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Power Member
Picture of Sprint_girl07
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What do other countries do at their borders I wonder? I know these borders are longer but wonder what they use.


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God Bless America - God Bless Immigrants - God Bless Poor Misguided Souls Too Smile
Mr S.U.
 
Posts: 8058 | Registered: 06-06-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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quote:
Originally posted by Sprint_girl07:
What do other countries do at their borders I wonder? I know these borders are longer but wonder what they use.


That's a good question, Sprint. I haven't read where other countries are building fences! Perhaps they have better immigration policies than the US???? Just a thought.


God Bless America and everyone else!
 
Posts: 6271 | Registered: 02-07-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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USCIS and FBI Release Joint Plan to Eliminate Backlog of FBI Name Checks

Partnership Establishes Series of Milestones To Complete Checks

WASHINGTON – U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) today announced a joint plan to eliminate the backlog of name checks pending with the FBI.

USCIS and the FBI established a series of milestones prioritizing work based on the age of the pending name check. The FBI has already eliminated all name check cases pending more than four years.

“This plan of action is the product of a strong partnership between USCIS and the FBI to eliminate the backlogs and to strengthen national security,” said USCIS Director Emilio Gonza***.

By increasing staff, expanding resources, and applying new business processes, the goal is to complete 98 percent of all name checks within 30 days. USCIS and the FBI intend to resolve the remaining two percent, which represent the most difficult name checks and require additional time to complete, within 90 days or less. The goal is to achieve and sustain these processing times by June 2009.

The joint plan will focus on resolving the oldest pending FBI name checks first. USCIS has also requested that the FBI prioritize resolution of approximately 29,800 pending name checks from naturalization applicants submitted to the FBI before May 2006 where the naturalization applicant was already interviewed.

The target milestones for processing name checks are:


Completion Goal
Category

May 2008 Process all name checks pending more than three years
July 2008 Process all name checks pending more than two years
November 2008 Process all name checks pending more than one year
February 2009 Process all name checks pending more than 180 days
June 2009 Process 98 percent of all name checks within 30 days and process the remaining two percent within 90 days



All together now. Hooray!!
 
Posts: 3754 | Registered: 09-27-2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Scrap the Visa Cap
By SHIKHA DALMIA
April 5, 2008; Page A8

America's political leaders are so fixated on illegal immigration they've barely noticed that the U.S. is losing the race for the best high-tech minds. This country won't keep its edge in the global economy until legislators stop behaving like border sentries and start acting like international recruiters – a switch virtually every industrialized country is making.

A good way to begin is for Congress to pass pending legislation to scrap the cap on skilled worker (H1-B) visas. This cap is currently so low (65,000) that in April last year it got used up within a day of these visas becoming available, leaving thousands of left over engineers to be scooped up by America's competitors. Immigration authorities started accepting 2009 applications last Tuesday – and expect a similar flood.

Two decades ago, professionals from developing countries such an India and China who managed to obtain a visa from Uncle Sam and got a job from an American company – or admission in a U.S. graduate program – took a one-way flight across the Atlantic. Returning home, instead of landing a job and a coveted green card here, was a sure-fire way of being branded a loser. Only those who couldn't get to the U.S. tried other Western destinations or Australia.

But America's ability to attract new foreign-born workers – and just as importantly, to keep the existing ones – is diminishing, thanks to the enticing opportunities opening up for them elsewhere, including in their own countries.

A 2005 study by the Pew Hispanic Center's Jeffrey Passel showed that new temporary legal arrivals – the vast majority of them skilled workers, university students or their dependents -- dropped to 185,000 in 2004 from 268,000 in 2000. From 2001 to 2003, applications from foreign students to American universities dropped by 26% while they increased in the United Kingdom (36%), France (30%) and Australia (13%). While some of this might be due to the aftermath of 9/11, there's another, stunning trend: Many high-tech immigrants are voluntarily returning home.

There is no comprehensive data to quantify this trend, because the U.S. government does not track people who leave. But Indian and Chinese newspapers have been abuzz for three years with stories about returning compatriots. Bangalore, India's outsourcing capital, is home to over 35,000 returnees – many from America. Tata Consultancy Services, India's Information Technology giant, reports a seven-fold increase in resumes from expatriates.

The most compelling evidence of this reverse brain drain, however, comes from Vivek Wadhwa of Duke University: The preliminary results of a company survey he is conducting reveal that returnees constitute 10% to 50% of the R&D staff of Indian high-tech firms; he expects similar results in China. In a related study last year, he found that one in three new immigrants holding high-tech jobs in the U.S. plan to leave. Why? With comparable jobs available closer to home and family, the frustrating five-year wait for a green card or permanent residency is not worth it anymore.

The number of foreign professionals coming here no doubt still exceeds those leaving. But the new immigrants are less inclined to make America – or, for that matter, any country besides their own – their permanent home. Like Western professionals, they increasingly regard stints abroad as personal growth opportunities, not permanent moves – a change in attitude with profound implications.

In response, most industrialized countries, facing their own skills crunch, are liberalizing their immigration policies to make themselves more attractive. England recently scrapped its Byzantine work permit program in favor of a Canadian-style point system that will allow entry to some skilled workers even before they get a job. New Zealand has a remarkable program that gives accredited private companies fast-track access to work visas that they can hand to foreign workers along with a job offer. Australia is considering modifying its skilled visa program along similar lines.

Even more radical is the blue card program that the European Union proposed last year to ***p up its skilled workforce by 20 million over 20 years. The card will admit not only skilled workers – but their entire families – and give spouses the legal right to work in all 27 EU countries within three months of applying. By contrast, the U.S. Congress recently questioned even a relatively modest suggestion by Bill Gates to raise or scrap the annual H-1B visa cap. Astoundingly, this cap was lowered to 1990 levels four years ago.

Not all that other industrialized countries are doing is worth emulating. Canada's point system, which is gaining popularity, often recruits foreigners whose skills don't match employers' needs. Yet at least they realize that the real immigration problem is not too many foreign workers knocking at their door -- but too few. America should worry less about keeping unskilled immigrants out -- and more about keeping skilled immigrants in. Otherwise, it'll lose the race for the most crucial resource in the knowledge economy: intellectual capital.

Ms Dalmia, who emigrated from India in 1985, is a senior analyst at the Reason Foundation


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impossibility is a word found only in the dictionary of fools
 
Posts: 4020 | Registered: 05-31-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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It's true, there are more and more opportunities out there around the Globe.
It's no longer do or die here.
Which is a good thing.
It will naturally alleviate many pressures and problems that just as naturally arose during last decade of former century.


__________________________________________________________________

It is not necessary for the public to know whether I am joking or whether I am serious, just as it is not necessary for me to know it myself.

Salvador Dali
 
Posts: 1344 | Registered: 04-05-2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Mrs. B. ,

the usa will not have trouble recruiting translators. They were never promised greencards to begin with, only the opportunity to apply for one.

Hi 4Now,

Yup, I did go back and reread the article. It reminds me of the saying that the law may be harsh, but it is still the law. The special visa didn't give a guarantee.

I still believe though that considering what he had done (his service to the USMC) and the cost (his endangered life), he should have been given some sort of consideration.

Sorry for the late reply - I haven't been able to log in as frequently.

(Btw, the Boss "Catfather" Mike said that he sent you to the hospital. Wink Big Grin)


The poet Horatio Smith wrote:

"Patriotism," he wrote, "is too often the hatred of other countries
disguised as the love of our own
[/QUOTE]


Do all the good you can, in all the ways you can, as long as ever you can.

--John Wesley
 
Posts: 1416 | Location: Georgia | Registered: 12-22-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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USCIS ANNOUNCEMENT:

Scheduled System Outages

On Friday, April 11, 2008, at 9:30 to 10:30 AM EDT, certain USCIS web-based systems will be taken out of service for maintenance upgrades. These systems include:

Case Status Online (and processing times)
Electronic Filing
Field Office Locator and Information
Civil Surgeon Locator; and
Change of Address Online

We apologize for the inconvenience.
 
Posts: 1420 | Registered: 01-22-2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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@Speed: thanks for the info!




Ability may get you to the top, but it takes character to keep you there.
 
Posts: 557 | Location: Davis, CA, USA | Registered: 08-23-2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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For anyone who is following this matter, this is good news - so little, so late, but better than nothing! Luckily, some reasonable minded 'arbiters' in our courts are always there to remind some of our USCIS people of their oftentimes 'arbitrary and rigorous' interpretations of laws. RN

'Widow Penalty' case progress

""The Court concludes that in light of Freeman v. Gonzales, 444 F.3d 1031 (9th Cir. 2006), and district court decisions from other jurisdictions agreeing with Freeman, see e.g., Robinson v. Chertoff, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 34956, at *4 (D. N.J. 2007); Taing v. Chertoff, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 91411, at *28 (D. Mass. 2007); Lockhart v. Chertoff, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 889, at *30 (D. Ohio 2008), there are serious questions going to the merits of this case. Specifically, it appears that defendants have improperly determined that the death of a United States citizen spouse before the two-year marriage anniversary of the citizen spouse and alien spouse, deprives the alien spouse of his or her ‘surviving spouse’ status." Hootkins v. Chertoff, C.D. Cal., Apr. 7, 2008."

http://www.ssad.org/images/Hootkins_Order_Deny_Prelim_Inj.pdf






________________________________________________________________
"The letter of the law is a sword that killeth; its intent is a spirit that giveth life."
 
Posts: 2082 | Registered: 01-16-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Indians win HSMP case against UK govt

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Indians win HSMP case against UK govt
London: Tens of thousands of mostly-Indian immigrants on Tuesday won the right to live and work in Britain after a British court ruled that retrospective changes made to their visas were illegal.

The landmark ruling by Justice Sir George Newman followed a legal challenge mounted by the Highly Skilled Migrant Programme (HSMP) Forum, a pressure group consisting mostly of Indian migrants.

In his judgment, Newman said the terms of the original scheme "should be honoured" and that there was no good reason why those already on the scheme should not enjoy the benefits of it as originally offered to them.

"Good administration and straightforward dealing with the public require it. Not to restrain the impact of the changes would, in my judgment, give rise to conspicuous unfairness and an abuse of power," he added.

A majority of some 49,000 HSMP visa holders - most of them Indian - and their families faced the prospect of having to uproot their homes in Britain and find jobs in other countries after the British government made abrupt and retrospective changes to the original visa regime.
Existing HSMP visa holders would have had to re-qualify under a new points based system, which makes it mandatory for applicants to have earned at least 40,000 pounds in the previous year and awards more points to younger applicants - conditions that the HSMP Forum described as "unfair".

"The immigration department was obsessed with defending their decision and were not open to any reasoning. We had no other recourse but to approach the judiciary and we are glad that our trust in the democratic system has finally been restored," said Forum executive director Amit Kapadia.


......................................................................................................................................
impossibility is a word found only in the dictionary of fools
 
Posts: 4020 | Registered: 05-31-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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quote:
Originally posted by mike_2007:
Indians win HSMP case against UK govt

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Indians win HSMP case against UK govt
London: Tens of thousands of mostly-Indian immigrants on Tuesday won the right to live and work in Britain after a British court ruled that retrospective changes made to their visas were illegal.

The landmark ruling by Justice Sir George Newman followed a legal challenge mounted by the Highly Skilled Migrant Programme (HSMP) Forum, a pressure group consisting mostly of Indian migrants.

In his judgment, Newman said the terms of the original scheme "should be honoured" and that there was no good reason why those already on the scheme should not enjoy the benefits of it as originally offered to them.

"Good administration and straightforward dealing with the public require it. Not to restrain the impact of the changes would, in my judgment, give rise to conspicuous unfairness and an abuse of power," he added.

A majority of some 49,000 HSMP visa holders - most of them Indian - and their families faced the prospect of having to uproot their homes in Britain and find jobs in other countries after the British government made abrupt and retrospective changes to the original visa regime.
Existing HSMP visa holders would have had to re-qualify under a new points based system, which makes it mandatory for applicants to have earned at least 40,000 pounds in the previous year and awards more points to younger applicants - conditions that the HSMP Forum described as "unfair".

"The immigration department was obsessed with defending their decision and were not open to any reasoning. We had no other recourse but to approach the judiciary and we are glad that our trust in the democratic system has finally been restored," said Forum executive director Amit Kapadia.


Interesting, I guess it would cause some legal battle if they suddenly change rules like that.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
God Bless America - God Bless Immigrants - God Bless Poor Misguided Souls Too Smile
Mr S.U.
 
Posts: 8058 | Registered: 06-06-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Big Grin


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impossibility is a word found only in the dictionary of fools
 
Posts: 4020 | Registered: 05-31-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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SELINSGROVE, Pa. — Dr. Pedro Servano always believed that his journey from his native Philippines to the life of a community doctor in Pennsylvania would lead to American citizenship.





But the doctor, who has tended to patients here in the Susquehanna Valley for more than a decade, is instead battling a deportation order along with his wife.

The Servanos are among a growing group of legal immigrants who reach for the prize and permanence of citizenship, only to run afoul of highly technical immigration statutes that carry the severe penalty of expulsion from the country. For the Servanos, the problem has been a legal hitch involving their marital status when they came from the Philippines some 25 years ago.

Largely overlooked in the charged debate over illegal immigration, many of these are long-term legal immigrants in the United States who were confident of success when they applied for naturalization, and would have continued to live here legally had they not sought to become citizens.

As applications for naturalization have surged, overburdened federal examiners, under pressure to make quick decisions and also weed out any security risks, prefer to err on the side of rejection, immigration lawyers and independent researchers said. In 2007, 89,683 applications for naturalization were denied, about 12 percent of those presented.

In the last 12 years, denial rates have been consistently higher than at any time since the 1920s.

Though precise figures are not available, an increasing number of these denials involve immigrants who believed they were in good legal standing, according to lawyers and researchers. Under the law, a number of grounds for naturalization denial can lead to an order of deportation, and appeals are more limited than in criminal cases.

“It’s no wonder there are so many illegal immigrants,” said Brad Darnell, an electrical engineer from Canada living in California who applied for citizenship but is also now fighting deportation. “The legal method is so intolerant and confusing.”

A legal immigrant since 1991, Mr. Darnell is married to an American and has two American-born sons. But after he presented his naturalization application last year, Mr. Darnell discovered that a 10-year-old conviction for domestic violence involving a former girlfriend, even though it had been reduced to a misdemeanor and erased from his public record, made him ineligible to become a citizen — or even to continue living in the United States.

Since 1996, when an immigration law overhaul first brought intensified scrutiny of citizenship applications, at least 85,000 naturalizations have been turned down each year.

The record year was 2000, when 399,670 applications were denied, one-third of those presented, according to an analysis by the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan research organization. More recent denial rates remain high, but have fallen from the peak because more immigrants have prepared with civics classes and immigrant advocates before applying to become citizens, researchers said.

In three recent cases in Florida, aspiring citizens thought their green cards entitled them to vote or register to vote before they were sworn in as Americans. When the immigrants reported their elections activities on their applications, not only were their naturalizations rejected, but they were also ordered to leave the country, according to their lawyer, Jeffrey Brauwerman.

In a current Florida case, a British-born businessman saw his naturalization derailed and was detained for deportation because he forgot to update his home address with the immigration agency, Mr. Brauwerman said. He was charged with ignoring a notice in which immigration examiners mistakenly accused him of a felony he had never committed.

In a case that drew Congressional attention this year in Illinois, Marin Turcinovic, an immigrant from Croatia, was twice denied citizenship because he did not show up at the immigration office to be fingerprinted. As his lawyer explained to no avail, Mr. Turcinovic was a quadriplegic, dependent on a ventilator and unable to leave his home.

Mr. Turcinovic died in April 2004 without becoming a citizen, creating an immigration crisis for his French widow, Corina, who had taken care of him. In January Representative Daniel Lipinski, Democrat of Illinois, presented a bill that halted her deportation.

Immigration officials say denials have increased in the last decade because naturalization applications are increasing. They note that approvals are rising as well. In 1996 naturalizations soared for the first time to more than one million, and they remained above 450,000 each year through 2007.






“Whenever we see a period when large numbers decide to apply, there tend to be larger numbers of people who are not ready or might not meet the requirements,” said Chris Rhatigan, a spokeswoman for Citizenship and Immigration Services.

Officials said the majority of denials went to applicants who failed a required civics and English language test or fell short of residency requirements. Those immigrants generally can try again.

But as the case of the Servano family illustrates, some denials come as a shock to both the applicants and the communities they call home.

Dr. Servano’s mother, five siblings and eight of his wife’s siblings became naturalized citizens, including one brother and two brothers-in-law who made careers in the Navy. His four children are Americans by virtue of being born here. He has been a legal immigrant in the United States for 25 years.

Following an outcry from neighbors, patients and local officials, Department of Homeland Security officials in December temporarily suspended the Servanos’ deportation. The Servanos and their supporters, including Senator Arlen Specter, Republican of Pennsylvania, are using the unusual reprieve to pursue new legal efforts to resolve the couple’s case.

For the federal government and for many Americans, naturalizations — the legal process by which legal immigrants become citizens — are a measure of immigrants’ willingness to join the society and embrace its civic values.

To become a citizen, a legal permanent resident must have lived in the United States more or less continuously for five years, or three years for the spouse of a citizen. The immigrant must demonstrate good moral character and allegiance to the Constitution, and pass a test of English ability and civics. Since 2002, citizenship applicants also undergo an extensive background check by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Applicants fail the moral character standard if they have been convicted of certain ***, drug or gambling charges or are “habitual drunkards.” They also can fail if they give “false testimony,” a term immigration lawyers say is subject to broad interpretation.

Dr. Servano and his wife, Salvacion, lived for years in the United States with no inkling they might have violated the law. They met in the Philippines when she was a nurse and he was a young traveling doctor. Her strict father insisted she marry, they said, but his family wanted him to wait.

In the early 1980s, their mothers came separately to the United States as legal immigrants and petitioned for residence visas, known as green cards, for Pedro and Salvacion under the category of unmarried children. But between the time the visas were requested and when they were issued in 1985, Pedro and Salvacion, hoping to escape conflicting parental demands, secretly married in the Philippines.

Unaware that their marriage could have violated the terms of their green cards, the Servanos settled in the United States. He completed a second medical residency here and began to practice in blue-collar towns where he made house calls and was known for attention to everyday ills. He and Salvacion married in New Jersey in 1987. They renewed their green cards punctually.

“My goal is to be fully functional and integrated into the society,” Dr. Servano said. They presented their 1991 naturalization applications without seeking a lawyer.

Immigration inspectors reviewing their applications discovered a record of their Philippine marriage. Accused of lying, they were ordered deported. In years of immigration court appeals, the Servanos had no opportunity to present broader evidence of their character, their lawyers said.

People in Selinsgrove and nearby Sunbury, Susquehanna Valley towns where Dr. Servano practices, were surprised to hear in October that the couple had received a final order with a November date for their deportation. Aside from his medical work, he and his wife had bought two blighted buildings on the square in Sunbury, refurbishing them with apartments and offices. Mrs. Servano opened a store, selling lottery tickets, homemade Filipino bread and DVDs in Tagalog, a Philippine language.

In November, more than 100 residents gathered in the Sunbury square for a candlelight vigil on behalf of the Servanos. Thousands of Filipinos in the United States have signed petitions supporting them.

“The fact that they want to displace and get rid of people we here feel are exceptionally good citizens quite frankly just doesn’t make any sense,” said Mayor Jesse C. Woodring of Sunbury.

The Servanos, huddled on the couch in their home in a Selinsgrove development, seemed numb at the prospect of returning to the Philippines.

“I live here, so I like America now,” Mrs. Servano said. “For 25 years we’ve been here; we didn’t even visit the Philippines. So it’s really hard.”

Their son, Peter, 16, an American, expressed his siblings’ anguish about being forced to separate either from their parents or from the only home they know.

“I want to stay here because all my friends are here, and I’ve grown up here, so it would be hard to leave,” Peter said. “But it would be hard not to go.”

Michael Gilhooly, a spokesman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which handles deportations, said the Servanos’ removal had been suspended based on new information from Mr. Specter about their humanitarian role. Other immigration officials said the Servanos could recover their legal status by applying for new green cards as parents of citizen children.


......................................................................................................................................
impossibility is a word found only in the dictionary of fools
 
Posts: 4020 | Registered: 05-31-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Hey Mike, there is a thread open that is about this story in case you didn't see it. Very interesting

http://discuss.ilw.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/902603441/m/19410278241


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
God Bless America - God Bless Immigrants - God Bless Poor Misguided Souls Too Smile
Mr S.U.
 
Posts: 8058 | Registered: 06-06-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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oops sorry proud but oh well ,i'm sure my fiance wont get mad at me Big Grin


......................................................................................................................................
impossibility is a word found only in the dictionary of fools
 
Posts: 4020 | Registered: 05-31-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Picture of ProudUSC
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quote:
Originally posted by mike_2007:
oops sorry proud but oh well ,i'm sure my fiance wont get mad at me Big Grin


Lol - what are you sorry for???? What did I say? I guess I missed something here. Anyway, can't get mad at you, Mike!!! You are too much fun!!!! Smile


God Bless America and everyone else!
 
Posts: 6271 | Registered: 02-07-2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post