Cite as "AILA InfoNet Doc. No. 02062640 (posted Jun. 26, 2002)"
Statement of Kathleen Campbell Walker
American Immigration Lawyers
Association
Before the Subcommittee on Immigration Judiciary Committee
United States Senate
Regarding
Immigration Reform and the Reorganization of Homeland Defense
June 26, 2002 - Washington, D.C.
Mr. Chairman and Distinguished Members of the Subcommittee:
My name is
Kathleen Campbell Walker. I am honored to be testifying today before you on
behalf of the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA). AILA is the
national bar association of nearly 8,000 attorneys and law professors, who
represent the entire spectrum of individuals subject to our immigration laws. I
am a member of AILA’s Executive Committee, was privileged to chair AILA’s State
Department Liaison Committee for the last three years and also am a member of
that organization’s Border Issues Committee. I also practice immigration law in
El Paso, Texas, where I have focused on border issues for over 16 years. In
addition, I serve on the Texas State Comptroller’s Border Advisory Council, and
have served as a board member of the Border Trade Alliance as well as a member
of the Executive Committee of the Texas Border Infrastructure Coalition. I
worked for four years as President of the El Paso Foreign Trade Association to
establish the first Dedicated Commuter Lane using Secure Electronic Network for
Travelers’ Rapid Inspection (SENTRI) technology in the state of Texas. I thus
bring to the table practical experience regarding the challenges of border
security and cross-border and cross-agency issues that I hope will be of use to
the Committee.
INTRODUCTION
Before presenting
specific immigration proposals in the context of the proposed Department of
Homeland Security, the following points need to be emphasized.
- Congress has the important responsibility of reviewing and modifying, as
necessary, the President’s Homeland Security Department initiative that would
implement the most far-reaching changes to the organization of our government
since the Second World War. In fact, every American who seeks to make our
nation safer also shares this responsibility. Questions about how best to
address our security concerns must not be labeled as “special interest” griping
or defending the status quo because too much is at stake to stifle or discourage
debate, and all of us want the best system developed and implemented. In fact,
the process by which we debate and create a Homeland Security Department will be
as indicative of the state of our democracy as the final Homeland Security
Department that becomes law. AILA thus welcomes the opportunity to testify on
this important issue.
- AILA cautions the Committee, and Congress as a whole, to proceed
deliberately and carefully. While many have urged that the formation of this
new Department become law before the end of this Congressional session, we
believe that getting it right is more important than proceeding quickly. And if
getting it right takes more time, then Congress and the Administration should
take the time needed to get it right. We cannot afford the mistakes and
oversights to which a hasty examination and debate could easily lead.
- We as a nation need to enhance our security without harming our
internationally based economy, our dedication to respecting individual rights
preserved by the Constitution, and our tradition as a nation of immigrants. AILA
strongly supported the passage of the Enhanced Border Security and Visa Reform
Act (P.L. 107-173) (Border Security Act) because that measure achieves an
appropriate balance between these concerns. The Border Security Act is
premised on two facts. First, enhancing our intelligence capacity is key to our
increased security. The face of terrorism is not tied to one nationality,
religion, or ethnic group. The horrific terrorist action in Oklahoma is an
ever-present reminder to us of that painful fact. Any changes in federal
policies and procedures must allow our federal agencies timely access to
valuable and reliable intelligence. In fact, the most important mission of the
proposed Homeland Security Department is to further enhance our intelligence
capacity and ensure interagency sharing of information. Our government has come
a long way since September 11, with federal agencies now sharing data more
frequently than in the past. However, more needs to be done, and failure to do a
better job of intelligence gathering and coordinating the sharing of information
will mean that we have failed to enhance our security.
Second, the Border Security Act recognizes that our most effective security
strategy is to keep out those who mean to do us harm, while admitting those who
come to build America and make our country stronger. Immigration is not a
synonym for terrorism. The problem here is terrorists, not immigrants. We need
to isolate terrorism, not America.
The Border Security Act’s provisions reflect two important understandings
about our country and our needs—namely, that we are a nation of immigrants, and
that we must undertake any reforms in ways that do not destroy our economy and
commerce. The U.S. is an integral part of the world economy, with global
business, tourism, and migration serving a pivotal role in our economic
prosperity. As we take important and needed steps to enhance our security, we
must seek to ensure the efficient flow of people and goods across our borders.
If we do not, we risk both chaos at our borders and the destruction of our
economy, and along with it, the ability to pay for our national security.
“Fortress America” is an undesirable and impractical solution that repudiates
our history and our economic and social needs as well as the current reality of
our global economy.
Nearly 500 million entries occur annually by people who come to the U.S. as
tourists, business people, students, or to visit with their families. Less than
one million annually settle here as immigrants. Living in a border community as
I do underscores on a daily basis the imperatives this flow creates, and the
necessity of balancing our security needs with the fact that we are a nation of
immigrants and that we must continue to facilitate the free flow of people and
goods. In fact, our best protection is to focus our security resources where
they are most needed. We must be able to identify and separate low risk
travelers and facilitate their entry. Such measures are more effective and more
easily implemented than measures that focus on persons after they enter the U.S.
We need to make sure that we use our resources in the most effective way
possible to keep out those who seek to do us harm, not those seeking to come to
our country for the reasons that people have always come here, including
escaping persecution, desiring to be reunited with their families, working
legally in the U.S., investing or conducting business in the U.S., or visiting
this country as tourists.
- The bureaucratic restructuring created through the Homeland Security
Department cannot take the place of either a comprehensive homeland security
strategy or the need to reform outmoded immigration laws. While the Bush
Administration’s proposal seeks to reorganize government, it is silent on the
policies necessary to enhance our security, and the costs of such policies.
Nowhere are such policies more needed than at our nation’s ports of entry. And
nowhere is there a greater call for change than in reforming our immigration
laws to enhance our security, support our economy and American businesses, and
reunite families. I will discuss both issues in more detail later in this
testimony.
- In the current environment, it is especially important to reaffirm that
this nation’s strength and future reside in our unity as a nation, our
diversity, and the democratic principles upon which our country is based. It
is also important to remember that U.S. immigration policy is based on a number
of values that relate to the core social and economic principles upon which our
nation was founded. These values are complementary and interweave to create the
rich fabric that is beneficial to all Americans. Among the most important values
are: the unification of American families; employment-related immigration to
keep America strong in a global economy; asylum protection for refugees fleeing
persecution; naturalization based on allegiance to the principles contained in
our Constitution and laws; immigration courts that are independent, impartial,
and include meaningful checks and balances; and immigration policy that is
implemented through a well-regulated system based on law, with fair, uniform,
and predictable requirements.
As the current situation calls out for change in the direction of more
effective means of deterring terrorism, we must not lose sight of these
fundamental values of this nation of immigrants. As we seek to create new means
to isolate terrorists, we must take care not to isolate America in the
process.
THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION’S PROPOSED HOMELAND SECURITY DEPARTMENT
The Bush Administration has proposed a major restructuring of the federal
government that would realign government activities into a single cabinet-level
homeland security department whose primary mission is to detect and deter
terrorism. The new Department of Homeland Security would be divided into four
divisions: Border and Transportation Security; Emergency Preparedness and
Response; Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear Countermeasures; and
Information Analysis and Infrastructure Protection. (The FBI and CIA would
remain as independent agencies.) While proposing this massive structural reform,
the Administration is silent about the comprehensive homeland security strategy
that needs to accompany this bureaucratic restructuring.
AILA will
focus its comments on the immigration aspects of this proposal. The Border and
Transportation Security division, as proposed, would subsume our nation’s
immigration function. Along with all of the INS (enforcement and immigration
services), and the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR), currently
part of the Justice Department, this division would include visa processing
(from the Department of State), the Customs Service (from the Treasury
Department), the Coast Guard and the Transportation Security Administration
(from the Transportation Department), Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
(from the Agriculture Department), and the Federal Protective Service (from the
General Services Administration). While under the Administration’s proposal, the
Coast Guard and the Secret Service would retain their independent identities and
agency titles, the proposal indicates that the other “units,” including the INS,
would be “integrated into the new organization, ensuring that there is one clear
organization built on divisions with clear mission statements and lines of
authority.”
The Administration has indicated that this proposal is
consistent with the President’s “long-standing proposal to reorganize our
immigration system to focus on enforcement and administrative functions
separately. Under this proposal, the enforcement and administrative functions
would be separated within the new Department to ensure that those on the
enforcement side are free to focus on enforcement, while those on the services
side are free to reform and improve the way we treat those who are seeking to
immigrate legally to this country.” However, it is questionable whether an
agency whose overall goal is counter-terrorism and security will be able to
properly fulfill the responsibility of providing timely and efficient
immigration services that respect our laws.
The current structure
and functioning of the INS only reinforces this concern. As a consequence of how
INS is currently organized, an enforcement mentality is often reflected in
inappropriate ways in adjudication decisions. The negative consequences of an
unbalanced enforcement emphasis at our ports of entry were clearly evident even
prior to September 11. For example, in recent years, adjudications by inspectors
at ports of entry under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) have
become more inconsistent and less commerce-oriented due to a perceived need to
make entries to the U.S. in Trade NAFTA status more restrictive. The result has
been not the prevention from entry of terrorists, but the prevention from entry
of legitimate business people attempting to carry out economy-fueling
trade.
Even more troubling is the fact that the inspectors
performing these adjudications at the ports of entry also have nearly carte
blanche authority to deny someone entrance into the U.S. and to order “expedited
removal.” In an expedited removal situation, there is no right of legal
representation, and the inspector’s decision, usually made on the spot, is not
subject to appeal or scrutiny. However, as a result of this quick decision, the
individual is barred from reentry for five years. Often individuals do not even
understand what has happened to them if expedited removal authority is invoked.
If the enforcement element of inspections is further accentuated and enhanced,
the possibility of fair and efficient adjudications becomes even less likely.
Such power housed within a security agency can only lead to further erosion in
fair and informed decision-making.
Furthermore, immigrants and
their U.S. citizen and legal permanent resident family members are deeply
troubled by the notion that the admission to the U.S. of their loved ones would
be viewed primarily through the lens of security and enforcement, thereby
equating immigration with terrorism.
Finally, this proposal
subsumes many non-security functions that many fear will not get the attention
they merit in a department so focused on security.
Under the
Administration’s plan, visa processing would be brought within the Border and
Transportation Security division so that the “new Department would consolidate
the legal authority to issue visas to foreign nationals and admit them into the
country. The State Department, working through U.S. Embassies and consulates
abroad, would continue to administer the visa application and issuance process.”
Thus, while the State Department would continue to issue and process visas, this
proposal “will unify the policy authority on who can receive visas in the new
Department.” This proposal raises concerns about how such a division would
operate and impact the process of granting visas.
In addition, this
proposal will likely lead to Congress reorganizing itself to “match” the agency
line-up created by the new department. However our immigration function is
restructured, it is vitally important that the Committee with expertise on
immigration, the Judiciary Committee of the House and Senate, retain
jurisdiction over our immigration function.
While the
Administration reportedly did not consult Congress in developing this proposal,
much of it appears to mirror provisions in S. 2452/H.R. 4660 introduced in the
Senate and House by Senator Lieberman and Representative Thornberry,
respectively. AILA had opposed the Lieberman bill because its approach to
immigration is deeply flawed. The proposed changes to the INS in that measure
run counter to the effective reorganization contained in the bipartisan Senate
INS reorganization bill (S. 2444), introduced by Senators Edward Kennedy (D-MA)
and Sam Brownback (R-KS).
HOW OUR IMMIGRATION FUNCTION CAN BEST CONTRIBUTE TO OUR NATIONAL
SECURITY
Our immigration function can best contribute to our
national security needs in two ways: first, by being effectively, efficiently
and fairly reorganized, and reorganized outside of the Department of Homeland
Security. Secondly, Congress and the Administration need to support changes in
our laws that would make legality the norm. This latter issue will be discussed
at the end of this testimony.
Reorganizing our Immigration Function: AILA believes that
reorganizing our immigration function and maintaining this function outside of
the proposed Department of Homeland Security would achieve two results: a more
effective, efficient and fair immigration process and enhanced national
security. AILA greatly appreciates the hard work of members of the House
Judiciary Committee, and in particular the subcommittee, who have focused on the
need to restructure the INS. While their efforts have contributed much to the
debate on how best to reform the INS, AILA believes that S. 2444, introduced by
Senators Kennedy and Brownback, provides the best roadmap for
reform.
AILA supports maintaining our immigration function outside
of the proposed Homeland Security Department for the following reasons:
- Our nation’s immigration function needs to receive higher priority and
more authority and resources, not less. Given the importance of immigration,
AILA believes that our immigration function, as is the case with the FBI, needs
to remain separate from this newly proposed, large federal bureaucracy. In fact,
to achieve maximum efficiency and effectiveness, our immigration function must
be given higher prominence within our government. The best way to achieve this
end is to effectively reorganize the INS (as structured in S. 2444) and
implement mandated cooperation between the reorganized INS and the new Homeland
Security Department.
- Moving our immigration function into a Homeland Security Agency
repudiates our tradition as a nation of immigrants and reflects a fundamental
(and inaccurate) shift in how our nation views and treats immigrants.
Placing our immigration function within a department whose mission is to
“prevent terrorist attacks within the United States; reduce the vulnerability of
the United States to terrorism; and minimize the damage, and assist in the
recovery, from terrorist attacks that do occur within the United States”
repudiates our tradition as a nation of immigrants and the history that has made
us strong. In fact, placing our immigration function within a Homeland Security
Department sends the signal that immigrants are to be feared and not welcomed as
economic, cultural, social and political assets.
- Immigration services and processing would fare poorly in the proposed new
department. Under the Bush Administration’s proposal, immigration services
would compete for funding with entities including the Coast Guard, Customs, the
Border Patrol, and Transportation Security. The services budget and policies
would not fare well, resulting in a service function in worse shape than it is
now and increasing backlogs. In addition, given the new department’s mission,
enforcement and adjudications concerns would not be balanced, leading to a
reduction in the admissions into the U.S. of legal immigrants and non-immigrants
(close family members of U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents, and needed
workers for U.S. businesses) and refugees and asylum-seekers, with negative
consequences to our economy and society.
- Placing our immigration function within the new department leads to
concerns about civil rights. The new department’s mission suggests that the
important balance between security and due process protections and guarantees
would not be maintained. It is too easy for civil liberty considerations to be
downplayed within a Homeland Security Department concerned with enforcement and
national security.
Given these concerns, AILA strongly supports reorganizing the Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS) and keeping the INS independent of, but coordinated
with, the proposed Homeland Security Department. AILA also strongly supports the
reorganization plan developed in the bipartisan S. 2444, the Immigration Reform,
Accountability, and Security Enhancement Act of 2002.
No matter
where the immigration function is placed—within or outside of the proposed
Department of Homeland Security—S. 2444 should provide the road map for any
reforms undertaken.
IMMIGRATION IN A HOMELAND SECURITY DEPARTMENT
AILA strongly supports reorganizing our immigration functions (as
restructured in S. 2444) and maintaining these functions as an entity outside of
the proposed Homeland Security Department. Such a reorganization and placement
best meets our security, family reunification, and business needs and best
fulfills our international obligations with regard to refugees and
asylees.
If Congress and the Administration opt to include our nation’s immigration
functions within the proposed new homeland security department, we urge that S.
2444 be used to guide how immigration is organized within the new department. In
that regard, we propose that three subdivisions should be formed headed by a
strong leader with the title of Undersecretary. AILA also strongly believes that
the care and custody of unaccompanied alien children should be transferred to
the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) within the Department of Health and
Human Services.
Establish an Undersecretary for Immigration Services and
Security: The primary responsibilities of the Undersecretary for
Immigration Services and Security would be to secure our borders, prevent the
entry of terrorists, and administer the Customs laws of the United States;
administer the immigration and naturalization laws of the United States,
including establishing the rules governing the granting of visas and other forms
of permission to enter the U.S. to individuals who are not citizens or lawful
permanent residents; enforce our immigration laws within the interior of the
United States; ensure oversight of our immigration laws and the protection of
civil and due process rights in carrying out these responsibilities; and ensure
the speedy, orderly, and efficient flow of lawful traffic and commerce in
carrying out these responsibilities. Given these responsibilities, this
Undersecretary must have experience in both enforcing U.S. immigration law and
adjudicating immigration benefits.
A Strong Leader is Needed: It will be very important to follow
the model outlined in S. 2444 and appoint an Undersecretary, a high-level person
with clout to be in charge of these functions. A successful reorganization of
our immigration functions hinges on the appointment of a high-level person with
line authority. Such an official would improve accountability by fully
integrating policy making with policy implementation, ensuring direct access to
high-level officials within the executive branch, attracting top management
talent, having authority both horizontally and vertically, and leading the
efforts of the subdivisions. It is vitally important that one person at the top
articulate a clear, coherent, and unified immigration policy within the
government, to Congress, and to the world.
Given this country’s urgent need to maintain and upgrade its security, it is
now more pressing than ever to place one person in charge who is accountable so
that our laws are implemented quickly and fairly, rather than developing rival
bureaucracies that will balkanize immigration policy. Even before the proposal
for a Homeland Security Department was made, a consensus had been reached that
separating the enforcement and adjudications functions will lead to more clarity
of mission and greater accountability, which, in turn will lead to more
efficient adjudications and more accountable, consistent, and professional
enforcement. However, coordination of these functions is as important as
separation, and is key to a successful reorganization because enforcement and
adjudications are two sides of the same coin. Almost every immigration-related
action involves both enforcement and adjudicatory components. Only through such
coordination will we achieve consistent interpretation and implementation of the
law, clarity of mission and, in turn, more efficient adjudications and more
effective, accountable, consistent, and professional enforcement. Such
coordination cannot be achieved merely by creating a shared database.
Inconsistent policies and interpretations of the law, the lack of a common
culture and, most importantly, the absence of someone in charge who can resolve
differences, can turn routine questions into Kafkaesque nightmares.
S. 2444 is the Appropriate Model for Structuring an Immigration and Border
Security Division. S. 2444 provides for the necessary person in charge and
coordination, which is why AILA urges that it be used as the model for
organization of immigration functions within a Homeland Security Department. The
other congressional proposal, H.R. 3231, does not create a strong person in
charge and does not provide for adequate coordination. While H.R. 3231 separates
enforcement and adjudications by creating two separate Bureaus, there is little
coordination between the two, save a General Counsel placed in a weak suboffice.
This coordination is largely lacking because there is no high level official
given sufficient authority over the two bureaus who would be able to integrate
shared information systems, policies, and administrative infrastructure,
including personnel and training. The divisions would likely end up working at
cross-purposes, with the leaders from each sending conflicting messages on
policy matters pertaining to complex laws.
Such an absence of coordination could lead to inconsistent opinions and
policies, and result in each bureau implementing laws differently, thereby
creating ongoing difficulties. The absence of coordination would exacerbate
these concerns even more and raise additional questions. For example, since
border inspections combine both adjudications and enforcement functions, how
would the many different activities that take place at our ports of entry be
handled? These activities can include officials adjudicating asylum eligibility,
granting final admission as a legal permanent resident based on an immigrant
visa, issuing entry documentation, interdicting those ineligible to enter the
United States, and assisting in the interdiction of those engaged in trafficking
activities.
Given the structure of H.R. 3231, these functions would not be organized,
integrated or coordinated. Furthermore, how will Congressional staff be able to
efficiently handle requests for assistance on immigration matters? Without
adequate coordination, staff would be forced to deal with two separate bureaus
that implement different policies and practices, making their jobs much more
difficult and time-consuming.
To Accomplish these Goals, AILA Supports the Creation of Three
Subdivisions Within the Proposed Immigration and Border Security
Division. These subdivisions would be:
- Border Security Subdivision: This subdivision would include the
United States Customs Service (now in the Department of Treasury), border
functions of the Coast Guard (now in the Department of Transportation), the
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Services (now in the Agriculture Department),
primary Inspections, and the Border Patrol (both currently in the INS/Justice
Department). Of particular concern are the two functions now housed at the INS,
inspections and the Border Patrol.
Inspections: Inspections is of particular concern because it is the
immigration function in which adjudications and enforcement most closely
intersect. As such, it has never been viewed as an enforcement function, but
rather, one that brings together enforcement and adjudications because
inspectors determine (i.e., adjudicate) who is eligible to enter the U.S. The
INS currently inspects all persons seeking admission or permission to transit
through the United States at air, land and sea ports of entry. Inspectors
determine if applicants qualify for admission and, if so, under what status.
Applicants include people seeking safe haven, tourists on vacation, needed
workers coming to join their U.S. employers, and family members reuniting with
their U.S. citizen or legal permanent resident relatives. While inspections must
function to keep out the people who mean to do us harm, inspectors must also
allow entry into this country of people who help build up America and are
central to who we are and to our country’s continued economic
vitality.
The INS inspects more than half a billion entries each year. (This number
includes all categories of temporary visitors, green card holders, and U.S.
citizens, and multiple crossings by the same individual.) The percentage of
those who are found to be inadmissible is just over 1/10 of one percent.
(Source: INS Monthly Statistical Report, July 2001.) More than 80 percent of all
inspections are done at land borders (more than 400 million). Air inspections
are second with just under 80 million annually. (Source: INS Inspections
Statistics). 80 percent of land border inspections are same-day trips. (Source:
North American Trade and Travel Trends). Approximately 800,000 border crossings
are made daily between the U.S. and Mexico; approximately 260,000 cross each day
between the U.S. and Canada. (Source: North American Trade and Travel
Trends.)
In 2000, international travelers spent $82 billion in the U.S., not including
passenger fares. This activity supports one million U.S. jobs in the tourism
industry.
To categorize the inspections function as being strictly enforcement-related
painfully ignores one of the most pivotal functions of
inspections—adjudications. Thus, it is important to separate out primary
inspections that would be part of the new border security division, from
secondary inspections, which should become part of the immigration services
division (see below).
Border Patrol: The Border Patrol, as the mobile uniformed branch of
the INS, has as its mission the detection and prevention of smuggling and
illegal entry of aliens into the United States, with primary responsibility
between the ports of entry. Border Patrol agents perform their duties along, and
in the vicinity of, the 8,000 miles of U.S. boundaries. It is important that the
Border Patrol implement the law consistently and fairly. The Border Patrol has
significant authority to detain or release someone and has been subject in the
past to allegations of civil rights violations
How to deal with our Ports of Entry—Unified Port Management: Border
communities for years have dealt with the apparent inability of the agencies
staffing our ports of entry to coordinate staffing, infrastructure needs,
policies, and procedures. This lack of coordination has had a negative impact on
border economies due to reduced efficiencies in the cross-border flow of people
and goods. The September 11 attacks heighten concerns over how such a lack of
coordination would weaken our national security. Unfortunately, the Border
Coordination Initiative (BCI) launched in 1998 that focused on interagency
enforcement coordination insufficiently addresses our national security
concerns. In many areas, the Port Quality Improvement Committee meetings that
the BCI mandated have not changed the status quo with regard to coordination and
accountability. The September 11 attacks have underscored the need to change the
status quo in order to achieve border security.
While the proposed Department of Homeland Security does not focus on how our
ports of entry would be managed, the proposal assumes that entities under one
command would coordinate and cooperate, and that policies and procedures, as
well as staffing and infrastructure needs, would be approved and coordinated by
a central management body. However, such an initiative will fail if it does not
uphold the important balance between enforcement and adjudications in the
context of INS inspections (and thus the division maintained here between
primary and secondary inspections). Furthermore, Congress and the Administration
must adequately fund and staff our ports of entry, and each port must be held
accountable for its performance. No advancement in grade should occur unless
performance merits such advancement in conjunction with continuing training
achievement. Regular training must be timely provided and required. Adequate
support staff must also be provided, and precious supervisory and adjudicative
time must no longer be wasted on clerical functions, including fee intake. As a
very simplistic example, it makes sense to test the use of ATM-like machines to
intake fees and issue more secure I-94s (Arrival/Departure Record).
Furthermore, The Border Patrol and the Coast Guard must coordinate their
staffing, infrastructure, enforcement and security policies and procedures.
These policies and procedures must be consistent with those implemented at our
ports of entry in order to create a more secure border environment that reflects
consistent application of our laws
- Immigration Services Subdivision: AILA is most concerned with placing
immigration services within the new department. If immigration services are
included in the Homeland Security Department, it is vitally important that the
important work that the INS has done by, for example, granting citizenship and
legal residency to hundreds of thousands of hard working people and relatives of
U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents not be lost. In fact, immigration is
and needs to be about more than internal security: It also is about recognizing
that immigration and immigrants strengthen our country, and without immigration
our country will be less vibrant and strong.
Various GAO studies have illustrated that the current provision of services
provided by the INS to its “customers” is woefully behind the times. A new
“corporate culture” needs to be instilled in the Immigration Services Division
that trains personnel to provide U.S. petitioner family members and businesses,
along with foreign-born beneficiaries, with the service that they deserve under
our laws. The improvement of services, and the achievement of timely
adjudications, will reduce the current backlogs and will provide much-needed
relief to those who have been waiting in line for years to unite with family
members or provide needed skills to U.S. businesses. The assurance that the
paths to legal immigration provided under our nation’s laws can be achieved
without lengthy delays will further reduce the incentive to circumvent the law,
reducing illegal immigration to our country.
With these important concerns in mind, this subdivision would include
services and adjudications and secondary inspections, which are now in the
INS/Justice Department. Service and adjudication functions would include:
adjustment of status, naturalization, adjudication of immigrant and nonimmigrant
visa applications, issuance of work permits, and asylum and other humanitarian
cases, and “well-founded fear” screening of political asylum applicants.
Secondary inspections at ports of entry should also be part of Immigration
Services. Primary inspection is where an applicant for entry into the United
States is initially reviewed to see if there is any enforcement or eligibility
reason to refuse entry. It is not uncommon for questions to arise as to whether
the individual meets the criteria for entry. For example, it may not be clear
whether an individual seeking entry for business is coming for a bona fide
business trip, allowing him to enter on a business visitor’s visa or under the
visa waiver program, or whether the purpose of the trip might cross the line
into employment in the United States, requiring a visa that includes appropriate
work authorization. This is an adjudicative function, requiring an examination
of the totality of the circumstances that cannot be made in the context of the
pressures of primary inspection and requiring a decision-maker who is fully
trained in adjudicative standards. Thus, it will be critical for Immigration
Services to have a role in Inspections, and secondary inspection is where this
role is usually played.
A department with the mission to guard against terrorism must also ensure
that families are reunited, international commerce is enhanced, and tourism is
encouraged. This is a security matter: America’s understanding of the world in
which we exist is greatly enhanced by the presence of immigrants and visitors
from other countries. This is an economic matter: immigration and tourism has
provided much fuel for our economy, and studies show that both will increase in
future years. This is a matter of our national values: protection of the
oppressed and unity of families underpin what makes the United States
great.
It will be important that these initiatives have a strong voice within the
division and within the Department. Because the Services operation will have the
most knowledge of adjudications issues, it must also have a significant role in
policy development and implementation. It is also critical that Immigration
Services have the resources necessary to do its job, including staffing,
technology and infrastructure requirements. Neither our nation’s security nor
our nation’s values are served by adjudications that are delayed for years,
petitions that are lost in huge warehouses, simple processes that are made
complex by duplication and inefficiency, and delays that require the
readjudication and re-checking, over and over, of the same data simply due to
the passage of time.
Ajudication fees paid by applicants for immigration benefits should be used
solely to adjudicate those applications. None of these funds should be diverted
to support other functions. Applicants and petitioners, particularly when they
are already experiencing lengthy delays and unacceptable levels of service,
should not be forced to pay for programs unrelated to the service for which they
have paid the fee—the processing of their applications. Also, since
adjudications are as much in the national interest as enforcement, adjudications
should receive on an ongoing basis direct congressional appropriations to
supplement user fees and build and maintain the infrastructure to support
Immigration Services and its interrelationship with enforcement
functions.
- Interior Security Subdivision: This subdivision would include
intelligence, investigations, and detention and removal (all currently in the
INS/Justice Department.)
Investigations: The Investigations Division currently is the interior
enforcement arm of the Service. It is charged with investigating violations of
the criminal and administrative provisions of the Immigration and Nationality
Act (INA) and other related provisions of the U.S. Code. The Investigations
Division’s enforcement mission has five broad objectives: identify and remove
criminal aliens; counter alien smuggling; counter immigration fraud; enforce
employer provisions of the INA; and respond to community complaints regarding
illegal criminal alien activity.
Intelligence: As the principal source of immigration-related
intelligence, the INS Intelligence Program currently provides analyses to INS
staff at all levels to aid in making day-to-day, mid-term, and long-term
operational decisions; acquiring and allocating resources; and determining
policy. Intelligence is as important to the adjudications side of the
immigration function as it is to the law enforcement side. In fact,
adjudications include a strong security component for which intelligence is key.
The recent implementation of IBIS checks that INS is currently conducting
exemplifies the need for coordination between both sides of the INS house. In
addition, the INS’s forensics document laboratory, which is part of the INS
intelligence program, assists INS adjudicators in detecting document fraud in
petitions filed with the INS.
Detention and Removal: This branch is responsible for detaining,
transporting, processing and supervising illegal aliens who are awaiting removal
or other disposition of their case. Especially given the changes in the law
enacted in 1996, recent court decisions, and prosecutorial discretion in the
law, it is vitally important that the law is consistently interpreted and that
applicants’ rights are protected.
THE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY MUST ENSURE THAT IT DOES NOT OVERLOOK
THE CIVIL RIGHTS OF AFFECTED PERSONS
The Homeland Security Department will fail in its mission if it does not pay
close attention to another mission that belongs to all government agencies: the
upholding and advancement of the Constitution and of the basic rights and
liberties of all persons. Nothing could be more fundamental to any American
undertaking. AILA therefore urges that a Division of Civil Rights and Oversight
be formed within the Department of Homeland Security to ensure that the
Department protects these rights. This Division is especially important given
that the mission of the Homeland Security Department would prioritize
enforcement and national security, leaving it questionable how civil liberty
concerns and considerations, as well as the protection of the provision of
services for people seeking immigration benefits, would be addressed.
Given the extensive authority of the Department of Homeland Security, it is
imperative that there be one office that can develop consistent interpretations
of the law, one office to which people seeking benefits can turn if they feel
they have been unjustly denied, one office to which people can go if they
believe ethnic or racial proofing has occurred. The proposed Department of
Homeland Security would lack credibility if there were no Division of Civil
Rights and Oversight to focus exclusively on addressing these concerns.
THE STATE DEPARTMENT’S CURRENT ROLE IN VISA PROCESSING MUST BE
PRESERVED
The Administration’s proposal would place policy development for visa
issuance in the hands of the Homeland Security Department, while leaving the
ministerial function of issuing the visas with the State Department. AILA
believes that dividing policy and process would result in chaos where the United
States can least afford it—our international affairs. Every day, in consular
posts around the world, issues arise as to how a policy or regulation, which was
necessarily stated in broad terms, should apply in a specific case. Often, the
cases that raise these questions can be of major consequence to our foreign
policy interests, U.S. business interests, or the interests of preserving
American values of family unity and humanitarian protection. The issues that
arise in these contexts need to be resolved by those who best understand the
reasoning and history behind the policy; namely, the department that develops
the policy. But, if the policy was developed by a different agency, the nature
of government agencies is such that the ability to resolve specific questions
will be all but lost in the structure of different departments. As a result,
policy implementation will become either disjointed or gridlocked. And, given
the nature of the Department of Homeland Security, establishing an
administrative presence all over the world at the staffing level required would
be inappropriate and a waste of resources.
Indeed, a department devoted to internal security is best operated
internally. But there are functions of the current INS that require a presence
outside the United States. Primarily, these are refugee processing,
orphan/adoption processing and the adjudication of waivers. AILA proposes that
these functions be transferred to the State Department, which already possesses
related expertise and has the needed infrastructure in the countries where these
activities take place.
In addition, to maintain a fair and reasoned process
for visa issuance, decisions regarding visa eligibility must be subject to
appellate review. This review must apply to all of the functions transferred to
the Department of State, which already are subject to such review, as well as to
consular decisions. For example, as we have seen with recent decisions regarding
international adoptions, checks and balances are needed to ensure that the
legally correct decision is made.
EOIR MUST REMAIN OUTSIDE OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY AND BE
CONSTITUTED AS AN INDEPENDENT AGENCY
AILA strongly opposes including the Executive Office for Immigration Review
within the proposed Homeland Security Department. It is vitally important that
our immigration courts be independent, impartial and include meaningful checks
and balances. Any proposal that would include the EOIR in a new homeland
security department is going in the absolutely wrong direction, as is evident by
the EOIR’s role, responsibilities and history.
Under authority delegated by the Attorney General, the EOIR administers and
interprets federal immigration laws and regulations through the conduct of
immigration court proceedings, appellate reviews, and administrative hearings in
individual cases. The EOIR carries out these responsibilities through its three
main components:
- The Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA), which hears appeals of decisions
made in individual cases by immigration judges (IJs), INS District Directors, or
other immigration officials;
- The Office of the Chief Immigration Judge (OCIJ), which oversees all the
immigration courts and their proceedings throughout the United States;
and
- The Office of the Chief Administrative Hearing Officer (OCAHO), which became
part of the EOIR in 1987 to resolve cases concerning employer sanctions,
document fraud, and immigration-related employment discrimination
The EOIR was created on January 9, 1983, through an internal Department of
Justice (DOJ) reorganization that combined the BIA with the immigration judge
function previously performed by the INS. Along with establishing the EOIR as a
separate agency within the DOJ, this reorganization sought to make the
immigration courts independent of the INS, the agency charged with enforcing
federal immigration laws. The EOIR also is separate from the Office of Special
Counsel for Immigration-Related Employment Practices in the DOJ Civil Rights
Division and the Office of Immigration Litigation (OIL) in the DOJ Civil
Division. As an office within the DOJ, the EOIR is headed by a Director who
reports directly to the Deputy Attorney General.
The BIA is the highest administrative body for interpreting and applying
immigration laws. Decisions of the Board are binding on all INS officers and IJs
unless modified or overruled by the Attorney General or a federal court. The
majority of appeals reaching the Board involve orders of removal and
applications for relief from removal. Other cases before the Board include the
exclusion of aliens applying for admission to the United States, petitions to
classify the status of alien relatives for the issuance of preference immigrant
visas, fines imposed upon carriers for the violation of immigration laws, and
motions for reopening and reconsideration of decisions previously rendered.
The historical reasons for creating EOIR and separating its functions from
the INS are even more compelling today. In these difficult times, the need for
public confidence in the integrity and impartiality of the system is great,
especially when government agencies are accruing more power, and there is the
need for an accompanying system of checks and balances that is the foundation
upon which our system is built. At the same time, there is growing public
cynicism about the impartiality and integrity of the system. Immigration judges
who issue unfavorable opinions have been the object of interagency squabbles and
acts of retribution. And, since many high-level managers at EOIR had been INS or
DOJ employees, reports have emerged of cases being “administratively” resolved
by an ex-parte phone call to a former colleague or high-ranking administrator,
rather than through the appropriate appeals process.
The Department of Justice itself has often ignored the important role of IJs
and the statutory authority that Congress has granted to them. As an example,
the Attorney General, on October 31, 2001, issued an interim rule which
insulates INS custody determinations from any IJ review by granting an automatic
stay of release on Immigration Judge decisions where the initial bond was set by
the Service at $10,000 or higher. Since the INS is the entity that sets the
initial bond amount, this provision guarantees that the INS will be the final
decision-maker on the issue of an alien’s release from custody during the
pendency of administrative proceedings, despite the fact that the law clearly
entitles an alien to a bail re-determination hearing before an IJ.
The current system of housing immigration prosecutors and judges within the
same agency is a disturbing concept, which creates, at the very minimum, the
appearance of partiality. In this environment, it is not surprising that the
public perceives this system as “rigged.” Legal scholars who have studied our
immigration system have made it clear that “the reviewing body must not only
seem to be, but must in fact be free of command influence…What is important is
that the court/corps not be part of the agency on whose actions it is to sit in
judgment. More specifically, the members of such a body cannot be beholden to
the agency in matters of compensation, tenure, or conditions of employment. This
means it should be free to formulate and advance its own budget before the
relevant Congressional authorizing and appropriating committees.” (Richard B.
Hoffman and Frank P. Cihlar, “Judicial Independence: Can It Be Done Without
Article I?,” 46 Mercer L. Rev. 863, 878 (Winter, 1995)).
AILA testified in February of this year before the House Subcommittee on
Immigration and Claims against a proposed rule that would make a number of
procedural reforms at the BIA that, taken together, would amount to a denial of
due process. We believe bringing the EOIR within the new Homeland Security
Department raises similar objections. In fact, AILA advocates the creation of a
separate, Executive Branch agency that would include the trial-level immigration
courts and the BIA. Such an independent agency would best protect and advance
America’s core legal values by safeguarding the independence and impartiality of
the immigration court system. Due process requires no less.
Specifically, AILA believes that the creation of an independent immigration
court should be based on the following considerations:
- The independence and impartiality of the immigration judges and the
immigration court system must be affirmed;
- Proposed changes must facilitate, not erode, immigrants’ access to the BIA
and federal courts, consistent with due process considerations in our justice
system; and
- Such changes must also enhance efficiency, increase accuracy, acceptability,
accountability and consistency, and facilitate oversight and
review.
CHANGING OUR IMMIGRATION LAWS TO HELP ENHANCE OUR SECURITY, ECONOMY, AND
SOCIETY
The goals of a new Homeland Security Department cannot be achieved until our
immigration laws are reformed. The creation of this department will not alter
the fact that U.S. immigration policy needs to be changed to make legality the
norm. Currently, families face long delays before they can be reunited, no visa
exists to bring in certain kinds of needed workers, and the 1996 immigration
laws eliminated due process for many legal permanent residents. Furthermore, the
status quo is unacceptable in a world in which enhanced security has become a
higher priority.
An agreement between the United States and Mexico on immigration and border
issues will help the U.S. address national security concerns. Bilateral
cooperation in enforcement initiatives that focus on illegal immigration, the
opportunity for hardworking immigrants already here filling legitimate labor
needs to earn legal status, a new temporary program for essential workers to
fill identified labor needs, and more visas for workers and family members are
initiatives that together will contribute to our security. Because our shared
security needs create the additional impetus for Mexico and the U.S. to
coordinate and cooperate, it follows that by encouraging and facilitating legal
immigration, both countries will be able to focus their resources on terrorists
and people engaged in smuggling, trafficking, and other criminal
activities.
The following principles are essential to successful immigration reform that
enhances our security, as well as our economy and society.
- Approaching Immigration Reform in a Comprehensive Manner: The United
States’ current immigration system needs to be reformed to reflect current needs
and realities. Due to our current system, families are separated for long
periods of time and U.S. employers cannot bring in needed workers. People are
forced to live an underground existence in the shadows, not making themselves
known to the government for fear of being separated from their families and
jobs. The current enforcement system has failed to prevent illegal immigration
and precious resources that should be spent on enhancing security are wasted on
stopping hard-working people from filling vacancies in the U.S. labor market.
Border enforcement efforts that do little to enhance our security have led to
people losing their lives, while current laws make it difficult for many to
enter legally. Our immigration system needs to be reformed so that legality is
the norm, and immigration is legal, safe, orderly, and reflective of the needs
of American families, businesses, and national security.
- Implementing Immigration Reform as an Important Component of our Enhanced
National Security. Immigration reform that legalizes hard-working people
already here and that creates a new temporary program will help the U.S.
government focus resources on enhancing security, not on detaining hard-working
people who are filling vacancies in the U.S. labor market or seeking to reunite
with their close family members. In addition, reform that includes a new
legalization program and a temporary worker program will encourage people to
come out of the shadows and be scrutinized by our government. The legality that
results from these initiatives will contribute to our national
security.
- Developing a Regularization Program for People in the U.S. without
Authorization: People who work hard, pay taxes, and contribute to the U.S.
should be given the opportunity to obtain permanent residence. This legalization
would stabilize the workforce of U.S. employers, encourage people to come out of
the shadows to be scrutinized by our government, and allow immigrants to work
and travel legally and be treated equally. Many have been here for years, are
paying taxes, raising families (typically including U.S. citizen and lawful
permanent resident spouses and children), contributing to their communities and
are essential to the industries within which they work. In order to unite
families and keep them together, liberal and generous waivers must be made
available for grounds of admissibility and deportability. It is neither in the
best interests of the workers nor of their employers for this situation to
remain unaddressed.
- Creating a New Temporary Worker Program: Current immigration laws do
not meet the needs of our economy for short- and long-term employees in those
sectors currently experiencing worker shortages and others that are expected to
experience shortages when the economy rebounds. A new temporary program would
give workers the opportunity to work in areas of the country where they are
needed and would give employers experiencing shortages the workforce they need.
Current programs have often proven unusable by both employees and employers, and
do not accommodate employers facing longer term, chronic labor shortages. The
framework for a new temporary worker program must differ significantly from
existing programs, and must respect both the labor needs of business as well as
the rights of workers.
- Opening Up Legal Channels for Family- and Business-Based Immigration:
Our immigration system has been characterized by long backlogs in
family-based immigration and long delays in business-based immigration. Illegal
immigration is a symptom of a system that fails to reunify families and address
economic conditions in the U.S. and abroad. To ensure an orderly future process,
it is critical to reduce bureaucratic obstacles and undue restrictions to
permanent legal immigration. Developing an increased legal migration flow will
make immigration more orderly and legal. It will also allow more people to
reunite with their families and work legally in the U.S., and will facilitate
fair, equitable, and efficient immigration law, policy, and processing. It is
essential to make legal future immigration that otherwise will happen
illegally.
- Adequately Funding Immigration Reform Initiatives: Immigration reform
must include adequate funding to implement reform. Congress frequently passes
new immigration laws without including adequate funding. Lack of adequate
funding has contributed to the long backlogs and ineffective, inefficient and
unfair services that currently characterize the Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS). Whether funds are directed to the INS or other entities to
implement reform, any changes in the law must be accompanied by adequate
funding, in the form of direct congressional appropriations.
CONCLUSION
The same criteria that are essential to an effective
reorganization of the INS are key to immigration in the context of any national
homeland security department discussion: It is necessary to have one person in
charge of the immigration function and to coordinate the separated enforcement
and adjudication activities. In addition, the services/adjudications function
merits adequate funding, no less because adjudications is as much in the
national interest as is enforcement. Such a reorganized immigration function
(modeled on provisions in S. 2444) is best left outside of the Homeland Security
Department, with coordination mandated between the two. If immigration is
included within the Homeland Security Department, then AILA supports the
creation of a separate division (Immigration Services and Security) to best
support our immigration function (that also would use S. 2444 as the model for
reform).
Clearly more needs to be done, but since September 11, the
status quo already has undergone much positive change, with federal agencies
(INS, Customs, Coast Guard and the other border agencies) coordinating and
cooperating at unprecedented levels to improve the processes at the border to
protect our homeland and efficiently process legitimate trade and travel.
Furthermore, the new Enhanced Border Security and Visa Entry Reform Act
addresses many concerns about improving cooperation and information sharing, as
well as tackling problems with existing systems.
As Congress
debates the creation of a Homeland Security Department, we must recognize the
need both to reform our immigration function, and change current immigration
laws to make legality the norm. The success of a new Department of Homeland
Security is directly linked to reforming our immigration laws so that they make
sense for and to a nation of immigrants.
Mr. Chairman, thank you very
much for this opportunity to share my thoughts and perspectives with the
committee. I and other members of AILA remain available to discuss these matters
with you at any future time. We look forward to working closely with you on
legislative efforts to enact needed changes.