------- Original Message --------
Subject: Attrition through immigration enforcement: A
cost-effective
Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2006 00:14:27 -0400
From:
center@cis.org
[FYI: A new cost analysis of a strategy of attrition of
the illegal population through immigration law
enforcement. -- Mark Krikorian]
ATTRITION THROUGH ENFORCEMENT
Government's Own Data Show Point to a Cost-Effective
Strategy
Contact: Jessica Vaughan, (202) 466-8185
WASHINGTON (April 2006) -- Proponents of mass
legalization of the illegal alien population often
justify this radical step by suggesting that the only
alternative – a broad campaign to remove illegal aliens
by force – is unworkable. One study fancifully suggested
that the cost of such a deportation strategy would be
$206 billion over the next five years.
But mass forced removal is not the only alternative to
mass legalization. A third way is to seek attrition of
the illegal population through law enforcement,
encouraging illegal aliens to give up and leave of their
own accord.
A new analysis from the Center for Immigration Studies
uses a variety of federal government data to demonstrate
that such a strategy of attrition, combined with a
stronger border security effort such as the
administration's Secure Border Initiative (SBI), can
significantly reduce the size of the illegal alien
population at a reasonable cost.
The report, by CIS Senior Policy Analyst Jessica
Vaughan, finds that, according to the government's own
cost estimates, an attrition strategy could cut the
illegal population by nearly half in five years, with an
additional investment of less than $2 billion, or $400
million per year – an increase of less than 1 percent of
the President's 2007 budget request for the Department
of Homeland Security ($42.7 billion).
The report, ''Attrition Through Enforcement: A
Cost-Effective Strategy to Shrink the Illegal
Population,'' is on line at
http://www.cis.org/articles/2006/back406.html and
includes the following additional findings:
* Elements of an attrition strategy would include:
mandatory workplace verification of immigration status;
measures to curb misuse of Social Security and IRS
identification numbers; partnerships with state and
local law enforcement officials; expanded entry-exit
recording under US-VISIT; increased non-criminal
removals; and state and local laws to discourage illegal
settlement.
* An attrition strategy could reduce the illegal
population by as many as 1.5 million illegal aliens each
year. Currently, only about 183,000 illegal aliens per
year depart without the intervention of immigration
officials, according to DHS statistics.
* Persuading illegals to leave of their own accord works
faster and is cheaper than a borders-only approach to
immigration law enforcement. For example, under the
controversial NSEERS program launched after 9/11, DHS
removed roughly 1,500 illegally-resident Pakistanis;
over the same time period, in response to the
registration requirements, about 15,000 illegal
Pakistani immigrants left the country on their own.
* Requiring employers to verify the status of workers
could deny jobs to about three million illegal workers
in three years, affecting at least one-third of the
illegal population. This measure is a central feature of
H.R. 4437, the enforcement measure passed by the House
of Representatives in December, and is estimated to cost
just over $400 million over five years.
* The Internal Revenue Service knows the name, address,
and place of employment of millions of illegal aliens,
and issues hundreds of millions of dollars in tax
refunds and tax credits to illegal aliens. Changing the
laws to provide for information-sharing would help boost
immigration law enforcement at minimal cost.
* US-VISIT border registration program is a critical
tool in curbing illegal immigration. Screening must be
expanded to include Mexicans and Canadians, and DHS must
move forward to deploy an exit-recording system. These
steps should be a prerequisite to adding or expanding
any visa program.
* Less than 10 percent of the investigative resources of
the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
are devoted to fraud, workplace violations, and
overstayers. DHS could double non-criminal removals at a
cost of roughly $120 million per year, balancing a
''broken windows'' approach with its current triage
approach to interior enforcement.
* Laws enacted by the state governments of Florida and
New York to prevent illegal immigrants from obtaining
driver's licenses have induced more illegal aliens to
leave than have federal enforcement efforts against
certain illegal populations in those states, and have
come at virtually no cost to the federal government.
# # #
----------------------------------------
Center for Immigration Studies
1522 K St. NW, Suite 820
Washington, DC 20005
(202) 466-8185 / fax: (202) 466-8076
center@cis.org
/
http://www.cis.org
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BORDERWAR 2006 - 2 visits - Apr 12
Mirrored here:
http://www.apfn.org/audio/AlertMessages.mp3. They
speak the truth. The warnings began in January and are
current to the amnesty. ...