If these marching Filipino-Americans in downtown New York are to be heard, all undocumented immigrants should be legalized. (Balita file photo) |
If most
pro-immigration advocates get their way, all 11 million undocumented immigrants
will become legal in the U.S…and maybe more. But while potential immigration
reform is becoming more likely as the year progresses, speculations arise as to
how each issue within the current but broken down immigration system will be
addressed.
Take border security
for example. Since more boots have been put on the ground at the border, there
have been less and less people who are being caught crossing the desert, or so
the government claims. To the conservatives, this is great news. Although they
want a more secure, if not a totally impenetrable wall at the border, they also
point to the fact that the economy is so bad that people down south may find no
incentive in coming here.
This brings to mind
the four senators in the “Gang of 8” from the Republican Party, namely Sen.
John McCain (R-Ariz.), Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.)
and Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.), whose main concern is how to secure the border
first, before they deal with the millions of undocumented immigrants.
At present, drones,
cameras, the deployment of more Border Patrol and National Guard personnel and
what’s left of the Minutemen seem to be reducing the number of illegal
crossings. The other four are Sens. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Chuck Schumer
(D-N.Y.), Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) and Michael Bennet (D-Colo.)
In Thursday’s New
American Media National Telebriefing on “Behind the Business-Labor Agreement on
Immigration Reform: What Ethnic Media Need to Know,” America’s Voice Executive
Director Frank Sharry said that the U.S. should not spend a dime more in
fortifying the border. Sharry said there are already 21,000 Border Patrol
agents deployed in the area and “we don’t need to waste more (funds) on agents
as there’s already been a tremendous effort in securing the border.”
Sharry made it known
that he backs ongoing efforts in preventing people from coming up north.
“Sustained effort, sure, I favor that,” Sharry said, “but we shouldn’t be
wasting more taxpayers’ money.” He said what’s more important is how to address
the issue on why people come to the U.S. illegally and the magnet that attracts
them to cross the border.
Speaking
of magnets, work and Benjamin Franklin are what drive people to risk their
lives in scaling the wall, crossing the Rio Grande, trudging the desert or
navigating a crudely-built tunnel. For those who braved any of those routes – as
difficult as it may have been, they were successful – and as result are
becoming more optimistic. Some may even be thinking back on how they made it
through the ordeal, ultimately, viewing their
acquisition of legal US citizenship as the fruit of their hardships.
To
many, this is just. To the conservatives, an “amnesty” means rewarding those
who “violated” the law. The latter just need to cite that the 1986 amnesty that
President Ronald Reagan implemented, who by the way was a conservative
Republican, which resulted in more people crossing the border illegally. It
would appear as if the federal government had forgotten that despite its
perceived strength, the border is indeed a permeable entity.
Be that as it may, it
seems more likely that when a bill is introduced, the GOP in the Gang of 8 will
most likely agree in making the undocumented illegals legal because of last
year’s elections, where the Latino vote decisively voted for their opponent
Barack Obama. As a “compromise,” they will potentially make the undocumented
pay taxes, learn English and go back to the metaphorical end the line. But
that’s easier said than done.
In the same briefing
on Thursday, this author posed the following questions: What have the advocates
heard as to how much an individual will have to pay in taxes? And if they do,
what will happen to the businesses that hired them (illegally) since these
companies will surely be criticized as the “culprit” and the reason as to why
the millions of undocumented individuals are able to stay here, find work and
survive?
The Immigration Policy
and Advocacy Center for American Progress Vice President Angela Kelley, who is
based in Washington D.C., said there has been no word on the amount of taxes
these individuals will pay as far as ongoing House Judiciary Committee hearings
are concerned, but she admitted that businesses might get exposed.
Kelley said whatever
bill they decide upon, it should have some sort of protection on the part of
the businesses and that there should be no risks involved when the undocumented
individuals submit their papers throughout the application process. “(The bill)
has to function, so that it will become achievable. If it can’t be done, then
you’re not solving the problem, ” she said.
A section in the
Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 provides that companies will be held
liable for hiring undocumented immigrants and that businesses or persons hiring
undocumented immigrants may pay a fine that may cost them as much as $10,000 “for
each such alien.” They are also criminally liable. An article by the New
York Times in May 2011 stated that the raids conducted by the
Department of Homeland Security on businesses netted fines totaling about $43
million in 2010, which the paper said was a record. The same article said 119
employers were convicted. This is separate from the numerous raids on several
factories all over the U.S., where companies said they tried to verify the
legality of their workers but didn’t have the capability to know which papers
are true and correct.
As to the question of
who will benefit from the immigration reform, Kelley hopes that those who have
been staying in the U.S. illegally for at least a year should be accommodated,
which may increase the 11 million count. She recalled, however, that those who
benefited from the 1986 amnesty program were people who stayed here
continuously for at least four and half years. The law allowed nearly three
million undocumented immigrants to gain permanent residency.
Economic Impact
While many don’t like
the idea of another round of amnesty, the Obama administration has been
deporting record numbers of undocumented immigrants. Despite that however, a
separate study by the Center for American Progress said deporting all 11 million
“would drain $2.5 trillion from the U.S. economy over 10 years." The same
study said mass deportation could cost U.S. taxpayers $285 billion over five
years.
Pro-immigrant
advocates have argued that the economic benefit of making the undocumented
legal far outweighs the alternative, not to mention that deporting these
immigrants can often have consequences for their children, who were born and
raised in the United States. In the agricultural sector alone, landowners have
said that no American workers would want to work at the farms despite the high
unemployment rate in the U.S. that stood at 7.7 percent as of Thursday.
According to
Washington D.C.-based Urban Institute, the total immigrant income in 1989, or
three years after the 1986 amnesty program, reached $285 billion (citing 1990
census figures), which the think tank said “represented about eight percent of all
reported income.”
Another study by White
House Council of Economic Advisers during President George Bush (43) also
stated that immigrants increase gross domestic product “by roughly $37 billion
each year because immigrants increase the size of the total labor force,
complement the native-born workforce in terms of skills and education, and
stimulate capital investment by adding workers to the labor pool.”
Just recently, Raul
Hinojosa-Ojeda, director of the North American Integration and Development
Center at the University of California, Los Angeles, said, “A comprehensive
immigration plan that includes a path to legalization could add $1.5 trillion
to the economy over the next 10 years and increase tax revenues by $4.5 billion
or more in three years,” in an article posted on Bloomberg.com – a huge amount
indeed at a time when the U.S. needs more revenues to reduce its deficit.
For whatever it’s worth,
it seems that both sides of the aisle will benefit from an immigration reform.
Though the “one-time” 1986 amnesty may have failed to prevent the entry of more
people illegally, it doesn’t change the fact that they are huge contributors to
the U.S. economy because they came here to work.