USCIS Accomplishment
Fact Sheet 2008
Fact Sheet
Nov. 6, 2008
USCIS MAKES MAJOR STRIDES DURING 2008
Application processing, transformation, FBI name checks, all part of agency
enhancements
At U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), fiscal year 2008 brought
unprecedented progress towards reducing naturalization processing times,
improving refugee and asylum processing, increasing adjudications officer hiring
and training, and reducing the backlog of FBI name checks.
USCIS has reduced processing times for
applications and petitions thanks in large part to the increase of trained
adjudications officers hired as a result of the implementation of last year’s
new fee structure. USCIS surpassed annual targets for completed asylum
applications and supported the highest level of refugee admissions in the last
seven fiscal years. The agency worked closely with the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) to reduce name checks pending for more than one year and is
on track to eliminate by early next year those pending more than six months.
Processing Times for Naturalization
Applications
During FY08, USCIS completed an unprecedented
1,171,140 naturalization applications, an increase of more than 422,000
processed applications a year earlier. Production for FY08 increased by 56
percent over FY2007, and surpassed original naturalization projections by
233,140 applications.
USCIS continues to make steady progress in
reducing the number of pending naturalization applications received during
FY07. The processing of naturalization applications is currently averaging 9-10
months, down from the 16-18 months projected after the surge of applications in
late FY07. The agency will reduce processing times to five months by the end of
FY09.
Hiring and Training
USCIS has made tremendous progress in hiring new
employees, particularly adjudications officers, who have directly contributed to
reducing the agency’s pending caseload.
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USCIS hired 2,058 employees, a 24 percent increase of the USCIS workforce
from FY07.
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1,600 of USCIS’ new employees have become adjudications officers.
Throughout the year, hundreds of USCIS employees
have conducted naturalization interviews on weekends, after normal business
hours and traveled to additional locations to further reduce processing times.
USCIS designed an extensive training program and
course curricula at the USCIS Training Academy to be both flexible and adaptable
to the training and educational needs of USCIS employees. The Academy also
placed an unprecedented number of newly-hired adjudications officers through a
restructured BASIC training program that allows officers to exit the academy
‘job-ready’, thus making an immediate impact on pending caseloads.
The personnel enhancements allow USCIS to more
efficiently process applications, provide better customer service, and improve
security against fraud and possible threats to our homeland.
FBI Name Checks
During FY08, USCIS worked with the FBI to
effectively eliminate all pending name checks more than two years old and
reduced the number of cases waiting for a name check final result from almost
350,000 in late FY07 to less than 37,000. The FBI is on target to eliminate all
name checks pending more than six months by early 2009.
Refugee and Asylum Processing
During FY08, the USCIS Refugee Affairs Division,
in coordination with USCIS overseas district offices, deployed officers to 71
countries to interview more than 100,000 refugee applicants from 59 nations.
These efforts supported the admission of more than 60,000 refugees from around
the world, a 25 percent increase in refugee admissions compared to FY07, and the
highest level of admissions since FY01.
Since the large-scale Iraqi refugee processing
was announced in February 2007, the Departments of Homeland Security and State
have worked cooperatively to increase the number of Iraqi refugees admitted as
part of the worldwide commitment. DHS and DOS have streamlined the process for
admitting Iraqi refugees to the United States and share responsibility for
initiating security checks of Iraqi refugee applicants. During FY08, the
Refugee Affairs Division deployed more than 150 officers in the Middle East to
interview more than 23,000 Iraqi refugee applicants. As a result of these
efforts, more than 13,800 Iraqi refugees were admitted during FY08, exceeding
the Administration’s goal of 12,000 admissions and establishing a robust
pipeline of approved Iraqi refugee applicants for admission in FY09.
USCIS’ Asylum Division
completed more than 47,000 asylum applications (120 percent of the division’s
annual target). This reduced the total end of the year pending applications to
a historically unprecedented level.
E-Verify
Free, safe, secure and simple to use, E-Verify is
the best means available for determining employment eligibility of new hires and
the validity of their Social Security Numbers. The program provides
participating employers an automated Internet-based resource to verify the
employment eligibility of newly hired employees. Through this process, E-Verify
assists employers in maintaining a legal workforce and protects jobs for
authorized U.S. workers.
More than 92,000 employers are currently using
E-Verify to verify that their new hires are authorized to work in the United
States.
- During FY08, approximately
6.6 million employment verification queries were run (as compared to a total
of 3.27 million in all of FY07).
- The Department of Homeland
Security’s FY09 appropriation legislation, signed into law on Sept. 30,
2008, provided $100 million to continue, expand, and improve E-Verify in
FY09.
A recent study conducted by Westat, a social
science research firm which monitors the effect of various changes made to the
E-Verify program, found that between April and June 2008:
- Approximately 96.1 percent
of all cases queried through E-Verify were instantly found to be employment
authorized (this is a substantial improvement from 94.2 percent);
- About 99.6 percent of all
work-authorized employees verified through E-Verify are verified without
receiving a tentative nonconfirmation or having to take any type of
corrective action;
- Erroneous tentative
nonconfirmations (those that were work-authorized but who received a
tentative nonconfirmation) has improved from 0.5% to 0.4%. Ultimately,
these mismatches are successfully resolved; and
- Of all queries received,
final nonconfirmations (meaning not work-authorized) are 3.5 percent; down
from 5.3 percent.
USCIS Transformation
USCIS is committed to making investments which will result in long-term
changes to the agency’s ability to provide better, more timely customer service.
USCIS moves into 2009 with a more aggressive agenda to improve its services to
customers.
- The agency has awarded the
Transformation Solution Architect task order to IBM, a five-year investment
to improve its filing and adjudication system.
- The task order is just one
of the building blocks of USCIS’ overall transformation plan made possible
through the implementation of last year’s new fee structure.
Future contracts that will add more building
blocks to USCIS’ transformation plan include program management office support
and a research and development center contract to assist in administrative and
program oversight.
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