Imperial Valley Press

US visa boss insists mission statement isn’t anti-immigrant

- BY ELLIOT SPAGAT

SAN DIEGO — The head of the federal agency that grants citizenshi­p and immigratio­n benefits said Friday that he had a message for anyone who considers his new mission statement anti-immigrant: “A thousand times no.”

Francis Cissna told The Associated Press that he cut reference to the U.S. being a “nation of immigrants” from Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services’ mission statement because a “bureaucrat­ic” document was the wrong platform to say so. He said the country is indisputab­ly a nation of immigrants.

The agency’s mission statement is “not something where you put eternal profession­s of American values. That sort of thing belongs chiseled in the wall of a monument, not in some bureaucrat­ic mission statement,” he said.

Cissna said he was surprised by criticism after announcing the change Thursday to his 18,000 employees. He said the White House had no involvemen­t.

“This was all inside my head,” he said.

Cissna, who became director Oct. 1 after 12 years in various positions at the parent Department of Homeland Security, said he proposed a complete rewrite of the mission statement with senior agency leaders and union o cials at a meeting in mid-October. It was widely discussed in the agency over several months.

The old statement read, “USCIS secures America’s promise as a nation of immigrants by providing accurate and useful informatio­n to our customers, granting immigratio­n and citizenshi­p benefits, promoting an awareness and understand­ing of citizenshi­p, and ensuring the integrity of our immigratio­n system.”

Cissna said he “read it a bunch of times and it just didn’t do it and I thought I would just start from scratch.”

The new statement reads, “U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services administer­s the nation’s lawful immigratio­n system, safeguardi­ng its integrity and promise by efficientl­y and fairly adjudicati­ng requests for immigratio­n benefits while protecting Americans, securing the homeland, and honoring our values.”

Cissna said it was important to add “protecting Americans” because that’s why the Homeland Security Department was created in 2003 after aerial attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

“What I hope will happen is that people will better understand what it is we do and who it is we truly serve, namely the American people,” he said. “I think that was lost for a little while.”

The director also told employees to stop calling applicants “customers.”

In his message to them on Thursday, he wrote, “Use of the term leads to the erroneous belief that applicants and petitioner­s, rather than the American people, are whom we ultimately serve. All applicants and petitioner­s should, of course, always be treated with the greatest respect and courtesy, but we can’t forget that we serve the American people.”

Cissna told the AP on Friday that the word “customers” is business-speak and disrespect­ful to visa applicants.

“It’s demeaning to them because a lot of times the sorts of things they’re applying for relates to intimate family matters or refugees,” he said. “We’re not selling anything. We’re not working in a bakery.”

Cissna said feedback has been positive from employees, but others had strong reactions.

Annaluisa Padilla, president of the American Immigratio­n Lawyers Associatio­n, called the changes the “latest insidious attempt by the Trump administra­tion to diminish the valuable contributi­ons that immigrants have made to our nation and our local communitie­s will not turn Americans away from our most fundamenta­l values.”

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 ??  ?? This Dec. 13, file photo shows L. Francis Cissna, director of U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, during an interview in his o ce in downtown Los Angeles. Cissna told The Associated Press on Friday, that he cut a reference to the U.S. being a...
This Dec. 13, file photo shows L. Francis Cissna, director of U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, during an interview in his o ce in downtown Los Angeles. Cissna told The Associated Press on Friday, that he cut a reference to the U.S. being a...

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