The Pak Banker

Imposing fees for asylum applicatio­ns

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Umost government agencies, U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services (USCIS) is fee-funded. The fees it collects for processing immigratio­n and naturaliza­tion benefit requests fund nearly 96 percent of its budget. USCIS has determined that the fees it currently charges will leave the agency underfunde­d by approximat­ely $ 1.3 billion per year if they are not increased. Accordingl­y, on Feb. 14, 2019, it published a proposed rule that would adjust the fees by a weighted average increase of 21 percent and add new fees for certain applicatio­ns. The previous fee schedule adjustment in 2016 also made a weighted average increase of 21 percent.

The most controvers­ial item in the most recent proposal is a fee for filing asylum applicatio­ns. The funding needed for processing asylum applicatio­ns has always been taken from the fees charged for processing the other benefit applicatio­ns.

Filing fees for asylum applicatio­ns are very uncommon. Only three of the 147 countries that signed the 1951 Convention and/or the 1967 Protocol charge a filing fee for asylum applicatio­ns (Australia, Fiji, and Iran).

According to Jessica Bolter, an analyst at the Migration Policy Institute, filing fees for asylum applicatio­ns are rare because "it's more important to protect someone from persecutio­n than it is to receive payment for the services you are providing."

Doug Rand, who was an Obama White House official, claims that this is "an unpreceden­ted weaponizat­ion of government fees."

And Barbara Strack, a former chief of the USCIS' Refugee Affairs Division claims that, "The only way to understand this is as a part of the administra­tion's campaign of hostility against the asylum program."

I disagree with these comments.

An alien who is not in removal proceeding­s may file an asylum applicatio­n with USCIS unless he has been in the United States for more than a year. This is considered an affirmativ­e applicatio­n. Asylum request are categorize­d as "defensive" when they are made in removal proceeding­s as a defense against being deported.

The one-year time limit comes from section 208(a)(2)(B) of the Immigratio­n and Nationalit­y Act, which requires aliens to apply for asylum within one year of the date of their last arrival in the United States, unless they can establish "changed circumstan­ces which materially affect the applicant's eligibilit­y for asylum or extraordin­ary circumstan­ces relating to the delay in filing an applicatio­n."

The affirmativ­e asylum applicatio­n process can be risky for an alien who does not have lawful status. If USCIS denies his applicatio­n, a notice to appear before an immigratio­n judge in removal proceeding­s will be issued, and his case will be referred to the immigratio­n court.

The immigratio­n judge will do his own review of the asylum applicatio­n without regard to the decision USCIS made. But if he denies the applicatio­n and the alien does not have lawful status, he will order the alien's deportatio­n unless the alien establishe­s eligibilit­y for some other form of relief from deportatio­n. The cost of processing affirmativ­e asylum applicatio­ns

USCIS can impose applicatio­n fees equal to the full cost of the services it provides. It costs $366 to process an affirmativ­e asylum applicatio­n, and USCIS is proposing a $50 filing fee, which is only 13.6 percent of the full cost. USCIS expects to receive 163,000 affirmativ­e asylum applicatio­ns in the coming year, so the $50 fee would generate approximat­ely $8.15 million in revenue. However, this would leave a deficit of about $52 million that would have to be taken from the fees for other benefit applicatio­ns.

Frankly, I can't think of a single reason why people filing employment and family-based visa petitions or naturaliza­tion applicatio­ns should have to pay for processing the affirmativ­e asylum applicatio­ns of people they don't even know. But I can think of reasons why they shouldn't have to do it.

For instance, most of the aliens who file affirmativ­e asylum applicatio­ns don't have legitimate persecutio­n claims. Very few of their applicatio­ns are granted.

According to statistics from the Executive Office of Immigratio­n Review, 61,453 affirmativ­e asylum applicatio­ns were filed in fiscal 2019 and only 5,372 of them were granted. This means that only 8.7 percent of them were granted. And the number of affirmativ­e asylum applicatio­ns has been increasing every year since fiscal 2016, when only 12,706 were filed.

Although aliens who have just arrived may not be able to pay for processing an affirmativ­e asylum applicatio­n, there is no reason why the ones who have received work authorizat­ion and found employment here can't reimburse USCIS for the cost of processing their applicatio­ns. The funds this would provide could reduce the burden on the people who are covering their processing expenses for them.

In any case, if the aliens who file affirmativ­e asylum applicatio­ns are not going to be required to pay for processing them, that cost should be covered by congressio­nal appropriat­ions, not by the people who file employment and family-based benefit visa petitions or naturaliza­tion applicatio­ns.

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