Archive for the ‘Comprehensive Immigration Reform’ Category

Economic Impact of Immigrants: Latest Study Finds Very, Very Positive Impact.

Tuesday, March 19th, 2013

One of the more conservative and respected think-tanks out of Washington, The Cato Institute, has published a definitive report on the positive economic impact of immigrants on the US economy.   Don’t take my word for it, read the report using the link below.Conservative and “nativist” objections to immigration and immigration reform are rapidly falling apart as the “facts” are overwhelming the anti-immigrant  B.S. that so many right-wing groups spew.  Let the facts speak for themselves.

Casey Wolff, Esq.

http://www.cato.org/sites/cato.org/files/pubs/pdf/edb17.pdf

N.Y. Times “Nails” the Argument for Legalization of the 11.5 Million Undocumented Foreign Nationals!

Wednesday, June 6th, 2012

Two university professors, Jorge G. Castaneda of New York University and Douglas S. Massey of Princeton University,  have hit the “immigration reform” nail on the head with their article in the June 1, 2012 New York Times.  Neither of these gentlemen is running for office or grinding a political “ax”.  They are analyzing data and migration trends between Mexico and the U.S.  Read:  Do-It-Yourself Immigration Reform. 

June 1, 2012

Do-It-Yourself Immigration Reform

By JORGE G. CASTAÑEDA and DOUGLAS S. MASSEY

IN the noisy American debate over immigration reform, something important seems to have escaped notice: time, and common-sense decisions by Mexican migrants, have brought us nearly everything immigration reform was supposed to achieve.

Migration between Mexico and the United States has returned to a healthy circular pattern: large numbers of Mexicans legally cross northward to work, then return south with confidence that they can repeat the journey the next time. The reason: Even as illegal Mexican migration flattened out in recent years, legal Mexican travel north rose.

These migrants have their papers in order. So it’s time to reconsider whether the United States still faces a difficult problem with Mexican immigration.

There are many reasons illegal Mexican migration has flattened out. The costs and risks have risen. Demand for labor in the United States has fallen. Growth in Mexico’s labor force has slowed.

Yes, the undocumented population in the United States is still about 11.5 million people, about 60 percent of whom are from Mexico, according to the federal Office of Immigration Statistics. But the number is not growing. In fact, data from the Mexican Migration Project, a binational effort by demographers and other researchers, indicates that the rate of undocumented emigration is nearing zero. It peaked at about 55 of every 1,000 Mexican men in 1999; by 2010 it had fallen to 9 per 1,000, a rate not seen since the 1960s.

Meanwhile legal migration soared: 517,000 Mexicans entered the United States as legal temporary workers in 2010, while 888,000 entered on business visas and 30,000 arrived as exchange visitors. In 1995 the respective figures were 27,000, 256,000 and 5,000. In other words, Mexicans are coming to the United States to work as eagerly as ever, but they are doing so legally.

At the same time, legal permanent Mexican immigration to the United States has exploded, with an average of 160,000 persons entering annually since 2005. About 60 percent of those are immediate relatives — spouses, minor children, parents — of American citizens, and an additional 30 percent are other relatives, like siblings.

The large number of family migrants is an unintended, even ironic, consequence of actions taken by Congress and successive administrations to make life miserable for immigrants regardless of legal status. Legislation enacted in 1996 limited access to federal benefits, curtailed civil rights and increased the risk of deportation. The well-being of foreign nationals was further undermined by the USA Patriot Act in 2001 and was threatened in 2006 by the Sensenbrenner bill, which aimed to deter illegal immigration through strict enforcement of draconian new restrictions; it failed to become law, but a similar strategy underlies Arizona’s 2010 anti-illegal-immigration law.

In response, many Mexican permanent residents made an unexpected choice: Rather than leave the United States because they felt unwelcome, they became citizens — a practice known as “defensive naturalization.” In the decade before 1996, an average of 29,000 Mexicans were naturalized each year; since 1996, the average has been 125,000 per year, yielding two million new citizens who could then bring in close relatives. At present, nearly two-thirds of legal permanent residents from Mexico enter as relatives of United States citizens.

Another paradox is that many of these new “permanent residents” do not use the visas to settle in the United States; instead, they circulate back and forth as temporary workers — restoring a pattern that had prevailed until the early 1990s, when the United States began trying to seal the border. When returning periodically to Mexico became too expensive, and running the gantlet to get back into the United States too risky, undocumented migrants and their families simply stayed in the United States.

But now circularity has returned, and with it a need to reconsider immigration reform.

All the major proposals — from Mexico, Congress and President George W. Bush — have included four basic components: reducing illegal immigration; increasing temporary work visas; granting more permanent resident visas; and legalizing existing undocumented migrants. With net migration of undocumented Mexicans near zero and temporary legal migration at record levels, the first two goals have effectively been reached, and mass legal immigration by relatives of citizens satisfies the third.

Regularizing the status of the 11.5 million undocumented people who live in the United States has yet to be accomplished, but a solution can be envisioned by recognizing that self-deportation is not going to happen. Voluntary departures have practically stopped, and the idea of forced removals disturbs many Americans. So if legalization can be achieved without too much fuss, the United States and Mexico will have solved their immigration issue peacefully and quietly.

It’s a solution long in the making, traceable in part to accident and in part to the hypocrisy of an American policy that has quietly legalized temporary workers without saying so publicly. But timeliness and honesty in these matters are often overrated. However we got here, Mexicans and Americans seem to have an opportunity to put their immigration squabble behind them and live more cordially as neighbors.

Jorge G. Castañeda, the foreign minister of Mexico from 2000 to 2003, is a professor of politics and Latin American and Caribbean Studies at New York University.Douglas S. Massey is a professor of sociology and public affairs at Princeton.

 

New Waiver Rules: Keeping Families Together.

Monday, April 2nd, 2012

The newspapers and websites have been full of rumors, half-truths and out-right lies about a new immigration rule change!  The law has not changed; only a procedure.  Because Congress refuses to do its job and reform our immigration laws (just as it refuses to act on anything that requires fixing in this country!), President Obama made this rule change without Congress, because he could…and because it makes sense.

U.S. citizens married to  illegals (who entered the US illegally) can now file their Extreme Hardship Waiver while their illegal spouse stays with the family in the US.  Foreigners who enter the U.S. illegally CANNOT legalize without returning to their home country where they risk not being allowed to come back to the U.S. for 10 years unless a Waiver is approved! The old rule required the foreign spouse to retun to his/her home country and wait for the Waiver there.  The old rule sometimes kept family apart for 12 months or more! 

Click the USCIS site below for more info or send your questions to my office thru our website: NaplesFloridaLawGroup.com.  Or call.  We are always willing to answer a quick question or two at no cost to you.

http://www.uscis.gov/portal/site/uscis/menuitem.5af9bb95919f35e66f614176543f6d1a/?vgnextoid=e784875decf56310VgnVCM100000082ca60aRCRD&vgnextc

Casey Wolff, Esq.

Naples, FL

hannel=68439c7755cb9010VgnVCM10000045f3d6a1RCRD

Casey Wolff, Esq. 2012 Immigration Seminars in Naples, FL

Monday, December 5th, 2011

If  you are lucky enough to be in Naples, Florida this winter, please join me  in February and March for an immigration presentation:  Immigration 2012 vs. Election 2012.  Schedule and locaton is below.  Please join me for the political and legal fireworks!

Immigration 2012 vs. Election 2012                                                                                                          $20 / $25

 

Option #1 – NC3347 – Naples Center                                                               Option #2 – NC3348 – Naples Center

February 1 at 1pm – 2:30pm, Wed – 1.5 hours                                March 21 at 10am – 11:30am, Wed – 1.5 hours

 

Choose one of the course options above. This lecture will discuss the convergence of immigration, racial politics, economic conditions, and constitutional issues regarding states’ rights as we head into the 2012 elections.  Topics discussed will include: how immigration reform will affect the 2012 elections; Department of Homeland Security policies that affect immigration; and how Department of State policies will adversely affect the Collier County economy.  Instructor:  Mr. Casey Wolff

 

 

John J. Guerra

Interim Executive Director, Continuing Education

 

239-287-5196 (t)

239-594-2665 (f)

jguerra@fgcu.edu

Comprehensive Immigration Reform Bill Proposed!

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

Well, it has finally happened.  Rep. Luis Gutierrez (Dem-IL) has fired the first shot across the bow of the Congress with his Comprehensive Immigration Reform ASPA Act of 2009.  91 other Congressmen joined as co-sponsors.

I know this is boring legal and political stuff but worth the read.  If you are serious about immigration you need to know how politics works inside the Wash. DC. beltways.  Here is Lesson No. 1. 

http://immigrationimpact.com/2009/12/22/a-closer-look-at-immigration-reform-legislation-in-the-new-year/