- President Agrees to Delay of Real
ID Act Requirements
- By Dawn Konet and Julia Gelatt
Migration Policy Institute
-
March 15, 2007
The Bush administration has agreed to give states extra time to develop
the secure driver's licenses required by the Real ID Act of 2005,
according to draft regulations for the license requirements issued March
1.
Under
Real ID, states must ask applicants for new or renewed driver's licenses
to prove their address, date of birth, and legal immigration status with
government-issued documents. States must then verify the validity of the
documents presented to them.
The
proposed regulations would allow states to request an extension until
December 31, 2009, to begin issuing the new IDs, but all Americans would
need to carry compliant licenses by 2013 to access federal buildings or
fly on commercial airlines. The original deadline for implementation was
May 2008.
Several
states have opposed the Real ID requirements, stating that Congress did
not provide money to meet the requirements or enough time to develop the
necessary document databases. Advocacy groups have criticized Real ID,
saying it is an unfunded mandate and resembles a national ID card.
According to the draft regulations, the cost of setting up the system
will be about $14.6 billion to states and about $7.8 billion to
individuals. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) will allow states
to allocate up to 20 percent of Homeland Security Grant Program funds
(money given to states for building and sustaining national preparedness
capabilities) toward implementation of the Real ID requirements.
Read the DHS proposed regulations on Real ID
here.
Read a DHS-created list of questions and answers on
the proposed regulations
here.
Passports Not Required for
Children
The
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) plans to relax passport requirements
for children crossing at land and seaports as part of Western Hemisphere
Travel Initiative (WHTI) requirements that go into effect in 2008.
Under the
new proposal, which is open to public comment, US and Canadian children
ages 15 and younger, with parental consent, will be exempt from the
requirement to carry a passport when traveling by land or sea between the
United States, Canada, Mexico, the Caribbean, and Bermuda.
Instead,
children will be able to enter the United States with a certified copy of
their birth certificate, though a passport will still be required when
traveling by air, in accordance with the initial phase of WHTI.
Children
ages 16 through 18 traveling with school, religious, cultural, or athletic
groups and under adult supervision will also be exempt and permitted to
travel with only a birth certificate.
The new
rules are expected to take effect as early as January 1, 2008, although
recent legislative changes permit a deadline extension until June 2009.
Read the DHS news release
here.
Immigration Reform Stalls in
Congress
Many
members of Congress and immigration analysts were cautiously optimistic
after the 2006 midterm elections, believing the chances for comprehensive
immigration reform would improve greatly under Democratic leadership.
However, it appears the change in leadership has not greatly strengthened
the case for comprehensive reform in the House.
In recent
congressional hearings, Senate committee members continued to voice
support for comprehensive reform, while House committee members reiterated
their support for improved enforcement before considering other issues.
Bipartisan
support for comprehensive reform in the Senate was evident in one recent
Judiciary Committee hearing, aptly titled "Comprehensive Immigration
Reform." Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA), who chairs the immigration
subcommitte and sits on the Judiciary Committee, is expected to introduce
legislation soon, but negotiations between senators are taking longer than
expected.
To avoid
further conflict, Kennedy is considering using the immigration bill the
Judiciary Committee agreed on last year as a starting point, rather than
introducing a revised plan for reform. Meanwhile, a group of GOP senators
began meeting with DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff and Commerce Secretary
Carlos M. Gutierrez in mid-March to develop features of an immigration
reform package that could garner widespread support.
On the
House side, Representative Jeff Flake (R-AZ) is expected to introduce a
version of comprehensive legislation, but as he was stripped of his seat
on the Judiciary Committee (a move he attributed to his willingness to
compromise with Democrats on immigration reform), he will have limited
control of such a bill once it is introduced and referred to committee.
Representative Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), who chairs the House immigration
subcommittee, says that she and other House Democrats are prepared to take
up such a bill if and when one is introduced.
Citizenship Bill Would Stop Proposed Fee Increases
Senator
and presidential candidate Barack Obama (D-IL) introduced legislation in
March that would halt proposed fee increases for immigration services,
including the citizenship application fee.
The
legislation would amend the law so that fees could be used only to cover
costs directly related to application processing. In January, US
Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) proposed fee increases that
would raise the cost for naturalization 80 percent, from $330 to $595 for
adult applicants and from $255 to $460 for children.
Under the
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), USCIS is permitted to charge
application fees to recoup costs for immigration services, as well as to
cover unrelated agency costs.
"We
believe that the fees immigrants pay to have their applications processed
should cover the direct costs of that process," Obama explained, "but it
is neither necessary nor fair for them to cover all of the costs the
agency bears for all applicants." Federal appropriations would be used for
nonrelated costs, according to the bill.
The bill
would also allow citizenship officials to take certain circumstances, such
as age and education level, into consideration in evaluating test
performance.
In
addition, USCIS would be required work with the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) to expedite background checks, in hopes of encouraging
more eligible immigrants to apply for citizenship.
Read the full text of the Citizenship Protection Act
(S. 795)
here.
For more on the proposed fee increases, see theMPI
Fact Sheet on immigration fee increases
Policy Beat in Brief
Preparations for Cuban Migrants.
The US Department of Defense is spending $18 million to prepare the US
Naval Station Guantánamo Bay for a possible flood of migrants from the
Caribbean. While the space would be used to house migrants from any part
of the Caribbean, Cuban President Fidel Castro's illness and the
subsequent transfer of power to his brother have made the preparations
more urgent. In 1994, US officials housed more than 53,000 Cuban and
Haitian migrants in tent cities at Guantánamo. The $18 million would fund
construction of facilities to house about 10,000 migrants, with the
ability to quickly expand capacity if needed.
Read an article about the preparations
here.
GAO on Secure Border Initiative.
Two Government Accountability Office (GAO) reports criticize the
expenditure plan for SBInet, the high-tech border security component of
the Secure Border Initiative. According to GAO, the plan is too vague in
several areas and lacks adequate measurement and accountability controls.
GAO is concerned that these inadequacies, coupled with high costs and
ambitious time frames, could prevent the program from delivering on
promised capabilities and benefits on time and within budget. The reports
further cite that the program does not satisfy certain legislative
conditions and regulatory requirements.
Read more information about SBInet in the
January 2007 Policy Beat.
GAO report:
SBInet Planning and Management Improvements Needed to Control Risks
GAO report:
SBInet Expenditure Plan Needs to Better Support Oversight and
Accountability
Immigration Sweeps.
US immigration enforcement officials and the Internal Revenue Service have
charged the executives of Rosenbaum-Cunningham International, Inc. (RCI),
a janitorial services company used by chain restaurants such as Hard Rock
Café and ESPN Zone, with evading taxes, committing fraud, and harboring
unauthorized immigrants. Immigration officials also arrested 195
unauthorized immigrant workers in 18 states and the District of Columbia
in an overnight raid in February. The executives allegedly failed to pay
$18.6 million in various federal employment taxes between 2001 and 2005.
- Read an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) press release
about the arrests
here.
-
http://www.migrationinformation.org/USfocus/display.cfm?ID=589
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