ISSUE PAPER
CHANGING THE REGISTRY DATE
THE
ISSUE: For more
than seventy years our immigration laws have included a provision
called "registry" that gives immigrants who have
continuously resided in the United States since the registry date
an opportunity to adjust their status. Legislation has been
introduced to update the cutoff date for this "statute of
limitations," now set at 1972. While the registry date
has been updated six times since 1929, it has not been changed
since 1986. Refusing to update the registry provision
undermines the long-established principles behind the law. Because
of the 1996 immigration laws, updating the registry date is
especially needed to correct a miscarriage of justice against a
group of people known as late legalization applicants.
BACKGROUND: The registry date has been part of
immigration law since 1929, granting the opportunity for people
who have resided continuously in the U.S. since the registry date
to become permanent residents. Eligible people must prove
that they have resided in the U.S. for every year since the
registry date, that they have a good moral character, that they
are not ineligible for citizenship, and that they are not
inadmissible as criminals, procurers, subversives,
narcotic law violators or aliens smugglers. Updating the
registry date is important for the following reasons:
Preserving
a history of fairness:
The registry date has been used to preserve fairness and to
recognize the valuable contributions of certain long-term
residents of the United States. The law needs to be updated
periodically, as has been done in the past, because it only
applies to people who have been in the U.S. since the specific
selected date. If the registry date is not advanced then the law
becomes obsolete. If the date had never been advanced, the
provision would be useless, only those people who continuously
resided in the United States since the original registry date of
May 19, 1921 would be eligible to apply. Instead, Congress
has advanced the registry date six times since 1929 to ensure
that it would be used by new classes of long-term residents whose
value and contribution to the U.S. warrant an opportunity to have
their status recognized.
The
registry date has not been changed since the Reagan
Administration proposed and passed the Immigration Reform and
Control Act of 1986 (IRCA). The cut-off date of January 1,
1972 set by that law is too remote to be effective. Not
since 1952 has Congress allowed more than a 28-year gap between
the cut-off date and the current year.
Correcting
an injustice of the 1996 law: In addition to moving the registry
date to 1972, the Reagan Administration also passed a
"legalization program" that allowed persons who resided
in the U.S. illegally since before 1982, or who worked in
agriculture during 1985 and 1986, to apply to become legal
permanent residents. Undocumented immigrants had one year
to apply. Many missed their opportunity to legalize through
no fault of their own, due to the Immigration and Naturalization
Services (INS) misinterpretation of the law. Courts
repeatedly decided in several class-action suits that the INS had
incorrectly interpreted the law. Affected immigrants were
given work authorization while INS was forced to properly
consider their applications.
However,
Congress acted in 1996 not to remedy the wrong, but to strip away
the courts' authority to grant relief for most of the wronged
legalization applicants. Section 377 of the Illegal
Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996
(IIRAIRA) stripped the courts of jurisdiction over the claims of
immigrants denied access to the legalization provision. Because
of the 1996 law, some of these immigrants no longer are entitled
to work authorization or protection from deportation. With
their work authorization expiring, they are reverting back to
undocumented status and could be deported at any time. Furthermore,
Congress did not update the registry provision in 1996. Updating
the registry cutoff date would be the simplest way to get the INS
bureaucracy to do what it should have done 13 years ago.
CURRENT
STATUS: In
recognition of the contributions of long-term residents to our
society and to our booming economy, several members of Congress
have introduced legislation that would update the current
registry date:
S.
2912 - Immigrant Fairness:
The Latino and Immigrant Fairness Act (S. 2912), introduced by
Senators Edward Kennedy (D-MA), Harry Reid (D-NV), Richard Durbin
(D-IL), and Robert Graham (D-FL) would update the registry date
to 1986. The bill would also restore Section 245(i) and
create NACARA parity.
S.
2407 - Registry Date Update: Introduced by Senators Harry Reid
(D-NV) and Edward Kennedy (D-MA), this bill would change the
registry date to 1986, and advance the date one year until it
reaches 1991 in the year 2006.
H.R.
4172 - Registry Date Update: Introduced by Representatives
Sheila Jackson-Lee (D-TX) and Luis Gutierrez (D-IL), this bill
would change the registry date to 1986.