I'm reading the comments on USCIS's "comment box" for all the ways they could be a better agency. Here's the first one from @GSiskind. I love it!
There's so much to love in this next one. Why are EADs necessary at all?
USCIS is not a serious agency. We all know this. But not using email is an embarrassment.
Here are the first three suggestions from @doug_rand targeting the #USCISbacklog
Also, @doug_rand says USCIS needs to use its authority to extend premium processing to other forms, raising revenue to hire adjudicators and reduce the backlog for everyone.
Here's one of my new suggestions that I submitted as part of our comments. @gsiskind helped me with the implications for doctors. I published it as a blog post today. cato.org/blog/uscis-dol…
@angelopaparelli and co's comments include surveys of its clients on many issues. Very interesting! I love: "The inability for USCIS to authorize auto-extensions of Employment Authorization Documents (EAD) where agency processing delays result in work authorization gaps "
There are so many good ideas here! Masterful!
I plan on writing about many of these ideas on the coming days.
@BrentRenison suggests USCIS retain the priority date for a derivative child who has aged out of EB eligibility but then enters the FB line. He notes SCOTUS has already affirmed USCIS's authority to go through with this change in 2014. Why did USCIS fail to do it under Obama?
@BrentRenison elaborates on the need for automatic EAD extensions
@BrentRenison with another great suggestion! Why are EADs valid for such a short period? It makes no sense!
More from @BrentRenison. How does a rule like this persist for so long? It's like the only lights in the USCIS building are at the adjudicators' desks, and so no one can see even a tiny big of the big picture
More from @BrentRenison. I'm getting enraged reading this. This agency is supposed to be the "pro-immigrant" immigration agency but it's actually an awful Kafka-esque bureaucratic disaster
More from @BrentRenison. If it takes more than 6 months to adjudicate something, shouldn't the timeline for filing *automatically adjust* to a period much earlier than that?
Moving onto @AILANational's comment. You really get the sense that USCIS *desperately* needed to this feedback. Its new leadership was never going to discover most of this on their own when so much has gone into making this dysfunctional system
Whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat... YOU ARE AN IMMIGRATION AGENCY!
So much basic, basic, basic, mind-numbingly basic stuff here
USCIS: "We're going to make things easier for you! Oh but we aren't going to talk to anyone before we make things easier... We're just going to wing it! Don't you love us?"
When was the last time anyone really cared about a functioning legal immigration system? Abraham Lincoln?
I just realized that AILA's comment is 20 pages. I'm only 4 pages in. Of course, Cato's comment is 40 pages, but AILA's has probably 5 times as many suggestions. Ah! This one cuts me deep. Unreliable and unhelpful data are the worst!
Last in, first out is turning the entire asylum application process into a sham. USCIS needs to fix this! 15 year wait for processing! Insanity!
It's crazy to me that USCIS has adjudications to get to its adjudications which are only caused by failure to adjudicate still other forms!
Here's another no-one-really-cares-about-you note from USCIS
Apparently this isn't happening. My brain hurts. Who has run this agency for the last 2 decades? Not to repeat, but obviously no one has really looked at why this agency is so messed up before.
Oh good thing this was created then...
Oh here's a gem from @AILANational. Please do this @USCIS
There are so many Trump policies still around. How is this possible? These are the EASY things to identify?
It certainly seems that at least some people at USCIS do not want people to easily know what the law is.
Every one of these things are enough to impeach the agency for high crimes
More Trump changes that inexplicably persist. USCIS should put into regulations that none of this is discretionary at the officer level so they can't keep easily undoing this.
CBP shouldn't get to make these decisions at all. Who cares if someone's passport is going to expire before the end of their stay? That's their problem, not CBP's. CBP should always approve for whatever the I-797 says.
An intriguing proposal. I wasn't aware that Es weren't already considered "dual intent" by virtue of the fact that they don't have to have a residence abroad that they have "no intention of abandoning" like Hs.
You would really think that Trump would've wanted more competition for @AlexNowrasteh and friends! Why is Biden keeping this?
Here's another one of my new suggestions that I submitted: "U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) should increase the three‐​year limit on H-2B and H-2A extensions of status to six years." cato.org/blog/uscis-sho…
I'm hopeful that USCIS will actually do this one (unlike some of my other H-2 suggestions) because it increases the bargaining power of H-2 workers relative to their employers. If employers know that you can't extend, that's a real problem for you! cato.org/blog/uscis-sho…
Wow. Three "comply withs" in a row. USCIS is as lawless as the rest of them.
Interesting. I'd love to hear what the legal arguments are here, but let's recapture as many unused numbers as possible!
Several commenters just submitted our list of ideas to which I added three more for the comments we submitted. cato.org/publications/s…
I was always very confused by how this case turned out, but it's a great suggestion from @the_ILRC. We currently are violating the text of the law to obtain an "equal" result that harms people who are being "equalized". It doesn't make sense to me.
Ugh... there's so many problems. It's one reason why @angelopaparelli and I urged the president and the agency to require leniency in favor of the applicants in the interpretation of all laws and rules. Anything ambiguous should go to the applicant.
Somehow I messed up my own thread. Oh well
Here's a good easy one for USCIS @the_ILRC. No "Extreme" (ly vague) vetting questions
More "extreme" (ly pointless) vetting
I'm furious that I messed up this thread multiple times! I'm as bad as USCIS
Hopefully USCIS will do a better job reading the comments than I did with my threads
@NFAPResearch nails this. DHS should stop inaccurately describing its overstay report as a report on "overstays." Obama started this thing, and then Trump predictably misused it to cancel visas for certain nationalities. USCIS should clearly state that it can't count overstays
Back to @the_ILRC's awesome comments. Trying to banish people for using legal marijuana is an example of how the immigration agencies take part in some of the worst abuses of government power
Please leftists never nationalize all businesses. This is horrific.
How America treats noncitizen crime victims is illustrative of how much it values noncitizens generally.

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More from @David_J_Bier

21 May
What's your least favorite most annoying #I485 question? This one is truly nuts uscis.gov/sites/default/… Image
Why are there so many questions about things that appear to me to be unrelated to someone's eligibility for adjustment of status? Why are you asking about activities and conduct that aren't related to your eligibility for a visa?
It seems to me that USCIS asks lots of questions for which there is no statutory basis to trap people in incorrect answers because they may not know what's relevant and what's not. Then if you supply incorrect info, then they can deny you!
Read 5 tweets
21 May
Unbelievable! USCIS delayed the #H2B rule for 55 days past employer's start dates. Then tells them all that their labor certifications are "out of date" if the start date was more than 45 days ago, forcing them to redo the whole process. Wonder why we've got illegal immigration? Image
I'm certain that #H2B employers will do this, but it is absolutely ridiculous and unfair to employers that are trying to follow the law. They met all the requirements. They did everything right, and now USCIS says they have to redo it b/c the agency messed up. Unbelievable.
USCIS says every employer under this rule will have to prove "irreparable harm" if they don't get visas and that the visas will help preserve US workers jobs. Yet it is arbitrarily capping the number of visas at 1/3 the number Congress allowed. It doesn't even try to justify it Image
Read 10 tweets
21 May
In addition to our previously published regulatory reform ideas, Cato's comment included three additional proposals for USCIS on H visas. First, USCIS increase the H-2 status limit to 6 years. The 3-year limit is not supported in the statute cato.org/blog/uscis-sho…
6 years would harmonize with H-1B. More importantly, the 3-year limit reduces the number of available H-2 workers (particularly for H-2B), while also decreasing the bargaining power for all H-2 workers who have reached the 3-year limit since employers know they can't change jobs
Second, USCIS should create a 60‐​day “grace period” of authorized status for H-2A and H-2B workers to find subsequent jobs, and it should allow the new job to start as soon as a petition is filed on their behalf. cato.org/blog/uscis-sho…
Read 8 tweets
21 May
He says there is no labor shortage b/c all companies need to do to get workers is raise wages. But then he says that companies are raising wages and concludes by giving several reasons why "shortages" are happening anyway nytimes.com/2021/05/20/bri…
In the technical sense, of course, the fact that McDonalds can't find workers at whatever wage isn't a "shortage." But the idea that it'll ever make financial sense for McDonalds to pay $25/hour to take burger orders is absurd.
So... Americans have dropped out of the labor force. Small businesses can't afford to raise wages, and the government is paying people not to work, so even raising wages isn't enough to pull them back in. I'm just confused by his piece. Image
Read 5 tweets
19 May
Imagine how much suffering would have been avoided, how much bigger, better, stronger, and more interesting the United States would be today, how much more freedom and prosperity there would be on this continent if the US had maintained free immigration at least in North America.
The millions of arrests, incarcerations, deportations. Tens of thousands of deaths in the deserts and rivers, and many more at the hands of cartels and criminals. Families torn apart. Homelessness. So much poverty and suffering and lost prosperity for us and them.
The only purpose of it all was just to keep Americans and other North Americans separated. How many great Americans never came to exist? How many great businesses, movies, music, foods were lost? We know so many were created. So much joy to remind us how much more could have been
Read 4 tweets
16 Apr
Some expected effects of letting migrants come legally rather than illegally:

-Immigrants would travel to the US on reputable airlines.
-Human smuggling networks would lose billions of dollars in revenue.
-Thousands of deaths of immigrants would be prevented along the journey.
-Thousands of crimes against migrants would be prevented.
-Many more immigrants would free themselves from all manner of despotism.
-Freedom of religion, speech, association, property ownership, education, etc. would increase.
-People living in poverty would fall.
-More immigrants would return to their home countries for visits or permanently.
-The number of legal violations would fall by millions.
-The black market in fake identification documents would almost disappear.
-Billions of dollars of law enforcement spending would be freed up.
Read 8 tweets

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