Associated Press
By Alicia Caldwell
October 22, 2014
The
White House on Wednesday cautioned against making assumptions about
President Barack Obama's changes to immigration rules based on a new
federal contract proposal
from the Homeland Security Department to buy enough supplies to make as
many as 34 million immigrant work permits and residency cards over the
next five years.
The
Associated Press reported earlier in the day the contract proposal
suggested that the Obama administration appeared to be preparing for an
increase in the number work
permit applications form of immigrants living illegally in the country.
The U.S. government produces about 3 million work permits and residency
identification, known as green cards, annually. The new contract for at
least 5 million cards a year would provide
the administration with the flexibility to issue far more work permits
or green cards even if it chose not to exercise that option.
"I
think those who are trying to read into those specific orders about
what the president may decide are a little too cleverly trying to divine
what the president's ultimate
conclusion might be," White House spokesman Josh Earnest said. "What I
would caution you against is making assumptions about what will be in
those announcements based on the procurement practices of the Department
of Homeland Security."
Earnest did not say whether Obama plans to issue more work permits.
Obama
announced earlier this year that if Congress didn't pass immigration
legislation, he would act on his own. After twice postponing a final
decision, he said as recently
as last month that he would hold off on executive actions until after
November's midterm elections.
The
administration has repeatedly declined to say what options Obama was
considering, but it is widely believed that he will expand protections
from deportation already
extended to more than 500,000 young immigrants who came to the United
States as children. Under that program, known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, many young immigrants who are in school or who have
graduated and don't have a criminal record can
win protection from deportation for up to two years. They are also
eligible for work permits.
The
president does not have the legal authority unilaterally to offer
immigrants living in the country illegally green cards or any other
permanent immigration status.
But administration officials have said the president can authorize
protection from deportation for immigrants on a case-by-case basis, such
as with the DACA program, and issue them work permits.
U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services Director Leon Rodriguez told an
audience at a Georgetown University Law Center conference Tuesday that
his agency was ready for
whatever immigration changes Obama may announce. He declined to provide
details.
USCIS
confirmed to the AP on Tuesday that it published a draft contract
proposal to buy the card stock needed to make work permits and permanent resident cards, more commonly
known as green cards. The proposal calls for providing material for at
least 5 million cards a year, with as many as 9 million "during the
initial period ... to support possible future immigration reform
initiative requirements." The contract calls for as
many 34 million cards over five years.
USCIS spokesman Christopher Bentley described the proposal posted earlier this month a routine contract solicitation.
"Solicitations
of this nature are frequent practice," Bentley said. He said the number
of immigration applications can rise "for any number of any reasons."
The contract proposal was first reported by the online news site Breitbart.com.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment