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By John Vinson, Editor AIC January 2007 Congress very soon will consider amnesty/guest worker legislation. Once introduced, the Bush Administration and Democratic leaders in Congress will attempt to pass such a measure as quickly as possible. Even if this kind of legislation were desirable - and it isn't - its promoters are totally irresponsible in rushing it to passage. The reason is that the agency that would administer these programs, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, is overwhelmed with existing work and simply could not handle the demands of processing amnesty applications and overseeing guest workers.
The agency itself admits its limitations. For documentation, see The Washington Post article Immigrant Processors Fall Behind — System Overwhelmed Even Without 'Amnesty,' Guest Workers by Spencer S. Hsu, January 4, 2007; A03. The following are excerpts from that article:
Another problem is that the agency is ill-equipped to deal with fraud by those who apply for its services, according to the Government Accountability Office (GAO). As The Washington Times reported (Article: Immigration agency falters in handling fraud cases by Stephen Dinan, March 6, 2006)
Further compounding difficulties, the article continued, is corruption within the agency itself.
Thus, when we hear congressmen claiming that amnesty and guest worker applicants will face tight screening and other requirements, we must ask, who will do it? Certainly not the USCIS as it now operates. Thus we must conclude that these politicians are either very ignorant, or very dishonest.
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