Center for Immigration Studies releases new report on US immigrant population

Update:  Washington Times has more on the study here.

Conclusion:   Immigrant households represent a larger percentage of those people living in poverty than native households.

The Center for Immigration Studies is a great source for background information on the legal and illegal immigrant population in the US.  Today they have announced the availability of their latest study based on Census Bureau data collected in 2010 and 2011.

They estimate that about a little over one quarter of the immigrants in the US and their children are here illegally.  But, these stats apply to both legal and illegal immigrants.

I’ve just picked a few summary points from the study (see below), but urge you to read the whole report here.

Overall Numbers

*The number of immigrants (legal and illegal) in the country hit a new record of 40 million in 2010, a 28 percent increase over the total in 2000.

*Of top sending countries, the largest percentage increase in the last decade was for those from Honduras (85 percent), India (74 percent), Guatemala (73 percent), Peru (54 percent), El Salvador (49 percent), Ecuador (48 percent), and China (43 percent).

Poverty

*In 2010, 23 percent of immigrants and their U.S.-born children (under 18) lived in poverty, compared to 13.5 percent of natives and their children. Immigrants and their children accounted for one-fourth of all persons in poverty.

*The children of immigrants account for one-third of all children in poverty.

*Among the top sending countries, poverty is highest for immigrants and their young children from Mexico (35 percent), Honduras (34 percent), and Guatemala (31 percent); and lowest for those from Germany (7 percent), India (6 percent), and the Philippines (6 percent).

Welfare Use

*In 2010, 36 percent of immigrant-headed households used at least one major welfare program (primarily food assistance and Medicaid) compared to 23 percent of native households.

*Among the top sending countries, welfare use is highest for households headed by immigrants from Mexico (57 percent), Guatemala (55 percent), and the Dominican Republic (54 percent); and lowest for those from Canada (13 percent), Germany (10 percent), and the United Kingdom (6 percent).

Read it all.  You might find especially interesting the “state numbers” which shows (no surprise) that financially struggling California tops the list with an almost 28% share of its population made up of immigrants.

USCIS and DOS working to improve “customer service” for “families” wishing to join immigrant here

It’s called the I-730 visa “Follow to Join” program being run jointly between the US Citizenship and Immigration Service and the US State Department.  A refugee or asylee gets into the US and can then file an application to bring spouse and minor unmarried children to the US.  The spouse and children need not prove that they are being persecuted or in danger, just that they are related to the anchor person who got in earlier.

On Monday we reported here that the USCIS would hold a teleconference to bring “stakeholders” up-to-date on their new pilot program geared to make for a smoother process to get those family members in more quickly and presumably to add some security measures.  Previously there were only a few places in the world where these applications were processed.

The pilot program was established in originally five locations and a sixth was added since the pilot was announced, here, in early 2011.

The pilot locations are Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Guatemala City, Guatemala; New Delhi, India; Port-au-Prince, Haiti; and Yaoundé, Cameroon. Since the original announcement a sixth location was added and that is Tashkent, Uzbekistan.   We learned yesterday that in those locations 4550 cases have been processed since the pilot program began in early 2011.  The largest number were processed in Addis (37%) with Port-au-Prince coming in as number 2 with 21% of the cases.    Eighteen new locations will be added soon to better facilitate “customer service.”

Stakeholders only!

At the beginning of the teleconference it was announced that if there were any members of the press on the phone they had to get off.   I didn’t think that applied to me because bloggers are told all the time that we aren’t legitimate media especially when it comes to getting into press-only events at places like the US State Department.   And, besides why should any media be excluded from hearing about how a program of the US government is going, especially one so intimately entwined with contractors.

And, I figured as a US taxpayer I was a “stakeholder!”   However, it seems their idea of a stakeholder is someone who is being paid (by the taxpayer) to help more immigrants get into the US.  Readers, you don’t actually think that the “charitable” organizations resettling refugees are doing so out of the goodness of their hearts—they are paid salaries to help file these forms.

As a matter of fact, I bet I was the only person on the phone not receiving any funds (either in salary or billable hours) for my hour of time.

Some of the “stakeholders” identifying themselves when they asked a question were the Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles, Catholic Charities of Brooklyn, Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society of Pennsylvania, World Relief Minnesota, Lutheran Family Services of CO, Heartland Alliance and Jewish Family and Children Services of Pittsburgh and others.   New York US Senator Gillibrand had a staffer on the phone (guess they are stakeholders) and the UNHCR had a representative on the line.

Questions by the teleconference participants were mostly involving minutia of the application process.  Oh, but one thing that really surprised me in the opening presentation was this:   81% of the cases were “follow to join asylees,” and 19% were “follow to join refugees.”    Asylees, as you know, are immigrants who got into the US on their own steam, perhaps crossed the border illegally, and then asked for asylum and ultimately convinced authorities that they were legitimately persecuted somewhere in the world.   At least in the case of refugees there is a presumption that much security screening has occurred in advance before they even touched American soil.

DNA testing!

The one discussion I found most interesting involved DNA testing, clearly an aggravation for many “stakeholders” and their customers.   Regular readers know that the Family Reunification portion of the refugee program (called P-3) has been closed for years and the hang-up appears to be this proposed requirement for DNA testing.   As we learned back in 2008, turns out that tens of thousands of “family” members getting into the US from Africa were not legally related to the anchor refugee here.  I’m guessing, but I do assume that this stepped-up interest in the I-730 process is a result of a lack of any resolution of P-3 program.  Back in 2010, draft regulations for P-3 were calling for DNA testing and the contractors and human rights advocates went nuts.

It was reported that in Addis Ababa where many Somalis and Eritreans were seeking “follow to join” permission that some children were being DNA tested.   The USCIS presenter on the phone was clearly uncomfortable with questioning about the number of such cases of DNA testing and insisted it was only for those people who did not have adequate documents to prove a relationship to the US anchor.

However, there is a mechanism for “adopted” children to get in with (or without?) an anchor’s spouse.  Go back to the  2011 USCIS report on the pilot program and note this rule (they must have been having problems with teens being “adopted” by “families”).

There is a co-residency requirement for I-730 adopted child beneficiaries.  To qualify as an adopted child for the purposes of family-based immigration, including refugee and asylee follow-to-join cases, a child must have been adopted before he or she turned 16 years of age and must have been in the legal and physical custody of the adoptive parent(s) for at least two years (see INA §101(b)(1)(E)).  The two year legal custody and residence requirements may take place before or after the adoption is final.

Kind of loosey-goosey though, don’t you think?  One could “adopt” a teenager at age 15 and how does one prove that the kid lived in your hut in Africa or somewhere for two years prior to that time?  Heck, the teen could be another wife!

Also, I think it was the UNHCR representative who asked if the USCIS had figured out what to do about “derivatives.”  Derivatives in this case are babies of the minor unmarried daughter.   You can see why this is called chain migration.

Ready to work and get benefits!

I almost forgot!  There was also mention of an I-765 form which will now be filled out in advance before the “beneficiary” gets off the plane.  Why?  That is explained, here, in that original report in 2011 on the “follow to join” pilot:

The beneficiary needs these forms to obtain work authorization, as well as state and federal benefits to which he or she may be entitled [which benefits?–ed].  By verifying the accuracy of these forms overseas, USCIS and DOS will facilitate the smooth processing of the beneficiary by CBP at port of entry and reduce the potential for problems that a beneficiary may have in attempting to access benefits once in the United States.

 We gotta keep those “customers” happy!  After all, we aim to please!

Sign up today to find out if more “family” members will join refugees in the US

Reader background:  In 2008, the US State Department found widespread fraud in the so-called P-3 family reunification program for refugees.   The State Department estimated that as many as 30,000 Africans (mostly Somalis) entered the US illegally in a five year period.  The program was suspended and not fully re-opened.

So now, some “refugees and asylees” are attempting to find other ways of getting “family” into the US.  The I-730 is one such program.  Before listening in on the “stakeholder” teleconference tomorrow, it’s recommended that you read this post in which a reader personally knowledgeable with some of these visa programs gives us a summary.

Here is the announcement from the USCIS (hat tip: Jim).  You must sign up today for the call tomorrow!

Dear Stakeholder [I hate that word, but as one reader recently pointed out, if you pay taxes, you are a stakeholder!–ed]

The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) International Operations Division and Public Engagement Division invite any interested individuals to participate in a teleconference on Tuesday, August 7, 2012 from 2:00 pm to 3:00 pm (Eastern) to receive an update on the Refugee and Asylee Follow-to-Join (Form I-730) pilot program that was launched overseas by USCIS and the Department of State (DOS) last year.

On March 31, 2011, USCIS and DOS began piloting new Form I-730 processing procedures at five overseas locations: Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Guatemala City, Guatemala; New Delhi, India; Port-au-Prince, Haiti; and Yaoundé, Cameroon. The pilot procedures were jointly developed by USCIS and DOS in an effort to improve customer service and to provide greater consistency, efficiency, and security in the processing of these important humanitarian cases.

During this engagement USCIS will provide an update on the pilot and plans for future implementation. In addition, subject matter experts will be available to answer questions from stakeholders.

To Participate in the Session

Please email the Public Engagement Division no later than August 6, 2012 at Public.Engagement@uscis.dhs.gov

Please reference “Follow to Join” in the subject line of your email. Please also include your full name and the organization you represent in the body of the email.

To Join the Session

On the day of the engagement please use the information below to join the session by phone. We recommend calling in 10 minutes prior to the start of the teleconference.
Call-in Number Inside the US: 1-800-779-9654
Call-in Number Outside the US: 001-212-547-0238
Passcode: 730

Kind Regards,

Public Engagement Division
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services

Leaders of the world-wide counter-jihad movement rallied and joined forces in Sweden on Saturday

Here is the story from Pamela Geller at Atlas Shrugs (emphasis mine):

Stockholm was a wild success, far exceeding expectations on so many levels. After an extraordinary rally* at Norra Bantorget in Stockholm, the heads of the leading worldwide counter-jihad organizations held a series of workshops and planning meetings. What has emerged from an intense forty-eight hour strategy session is the first activist leadership team uniting counter-jihadists in Europe, the U.S., and Australia: the President’s Council of Stop Islamization of Nations (SION).

The initial members of the President’s Council are SIOE’s Anders Gravers; Tommy Robinson and Kevin Carroll of the EDL; Debbie Robinson of the Q Society of Australia, Robert Spencer and me. The members of the newly formed council unanimously voted to elect me Council President. I am honored. This is a momentous beginning to what I am confident will become a powerful force for defending freedom worldwide.

The President’s Council differs from the SION Board, which includes Swiss parliamentarian Oskar Freysinger; Cliff Kincaid of Accuracy in Media; Ashraf Rameleh of Voice of the Copts; Ali Sina, the renowned ex-Muslim author and founder of FaithFreedom.org; Wafa Sultan, the ex-Muslim human rights activist and author; the German pro-freedom activist Stefan Herre of Politically Incorrect; the Israeli author Dr. Mordechai Kedar; the Hindu human rights activist Babu Suseelan; and Anders Gravers of Stop Islamisation of Europe (SIOE).

This Board functions in an advisory capacity, while the President’s Council is a steering committee. It functions as a mobile, proactive, reactive on-the-ground team developing and executing confidential action plans that strike at the heart of the global anti-freedom agenda.

Our next initiative will be the first session of the International Freedom Defense Congress, which will be held in New York on September 11, 2012. The principal focus of the Congress will be a media workshop pertaining to Islamic supremacist attempts to restrict the freedom of speech in the free world, and the smear campaigns against freedom fighters in newspapers and media institutions in the West.

* Here is just one of several reports on the rally.

Type ‘Sweden’ into our search function and you will see it was an ideal location for this gathering.

Another Connecticut food stamp fraud bust

More fellows named Smith and Jones are busted in food stamp fraud scheme—Not!   I don’t know the immigration status or nationalities of the three, but once again immigrant-owned convenience stores are the location of illegal activity.

From Meriden Patch:

Three people, including two Meriden men, are facing fraud charges after federal authorities said they partook in a scheme of exchanging food stamp benefits for cash at two city stores.

Carols Dominguez, 56, and Serafettin Buyuksoy, 56, both from Meriden, were arrested Thursday along with Myrachid Elquafai, 50, of New Haven, on charges of defrauding the federal Supplemental Nutrition and Assistance Program (SNAP) hundreds of thousands of dollars over the past two years.

These guys could get up to 20 years, but our local scammer (who inspired me to follow food stamp fraud stories) is out after only 18 months!  And, back running the store!

Read it all.  This publication, Meriden Patch, has printed the US Justice Department press release in its entirety.

For more on ‘Food Stamp Fraud’ from sea to shining sea, type those words into our search function.  My theory is that the US State Department runs those “Investor” programs that allow foreign nationals to get visas to come in and buy businesses in the US and they then turn them into hubs of illegal activity—drug dealing and/or food stamp fraud operations.