Legislative Update
The
U.S. House Subcommittee on Research and Science Education heard recommendations
last week for easing the visa process for foreign students and scholars in the
first hearing of its subject since 2004, Inside
Higher Education reports. Foreign
student enrollment in
Among
the suggestions from panelists of improving the student visa process was the
need for the State Department to reissue visas domestically rather than require
student and scholars to leave the country for renewal.
"We cannot overemphasize the fear that people have in returning home
or outside the
Committee
members repeatedly lamented that the issue of improving the visa system for
foreign students and scholars often gets tied up in the immigration debate.
Committee chairman, Rep. Brian Baird, acknowledged that many
representatives on the panel seemed frustrated by the status quo-despite the
State Department’s reported progress. Acknowledging
that the federal government has made progress, Baird stressed the importance of
the panel to "hear constructive criticisms for improvement."
Acknowledging
that perceptions of a burdensome visa process and sometimes humiliating border
crossing experience have hurt the United State’s ability to attract foreign
students, committee members consistently returned to the point that even one
traumatic incident at airport security can cause sever harm to the United
States’ reputation. "One
anecdote circulates rapidly and widely and tarnishes an entire image," said
Allan Goodman, chairman of the
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State
officials estimate that as many as 1,000 undocumented immigrants attend the
state’s public schools. Several
public universities do not check legal residence in the
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Undocumented
immigrants would not be able to receive a proposed state-issued card that allows
them to drive and buy insurance, under a measure approved this month by the Utah
House, The Associated Press reports.
The bill, sponsored by Rep. Glenn Donnelson, was introduced as a safety
measure to national security and a deterrent to immigration to
A
recent state audit showed the number of Utahns possessing a card continues to
rise, and three-quarters of cardholders have insurance since the state ID card
was introduced two years ago. The
negative response stems from what the state perceives as the US Congress failing
to address the issue. "Do we
want to continue the vacancy sign at our state borders?" said House
Majority Leader Dave Clark. "If
Congress is unwilling to resolve this, by golly, I guess we’ll have to do
it."
In
response,
For the specific details of this bill, check out Greg Siskind’s blog entry on the bill at the
SSB Employer Immigration Compliance Blog.