Wednesday, May 20, 2009
CONTACT:
George Tzamaras
202-507-7649
gtzamaras@aila.org
Sens. Menendez, Gillibrand, Kennedy and Schumer introduce "The Reuniting
Families Act" in the Senate
Judiciary Immigration Subcommittee holds its second Hearing "Securing the
Borders and America's Points of Entry, What Remains to Be Done"
The Police Foundation releases a report titled "The Role of Local Police:
Striking a
Balance Between Immigration Enforcement and Civil Liberties"
The National Foundation for American Policy releases two studies today: "Common
Sense and Common Interests" and "A Commission to Regulate Immigration?
A Bad Idea Whose Time Should Not Come"
White House announces meeting on immigration reform with Congressional leaders
for June 8
WASHINGTON, DC - The American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA) welcomes
several developments today that signal that immigration reform is gaining momentum!
AILA commends US Senators Robert Menendez (D-NJ), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY),
Edward Kennedy (D-MA) and Charles Schumer (D-NY) for introducing legislation
today that seeks to restore America's commitment to family unity. The Reuniting
Families Act would help legal immigrants reunite with their families and end
decade-long waiting times for legal immigrant visas. "This is momentous
day for all Americans who understand the dire need for immigration," said
Charles H. Kuck, president of AILA. "This important legislation promotes
timely reunification of families by recapturing unused visas and eliminating
the tragically long family immigration backlogs."
The legislation would reinforce our commitment to families and reduce current
wait times in the family immigration system by:
Helping an estimated 322,000 spouses and children under the age of 21 of lawful
permanent residents who are waiting in line to reunite with their families by
reclassifying them as immediate relatives
Addressing the decades-long backlogs for certain countries by raising the per-country
immigration limits from 7 percent to 10 percent of total admissions
Protecting widows, widowers and orphans by allowing them to continue to wait
in line for a visa after the death of the sponsoring relative.
Recapturing an estimated 400,000 family-sponsored and employment-based visas
that went unused between 1992 and 2007.
Respecting the contribution of Filipino World War II veterans by reducing their
children's waiting times for an immigrant visa.
Promoting family unity by allowing more people who are already eligible for
an immigrant visa to efficiently use our legal family immigration system.
Providing equal treatment for stepchildren and biological children by allowing
stepchildren under the age of 21 to immigrate upon their parents' marriage (current
age limit is 18).
In addition to this important legislation, the Senate Judiciary Immigration
Subcommittee today launched an aggressive effort to press for passage of comprehensive
immigration legislation, with Subcommittee Chairman Charles Schumer, D-NY, saying
conditions are ripe for Congressional action. Schumer also announced an agenda
of hearings for the coming months and said he is "cautiously optimistic
that we can pass strong, fair, practical and effective immigration reform this
year."
Further, a report released today by the nonpartisan Police Foundation criticized
efforts to have local law enforcement agencies enforce federal immigration laws.
The group said the report "finds that immigration enforcement by local
police undermines their core public safety mission, diverts scarce resources,
increases their exposure to liability and litigation, and exacerbates fear in
communities already distrustful of police."
Also, the National Foundation of American Policy released two studies earlier
today. One study titled, "Common Sense, Common Interests," recommends
combining fully portable work permits - not tied to a specific employer - with
bilateral administrative agreements.
The second study, "A Commission to Regulate Immigration? A Bad Idea Whose
Time Should Not Come," concludes that creating a commission to establish
the annual level of temporary visas and green cards for high and low-skilled
workers would result in unaccountable officials with the enormous power to change
the law based on little more than their personal preference.
And finally, the White House today announced that it will hold a high-level
meeting with Congressional leaders on June 8th to discuss plans for immigration
reform.
These important developments all keep the momentum building towards an immigration
overhaul that is desperately needed by our country. AILA pledges itself to working
closely with Congress and the Administration to make sure that immigration reform
moves forward to a successful conclusion in the months ahead!