| Contact: Steven Camarota
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sac@cis.org
Falling Behind on Security
Visa Tracking
Deadlines, Met and Missed
Read the Report
Read the panel
discussion transcript
WASHINGTON (December 18, 2003) — The Administration has missed
a majority of the deadlines set by Congress in the 2002 visa-tracking law,
according to a new report published jointly by the Center for Immigration
Studies and NumbersUSA Education and Research Foundation.
The report is the first to systematically examine the
implementation of the Enhanced Border Security and Visa Entry Reform Act of
2002. Signed into law in May 2002, the visa tracking law, as it is often
called, and the USA Patriot Act were the primary legislative responses to the
9/11 attacks. While the Patriot Act has been the subject of extensive debate,
the visa tracking law has received relatively little attention. The full
report, “Falling Behind on Security: Implementation of the Enhanced Border
Security and Visa Entry Reform Act of 2002,” by Rosemary Jenks and Steven
Camarota, is available at
www.cis.org/articles/2003/back1903.html.
Among the findings:
• Of 22 mandated deadlines that already have passed, more than half (13) were
missed.
• Of the 13 missed deadlines, four of the required reforms eventually were
implemented, while nine others still have not been implemented.
• One of the most important missed deadlines is the Administration’s failure
to report any progress on the development of an integrated biometric-based
database, dubbed Chimera, that would give the State Department and the
Department of Homeland Security real-time access to law enforcement,
immigration, and intelligence information on every alien.
• The government still is not checking the names of all aliens from “visa
waiver” countries against terrorist watch lists at ports of entry, though it
was required to do so upon enactment of the visa tracking law. Checking these
names is critical because visa waiver aliens are not vetted by U.S. consulates
prior to arrival.
• Machines that can read and compare biometric information on Border Crossing
Cards have yet to be installed at most ports of entry along the U.S.-Mexico
border, greatly facilitating fraudulent use of the cards.
Commenting on the report, Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) observed, “The
White House has insisted on implementing a massive government reorganization
without providing the resources to finance it. It was a recipe for just the
types of border security lapses this report identifies. Sen. Byrd, ranking
Democrat on the Homeland Security Appropriations Subcommittee, continued: “The
President made a commitment to the American people when he signed the visa
tracking bill into law. He should live up to his commitment by investing the
funds necessary to fully implement it.”
Despite significant failures, however, a number of provisions of the visa
tracking law have been successfully implemented:
— Creation of an interim data-sharing system between government
agencies;
— Development of a biometric technology standard to verify the
identity of non-citizens;
— Establishment of terrorist lookout committees in U.S. missions
abroad;
— Advance electronic submission of passenger manifests by all
commercial airlines and vessels;
— Implementation of the foreign student tracking system (SEVIS);
— Submission of an annual report on alien absconders who fail to
show up for removal
following a final order of
deportation.
There is probably no more important tool for preventing future
attacks on American soil than the nation’s immigration system. Because the
current terrorist threat comes primarily from individuals who arrive from
abroad, our system for admitting immigrants and temporary visitors, as well as
controlling our borders, is vital to reducing chances of another attack. If
fully implemented, the visa tracking law could significantly enhance national
security. Implementation also could help in reducing illegal immigration by
making it more difficult for an alien to overstay a temporary visa.
However, as we approach the second anniversary of the law’s passage, the
Administration is falling behind and has not carried out several of the
legislation’s key provisions. As a result, many of the loopholes that have
been used by terrorists in the past remain open. The Administration and
Congress must make a greater effort to ensure that the law is implemented. If
not, and terrorists again enter the country and commit another attack on
American soil, we may have only ourselves to blame.
# # #
The Center for Immigration Studies is an independent
research institute which examines the impact of immigration on the United
States.
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