News Bytes
Director
of US Citizenship and Immigration Services Eduardo Aguirre has indicated that
the Bush Administration does not intend to introduce legislation embodying the
President’s immigration reform proposal.
Aguirre stated that the purpose behind the President’s speech on
January 7, 2004 was to outline broad parameters of the immigration reform debate
and that it was up to Congress to form a detailed plan for immigration reforms.
He added that as bills are introduced, the President will work with the
sponsors. Many see Aguirre’s remarks as signaling the President’s intention
to back away from his January proposal, which has drawn considerable criticism
from members of his own political party.
*****
Since
2003, the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS), an anti-immigration think-tank,
has been a subcontractor on a project for the US Census Bureau evaluating the
quality of immigrant data collected in the American Community Survey.
CIS has an 18-month contract with the Census Bureau for $220,000.
*****
An
unnamed Amish man who went to visit his sick father in Ontario, Canada in
December was not allowed to reenter the US because he had no photo
identification with him. The Amish,
who do not allow pictures to be taken because of the Bible’s prohibition of
graven images, have previously been granted photo waivers.
However, these waivers have been discontinued due to security concerns.
*****
Twenty-seven
countries are expected to miss the deadline set by the US for countries to issue
computer-coded passports, including Japan, Britain, Germany and Italy.
Only Congress can extend the deadline for this congressionally mandated
anti-terrorism measure.
Visitors
from the countries who are issued passports without the facial-recognition
technology by October 26, 2004 will be required to apply for visas to travel to
the United States. This could
result in the demand for tourist visas to increase to about 12 million in FY
2005 from about 7 million in 2003. This
could create significant visa backlogs by flooding consular staff in American
embassies with visa requests, potentially disrupting tourism and business travel
from the affected countries.
*****
A trend is affecting the nation’s motor-vehicle agencies as many undocumented immigrants and others ineligible for driver’s licenses are bribing employees to produce and issue fraudulent licenses. Last year, 45 states considered legislation that would tighten security at their motor-vehicle agencies, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
< Back | Index | Next >
Disclaimer: This newsletter is provided as a public service and not intended to establish an attorney client relationship. Any reliance on information contained herein is taken at your own risk.