Plus, the use of temporary visas by human traffickers
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Solutions for Ending the Border Crisis and Creating an Effective Process for Removals from the Interior ([link removed])
Plus, the use of temporary visas by human traffickers
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Washington, D.C. (August 12, 2022) – More than a million migrants have been apprehended and released into the United States under the Biden administration. If got-aways - migrants who successfully evaded Border Patrol – and unaccompanied minors are added, the total is nearly two million. In today’s episode of Parsing Immigration Policy ([link removed]) , experts discuss solutions to ending the border crisis and executing an effective interior enforcement plan.
Dan Vara ([link removed]) , a former District/Chief Legal Counsel for the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Miami Division and a Center board member, shares his experiences with past operations that successfully dealt with mass migration situations, including the record breaking mass exodus of Nicaraguans to the United States in 1988 and 1989.
Vara describes how career personnel created the enforcement processes that then filtered up to the top for approval. The keys were detention, judges and attorneys detailed to the border, quick decisions on asylum applications, and corresponding quick deportations. Are Border Patrol, Customs and Border Protection, and ICE officers’ ideas filtering up for consideration today? “Immigration is politics and politics is immigration”, says Vara. Today, “voices in the field are being stifled.”
The Biden administration is not interested in interrupting the flow, but rather more interested in accommodating and managing it. Eventually there will be the opportunity to return to the fundamentals – detention for those claiming asylum and more detention for those in the country illegally. Vara describes specific changes that would make removals easier, including providing free legal counsel for migrants claiming asylum, suggesting that would expedite cases and would reduce backlogs as counsel would be held liable for fraudulent cases and thus fewer cases would come before a judge.
In the closing commentary, Jessica Vaughan, the Center’s director of policy studies and the host of today’s episode of Parsing Immigration Policy ([link removed]) , highlights the fallacy advanced by many on the left – more legal immigration employment opportunities would solve the illegal immigration problem. She highlights a recent human trafficking case uncovered by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution ([link removed]) that occurred in the state of Georgia where a bait and switch employment scam brought Mexican engineers to the U.S. using the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) professional workers (TN) temporary worker visa. But the high skilled work required by the visa was non-existent; the engineers were placed in hard labor manual jobs. Vaughan explained this case is just the tip of the iceberg - fraud
within the various temporary work visa programs have made them easy targets for trafficking.
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