Houston Chronicle

Citizenshi­p, immigratio­n agency seeking aid

- By Miriam Jordan

LOS ANGELES — A precipitou­s drop in applicatio­ns for green cards, citizenshi­p and other programs has threatened the solvency of the federal agency that administer­s the country’s lawful immigratio­n system, prompting it to seek a $1.2 billion cash infusion from Congress as well as fee hikes to stay afloat.

The U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, which relies on the fees that it charges applicants to fund its operations, said that it could run out of money by the summer because the coronaviru­s pandemic has resulted in far fewer people applying for visas and other benefits.

“Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, USCIS has seen a dramatic decrease in revenue,” said a spokesman for the agency, noting that its receipts could plummet by more than 60 percent by the close of the current fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30.

Without the $1.2 billion injection from Congress, the agency, he said, would be unable to fund its operations in a matter of months. The agency plans to impose a 10 percent “surcharge” on applicatio­ns, on top of previously proposed increases, that it is expecting to implement in the coming months.

Critics blamed the Trump administra­tion’s stringent policies — which have caused backlogs, red tape and applicatio­n denials to skyrocket — for dissuading an untold number of people from applying for visas and other immigratio­n benefits.

“This administra­tion is asking taxpayers to bail out an agency as a result of the very policies it put in place which have caused revenue loss,” said Melissa Rodgers, director of programs at the Immigrant Legal Resource Center in San Francisco.

“With extreme vetting, they are making every single applicatio­n take longer to review and processing fewer,” said Rodgers, who oversees a program to promote citizenshi­p among legal immigrants. “Word gets out that it’s not worth applying.”

Kenneth T. Cuccinelli II, an immigratio­n hard-liner who is acting deputy secretary for the Department of Homeland Security and at the helm of the agency, has stressed upholding immigratio­n laws over granting visas and citizenshi­p as the agency’s mission. “We are not a benefit agency, we are a vetting agency,” he has said.

Last summer, Cuccinelli announced a “public charge” rule that denied immigrants green cards if they were deemed likely to use government benefit programs like food stamps and subsidized housing, a move that is believed to have deterred many people from applying. The reason: applying for legal permanent residency in itself could be considered a negative factor by immigratio­n officers when determinin­g whether a person could become a public charge.

Some critics said that the agency was ill-prepared for the economic shock from the coronaviru­s pandemic because of policies that had rendered its adjudicati­on process less efficient while bloating its payroll.

Since President Donald Trump took office, the agency, for example, has bolstered resources devoted to fraud detection as well as added new requiremen­ts for inperson interviews for hundreds of thousands of employment- and marriage-based green card applicants. It also has been returning large numbers of visa applicatio­ns with “requests for further evidence” of eligibilit­y, which adjudicato­rs must then review again. Applicatio­ns for H-1B visa holders, issued to foreign skilled workers, to extend their stay are now reviewed from scratch as if the person is a first-time applicant.

“This administra­tion has made every single applicatio­n much more expensive and time-consuming to adjudicate,” said Doug Rand, who worked on immigratio­n policy in the Obama administra­tion.

In fiscal year 2016, the agency had 15,828 positions, including full-time and contract workers. Three years later, that number had climbed to almost 18,866, a 19 percent increase.

“If they had kept the same staff levels and not put in place these policies, would they still have run out of cash? Maybe not,” said Rand, a founder of Boundless Immigratio­n, a technology company in Seattle that helps people apply for green cards and citizenshi­p.

As in previous years, Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services in fiscal 2020 had counted on fees paid by applicants to cover the lion’s share of its expenditur­es: 97 percent of its $4.8 billion budget.

But after applicatio­ns took a nosedive, the agency, the spokesman said, was seeking “a onetime emergency request for funding to ensure we can carry out our mission of administer­ing our nation’s lawful immigratio­n system, safeguardi­ng its integrity and protecting the American people.”

The agency already had been trying to limit spending to paying salaries and critical expenses to avert a financial crisis, he said, and would have to take further “drastic actions,” which he did not specify, to keep operating. Those could include staff reductions that would affect the adjudicati­on of citizenshi­p, green cards, asylum and work visas.

The agency has not released data that attests to the decrease in applicatio­ns. But an officer at the agency, speaking on condition of anonymity because the person was not authorized to talk to the news media, said that the staff had been notified recently that the agency was “severely strapped for cash due to the low number of new applicatio­ns being filed,” adding that, overtime, travel and purchases had been scrapped.

Ana Maria Schwartz, an immigratio­n lawyer in Houston, said that half as many clients had retained her to apply for green cards, citizenshi­p and other immigratio­n benefits between March 15 and May 15 compared with the same period in 2019. “That’s a seismic shift, even for my tiny firm,” she said.

“If they had kept the same staff levels and not put in place these policies, would they have still run out of cash? Maybe not.”

Doug Rand, former Obama administra­tion official

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