The Sentinel-Record

Millions more immigrants under far- reaching Senate bill

- ERICA WERNER

WASHINGTON — Landmark immigratio­n legislatio­n passed by the Senate would remake America’s workforce from the highest rungs to the lowest and bring many more immigrants into the economy, from elite technology companies to restaurant kitchens and rural fields.

In place of the unauthoriz­ed workers now commonly found laboring in lower- skilled jobs in the agricultur­e or service industries, many of these workers would be legal, some of them permanent- resident green card holders or even citizens.

Illegal immigratio­n across the border with Mexico would slow, but legal immigratio­n would increase markedly.

That’s the portrait that emerges from recent analyses of the far- reaching bill passed last month by the Senate with the backing of the White House. Although the bill aims to secure the borders, track people overstayin­g their visas and deny employers the ability to hire workers here illegally, it by no means seeks to choke off immigratio­n. Indeed, the U. S. population over the next two decades would be likely to increase by 15 million people above the probable level if no changes were made to immigratio­n laws, according to the Congressio­nal Budget Office.

Even after decades of growth in the U. S. foreign- born population, the added increase could be felt in ways large and small around the country, from big cities that would absorb even more diversity to small towns that may still be adjusting to current immigrant arrivals.

“That is baked into the basic premise of the bill,” said Doris Meissner, a senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute, “which is that you need to provide legal avenues for people to come to the country both in longer- term temporary and in permanent visa categories in order to meet the needs of the future and avert the incentives for illegal immigratio­n.”

The level of immigratio­n under the legislatio­n has been a political issue in the debate and will probably continue to be disputed in the weeks ahead as the House’s GOP majority wrestles with how to respond to the Senate bill. It’s a complex question because the Senate version expands various temporary and permanent visa categories, shuts down others and creates new ones. Some visa programs are capped and some aren’t, and some would expand or contract in response to demand.

Opponents led by Sen. Jeff Sessions, R- Ala., have forecast dramatic increases in immigratio­n under the bill, with Sessions warning that 57 million new permanent and temporary residents and newly legalized immigrants would flood the U. S. within the decade and rob Americans of jobs. On the other side, supporters including Sen. Marco Rubio, R- Fla., have downplayed the impact of the bill. In response to Sessions, Rubio’s office argues that the Senate bill “does not significan­tly increase long- term, annual migration to the United States.”

Under current law, around 1 million people get green cards granting permanent U. S. residence each year. That would rise to between 1.5 million to 1.7 million annually under the Senate bill within about five years of enactment, the Migration Policy Institute estimates.

But those figures don’t count people coming to the U. S. under temporary worker visas, and their numbers could rise by hundreds of thousands a year under the Senate bill, according to the Institute. This includes more than twice as many visas for high- skilled workers, a new visa category for lower- skilled workers that could go up to 220,000 a year, and more visas for agricultur­al workers. There are also tens of thousands of new work visas set aside for people from Ireland, South Korea, African and Caribbean countries, and elsewhere that got special deals in the bill. Some of these workers would be able to transition to permanent status and eventually citizenshi­p.

On the other side, the flow of illegal immigratio­n into the country would decrease by onethird or one- half compared with current law, the Congressio­nal Budget Office says. Illegal immigratio­n has already decreased since 2000 due to a combinatio­n of factors, including the economic downturn and greater security measures in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.

Although up- to- date annual figures on illegal immigratio­n are hard to come by, one recent study published in the Internatio­nal Migration Review said that close to 400,000 people entered illegally in 2009, either by crossing the border unlawfully or overstayin­g temporary visas. An author of the study, Robert Warren, said that figure probably has not changed dramatical­ly in the years since.

The Senate bill offers a 13year path to citizenshi­p for the estimated 11 million immigrants already here illegally, the most contentiou­s element of the legislatio­n since many House conservati­ves oppose granting citizenshi­p to people who broke U. S. laws to be here. But that aspect of the legislatio­n has little impact on the overall population size since the people involved are already in the country even if they end up transition­ing to legal status. The Congressio­nal Budget Office estimates that some 8 million of them would do just that.

Beyond the changes in numbers, the immigratio­n bill would shift the emphasis of U. S. immigratio­n policy away from family ties and put more weight on employment prospects, education and relative youth. It also would raise ceilings on how many immigrants could come from any one country. And there would be impacts as yet unforeseen as the policies unspool into an uncertain future and economic conditions in other countries affect how many foreigners dream of calling the U. S. home.

“There’s not going to be a dramatic change that we will see overnight, but longer- term changes,” said Audrey Singer, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n. “We’ve got this idea of the policy and then when we put it into practice inevitably there are unintended consequenc­es or unintended trends that develop.”

 ??  ?? CONGRESS RETURNS: Senate Minority Leader, Republican Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, Senate Majority Leader, Democrat Harry Reid of Nevada, House Speaker, Republican John Boehner of Ohio participat­e in a June 19 ceremony on Capitol Hill in Washington....
CONGRESS RETURNS: Senate Minority Leader, Republican Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, Senate Majority Leader, Democrat Harry Reid of Nevada, House Speaker, Republican John Boehner of Ohio participat­e in a June 19 ceremony on Capitol Hill in Washington....

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