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01-20-2007, 12:15 AM #1
USTask Force Recommend Radical Changes to Immigration Policy
http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-01-19-voa68.cfm -
US Task Force Recommends Radical Changes to Immigration Policy
By Marissa Melton
Washington
19 January 2007
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As the new U.S. Congress prepares to debate immigration reform and border security, a bipartisan task force has released a report outlining suggestions to simplify and strengthen U.S. immigration policy. Recommendations include consolidating immigration data and jurisdiction under a single federal agency; establishing an "as-needed" work visa for foreign workers; and devising a path to legal residency for illegal workers already in the country. VOA's Marissa Melton reports from Washington.
The co-chairs of the Independent Task Force on Immigration and America's Future this week hosted a forum to discuss their ideas for making immigration reform work. The task force brought members of Congress together with business, labor, and immigration groups, as well as public policy and immigration experts. Their report says, among other things, that the U.S. immigration system is vital to the U.S. economy -- and that the system is broken.
Lee Hamilton (19 Jan 2007)
Lee Hamilton, a former U.S. lawmaker and former vice chair of the 9/11 Commission, now heads the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. He describes some of the shortcomings of U.S. immigration policy, saying it is complicated, disorganized, and its actions are frequently ignored by all but a few people.
He said, "You've got a system that doesn't help families. It's inhumane. It doesn't meet our economic needs. It is just a managerial mess."
"The system is overburdened everywhere you look, they don't have any regulatory mechanism in it, nobody pays any attention to the administration of immigration except a few people. So that's why we came to the conclusion that we needed some kind of comprehensive reform," he continued.
Hamilton says Congress tends to take up the topic of immigration policy about once every ten years or so. The task force has recommended several radical changes. The first would create a federal agency that would coordinate data on immigration with labor needs. That agency would make periodic recommendations to Congress on how many immigrant workers are needed to fill out the work force.
The second recommendation was to establish a category of foreign worker who is neither temporary nor permanent, but "provisional" -- meaning a foreign worker who could be issued a visa for a finite amount of time to fill holes in the labor force.
Spencer Abraham (file photo)
Former U.S. lawmaker and Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham says basing immigration decisions on workplace needs rather than trying to re-unite families is a different approach for the United States, and a more realistic one.
"Participants in our task force felt that employment should be the driver in terms of the policies and approach taken, as opposed to the past, which was either principally family or primarily family-based immigration," he said.
The most controversial suggestion the task force offered was devising a way for immigrants who entered the country illegally to get legal status.
But the task force argues there is simply no good way to deal with the more than 11 million people believed to be in the United States illegally, and the process would split up families in which children are legal residents and parents are not.
But opponents of that idea say giving illegal immigrants a path to legal status amounts to amnesty for illegal acts. The activist group NumbersUSA says when Congress has granted amnesty to select groups in the past, it has been followed by dramatic increases in illegal immigration.
Border fence in the distance that separates the U.S., foreground, from Mexico near downtown Nogales, Ariz (File photo)
The task force also supported enhancement of border security efforts -- but not with the 1,100 kilometer fence along the U.S. border with Mexico that President Bush approved last year.
Abraham said, "I don't think the building of perimeter fences and more border patrols is ever going to succeed. You're trying to put a fence up that can stop both the economic forces at play and the human aspirational forces at play. And I don't think you can build a fence big enough to do that."
Lee Hamilton put it more succinctly, quoting the governor (Janet Napolitano) of U.S. border state Arizona, where parts of that wall would be built.
"Show me a 50-foot wall, and I'll show you a 51-foot ladder," he said.
Instead, the force recommends speeding up the implementation of "smart border" measures combining personnel, equipment, and technology. It also called for greater surveillance of legal ports of entry, and government action to disband citizen vigilante groups patrolling the borders.
Hamilton complains that members of Congress often focus on high-profile issues, such as the proposed border wall, rather than work on more comprehensive policy changes.
But both task force leaders say they hope that members of Congress this year will work together to implement comprehensive immigration reform.
Lee Hamilton says he has more faith now, after seeing moves by both parties in Congress to cooperate with one another.
He said, "I'm a little more optimistic than I would have been a few weeks or months back. I think the president is clearly interested in comprehensive reform and he was forced away from that really by the Republicans."
"Now I also believe that immigration is a question where the president and leaders of Congress really think there's an opportunity to make some progress," he added.
Congress is currently discussing more than a dozen proposals to alter or overhaul U.S. immigration policy.
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01-20-2007, 12:28 AM #2and government action to disband citizen vigilante groups patrolling the borders.
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01-20-2007, 12:29 AM #3
Was this so-called US Task Force commissiond by the federal government or is it a private citizen task force?
"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**
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01-20-2007, 12:39 AM #4
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At the risk of sounding like a broken record, Lee Hamilton is on CFR & TLC. This smacks of more "comprehensive immigration reform" propaganda.
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01-20-2007, 12:41 AM #5
Sounds like a private report. They are doing the same thing all over the country. The OBL believes they can release biased reports with down right "bad data" will convince America to accept the illegal aliens.
It's a disinformation campaign.
DixieJoin our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)
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01-20-2007, 12:47 AM #6
I agree. The people have no say in their conclusions and certainly have noone representing us at the meeting. The article is slanted. NumberUSA is mentioned, but not held in any matter of signifigance to their conclusions. ALIPAC could have a meeting and give a laundry list of suggestions.
Imagine if NAU is established. They won't let us have a say in anything. Dictatorship here we come.Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)
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01-20-2007, 12:52 AM #7
The NAU will be a lot like the EU,,,which is the thing they are making a copy of. But the NAU will likely be a lot less free and more forceful; why, because EU has 27 countries they have to be very nice to. In which they have to walk softly. Here we got 3 countries with leaders having a lot more power, which will be much more easier controled in dictated.
<div>DEFEAT BARACK HUSSEIN OBAMA THE COMMIE FOR FREEDOM!!!!</div>
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01-20-2007, 12:55 AM #8
They think the Minutemen are vigilantes, well I think Boosh and the rest of his lockstep cabal are the vigilantes.
Total disregard for our demands that the border be secured and illegal rounded up and deported.Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)
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01-20-2007, 01:03 AM #9
This VOA is a bunch of propaganda and the worst thing about it is it's taxpayer funded. We pay for these clowns to broadcast and report this propaganda as if it's news.
It also called for greater surveillance of legal ports of entry, and government action to disband citizen vigilante groups patrolling the borders.
Former U.S. lawmaker and Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham says basing immigration decisions on workplace needs rather than trying to re-unite families is a different approach for the United States, and a more realistic one.
From the Washington Monthly article titled:
Borderline Insanity
President Bush wants the INS to stop granting visas to terrorists. The biggest obstacle? His own administration.
Excerpt:
Had the full CIPRIS system been even partially deployed, along with the entry/exit system that (Stuart) Anderson and his allies (Abraham) helped delay in 1998, the terrorists' sojourn in the United States might have ended much sooner. Hani Hanjour, who piloted the plane that hit the Pentagon, had enrolled in a community college in California in November 2000 but never showed up for class; CIPRIS would have alerted the INS to his absence almost a year before the attacks.
Similarly, Mohammed Atta's original student visa application would not have languished in a warehouse in Kentucky for six months. Instead, it would have filtered through the FBI, CIA, National Security Agency, and Treasury Department databases, which might have thrown up any number of flags---Atta's trip to Afghanistan in 1999, for instance, or the Al-Qaeda source of his flight-school tuition.
Abraham was instrumental in stalling the program that could have alerted the Feds to the presence of the 9/11 hijackers by their student visas. So what does Bush do? He rewards this pro-illegal alien idiot by appointing him Secretary of Energy. Heck, why not make him Director of Homeland Security? And this moron now has the nerve to tell us how we should implement new immigration reforms?[b][i][size=117]"Leave like beaten rats. You old white people. It is your duty to die. Through love of having children, we are going to take over.â€
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01-20-2007, 01:45 AM #10
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