INS REORGANIZATION
The ISSUE: The
Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) both enforces
immigration laws and adjudicates applications for nonimmigrants
and immigrants. INS has been justifiably criticized for not
providing timely and consistent service for applicants. However,
Congress must also take responsibility for creating unfunded,
complicated and often-conflicting mandates. Simply put: the INS
has tremendous adjudications and naturalization backlogs, and
does not consistently and professionally enforce immigration
laws. Nearly everyone who deals with the INS agrees it should be
reformed. The question is: how to do that, while allowing the
agency to operate successfully.
BACKGROUND: Appointed
in 1990, the Commission on Immigration Reform recommended
breaking up the INS, and dispersing its operations to the State,
Justice, and Labor Departments. President Clinton rejected those
recommendations. In the 105th Congress,
Representative Harold Rogers (R-KY) introduced H.R. 4264, which
would have turned the INS into a Bureau of Enforcement and a
Bureau of Border Affairs within the Department of Justice. This
measure did not pass.
CURRENT STATUS: There
are three INS reorganization proposals currently before Congress:
H.R. 3918, introduced by
Representatives Harold Rogers (R-KY), Lamar Smith (R-TX) and
Silverstre Reyes (D-TX), would split the INS in two, with
separate enforcement and adjudications bureaus. Lobbyists
oppose this measure because it provides for neither a single
person with clout to be accountable for immigration policy,
coordination between the functions, nor an adequate funding
mechanism. Recently, Representatives Rogers and Smith
reintroduced the bill as H.R. 3918.
H.R. 2680, introduced by
Representative Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-TX), and supported by
Lobbyists , would create a National Immigration Bureau, run by a
single person reporting to the Attorney General; would create
separate offices handling adjudications, enforcement and
detention; would mandate an Office of Shared Services, handling
support requirements for all offices; and would require that all
offices receive appropriated funds. This measure also would
restore Section 245(i), with the funds from the fees generated
used to support the office handling adjudications.
S. 1563, sponsored by Senators
Spencer Abraham (R-MI), Edward Kennedy (D-MA), Chuck Hagel
(R-NE), and Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), which Lobbyists also support,
would create an Immigration Affairs Agency within the Department
of Justice. This Agency would be headed by an Associate
Attorney General for Immigration Affairs. This measure also
would separate the INS into an Immigration Services and
Adjudication Bureau, and a Bureau of Enforcement and Border
Affairs. This bill provides for coordination and support between
the bureaus, and would mandate that user fees support
adjudication functions. It also would establish
accountability within both the adjudications and enforcement
agencies.