US immigration agency job cuts will bring visa system to
a halt
The US federal agency responsible for immigration, processing visa
applications and approving citizenship is threatening to furlough more than
half of its workforce unless Congress provides additional funding, according to
a spokesperson.
The US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is
preparing to furlough 70 percent of its staff, unless it receives fresh
funding, which would bring an already backlogged system to a virtual halt.
USCS, an agency of the Department of State largely depends
on fees from new immigration applications for its operations, now faces an
historic budget shortfall.
This comes at a time when President Donald Trump’s 2020
re-election campaign manifesto highlights slashing legal and undocumented immigration
to America.
Already the number of new immigrants to the US has been
dramatically curtailed by new regulations, executive actions and travel
restrictions introduced to combat the coronavirus pandemic.
The agency has seen fee income decline by 50% since March has
requested a $1.2bn bailout from Congress to avoid drastic staff reductions.
"On or before July 2, approximately 13,400 USCIS
employees will receive notice that if USCIS must proceed with an administrative
furlough, they would be furloughed beginning August 3," the USCIS
spokesperson's statement said.
Staff furloughs "will for sure cause noticeable delays
immediately," one USCIS employee, who asked not to be named, told the
Reuters News Agency. "There are already so many backlogs to work through.
It's insane to even contemplate how bad this is going to get."
This week, Trump signed a presidential proclamation banning US
entry under a number of categories of temporary visa holders. He also extended the
ban on some green card applicants, which the administration said would help
open more jobs for unemployed Americans.
The move may win Trump votes, but could also hurt the beleaguered
US economy, which has seen many States put the brakes on reopening for business
following a spike in Coronavirus Covid 19 cases.
Western nations compete for talented nurses, doctors,
engineers, teachers, as well as entrepreneurs and investors. Even if their
ultimate destination is America, professionals, such as nurses from the
Philippines, will often apply for jobs in the UK, New Zealand or Australia to work
or settle abroad. Not all will pursue the American dream after gaining permanent
residence or citizenship in another country
Wealthy business people and investors may choose to take
their money elsewhere and settle in countries like Canada and Australia or EU
countries where they feel more welcome.
EU countries, such as Cyprus offer a guaranteed route to citizenship in the
European Union.
The Cypriot immigration policy and legal framework now
enable Non-EU applicants to obtain Cypriot citizenship on an expedited basis –
fast.
If you have funds to invest and would like to know more
about the Cyprus golden visa programme visit: http://eugoldenvisaprogramme.com
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