Summary of the unreleased draft legislative framework for comprehensive
immigration reform written by Senate Democrats, April 30, 2010.
Conceptual Proposal for Immigration Reform
I. Achieving Operational Control of America’s
Borders to Prevent Future Illegal Immigration
A. Securing the Border First Before any Action
can be Taken to Change the Status of people in the United States Illegally
Proponents of immigration
reform acknowledge that we need to meet clear and concrete benchmarks before we
can finally ensure that America’s borders are secure and effectively deal with
the millions of illegal immigrants already in the United States. These
benchmarks must be met before action can be taken to adjust the
status of people already in the United States illegally and should include the
following: (1) increased number of Border Patrol officers; (2) increased number
of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents to combat smuggling
operations; 3) increased number of ICE worksite enforcement inspectors and
increased inspection resources; 4) increased number of ICE document fraud
detection officers and improved detection capability; 5) increased number of
personnel to conduct inspections for drugs, contraband, and illegal immigrants
at America’s ports of entry; 6) improved technology, infrastructure, and
resources to assist the Border Patrol and ICE in their missions; 7) increased
resources for prosecution of drug smugglers, human traffickers, and unauthorized
border crossers; and 8) increased immigration court resources to expedite the
removal of unlawfully present individuals.
Subtitle B. Further Fortification of America’s
Border Enforcement Capability
Even after the benchmarks have
been met, further fortifications of our border enforcement capabilities will
still be required. These include substantial increases in the number of border
patrol agents stationed on the southern and northern borders and the number of
officers stationed at America’s ports of entry to conduct inspections for drugs,
contraband and illegal.
The
proposal also recognizes that securing the border between America’s ports of
entry is a necessary but insufficient step to preventing future illegal
immigration. Due to years of insufficient investment in our port-of-entry, far
more contraband and illegal immigrants enter the United States through our
ports-of-entry than between the ports-of-entry. That is why the proposal calls
for construction of additional ports-of-entry and for the hiring of thousands of
new customs and border protection inspectors. These ports-of-entry will also
have enhanced connectivity with all government fingerprint databases to ensure
that criminals are not permitted to enter the United States. We also require the
construction and commencement of operations of additional permanent Border
Patrol Forward Operating Bases.
More must also be done to
ensure that all officers within U.S. Customs and Border Protection have the
tools they need to succeed. These officers will all receive training to: 1)
identify and detect fraudulent travel documents; 2) accomplish border
enforcement without engaging in racial profiling; and 3) address vulnerable
populations such as children and victims of human trafficking. Officers will
also be equipped with high-quality body armor that is appropriate for the
climate and risks faced by each officer. They will also be equipped with
weapons, including non-lethal intermediate force weapons, that are reliable and
effective to protect themselves, their fellow agents, and innocent third parties
from the threats posed in the line of duty.
Other agencies will also be
asked to play a greater role in using their expertise and capabilities to make
America’s borders more secure. Immigration and Customs Enforcement will be given
additional investigators for the specific purpose of investigating alien
smuggling. The Drug Enforcement Administration and the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives will be given more agents for the Southwest
Border Initiative to investigate the cross-
border smuggling of
drugs, firearms, and other contraband between the United States and Mexico. The
proposal also calls for more resources for America’s immigration courts to
expedite the removal of unlawfully present individuals.
C. Other Necessary Reforms
Upon enactment of this
proposal, a bipartisan commission will be created and tasked with investigating
the state of security on the southern and northern borders and issuing
recommendations on additional resources, technology, manpower, and
infrastructure that must be implemented to ensure complete operational control
of the southern and northern borders within 12 months. Congress shall be
required to vote on whether to enact the Commission’s recommendations. Because
the federal government will have fulfilled its obligation to secure America’s
borders, states and municipalities will be prohibited from enacting their own
rules and penalties relating to immigration, which could undermine federal
policies.
This proposal also ensures
that we will secure our borders in a manner that is consistent with America’s
best values and traditions. The Departments of Homeland Security, Interior, and
Agriculture will work together to make sure we are protecting our borders while
at the same time preserving our national parks and our protected wildlife
sanctuaries. We will provide grants to local towns and counties to mitigate the
impact of unauthorized immigrants crossing the border and to assist them in
transferring unauthorized immigrants to law enforcement authorities. Owners of
property near the border will be protected from civil lawsuits for injuries that
took place on their property that were related to the duties of law enforcement
officers seeking to combat drug smuggling and illegal immigration. Indian tribes
that have been adversely affected by illegal immigration will be reimbursed for
law enforcement activities and restoration of areas damaged by illegal
immigration. Northern border cities will be treated just like their southern
border counterparts,
and will be reimbursed for handling case dispositions of criminal cases that are
federally initiated but federally declined-referred.
To ensure that our border
security efforts are not substantially affecting the quality of life and
economic viability of the cities near our borders, the proposal establishes a
Border Communities Liaison Office that will be responsible for conducting
outreach to residents of border towns and a standardized complaint process for
addressing complaints from the public related to the operations of U.S. Customs
and Border Protection. Communities will be given the ability to create
alternatives to detention programs to lower the costs of immigration detention
and, if detention is necessary, there will be custody standards providing for
basic minimum standards of care at all Border Patrol stations, holding cells,
checkpoints and short-term custody facilities.
II. Detection, Apprehension, and Removal of
Unlawfully Present Persons in the United States
In addition to increasing
border enforcement, this proposal will substantially enhance our capabilities to
detect, apprehend, and remove persons who entered the United States unlawfully
and persons who entered lawfully on temporary visas but failed to leave the
country when designated. We will complete implementation of an entry-exit system
that permits us to know whether foreign nationals have overstayed their visas
and will permit us to apprehend and expeditiously remove these individuals. This
proposal will equip all ports of entry with the United States-Visitor and
Immigrant Status Indicator Technology (“US-VISIT”) system and will deploy this
system in an interoperable fashion with all immigration screening systems
operated by the Department of Homeland Security.
The
Department of Homeland Security will promptly identify, investigate, and
initiate removal proceedings against every alien admitted into the United States
on a temporary nonimmigrant visa who exceeds his or her period of authorized
admission beyond a specified period or otherwise violates any terms of the
alien's nonimmigrant status. All criminals in federal, state, and local prisons
will be checked for lawful immigration status and will be deported if they are
here illegally. The Visa Waiver Program (“VWP”) will be evaluated and monitored
to ensure that no country on this program has a high percentage of visa
overstays. Countries whose nationals frequently overstay their visas will be
removed from the VWP until such time as they implement accountability systems to
ensure compliance from their nationals.
Additional measures will also
be critical to combat future illegal immigration. There will be zero tolerance
for illegal entry and reentry into the United States. Gang members will be
prohibited from entering the United States and will be deported when
apprehended. In order to combat human trafficking, convicted sex offenders will
be prohibited from petitioning to bring foreign nationals to the United States.
DHS will have greater authority to seize boats and other vessels used to traffic
drugs, guns, and human beings and to subject these vessels to forfeiture.
Noncitizens in removal proceedings will be required to inform the United States
government of their location at all times. Laws will be amended to encourage
individuals here illegally to depart voluntarily. New crimes will be created for
the trafficking and misuse of passports and increased penalties and prison
sentences will be levied upon persons who sell or use false documents. Fraud and
misrepresentation in the context of immigration proceedings will be punished.
To ensure the removal of
dangerous individuals, laws will be amended to sanction countries that delay or
prevent repatriation of their citizens and the U.S. Government will have
heightened authority
to detain dangerous criminals until they can be deported. States will be quickly
reimbursed for the costs of incarcerating and transporting aliens. All foreign
nationals will be required to provide the United States government with
biometric information, and will be refused admission or deported for
non-compliance. Carriers will be required to provide advanced delivery of
passenger manifests to the U.S. government, to ensure that dangerous individuals
are not permitted to travel to the United States.
When aliens must be detained
by the United States government to ensure their appearance in Court, or to
ensure their removal, uniform standards will govern their detention. The
Department of Homeland Security will be required to file a charging document
with the immigration court closest to the location at which an alien was
apprehended within 48 hours of the alien being taken into custody by the
Department. If an alien is detained, minimum standards for detention will be
enacted for both government and privately-owned detention facilities to ensure
that these facilities are in compliance with standards recommended by leading
experts. In addition, no detainee shall be transferred from his/her area of
apprehension until arrangements have been made for the detainee’s children, and
the government has given due consideration to the best interest of the child in
decisions concerning detention, release or transfer of a parent.
Penalties and sanctions will
also be increased for violators of immigration law. There will be substantial
increases in fines and prison sentences for individuals who: a) evade border
checkpoints; b) fail to obey the lawful commands of border officials; c) engage
in human smuggling; d) use vessels and aircraft to smuggle aliens; e) sell
firearms to illegal immigrants; f) engage in money laundering or use stored
value cards and E-Currencies to fund illegal trafficking activities; and g)
willfully fail to comply with conditions placed upon them if they are on
supervised release programs.
There will also be penalties to ensure that unscrupulous employers are not
permitted to exploit unauthorized labor. Victims of egregious labor violations
will be provided with legal incentives to cooperate with law enforcement to
report labor law violations committed by their employers. Egregious labor law
violators will face civil sanctions and prison sentences.
Existing enforcement laws will
be reformed to become more efficient and effective. The government will require
any state or local entity that participates in the 287(g) program to collect and
maintain such records and data as are reasonably necessary to ensure that
actions under the agreement comply with federal law. Refugees and asylees will
be admitted to become lawful permanent residents when they receive the grant of
refugee or asylee status, so as to reduce inefficiency and unnecessary
duplication in government. The proposal includes new custody options for
refugees and other vulnerable populations. Children seeking asylum will be
afforded necessary protections and certain vulnerable refugee groups will be
permitted to obtain expedited adjudication to minimize the risk of facing
government persecution while awaiting adjudication of refugee status.
III. Ending Illegal Employment through
Biometric Employment Verification
In order to prevent future
waves of illegal immigration, this proposal recognizes that no matter what we do
on the border, our ports of entry, and in the interior, we will not be
completely effective unless we can prevent the hiring, recruitment, or referral
of unauthorized aliens in America’s workplaces. Jobs are what draw illegal
immigrants to the United States.
Not later than 18 months after
the date of enactment of this proposal, the Social Security Administration will
begin issuing biometric social security cards. These cards will be
fraud-resistant, tamper-resistant, wear resistant, and machine-readable social
security cards containing
a photograph and an
electronically coded micro-processing chip which possesses a unique biometric
identifier for the authorized card-bearer.
The card will also possess the
following characteristics: (1) biometric identifiers, in the form of templates,
that definitively tie the individual user to the identity credential; (2)
electronic authentication capability; (3) ability to verify the individual
locally without requiring every employer to access a biometric database; (4)
offline verification capability (eliminating the need for 24-hour,
7-days-per-week online databases); (5) security features that protect the
information stored on the card; (6) privacy protections that allow the user to
control who is able to access the data on the card; (7) compliance with
authentication and biometric standards recognized by domestic and international
standards organizations. The new biometric social security card shall enable the
following outcomes: (1) permit the individual cardholder to control who can
access their information; (2) allow electronic authentication of the credential
to determine work authorization; and (3) possession of scalability of
authentication capability depending on the requirement of the application.
Possession of a fraud-proof
social security card will only serve as evidence of lawful work-authorization
but will in no way be permitted to serve—or shall be required to be shown—as
proof of citizenship or lawful immigration status. It will be unlawful for any
person, corporation; organization local, state, or federal law enforcement
officer; local or state government; or any other entity to require or even ask
an individual cardholder to produce their social security card for any purpose
other than electronic verification of employment eligibility and verification of
identity for Social Security Administration purposes. No personal information
will be stored on the electronic chip contained within the social security card
other than the individual’s name, date of birth, social security number, and
unique biometric identifier.
Under no circumstances will any other information, including medical information
or position-tracking information, be contained within the card.
The Secretary of Homeland
Security shall work with other agencies to secure enrollment locations at sites
operated by the federal government.
Prior to issuing an individual
a new fraud-proof social security card, the Social Security Administration will
be required to verify the individual’s identity and employment eligibility by
asking for production of acceptable documents to be provided by the individual
as proof of identity and employment eligibility. The Secretary of Homeland
Security will work with the Commissioner of the Social Security Administration
to verify non-citizens’ employment authorization. SSA will also be required to
engage in background screening verification techniques currently used by private
corporations that use publicly available information that can be derived from
the individual’s social security number. An administrative adjudication process
can be invoked in the event that an individual is unable to establish his or her
identity or lawful immigration status. Adverse decisions can be reviewed in the
federal courts. There will be a multi-stage process of re-verification if an
individual claims he lost his previously issued fraud-proof social security card
to ensure that there is no identity-theft or unlawful collaboration of identity.
There will also be a multi-stage process for resolution of proper identity if an
individual claims an identity tied to a social security number that has been
claimed by another individual. Tough penalties will be put in place for fraud in
procurement of a fraud-proof social security card. The same penalties shall
apply for conspiracy to commit fraud if false information is intentionally
provided.
Employers hiring workers in the future will be required to use the newly created
Biometric Enrollment, Locally-stored Information, and Electronic Verification of
Employment (BELIEVE) System as a means of verification. There will be strict
employer penalties for failure to participate in the BELIEVE system after being
notified of a requirement to do so by the Secretary of Homeland Security or
after the BELIEVE system has been fully implemented nationwide such that it is
required to be used by all employers. Prospective employees will present a
machine-readable, fraud proof, biometric Social Security card to their
employers, who will swipe the cards through a card-reader to confirm the
cardholder’s identity and work authorization. The cardholder’s work
authorization will be verified by matching a digital encryption key contained
within the card to a digital encryption key contained within the work
authorization database being searched. The cardholder’s identity will be
verified by matching the biometric identifier stored within the micro-processing
chip on the card to the identifier provided by the cardholder that shall be read
by the scanner used by the employer.
During the transition period
from the current employment verification system to the BELIEVE System, all
current employment verification laws applying to employers, including all laws
currently pertaining to E-Verify, will be extended until such time as a
particular employer is notified of a requirement to verify their employees using
the BELIEVE system or until after the BELIEVE system has been implemented
nationwide such that it is required to be used by all employers. When the
BELIEVE system is deployed nationwide current employment verification laws will
sunset. This date is estimated to occur six (6) years after the date of
enactment.
Employers will be permitted to
voluntarily verify their employees by using the BELIEVE system, even if it is
before the date they are required by law to use the system. DHS shall require
expedited participation in the BELIEVE system for certain employers who: (1) are
in an industry
which the Secretary
knows or has reason to believe has a high rate of employment of aliens who are
not authorized for employment in the United States; (2) have access to locations
or information directly related to national security; or (3) who have engaged in
material violations of the law. DHS will provide ample notice to those employers
required to participate on an expedited basis and will provide clear guidance to
employers as to the process for informing employees of the need to obtain a new
social security card and the process for enrolling in the BELIEVE system. DHS
will provide a reasonable time period for employers to verify that all employees
have been confirmed as authorized for employment by the BELIEVE system. The
federal government will be required to use the BELIEVE system as the sole
employment verification system within three (3) years after the date of
enactment and federal contractors will be required to use the BELIEVE system
within four (4) years after the date of enactment.
Within five (5) years of the
date of enactment, the fraud-proof social security card will serve as the sole
acceptable document to be produced by an employee to an employer for employment
verification purposes. This requirement will exist even if the employer does not
yet possess the capability to electronically verify the employee by scanning the
card through a card reader. In that circumstance, the employer’s sole
responsibility shall be to obtain a photocopy of both sides of the card and
maintain that document for inspection by the Secretary. But all businesses will
be required to possess electronic scanning capability within six (6) years after
the date of enactment. If a business is unwilling or unable to scan an employee
on its own, government-certified, private sector providers will be permitted to
conduct verification of an employer’s employees. All private sector providers
will be required to post a $150,000 financial bond to the Secretary as a
requirement for certification. There will be annual auditing and undercover
investigations of private sector providers to ensure that they are operating as
required
by law. For businesses
that do not want to use a private provider, DHS and SSA shall promulgate
regulations authorizing the use of United States Post Offices or other local
government offices as locations where individuals may be verified for employment
eligibility.
The following procedures will
govern the employment verification process for a particular worker. Employers
will swipe the biometric society security card through a card reader for all new
hires no sooner than the date of hire and no later than the third business day
after the employee has reported for duty, or no later than the first day
following recruitment for employment or any time an employee requests to provide
self-verification. The BELIEVE system will respond to each inquiry as soon as
possible but no later than 24 hours after receiving the inquiry. Employers will
notify the employee of the response within 24 hours of receiving the system
response. If there is a denial, employers will provide employees with a notice,
in written form developed by the Commissioner, which states the reason for the
denial, the right to contest the denial, and contact information for initiating
a contest of the denial. Employees may contest any initial disapproval within 10
days of its receipt. If the system is unable to confirm the employee’s work
authorization, employees will have 30 days to file an administrative review of a
work disapproval under procedures developed by SSA and DHS. They will also have
an opportunity to seek judicial review within 30 days of receiving the final
determination of the administrative review. Employees will be provided lost
wages when a determination is reached that the disapproval was caused by
erroneous system information and not by an act or omission of the employee.
Employees will be provided with a private right of action against the employer
when a determination is reached that the disapproval was caused by an act or
negligence on the part of the employer.
SSA
and DHS will be required to establish procedures to maintain the accuracy and
integrity of the system. Also, a public education campaign and registrant
training will be developed in consultation with the Department of Health and
Human Services and the States –within 6 months before the first date of
registration. Minimum system requirements will be established to ensure
efficiency, accuracy, and privacy. Several of those measures include: a
mechanism for employers to attest to their compliance; audits of employer use of
the system; timely entry and access of all data; a method to correct relevant
data held within the system; secure procedures for individuals to examine their
records, request expedited corrections of errors, and appeal disapprovals;
procedures limiting agency and contractor personnel to enter data; and 24-hour
Internet and telephone help desk.
An annual report will be
submitted to Congress by SSA, no later than 24 months following full
implementation of the BELIEVE System, which provides a certified determination
of the percentage of inquiries that result in an initial or final disapproval
within the applicable timeframe and that were not overturned on appeal. If the
percentage is less than 99 percent the Commissioner must detail the steps being
taken to bring the percentage to 99 percent, with specified timeframes. Further,
the Commissioner must provide an assessment of the privacy and security of the
BELIEVE system and employer compliance with the system’s rules. Only the
absolute minimum amount of data necessary to accomplish employment verification
and detect and prevent employment related identity theft shall be stored in the
database. Storing of biometric data stored in the fraud-proof social security
card in any government database will be prohibited under all circumstances. Any
office, employee, or contractor shall be punished for willfully and knowingly
using information in a manner other than prescribed in the law. SSA will
establish procedures whereby an individual may block and remove a block on the
use of
their Social Security
Card for any employment verification purpose until such time as they unblock
their card.
Protections will be put in
place to prevent misuse of the system. Employers will be prohibited from using
the BELIEVE system to selectively verify a class, level, or category of new
employees and we will allow employers with multiple locations to verify
employees at selected locations without verifying at all locations. Officers,
employees, and contractors will face strict penalties for willfully and
knowingly using information in a manner other than prescribed in the law.
Restitution will be available to victims of a violation of the BELIEVE system,
including those who have suffered a financial loss due to an improper disclosure
of information. Restitution issued to the Commissioner shall be deposited in the
Social Security trust funds. It will be an unfair immigration-related employment
practice to: terminate or to take any adverse employment related action unless
authorized or required to do so by this Act or by the Secretary; screen an
applicant prior to an offer of employment; to use the system on current
employees unless required to do so by the Secretary; or to require an individual
to self-verify unless permitted by the Secretary. There will be substantial
civil monetary penalties for violations of this section.
Employers will be protected
from liability for employment related actions taken with respect to an employee
in response to information provided by the BELIEVE system. SSA in conjunction
with DHS will provide proof of verification via the BELIEVE system to employers
that they can produce to the Secretary to show compliance upon request. In
addition, all state and local immigration or employment verification laws will
be preempted by federal immigration law. There will be an Employment
Verification Advisory Panel consisting of experts and representatives from
affected industries, including human resources, employer and
employee
organizations, and those in the database and biometric technology industries
that will advise the Government on the implementation, deployment, and security
of the BELIEVE System. The Government Accountability Office will also be
required to conduct a study and submit a report every two years following the
date of enactment in order to evaluate the accuracy, efficiency, integrity and
impact of the BELIEVE system.
To make the system air tight,
the proposal substantially increases civil monetary penalties by 300 percent for
violations of knowingly hiring someone not authorized for employment or hiring
without verifying employment eligibility, continuing to employ an unauthorized
alien knowing the alien is or has become unauthorized to work or violating the
anti-discrimination protections related to employment authorization. It also
increases penalties of any person or entity that engages in a pattern or
practice of violations and requires imprisonment for repeat offenders. There
will be mitigation of certain increased penalties for small employers and an
exemption from penalties if the employer proves it was the first of such a
violation and that they acted in good faith. There will also be a safe harbor
for employers who hire or continue to employ unauthorized workers through a
subcontractor, unless the employer knew or recklessly disregarded that the
subcontractor hired or continued to employ an unauthorized worker. Employers
will be able to include in a written contract or subcontract an effective and
enforceable requirement that the contractor or subcontractor adhere to the
immigration laws, including the use of the BELIEVE system.
Enforcement will also be made
more effective by the requirement that the Secretary of Health and Human
Services, Commissioner of Social Security, and Secretary of Homeland Security
establish a national birth and death registration system. The system will ensure
fraud prevention and uniformity for all states. The Department of Defense will
process information
regarding the death of
military personnel and their dependants within one year. The Department of State
will improve registration and notification for births and deaths abroad. States
will be required to retain birth and death data within three years of enactment.
Moreover, employers who hire unauthorized workers will be prohibited from
deducting wages paid to unauthorized workers. Employers will be required to
provide a list of employees whose wages are being deducted and the date in which
their employment eligibility was verified. The Internal Revenue Service will
perform random inspections to determine if employees were verified as claimed by
the employer.
In order to pay for
implementation of the BELIEVE System, funding will be obtained in whole or in
part by collecting the following fees and fines: (1) an employment authorization
fee that will be charged only to non-citizens in order to obtain the biometric
social security card required for employment—under no circumstances will a fee
be charged to United States citizens for obtaining an initial biometric Social
Security Card; (2) an employment authorization system fee to be paid by all
employers who seek to petition for an employment-related immigration benefit for
a non-citizen worker; (3) fees charged to business entities who seek
pre-certification as authorized private employment eligibility screeners under
regulations provided for pursuant to this Act; (4) fines charged to every person
or other entity subject to the Immigration and Nationality Act who fails to
comply with the provisions of this law; and (5) fees charged to U.S. citizens
for obtaining replacement Social Security Cards. This proposal also requires
that neither backpay nor any other monetary remedy for unlawful employment
practices, workplace injuries or other causes of action giving rise to liability
shall be denied to a present or former employee on account of: the employer's or
the employee's failure to comply with the requirements of the policy in
establishing or maintaining the employment relationship; the employee’s
violation of
the provisions of
federal law related to the employment verification system set forth in the
proposal; or the employee’s continuing status as an unauthorized alien both
during and after termination of employment.
IV. Reforming America’s Legal Immigration
System to Maximize American Economic Prosperity
A. High Skilled Immigration
This proposal will reform
America’s high-skilled immigration system to permanently attract the world’s
best and brightest while preventing the loss of American jobs to temporary
foreign labor contractors. At the moment, high-skilled workers are prevented
from emigrating to the Unites States due to restrictive caps on their entry. In
order to accomplish this goal, a green card will be immediately available to
foreign students with an advanced degree from a United States institution of
higher education in a field of science, technology, engineering, or mathematics,
and who possess an offer of employment from a United States employer in a field
related to their degree. Foreign students will be permitted to enter the United
States with immigrant intent if they are a bona fide student so long as they
pursue a full course of study at an institution of higher education in a field
of science, technology, engineering or mathematics. To address the fact that
workers from some countries face unreasonably long backlogs that have no
responsiveness to America’s economic needs, this proposal eliminates the
per-country employment immigration caps.
This proposal also adds fraud
and abuse protections for existing temporary high-skilled work visas. It will
amend current law regarding H-1B employer application requirements to: (1)
revise wage determination requirements; (2) require Internet posting and
description of employment positions; (3) lengthen U.S. worker displacement
protection: (4) apply certain
requirements to all
H-1B employers rather than only to H-1B dependent employers; (5) prohibit
employer advertising that makes a position available only to, or gives priority
to, H-1B nonimmigrants; and (6) limit the number of H-1B and L-1 employees that
an employer of 50 or more workers in the United States may hire. The proposal
also authorizes the Department of Labor (DOL) to: (1) investigate applications
for fraud; and (2) conduct H-1B compliance audits. DOL will also be required to
conduct annual audits of companies with large numbers of H-1B workers and
initiate H-1B employer application investigations. Penalties for employers who
violate the law will be increased.
For L-1 visas, the proposal
prohibits, with a specified waiver by the Secretary of Homeland Security, an
employer from hiring an L-1 nonimmigrant for more than one year who will: (1)
serve in a capacity involving specialized knowledge; and (2) be stationed
primarily at the worksite of an employer other than the petitioning employer.
The proposal also specifies L-1: (1) employer petition requirements for
employment at a new office; (2) wage rates and working conditions; and (3)
employer penalties. DHS will be authorized to initiate investigations of L-1
employers suspected of being non-compliant with the law. DHS shall also report
to Congress regarding the L-1 blanket petition process.
B. Immigration of Lower-Skilled Workers.
This proposal will reform
America’s lower-skilled worker programs to ensure that businesses only obtain
foreign workers when American workers are unavailable. For agricultural workers,
the H-2A program will be reformed to adopt the proposals agreed to by the farm
workers and the growers which are enumerated in the Agricultural Job
Opportunities, Benefits and Security Act (“AgJOBS”), which is a bi-partisan
agreement of interested
stakeholders in the
agricultural industry that has existed since 2003. AgJOBS also addresses the
acute labor needs of the dairy industry.
For non-agricultural seasonal
workers, the H-2B program will be reformed to add critical protections necessary
to eliminate fraud and abuse within the program. The Department of Labor will be
given the authority to impose penalties and seek injunctive relief to assure
employer compliance with the H-2B rules. Aggrieved workers will have a right to
file a civil action against the employer. Employers must notify the Department
of Labor within 30 days of an H-2B employee’s termination and submit to DOL
payroll records showing that the employer paid the required wage, transportation
and other expenses.
Employers using the H-2B
program will also be required to conduct advanced recruiting of U.S. workers
prior to hiring an H-2B worker and will be required to pay higher wages than the
current wages paid, namely, either the wage set forth in a collective bargaining
agreement, or if there is no collective bargaining agreement, higher than: (1)
the wage determination issued under the Davis-Bacon Act; (2) the wage issued
under the Service Contract Act; (3) the median rate of the highest 50% of the
wage data published under the most recently published OES Survey compiled by
BLS; or (4) a wage that is 133% of the minimum wage. Employers will be required
to reimburse H-2B workers for the reasonable transportation costs incurred by
the worker to reach the job site and to return home. Returning workers will not
be counted toward the current H-2B cap in any year the national unemployment
rate is at, or below, 8.0% percent. If unemployment is greater than 8.0%, a
returning worker may still be exempted from the cap if the metropolitan
statistical area where the labor is to be performed is below 6.0%.
This proposal also creates a
provisional visa (H-2C) for non-seasonal, non-agricultural workers to enter the
United States. The visa shall be for three years, and is renewable once for a
total of six years.
Workers in the H-2C program shall be permitted to earn lawful permanent
residence if they meet sufficient integration metrics to demonstrate that they
have successfully become part of the American economy and society. The
provisional visa will be a dual intent visa so there is not a problem with
intending immigrants.
Employees on H-2C visas shall
have portability to change employers after 1 year. The annual cap for H-2C visas
shall be adjusted each year based on unemployment and relevant economic
indicators. If an employer cannot obtain a foreign worker because the annual cap
has been reached, the employer may still obtain the worker by paying an
additional fee to USCIS, a heightened wage to the employee, and by engaging in
additional recruiting to demonstrate the need for the worker. In all cases, no
H-2C worker may be hired before an employer takes affirmative steps to recruit
and hire American workers, including through America’s Job Bank and recruiting
through State Workforce Agencies. H-2C workers shall be entitled to the same
labor protections as American workers and shall have the same causes of action
afforded to American workers. Any qualified American worker who is displaced by
an H-2C worker or who applies for a job that was filled by an H-2C worker shall
have redress for being unlawfully displaced by an H-2C worker.
This proposal also authorizes
the creation of the Commission on Employment-Based Immigration. The Commission
shall have the purpose of studying America’s employment-based immigration system
to recommend policies that promote economic growth and competitiveness while
minimizing job displacement, wage depression and unauthorized employment. Each
year, the Commission shall publish a report to Congress detailing all relevant
economic data surrounding the usage of all of America’s employment-based visas
and green cards and shall issue recommendations.
The
Commission shall have the power to declare an emergency in the immigration
system. An emergency shall consist of a situation in which America’s
employment-based immigration system is either substantially failing to admit a
sufficient number of workers for the needs of the American economy or is
substantially admitting too many foreign workers, leading to significant job
displacement and/or wage depression in the American workforce. If the Commission
declares that an emergency exists, the Commission shall recommend proposed
adjustments in the employment based immigration system to remedy the emergency.
Congress shall then be required to vote on whether to enact the Commission’s
recommendations or to disapprove of enactment of the Commission’s
recommendations.
The proposal will also reform
America’s Green Card system to ensure efficiency and equity in legal immigration
to the United States. It authorizes the recapture of immigrant visas lost to
bureaucratic delay. The family immigration backlog will be cleared over the
course of eight years. After eight years, the current numeric caps on the family
preference categories would remain the same as in current law. Spouses and
children of lawful permanent residents will be classified as “immediate
relatives” to promote the efficient reunification of families. To address the
fact that some countries face unreasonably long backlogs, the per country family
immigration limits will be amended from 7 to 10 percent of total admissions.
The proposal will also address
several remaining technical issues that prevent widows and orphans of U.S.
citizens from obtaining immigration benefits. It will eliminate discrimination
in the immigration laws by permitting permanent partners of United States
citizens and lawful permanent residents to obtain lawful permanent resident
status. The proposal also exempts the children of certain Filipino World War II
veterans from the numerical limitations on immigrant visas. It also provides
protection for children and people with special
humanitarian
considerations. The proposal would address several other technical issues
related to stepchildren and adoptive children.
V. MANDATORY REGISTRATION, ACCEPTANCE OF
RESPONSIBILITY, AND ADMINISTRATION OF PUNISHMENT FOR UNAUTHORIZED ALIENS
PRESENTLY IN THE UNITED STATES
The Department of Homeland
Security estimates that there are approximately 10.8 million people currently in
the United States with no legal status. Accordingly, this proposal not only
includes well-designed statutory provisions that will strengthen future
enforcement, but also includes a broad-based registration program that requires
all illegal immigrants living in the U.S. to come forward to register, be
screened, and, if eligible, complete other requirements to earn legal status,
including paying taxes. These criteria are intended to exclude individuals who
threaten public safety or national security and to ensure that those individuals
taking advantage of the program intend to stay in the U.S., integrate into
society, and become productive, tax-paying members of the community.
In order to register and
screen millions of applicants effectively, the program must be simple and
straightforward to implement. To achieve these goals, this proposal includes a
two-phase process. In Phase 1, eligible applicants, including individuals on
Temporary Protected Status and other statuses designated by the Secretary, will
be registered, fingerprinted, screened, and considered for an interim “Lawful
Prospective Immigrant” (LPI) status that allows them to work and to travel
outside of the United States. In Phase 2, which will take place in eight years
after current visa backlogs have cleared (often referred to as the “back of the
line” provision), LPIs who have fulfilled all additional statutory requirements
will be permitted to petition for adjustment to Lawful Permanent Resident (LPR)
status.
There will be a broad and streamlined registration/application process that is
characterized by rigorous security checks and verification of eligibility. This
approach is designed to achieve two complementary objectives:
1. Encourage maximum
participation in the legalization program. A broad-scope program will serve
to bring the vast majority of illegal immigrants out of the shadows. Streamlined
processing, including rapid collection of fingerprints from applicants leading
to prompt issuance of a biometric-enabled credential to those found eligible for
LPI status, will register the physical presence of those here illegally, record
their identities with the U.S. Government, and ultimately help ensure that those
who are qualified are integrated as accountable, tax-paying members of U.S.
society.
2. Enhance law enforcement
capabilities and protect U.S. national security. Speedy checks of biographic
and biometric information against law enforcement databases will help ensure
that only those applicants who qualify are granted authorization to remain.
Providing eligible applicants with a secure, tamper-resistant credential will
enhance border security and interior enforcement by allowing law enforcement to
more readily identify and remove convicted criminals; national security and
public safety risks; individuals who do not comply with the requirement to
register; and other ineligible applicants.
The intended population for
the program is that portion of the approximately 10.8 million illegal immigrants
currently present in the United States, including minors, who are not
disqualified by criminal convictions or actions that threaten national security.
Spouses and minor children living abroad will be eligible for legalization, once
their resident relative obtains LPI status.
Specifically, to be eligible for initial registration for the
legalization program and interim status as an LPI, each individual must: (1)
complete an application supplying basic biographic and biometric information;
(2) pass terrorism, criminal history, and other security checks; (3) pay all
applicable fees, civil penalties, and taxes; and (4) have been continuously
present in the United States since the date of enactment.
Such persons will not be
eligible for registration if they: (1) have been convicted of any felony offense
under Federal or State law (all offenses punishable with a term of imprisonment
greater than one year), or three or more misdemeanors; (2) have participated in
the persecution of others; (3) are inadmissible under certain provisions of INA
212(a), particularly with regard to national security grounds and criminal
grounds; (4) are currently present in the U.S. in an authorized immigrant or
nonimmigrant status; or (5) have entered illegally after the date of
introduction of the bill.
After eight years, individuals
who have been granted LPI status will be permitted to apply for adjustment of
status to lawful permanent residence (LPR), provided that they can
demonstrate that they meet criteria related to: (1) basic citizenship skills;
(2) English language skills; (3) continuous residence in the U.S.; (4) updated
terrorism, criminal history, and other checks; (5) payment of all federal income
taxes, fees, and civil penalties; and (6) registration for Selective Service.
Administrative and judicial review of adverse decisions in this program will be
available under certain conditions.
In addition, the stand-alone
registration programs provided by the DREAM Act and the AGJOBS legislation will
also be included within this proposal.
VI. REFORMS
DESIGNED TO ENHANCE EFFICIENCY AND EFFECTIVENESS IN AMERICA’S IMMIGRATION SYSTEM
Finally, the proposal also
enacts various technical reforms to enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of
America’s immigration system. A new program will be created to provide visas to
promote property ownership by foreign nationals for the enhancement of America’s
housing market. The R-1 religious worker visa program will be made permanent,
and religious organizations will be able to bring minister more easily. The
Conrad 30 J-1 Visa Program will be made permanent and H-1B and J-1 visas will be
more easily obtainable by foreign doctors, who will also be given an easier path
to lawful permanent residence.
This proposal creates an E-3
visa for nationals of the Republic of Ireland similar to the visa already
provided for nationals of Australia and adjusts current immigration law so that
fashion models can enter the United States on an O-visa or a P-visa rather than
an H-1B visa. It allows for foreign nurses and physical therapists to enter the
United States to alleviate shortages in these areas. Select technical fixes will
be made to the EB-5 program.
The proposal will authorize
the Department of Justice to make grants to State courts to develop and
implement programs to assist individuals with limited English proficiency to
access and understand State court proceedings in which they are a party and will
put in place extensive nationwide immigrant integration programs. It will also
create a Commission on Wartime Treatment of European Americas to review the
United States Government's wartime treatment of European Americans and European
Latin Americans during World War II, and a Commission on Wartime Treatment of
Jewish Refugees to review the United States Government's refusal to allow Jewish
and other refugees fleeing persecution or genocide in Europe entry to the United
States during World War II. |