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“‘Dysfunctional’ doesn’t begin to describe our immigration bureaucracy”

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Immmigration law professor Nicole Hallett, on The Hill looks critically at the immigration bureaucracy, with a focus on U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS),:

“The immigration bureaucracy is a study in dysfunction that fails to work at the most basic level. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) gets a lot of criticism for how it is run, but a lesser-known agency, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), holds sway over many more people’s lives. USCIS is the part of the immigration system that processes applications for immigration benefits, including applications for lawful permanent residence, naturalization, work authorization, and visa extensions. While ICE deported approximately 185,000 people in fiscal year 2020, USCIS received 7.7 million applications. Millions of people’s lives are in a holding pattern because they are waiting for decisions on applications filed with USCIS. They may be waiting a long time. For example, the wait time for a decision on an application to adjust status (i.e., a green card application) being processed at the USCIS Texas Service Center is currently 27 to 62.5 months. . . . .  These wait times do not even take into account the visa backlogs that leave applicants unable to even apply for years or, in some cases, decades.”

KJ

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