Archive for the ‘Immigration Reform’ Category

David Valadao will run for newly drawn 22nd Congressional District – Visalia Times-Delta and Tulare Advance-Register

Rep. David Valadao (R-Hanford)announced Wednesday he would run for reelectionin the newly created 22nd Congressional District.

My commitment to the Central Valley is stronger than ever, Valadao said in a statement. Ill continue to be an independent member of Congress who will stand up to the divisive partisanship in Washington D.C., get things done to grow our local economy, and deliver more water for our farmers and communities. Im excited to earn the vote of old friends as well as new voters across Kern, Kings, and Tulare counties.

Valadao currently represents the 21st Congressional District, including Kings County and portions of Fresno, Tulare, and Kern counties.

In 2018, Valadao narrowly lost his reelection bid to T.J. Cox (D-Fresno) but avenged that defeat in 2020 byjust 1,522 votes.

The newly redrawn 22nd Congressional District skews more Democrat thanValadao's old district. PresidentBiden would have carried the new 22nd District by 13 points, 55 percent to 42 percent, in an analysis by political websiteRoll Call.

In 2020, no member of Congress was elected to a district that voted so heavily for the other partys presidential nominee, Roll Call found.But Valadao overcame an 11-point winning margin for Biden in his current district, so political pundits say the Hanford politician could still win the new district, rating the election race a toss-up.

The new districtwill take in the southern half ofTulare, most of southern Tulare County, and parts of Kings County, including the city of Hanford, and Kern County, including the cities of Delano and McFarland.

More: Redrawn political maps may split Visalia, Tulare. That could mean less government representation

Valadao will likely face several strong opponents in his bid for reelection, includingCalifornia State Assemblyman Rudy Salas (D-Bakersfield)and Chris Mathys, a FresnoRepublican who has criticized the Congressman for his voteto impeach former President Trump after the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection.

The Kings County congressman was among 10 House Republicans who voted to send the articles of impeachment to the Senate.

"I am running for Congress in Californias 21 Congressional District against David Valadao, who betrayed our trust when he voted to impeach President Trump,"Mathys wrote in a press release announcing his candidacy. "Send me to Congress, and I will fight for our freedoms and make sure President Trump gets the respect and support he deserves."

Mathys, a former Fresno City Council member,has also strongly opposed COVID-19vaccination mandates and has criticizedValadao's support of immigration reform.

James Ward covers entertainment, news, sports,and lifestyles for the Visalia Times-Delta/Tulare Advance-Register. Follow him on Twitter.Get alerts and keep up on all things Tulare County for as little as $1 a month.Subscribe today.

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David Valadao will run for newly drawn 22nd Congressional District - Visalia Times-Delta and Tulare Advance-Register

Immigration Reform | Speaker Nancy Pelosi

Our nations immigrants are the constant reinvigoration of America. Each wave of newcomers brings their patriotism, bravery and determination to succeed to our shores and in doing so, makes America more American. As students and servicemembers, entrepreneurs and public servants, parents and neighbors, these new Americans affirm our countrys fundamental, founding truth: that in diversity, lies strength.

Yet President Trump and Congressional Republicans continue to push a hateful, harmful anti-immigrant agenda that instills fear in our communities and weakens our country. Instead of respecting the hard-working men and women who want to contribute to our nation, Republicans are trying to make American taxpayers pay for an immoral, ineffective and expensive border wall. At the same time, the Trump Administration is unleashing a cruel deportation force that is tearing apart families across America.

We must reject these senseless and destructive policies. Democrats remain committed to passing comprehensive immigration reform that recognizes and embraces the talents and contributions of our immigrants. We will continue to work toward a comprehensive solution for our countrys broken immigration system, and we will never stop fighting to ensure that America remains a land of opportunity for those who work hard, abide by our laws and dare to dream.

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Immigration Reform | Speaker Nancy Pelosi

Neither side thrilled with immigration reforms in Build Back Better bill – Cronkite News

Pedestrians line up to cross the U.S. border checkpoint in Calexico, California, in this file photo. The Build Back Better plan includes $100 billion for immigration reform, including expanded access to visas and DACA-like protection for up to 7 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S., but not the pathway to citizenship advocates had pushed for. (Photo by Josh Denmark/Customs and Border Protection)

WASHINGTON Buried in the $1.9 trillion Build Back Better Plan is $100 billion for immigration reform, money that critics say has no business being in the bill and that migration advocates say does not go nearly far enough.

The immigration provisions, which were included in the bill House approved Nov. 19 on a mostly party-line vote, are certain to become a sticking point if and when the Senate takes up the full Build Back Better bill, one of the Biden administrations key initiatives.

The money would be used for everything from expedited processing of immigration paperwork, expansion of visa availability and access to work permits for as many as 7 million undocumented immigrants currently in the U.S., among other provisions.

But it does not include a pathway to citizenship for those immigrants, which advocates see as a slap that does not address the larger issue the need for comprehensive immigration reform.

The Build Back Better Plan, the one that passed in the House, its not a path to citizenship, and it just feels like a temporary bandage, said Vicki Gaubeca, policy and communication strategist for the Southern Border Communities Coalition.

So its a short-term fix, but really, I think, ideally, we need to get immigration reform with a pathway to citizenship for all 11 million people who are here without work authorization, Gaubeca said.

That was echoed by Jose Patio, the director of education and external affairs at Aliento, an Arizona-based immigrant advocacy group.

Its been since 1986, over 35 years since we had an immigration reform, Patio said, referring to the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986. That bill, signed into law by President Ronald Reagan, led to citizenship for more than 2 million undocumented immigrants who were in the country at the time.

But Ira Mehlman, media director for the Federation for American Immigration Reform, said the U.S. has no ethical obligation of rewarding people who have broken the law by coming here illegally.

Nobody promised people who came into the country illegally that they were going to get some kind of benefit, you know, including a path toward citizenship, Mehlman said.

The bill currently before the Senate does not provide a path to citizenship, but it provides a path to at least a provisional status, which is parole for, you know, for undocumented immigrants who arrive prior to January 1, 2011, said Donald Kerwin of the Center for Migration Studies of New York.

In addition to being here since 2010, immigrants who want to apply for protection under the bill would be charged a fee for the application and would have to meet other criteria. Kerwin said it is similar to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, under which work permits and other benefits are provided along with temporary protection from deportation.

But DACA provides just two years of protection, which can be renewed for two years at a time, for undocumented migrants who can prove they were brought to the U.S. illegally as children. Under the Build Back Better plan, however, the deportation deferral would be good for five years at a time, and renewable.

Its a very positive bill, Kerwin said.

Mehlman does not just disagree with the proposal, he disagrees with the way Democrats are trying to get it through the Senate.

With the Senate evenly divided between Democrats and Republicans, critics of the bill can easily block a measure by filibustering it, since it takes 60 votes to end a filibuster and bring a measure up for a vote. One way around that is through budget reconciliation measures, which need only a simple 51-vote majority.

Mehlman noted that the Senate parliamentarian has already rejected an attempt to include immigration language in an early reconciliation bill, and said that should happen again, since he does not believe the migration policy proposal really constitutes an investment.

Shes going to have to rule again, that these are social policies that really dont belong in a budget reconciliation bill, Mehlman said of the parliamentarian.

You can dress it up any way you want, call it an investment. It is not, it is a major policy change, he said. So, you know, it probably is not going to make it into the final version of the Senate bill.

Gaubeca said that not only should it be included but she hopes that senators take it a step further and include a path to citizenship, even though she concedes that she is being a little bit super-idealistic.

That would be awesome to offer a pathway to citizenship, even though they will have to send it back to the House, she said.

Patio said undocumented immigrants deserve a path toward citizenship, noting their contributions to the U.S. by serving as front-line workers in dangerous circumstances during COVID-19 pandemic.

They were the ones who are out there risking their lives with no vaccines, no access to unemployment, a very little gear, and making sure that we have food on the table, he said.

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Neither side thrilled with immigration reforms in Build Back Better bill - Cronkite News

Immigration reform starts with your vote | Opinion | sent-trib.com – Sentinel-Tribune

I read your article about U.S. Rep. Bob Latta and immigration (Latta language protested, Nov. 24). I can offer some light on this topic. I was an immigration civil surgeon, which means that I did the intake physical exams on people trying to become citizens of this country.

I began doing the intake exams in 1987 and continued doing them until the Donald Trump administration. I probably did some 5,000 exams.

As is well known, the former president had a hard stand against immigration from non-European countries. He made it hard to enter the country, but this tactic did not slow the rates of immigration much. As a result, the Trump administration decided to reduce the number of civil surgeons, thus bottle-necking the immigration process at both ends.

The agency that handled the civil surgeon end of the process contacted me about their intent to revoke my civil surgeon status, saying that I had to prove that I had been in practice for at least four years. I pointed out that I had been doing CIS exams since 1987, but this was not sufficient. I complied with every request they made, but that was not sufficient either. I still have the paper work for inspection. Hence, my civil surgeon status was revoked though I could pay $675 dollars and file an appeal. But, being no indication that my appeal would be granted and I would still be out the $675, I could see the handwriting on the wall, so I did not appeal.

In light of the above, I consider Lattas response to La Conexion sadly laughable. I dont think that Latta really cares about immigrants despite what he says.

If La Conexion wants to improve the lot of immigrants, its members must vote Republican lawmakers out of office, beginning at the local and state levels and continuing on to national levels. Otherwise, if Trump becomes president again and the Republicans gain control of Congress, immigrants are out of luck.

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Immigration reform starts with your vote | Opinion | sent-trib.com - Sentinel-Tribune

Biden and businesses agree on one thing: U.S. needs immigrant workers – POLITICO

The squeeze on foreign labor comes as the country's working-age population has been declining and as businesses say they cant find enough workers to staff their operations because of the pandemic. There were 10.4 million job openings in the U.S. at the end of September, according to the Labor Department.

The processing issues are huge, said Jon Baselice, vice president of immigration policy at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Thats the most disruptive thing that I hear from companies on a regular basis.

Processing delays slow down all sorts of other things that a company has to do. So when they can't get things processed timely, that means people have to be taken off the payroll, Baselice said.

Foreign nationals already in the U.S. have been waiting for months and in some cases, for over a year to have their employment authorization approved or extended due to processing holdups at USCIS field centers, caused partly by the coronavirus pandemic. Thats forced some people, including asylum seekers, to quit their jobs in the U.S. after their work permits expired.

These are folks who are working and who took jobs to support themselves and their families, said Emma Winger, a staff attorney at the American Immigration Council. Now, because of this delay, they're losing their jobs. And many of those people were contributing to the economy and filling jobs that the U.S. really needs.

Winger is representing an asylum advocacy group in a lawsuit over USCIS processing delays affecting health care workers, a truck driver, a fast-food manager and others.

The delays across the agency have also prevented USCIS from issuing green cards that would give foreigners the ability to work in the U.S. permanently, leaving thousands to expire this year.

The fight is now playing out in the debate over Democrats $1.7 trillion Build Back Better legislation.

The House version of the bill would recapture unused immigrant visas going back to 1992, freeing up 157,000 employment-based visas, according to an estimate from Democrats, in addition to roughly 262,000 family-based and diversity visa slots, which would also allow applicants to work.

It would provide temporary protection and work authorization to an estimated 7 million undocumented immigrants including Dreamers and farmworkers who are already in the U.S., which Democrats say will accelerate the economic recovery. The House version of the legislation would also provide $2.8 billion to help USCIS process those new cases and fix processing delays.

Some business groups agree, saying the immigration provisions in the bill are necessary to address labor shortages that are contributing to rising inflation.

Immigrant workers are a critical component for calming the current hike in inflation, the American Business Immigration Coalition wrote in a letter to the president and Democratic leadership this week. "Labor shortages result in construction delays, higher production costs, and lower inventory levels, which all lead to inflation."

But anti-immigration groups have panned the provisions in the Democrats' bill as providing amnesty to millions and warned that the changes could actually have a negative effect on the economy.

The Federation for American Immigration Reform, which pushes for lower levels of immigration, argued in an analysis of the Build Back Better act that the sudden increase in the supply of legal labor generated by amnesty would likely further contribute to wage stagnation, giving employers even less incentive to raise wages.

Robert Law, director of regulatory affairs and policy at the Center for Immigration Studies, said the money included in legislation won't be enough to resolve USCIS' backlog issues.

There are so many structural problems within USCIS that, frankly, I don't think that money would make much difference as far as reducing some of the processing times, Law said. There's too much volume, there's too many other obstacles.

Democrats are already facing an uphill battle getting their broad social spending package through the Senate, where the bills immigration reform sections still need to be approved by the parliamentarian, who has blocked attempts to include immigration reform before.

Experts say the problem is two-fold, pointing to what they see as arbitrary caps on employment-based immigration, along with agency-wide delays in processing immigration documents.

Employment-based visas are capped at 140,000 each year and typically expire at the end of the year if they go unused. Under current law, people from any single country may only receive 7 percent of an annual pool of employment and family-based green cards. Immigrants from countries such as India, China, Mexico and the Philippines can face green card waits that span years.

We're just not issuing the number of visas that come up every year, said Kristie De Pea, vice president for policy and director of immigration at the Niskanen Center, a libertarian think tank. There are a lot of bureaucratic inefficiencies in the process. And when you pair that with the caps for certain countries, and the number of folks that are still trying to come from those countries all the time, you end up looking at backlogs that are a decade long in some cases.

There are currently 1,551,864 employment-based green card applications stuck in the backlog, according to an estimate from David Bier, a research fellow at the Cato Institute. Roughly 850,000 of those workers are simply waiting in line to adjust their status, meaning they are already working in the U.S. on some other visa which typically have limits on who foreigners can work for and for how long.

The Biden administration blames the delays in part on the Trump administration.

There's a massive backlog on these [work permit] applications, as with so many others, that we inherited and that we are working diligently to address, said a USCIS official who requested anonymity to discuss the previous administration. So we're very much aware of both the economic and human cost of people losing their ability to work for no reason other than administrative delay. We know it's happening. We know it's continuing to happen. And we are determined to prevent that from happening as soon as possible for everyone in that position.

The agency said it has tried to alleviate some of the backlog by temporarily suspending certain biometrics requirements for some groups and granting extensions of work permits, among other steps.

Immigration experts as well as the Biden administration say the problem has been made even worse by consulate and agency closures due to the pandemic, as well as policy changes made during the Trump administration that added hurdles for asylum seekers and immigrants to come to the U.S. and receive work authorization.

The Trump administration cut resources to an already inadequately funded USCIS and created bottlenecks by creating bureaucratic obstacles, according to the pro-immigration reform group New American Economy. This led to unprecedented delays to the processing of immigration applications and higher rates of rejection for temporary worker visa applications.

Dan Wallace, deputy managing director of the organization, said that from 2015 to 2019 there was a roughly 40 percent decline in migration to the U.S.

Researchers at JPMorgan wrote in a November report that the U.S. population is about 3 million immigrants short of where it would be if it continued on pace with pre-2017 trends, a large majority of whom would have been of working age.

That decline in immigration has been compounded by an extra 1.7 million people retiring during the pandemic, the researchers wrote, which could stunt the growth of the labor force and overall economic productivity.

Immigration rates could eventually rebound, but we suspect this will be a slow process, they said. Meanwhile, the resident population will continue aging.

The Census Bureau estimated that immigrants expanded the U.S. population by over 1 million in 2016, before falling steadily to about 480,000 by 2020, the JPMorgan researchers said.

This is sort of the worst possible time for us to be experiencing a decline in immigration, said Wallace, noting that immigrants are more likely to be working age and to have educational backgrounds that fit gaps in the labor force.

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Biden and businesses agree on one thing: U.S. needs immigrant workers - POLITICO