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- CHICAGO TRIBUNE (Editorial):
- Immigration 2.0
- April 1, 2007
Last year’s immigration debate started on a sour note and stayed shrill to
the end. Republicans in the U.S. House -- furious that 12 million people
had settled here illegally with the tacit approval of those who were
supposed to keep them out -- attacked the problem with a punitive bill
designed to round ‘em up, toss ‘em out and lock down the border.
Immigrants responded with a display of public activism that inflamed some
people and inspired others. Yes, we're lawbreakers, they said, but try to
live without us. The Senate's watered-down attempt to find middle ground
was DOA in the House. All that noise for nothing.
It's time to take a deep breath and start over.
Reps. Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.) and Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) have crafted a bill
designed to supply the country with the workers it needs, backed up by a
system that doesn't tolerate -- much less invite -- abuse. The bill would
increase enforcement at the border and in the workplace, adding customs
inspectors and border patrol agents and stiffening penalties for illegal
workers and those who hire them. It would create a program to admit
400,000 guest workers a year and provide a path to citizenship for those
already working here.
Late last week, the White House and Senate Republicans were circulating
sketchy details of their own new plan. It would shift emphasis in granting
visas to favor prospective new workers over family members seeking to join
immigrants already here. That faces heady resistance from Democrats, who
would add more visas rather than sacrifice family reunification.
The root of the immigration problem is the dumbfounding disconnect between
the number of workers our economy regularly absorbs and the number the
government admits legally. In 2005, only about 5,000 visas were issued for
low-skill jobs, but nearly half a million people slipped in and found work
without them.
But the law is the law, and many Americans find the idea of legalizing
those workers especially distasteful. The Flake-Gutierrez bill would not
give them a free pass. They would have to register for "conditional
non-immigrant status," pass background checks and pay $2,000 in fines.
After six years -- during which they must pay taxes, remain employed and
learn English -- they'd go to the end of the line to wait for legal
residency and eventual citizenship. Before they could apply, they'd have
to exit the country and re-enter legally, a largely symbolic gesture but
an important one because it would place them, finally, on the right side
of the law.
Those who chose not to take those steps would find it much harder to stay.
The bill gives employers a new pool of legal workers, an electronic system
for verifying their immigration status and tougher penalties for hiring
illegal immigrants.
Gutierrez and Flake envision a system under which it is possible to
operate legally -- and risky not to. The White House plan, while less
generous, seems to have the same goals. Another loud debate is sure to
follow.
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this
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