USCIS Cancels Furlough of Nearly 70% of Workforce

US Citizenship & Immigration Services (USCIS) this week announced that the agency will cancel an administrative furlough of more than 13,000 employees that was scheduled to begin August 30. In a statement, USCIS said that they expect to be able to maintain operations through the end of fiscal year 2020 (on September 30), although Joseph Edlow, USCIS Deputy Director for Policy, noted that “averting this furlough comes at a severe operational cost that will increase backlogs and wait times across the board, with no guarantee we can avoid future furloughs.” He added: “A return to normal operating procedures requires congressional intervention to sustain the agency through fiscal year 2021.”

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Forbes: “Congress Asks USCIS To Explain Immigration Delays And Denials.”

Congress raised concerns about the rising delays and unjustified denials of various visa types at the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS), during a House Judiciary Committee oversight hearing on July 16, 2019. Representative Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), chair of the House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Immigration and Citizenship, specifically highlighted inefficiencies regarding changes in processing, noting their impact on students experiencing significant delays for Optical Practical Training (OPT). 

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The New York Times: “Trump Declares National Emergency to Build Border Wall”

President Trump declared a national emergency at the border this morning to access billions of dollars to build a border wall that Congress refused to give him, claiming that the nation faces an “invasion of drugs and criminals coming into our country.” The emergency declaration, issued after the spending package passed by Congress included none of his requested $5.7 billion for 234 miles of steel wall but instead only provided $1.375 billion for about fifty-five miles of fencing, will enable President Trump to divert $3.6 billion budgeted for military construction projects to the border wall. Those funds, along with the presidential budgetary discretion to draw $2.5 billion from counternarcotics programs and $600 million from a Treasury Department asset forfeiture fund and the $1.375 billion authorized for fencing, would total about $8 billion in all for construction of new barriers and repairs or replacement of existing barriers on the US/Mexico border.

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Vox: "March 5 is supposed to be the DACA 'deadline.' Here’s what that means for immigrants."

Last September, President Trump announced the termination of the Obama administration’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program and gave March 5, 2018, as the deadline for Congress to find a legislative solution for the approximately 700,000 DACA recipients. This March 5 deadline arrived this week just after the Supreme Court declined to hear the administration’s appeal of a federal judge's injunction that halted Trump's decision to terminate the DACA program. Currently, because of the recent court injunctions and the actions of the Supreme Court and despite the March 5 deadline, USCIS is accepting DACA renewals only and operating the DACA program on the “terms in place before it was rescinded on Sept. 5, 2017, until further notice.”

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USCIS: “Deadline to Submit DACA Renewal Requests Approaching On Oct. 5”

US Citizenship & Immigration Services (USCIS) issued a statement reminding eligible Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) recipients that the deadline to file DACA renewal requests and employment authorization applications is October 5, 2017. This deadline comes in response to President Trump’s decision to end the Obama administration’s DACA program, which has protected approximately 800,000 young immigrants who were brought to the US as children and who hold no legal status. DACA also provided these individuals with work authorization. In a memorandum on September 5, 2017, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced that they would begin to wind down the program until it officially expires on March 5, 2018. After the DACA program expires, it is unknown what will happen to those who were granted deferred action. The Trump administration has repeatedly stated that in the meantime it is up to Congress to develop a solution. The Trump administration would support legislation allowing DACA recipients to obtain lawful permanent status and eventually citizenship, according to testimony by a DHS official to Congress earlier today.

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NY Times: "The Great ‘Sanctuary City’ Slander"

San Francisco / Protima Daryanani

San Francisco / Protima Daryanani

The US Senate is set to vote today on a controversial bill sponsored by David Vitter of Louisiana to punish so-called “Sanctuary Cities” by denying them federal law enforcement funds. The bill—a version of which passed the House in July—came about after the tragic death of Californian Kathryn Steinle who was shot in San Francisco by an undocumented immigrant with prior drug convictions who had been deported previously.  

“Sanctuary cities and the associated violent crimes by illegal immigrants are reaching a critical point, and we cannot wait any longer to take action to protect Americans here at home,” said Vitter in a press release. “There is simply no incentive for these localities to enforce current immigration laws, and my legislation will make sure sanctuary cities are no longer rewarded for their failures to uphold the law.”

Not everyone agrees with this assessment. The New York Times editorial board says the bill scapegoats eleven million immigrants based on the actions of a few and is based on the lie “that all unauthorized immigrants are dangerous criminals who must be subdued by extraordinary means.”

What Are ‘Sanctuary Cities?’

The American Immigration Council, whose mission is to shape a rational conversation on immigration and immigrant integration, explains that the phrase comes from the “church-centered” movement in the 1980s when many Central American refugees fleeing civil wars were denied asylum. Religious institutions banded together to oppose the return of the refugees to where they had been persecuted and this became known as the “Sanctuary Movement.”

The American Immigration Council points out that the term “sanctuary city” is a “misnomer when used to describe community policing policies which attempt to eliminate fear from those who worry that reporting a crime or interacting with local law enforcement could result in deportation.”

“Sanctuary cities” do not ensure that immigrants in those communities are insulated from any immigration enforcement action against them; their residents are still subject to federal enforcement actions and in fact, many “sanctuary cities” have enacted community policing policies to ensure that immigrant communities interact with the police and that law enforcement officers do not detain persons they have no legal authority to hold. Many sanctuary city policies came about after the Obama-instituted “Secure Communities,” which shared information between state and local law enforcement and federal authorities, and “shattered trust” between immigrant populations and law enforcement agencies.

Tom Manger, Chief of Police for Montgomery County and President of the Major Cities Chiefs Association, explains

To do our job we must have the trust and respect of the communities we serve. We fail if the public fears their police and will not come forward when we need them. Whether we seek to stop child predators, drug dealers, rapists or robbers—we need the full cooperation of victims and witness. Cooperation is not forthcoming from persons who see their police as immigration agents. When immigrants come to view their local police and sheriffs with distrust because they fear deportation, it creates conditions that encourage criminals to prey upon victims and witnesses alike.

What Does the Bill Do? 

The Stop Sanctuary Policies and Protect Americans Act proposes to withhold certain funds and grants from “sanctuary jurisdictions” and require that these funds are re-allocated to other jurisdictions that allow local law enforcement to cooperate with federal policies, among other things, and includes “Kate’s Law,” which establishes a mandatory minimum sentence of five years for undocumented immigrants who are convicted of re-entering the US after being convicted of an aggravated felony or being convicted of having illegally re-entered the US twice prior.

While co-sponsor Pat Toomey calls the bill “commonsense legislation” to protect Americans, the New York Times argues that “sanctuary city” policies perform an important function by ensuring that law-abiding immigrants don’t fear and shun the police, and allowing them to be a productive part of the community in which they reside. “The answer to an immigrant population in the shadows is — as it has been throughout our history — integration and welcome instead of scapegoating and oppression,” the New York Times states. “And leaving local law enforcement free to focus on catching criminals and protecting public safety.