Summary of the Reid-Schumer-Menendez Amnesty Proposal

Similar documents
Conceptual Proposal for Immigration Reform. I. Achieving Operational Control of America s Borders to Prevent Future Illegal Immigration

STATE OMNIBUS BILLS AND LAWS January 1 June 30, 2011

Regarding H.R. 1645, the Security Through Regularized Immigration and a Vibrant Economy Act of 2007 (STRIVE Act)

Background on the Trump Administration Executive Orders on Immigration

An Immigration Reform Bill? What s in it? What s Not?

Summary of H.R. 4321: Comprehensive Immigration Reform for America s Security and Prosperity

Michael J. Goldstein Lucy G. Cheung

Agricultural Job Opportunities, Benefits and Security Act of 2009 ( AgJOBS H.R. 2414/S. 1038) Summary Prepared: June 17, 2009

Immigration Legislation and Issues in the 113 th Congress

Comprehensive Immigration Reform for America's Security and Prosperity (CIR ASAP) Act of 2009

Immigration Enforcement Benchmarks

Side-by-Side Comparison of 2006 and 2007 Senate Legislation and 2009 CIR ASAP Bill

Comprehensive Immigration Reform in the 113 th Congress: Short Summary of Major Legislative Proposals

Securing America s Borders Act (SABA) Section by Section Analysis TITLE I BORDER ENFORCEMENT SUBTITLE A- ASSETS FOR CONTROLLING UNITED STATES BORDERS

HOUSE BILL 2162 AN ACT

Immigration Issues in Child Welfare Proceedings

The President s Budget Request: Fiscal Year (FY) 2019

Basics of Immigration Law. Jojo Annobil The Legal Aid Society Immigration Law Unit

Basics of Immigration Law

ANALYSIS OF 2011 LEGIS. IMMIGRATION RELATED LAWS

Section-by-Section Summary of the February 23, 2006, Chairman s Mark of the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2006

617 POLICY Immigration Status and Secondary Confirmation Documentation

Border Security Provisions Overview of the Senate s Comprehensive Immigration Reform Bill following final passage of S. 744

Immigration Enforcement and Border Security Act of 2007 S.1984 (As Introduced, 110 th Congress) Section-by-Section Analysis

Immigration Violations

Alien Removals and Returns: Overview and Trends

Immigration Law, Policy, and Enforcement in the Trump Era. Hans Meyer Meyer Law Office

Executive Actions on Immigration

1/20/2014. Overview. Immigration Reform in 2014? Senate versus House. Interior Enforcement. Border Security

Comprehensive Immigration Reform in the 113 th Congress: Major Provisions in Senate-Passed S. 744

SUBTITLE A INVESTING IN BORDER SECURITY AND INFRASTRUCTURE

NAVIGATE THE I-9 RULES LIKE A VIKING TO AVOID SINKING YOUR BUSINESS IN LAWSUITS AND PENALTIES

IMMIGRATION INSIDE THE U.S. EMPLOYMENT-BASED IMMIGRATION SYSTEM

State and Local Enforcement of Federal Immigration Law. The Arizona Experiment

Immigration Reform: Brief Synthesis of Issue

OVERVIEW OF CURRENT STATUS OF ALABAMA S IMMIGRATION LAW

(including Judiciary Committee Amendments)

Immigration Enforcement, Bond, and Removal

CRS Report for Congress

GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA SESSION 2011 S 1 SENATE BILL 604. Short Title: NC Illegal Immigration Enforcement Act. (Public) April 19, 2011

Developments in Immigration Policies Affecting Employers. I-9 Compliance. The law:

CHAPTER 17 - ARREST POLICIES Alternatives to Arrest and Incarceration Criminal Process Immigration Violations

GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA SESSION 2011 H 1 HOUSE BILL 343. Short Title: Support Law Enforcement/Safe Neighborhoods.

Immigration and the Southwest Border. Effect on Arizona. Joseph E. Koehler Assistant United States Attorney District of Arizona

IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT

Immigration Legislation and Issues in the 112 th Congress

IMMIGRATION POLICY BRIEF Review of the Securing America s Future Act of 2018 and State-By-State Economic Effects

U.S. Immigration Policy: Chart Book of Key Trends

Alabama's Immigration Law: Version 2.0 And How It Impacts Employers

Immigration 101. USCIS overview. AIFC Prescott, Arizona

GAO. HOMELAND SECURITY Challenges to Implementing the Immigration Interior Enforcement Strategy

Policy 1326 Immigration Reform and Control Act

INDEX. Copyright 2017 Alan House Publishing.

BUILDING TRUST WITH COMMUNITIES, UPHOLDING DUE PROCESS SUPERVISING ATTORNEY IMMIGRANT LEGAL RESOURCE CENTER SEPTEMBER 2015

GLOSSARY OF IMMIGRATION POLICY

SALEM COUNTY PROSECUTOR S OFFICE

Immigration: Globalization. Immigration Practice Group Lex Mundi March 4-7, Rome, Italy

Executive Actions Relating to Immigration

Immigration Legislation and Issues in the 110 th Congress

I-9 Employment Eligibility Verification & Employer Compliance in an Era of Heightened Worksite Enforcement

Intersection of Immigration Practice with other Areas of Law

Special Report - House FY 2012 Department of Homeland Security Appropriations and California Implications - June 2011

Question & Answer May 27, 2008

6 DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals)

Immigration Issues in New Mexico. Rebecca Kitson, Esq

CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION. 1.1 Introduction to Citizenship

An Introduction to Federal Immigration Law for North Carolina Government Officials

HAUSWIESNER KING LLP

ABC NATIONAL IMMIGRATION POSITION

Cathy Demchak & Lynn Javor. Carnegie Mellon University PASFAA Conference, October 2017

GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS Standard Operating Procedures

U.S. Customs and Border Protection

CRS Report for Congress

Hearing on Agricultural Labor: From H-2A to a Workable Agricultural Guestworker Program

Approximately eight months after the terrorist

JTIP Handout:Lesson 34 Immigration Consequences

You may request consideration of deferred action for childhood arrivals if you:

SUMMARY AND ANALYSIS OF DHS MEMORANDUM Implementing the President s Border Security and Immigration Enforcement Improvements Policies

CRS Report for Congress

Immigration Tsunami: Understanding the Tidal Wave of Compliance When Hiring Foreign Nationals

Immigration Legislation and Issues in the 109 th Congress

A Primer on U.S. Immigration Policy

I-9 Compliance, Audits, and E- Verify

Subtitle G--W Nonimmigrant Visas SEC BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION AND LABOR MARKET RESEARCH.

PRESIDENT TRUMP S EXECUTIVE ORDERS ON IMMIGRATION

Immigration Reform: Brief Synthesis of Issue

Immigration and DACA Basics: Risk Factors for Higher Education

Immigration Compliance

Important: To prevent changes to your coverage in Ambetter from Superior HealthPlan, please respond to the Health Insurance Marketplace

ICE. I.C.E. Under D.H.S. Customs and INS Investigations DRO

OBAMA S DEFERRED ACTION PLAN ( DACA )

DHS Issues Supplemental Safe Harbor Rule to Guide Employers Who Receive Social Security No-Match Letters

What is US-VISIT? United States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology (US-VISIT) Biometric Services

OVERVIEW OF IMMIGRATION CONSEQUENCES ANALYSIS

A Primer on U.S. Immigration Policy

GLOSSARY OF IMMIGRATION TERMS

Case 2:11-cv IPJ Document 1 Filed 08/01/11 Page 1 of 45 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA SOUTHERN DIVISION

Mike E. Stroster Kevin D. Battle

Highlights. Federal immigration suspects 18,000 16,000 14,000 12,000 10,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000

Summary of the Full-Year Appropriation Act for the Department of Homeland Security, 2019

Transcription:

April 30, 2010 PARTS I. Border Security II. Detection, Apprehension, and Removal of Illegal Aliens III. Employment Verification IV. Legal Immigration V. Amnesty VI. Miscellaneous I. BORDER SECURITY Increases personnel in CBP and ICE, and resources for courts; creates trigger provision requiring these to be fulfilled before amnesty can be granted to those illegally in the country (p.1) Provides for additional increases in Border Patrol agents stationed on the southern and northern borders and CBP agents stationed at ports of entry (p.1) Provides for the installation of high-tech ground sensors along the southern border instead of SBInet (p. 2) Upgrades technology for the Border Patrol (BP), including: (1) secure two-way communication capabilities among all BP agents; (2) use of DOD equipment at the border; (3) additional SUVs, helicopters, power boats, river boats, portable computers, night vision equipment, unmanned aircraft systems, etc. (p. 2) Creates a Border Patrol Auxiliary Unit to assist the BP (p. 2) Authorizes DHS to deploy National Guard personnel to borders when needed (p. 2) Requires creation of additional ports of entry; hiring of thousands of CBP inspectors; provides ports of entry will have enhanced connectivity with government fingerprint databases (p. 3)

Requires the construction of additional permanent Border Patrol Forward Operating Bases (p. 3) Provides additional investigators to ICE to investigate smuggling (p. 3) Provides additional agents to DEA and ATF for the Southwest Border Initiative (pp. 3-4) Creates a bipartisan commission tasked with investigating the state of security on the southern and northern borders and issuing recommendations to ensure complete operational control within 12 months. Congress will be required to vote on whether to enact the commission s recommendations (p. 4) Expressly preempts states and municipalities from enacting their own rules and penalties relating to immigration (p. 4) Directs DHS, DOI, and DOA to work together to protect our borders while preserving our national parks and wildlife sanctuaries (p. 4) Provides grants to municipalities and counties to mitigate the impact of illegal [aliens] crossing the border and assist them in transporting [them] to law enforcement authorities (p. 4) Provides that northern border cities will be treated just like southern border cities and will be reimbursed for handling case dispositions of criminal cases that are federally initiated but federally declined or referred (pp. 4-5) Establishes a Border Communities Liaison Office responsible for reaching out to border town residents and creating a standardized complaint process for addressing complaints regarding the operations of CBP (p. 5) Allows communities to create alternatives to detention (p. 5) Creates custody standards providing minimum standards of care for all Border Patrol stations, holding cells, checkpoints, and short-term custody officials (p. 5) II. DETECTION, APPREHENSION, AND REMOVAL OF ILLEGAL ALIENS Requires completion of US-VISIT (first passed in 1996) (p. 5) Page 2

Provides DHS will promptly identify, investigate, and initiate removal proceedings against any nonimmigrant who has exceeded his/her authorized stay or otherwise violated the term of his/her visa (p. 6) Requires DHS to check all criminals in federal, state, and local prisons and to deport those here illegally (p. 5) Requires evaluation and monitoring of the Visa Waiver Program to ensure no participating country has a high percentage of visa overstays (p. 5) Provides there will be zero tolerance for illegal entry and reentry into the U.S. (p. 5) Prohibits gang members from entering the U.S. and states that such individuals will be deported when apprehended; further prohibits sex offenders from petitioning to bring in foreign nationals (p.6) Amends federal law to sanction countries that delay or prevent repatriation of their citizens (p. 6) States that the U.S. will have heightened authority to detain dangerous criminals until they can be deported (pp. 6-7) Provides that states will be quickly reimbursed for the costs of incarcerating and transporting aliens (p. 7) Requires all foreign nationals to provide the U.S. with biometric information (p. 7) Sets uniform standards for detention of aliens (p. 7) Increases penalties and sanctions for those who violate immigration laws (p. 7) Gives victims of egregious labor law violations incentives to cooperate with law enforcement to report labor law violations; egregious labor law violators will face civil sanctions and prison sentences (p. 8) Requires agencies participating in 287(g) to collect and maintain records and data necessary to ensure that actions under the agreement comply with federal law (p. 8) Grants refugees and asylees green cards when they receive status (p. 8) Page 3

III. EMPLOYMENT VERIFICATION Requires SSA to begin issuing biometric, secure social security cards 18 months after enactment; cards will contain a photograph and an electronically coded microprocessing chip with a unique biometric identifier for the card-bearer (pp. 8-9) Possession of the biometric social security card will only serve as evidence of work authorization, not proof of citizenship or lawful immigration status (p. 9) Requires DHS and SSA to identify all individuals before issuance (p. 10) Requires employers hiring workers in the future to use the new cards as verification of work authorization through what they call the BELIEVE system; prospective employees will present the card to their employers who will swipe the card through a card-reader to confirm the cardholder s identity and work authorization (p. 11) Extends laws relating to E-Verify during transition; estimates transition time from E-Verify to new cards will be six years (p. 11) Within 5 years of enactment the biometric social security card will be the sole acceptable document for verifying work authorization (p. 12) Preempts all state and local immigration or employment verification laws (p. 15) Creates an Employment Verification Advisory Panel of experts and representatives from affected industries that will advise the government on the implementation, deployment, and security of the BELIEVE system (pp. 15-16) Increases penalties for employers who knowingly hire illegal aliens, hire without verification, etc. Provides a safe harbor for employers who hire or continue to employ illegal workers through a subcontractor, unless the employer knew or recklessly disregarded that the subcontractor hired or continued to employ an unauthorized worker (p. 16) Directs HHS, SSA, and DHS to establish a national birth and death registry (p. 16) Prohibits employers from deducting wages paid to illegal alien workers (p. 17) Provides that BELIEVE system will be paid for by collecting fees and fines (p. 17) Page 4

IV. LEGAL IMMIGRATION Makes green cards immediately available to foreign students with advanced degrees from U.S. universities in science, technology, engineering, or math and who have offers of employment from a U.S. employer in a field related to their degree (p. 18) Eliminates the per country employment-immigration cap (p. 18) Adds fraud and abuse protections for the H-1B program (p. 18) Adds new limitations on the L-1 program (p. 19) Adds protections to the H-2B program. Provides that returning H-2B workers will not count against the cap in any year the national unemployment rate is at or below 8 percent. Even if the national unemployment rate is above 8 percent, an employer may import an H-2B worker if the metropolitan statistical area where the labor is to be performed has an unemployment rate below 6 percent (p. 20) Creates a new, H-2C guest worker program for unskilled workers. The visa shall last for three years and may be renewed once. H-2C workers are eligible to get green cards if they meet sufficient integration metrics to demonstrate they have successfully become part of the U.S. economy and society. Allows a qualified U.S. worker who is displaced by an H-2C worker or who applies for a job filled by an H-2C worker to have redress for being unlawfully displaced. There is no mention of whether an alien has to apply for the H-2C visa outside the U.S. or is eligible if illegally in the U.S. (pp. 20-21) Creates a commission on employment-based immigration. The Commission shall recommend policies that promote economic growth and competitiveness while minimizing job displacement, wage depression and unauthorized employment. The Commission shall have the power to declare an immigration emergency meaning a situation in which our employment-based system is either substantially failing to admit a sufficient number of workers for the needs of the economy or is substantially admitting too many foreign workers. If the Commission declares an emergency, it shall recommend changes in the employment-based system. Congress shall then vote to approve or disapprove of those recommendations. (pp. 21-22) Allows same-sex partners of citizens and LPRs to obtain green cards (p. 22) Authorizes the recapture of immigrant visas (if like existing legislative proposals, would consist of over 500,000 green cards) (p. 22) Page 5

Classifies spouses and children of LPRs as immediate relatives (p. 22) Increases the per country cap for family-based visas from 7 to 10 percent (p. 22) V. AMNESTY OR BROAD-BASED REGISTRATION PROGRAM Grants amnesty in two phases. Phase 1: Lawful Prospective Immigrant status Requires illegal aliens to register, get fingerprinted, be screened Allows these individuals to work in the U.S. and travel outside the U.S. Allows aliens to bring in spouses and minor children from outside the U.S. (pp. 23-24) To be eligible, an alien must: Complete an application, which includes biometric information; Pass security and criminal history checks; Pay all applicable fees, civil penalties and taxes; and Have been continuously present in the U.S. since the date of enactment (p. 25) Unlike S.1639, there is no requirement that applicants be gainfully employed. Aliens will be ineligible if they: Have been convicted of any felony offense under federal or state law; Have been convicted of three or more misdemeanors; Are currently legal; or Have entered illegally since the date of introduction (p. 25) Phase 2: Lawful Permanent Resident status LPIs are eligible to become LPRs after 8 years. To become an LPR, an LPI must meet criteria related to : Basic citizenship skills; English language skills; Continuous residence in the U.S.; Updated criminal history and security checks; Payment of all federal income taxes, fees, and civil penalties; and Registration for selective service (p. 25) Again, there appears to be no employment requirement. Page 6

AgJOBS is included (no mention of which version). The DREAM Act is included (no mention of which version). VI. MISCELLANEOUS Makes the R-1 Religious Worker Visa Program permanent (p. 26) Makes the Conrad 30 J-1 Visa Program permanent (p. 26) Makes H-1B and J-1 visas more easily obtainable by foreign doctors, who will also be given an easier path to citizenship (p. 26) Creates E-3 visas for the Irish (p. 26) Allows fashion models to enter the U.S. on an O or P visa instead of an H-1B visa (p. 26) Allows admission of foreign nurses and physical therapists to alleviate shortages in these occupations (p. 26) Makes technical fixes to the EB-5 program (p. 26) Page 7