Archive for the ‘Illegal Immigration’ Category

Are There Really 42000 Illegal Immigrant Doctors? – Immigration Blog

Identifying illegal aliens in Census Bureau data is a challenging task. Researchers must gather the limited amount of outside information they have about the illegal population, then make educated guesses about the legal status of non-citizens in the data. Given all the uncertainty, it's important to assess the face validity of the results in other words, are they plausible?

That's where a new Cato Institute analysis went wrong. Intending to demonstrate the importance of immigrants to the healthcare system, Alex Nowrasteh and Michelangelo Landgrave reported that over 42,000 physicians in the United States are illegal aliens.

Take a moment to consider the implausibility of that number. The Center for Migration Studies (CMS) estimates 7,427,035 illegal immigrants in the labor force, based on the same 2018 American Community Survey (ACS) data that Cato used. If Cato's illegal-physician count is correct, then about 0.6 percent of all illegal workers are doctors. But only 0.5 percent of natives in the labor force are doctors 653,865 native-born doctors out of 135,783,619 workers. In other words, illegal workers are supposedly more likely to be physicians than native workers!

Here is another way to look at it: The 2018 ACS shows a total 66,065 non-citizen physicians who arrived in the United States since 1980.1 This is around the earliest time that any current illegal alien could have arrived due to the IRCA amnesty.2 Nowrasteh and Landgrave would have us believe that nearly two-thirds of them are here illegally.3

Their illegal counts for some other healthcare occupations also constitute an implausibly high share of post-1980 non-citizens. In the table below, the first three columns are from Cato's Table 1, and the last two columns (in red) are our calculations from the same data. For example, 88 percent of all post-1980 non-citizen nurse-anesthetists are supposedly illegal, as are 71 percent of physician assistants.

Source: Columns 1, 2, and 3 from are Table 1 of "Immigrant Health Care Workersby Occupation and State", by the Cato Institute, which is based on the 2018 AmericanCommunity Survey. Columns 4 and 5 are our calculations from the same data.

In addition to obtaining an advanced education that is out of reach for most illegal aliens, doctors and other health care providers also need to be licensed, yet few states offer licenses to people who are not authorized to work in the country. Moreover, like doctors, many of these occupations (e.g. nurse-anesthetists, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants) typically require Drug Enforcement Agency registration so they can dispense drugs. In short, many of Cato's numbers do not just stretch credulity, they break it.4

The licensing requirement is the primary reason both Pew and the CMS, which produce the two leading demographic profiles of the illegal population, automatically count physicians as legal.5 CIS follows the same rule, and it is why we do not report an estimate for illegal doctors and other highly regulated medical professions in our analysis of occupations. This is not to say that the number of illegal alien doctors or other high-skilled medical practitioners is exactly zero. Surely there are some, but no probabilistic method will be able to count them reliably.

1 Cato includes in their numbers those employed, those unemployed, and those totally out of the labor force (neither working nor looking for work). The ACS reports occupations for those not working if they were employed in the prior five years. Though it impacts the numbers only slightly, the inclusion of those totally out of the labor force is surprising since these individuals are by definition not practicing medicine. Nonetheless, the post-1980 non-citizen figures we report follows Cato's definition of healthcare professional.

2 The Cato healthcare report links to another Cato report to explain how they determine legal status. That report states that they followed the method of another researcher, Christian Gunadi, and the Cato authors "identified an immigrant as lawfully present if he or she met any of the following criteria: the immigrant arrived after 1980." This must be a typo as "after" should read "before". Gunadi is certainly clear in his report that he considers anyone a legal immigrant if they arrived before 1980.

3 Cato did not adjust upward the number of illegal immigrants identified in the data. We know this because the number of legal and illegal immigrants they report separately add up to the total number immigrants in the ACS.

4 There are occupations, such as medical assistants, that typically require only modest training and no licensing, where significant numbers of illegal immigrants do work. So their numbers in that category are not unreasonable.

5 Robert Warren of the Center for Migration Studies (CMS) noted in an email on May 13, 2020, that the estimates developed by CMS employ "logical edits" to the ACS data that exclude doctors as possible illegal immigrants. The lack of logical edits in the healthcare field is presumably the main reason Cato came up with implausible numbers.

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Are There Really 42000 Illegal Immigrant Doctors? - Immigration Blog

California is now offering support to undocumented immigrants, in the first relief fund of its kind – CNN

Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the $125 million coronavirus disaster relief fund last month to support undocumented immigrants who were ineligible for federal stimulus checks and unemployment benefits due to their immigration status.

It's the first state funding effort directed at helping undocumented immigrants as the coronavirus pandemic causes financial hardships and spurs unemployment across the nation.

Applications will be accepted until June 30 or until funds run out.

Undocumented workers are essential, Newsom said

Undocumented workers are overrepresented in many of the sectors deemed essential and that are keeping the state afloat, including health care, agriculture and food, manufacturing and logistics and construction, Newsom said in his initial announcement.

About 10% of California's workforce is undocumented, he said. And though they paid over $2.5 billion in local and state taxes last year, they benefit from neither unemployment insurance nor the $2.2 trillion stimulus signed by President Trump.

Private donors to the $50 million philanthropy effort include the Emerson Collective, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, James Irvine Foundation, California Endowment and Blue Shield Foundation.

"I'm not here to suggest that $125 million is enough. But I am here to suggest it's a good start, and I'm very proud it's starting here in the state of California," he said.

The measure is likely to draw criticism from groups that oppose illegal immigration, who argue that it is unfair to offer financial support to immigrants who have broken the law.

While some argue that it is not the government's responsibility to support those undocumented when American citizens are hurting financially, immigration advocates say the disproportionate effect on undocumented workers is a wider problem.

CNN's Madeline Holcombe and Catherine Shoichet contributed to this report.

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California is now offering support to undocumented immigrants, in the first relief fund of its kind - CNN

Guy Farmer: COVID-19 on the U.S.-Mexico border – Nevada Appeal

While California Gov. Gavin Newsom and many of his fellow Democrats continue to push for open borders, COVID-19 cases are increasing along our southern border, straining local medical facilities in Southern California and beyond.

The respected Wall Street Journal reported last week that hospitals in the border city of Chula Vista, Calif., are struggling to cope with a large number of COVID-19 patients, an influx they attribute to legal crossings from Tijuana, one of Mexicos cities hardest hit by the coronavirus pandemic. Although the medical crisis along the border isnt attributed to illegal immigrants excuse me, undocumented workers you can understand how open borders would exacerbate the problem. In March, before the U.S. closed the border to non-essential travelers, more than 531,000 pedestrians and some 1.6 million vehicle passengers crossed the border into San Diego County at San Ysidro.

Scripps Health says it is near capacity for patients with COVID-19 at its Chula Vista hospital, the Wall Street Journal article continued. Sharp HealthCare, which owns Chula Vistas largest hospital, had to turn away ambulances during some busy days in April, the Journal added, describing Tijuana as a magnet for Mexican and foreign migrants seeking to enter the U.S Is it ever!

San Diego County has the third highest number of coronavirus cases in California, behind only populous Los Angeles and Riverside counties, the Journal continued. Chula Vista and nearby communities have the highest rate of infections per 100,000 people and the number has been rising The crisis south of San Diego illustrates a new threat: that Mexicos struggles to tackle the pandemic could spill over into the U.S. Apparently, however, it already has.

Meanwhile, Newsom and open borders advocates want to roll out the welcome mat for millions of illegal immigrants, and give them millions, or even billions, of taxpayer dollars worth of free benefits, including health care, not to mention sanctuary city policies that encourage more illegal immigration. President Trump has threatened to withhold federal aid from sanctuary cities and I think he should because those cities are openly violating our immigration laws.

States and cities including Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle and Portland that welcome illegal immigrants should pay the price for doing so and not look to the federal government for multi-million or billion-dollar bailouts. Carlos Mora, founder of the Migrant Affairs Council in Baja California, Mexico, told the Journal that some migrants deported from the U.S. have tested positive for COVID-19. My guess is that some could mean hundreds, or even thousands of illegal immigrants.

In a joint statement issued in March by the Mexican and U.S. governments, both governments recognized the need for a dedicated joint effort to prevent the spread of the COVID-19 virus and address the economic effects resulting from reduced mobility (that is, tougher border controls) along our shared border. That sounds fine but Im pleased that construction is moving forward on Trumps big, beautiful border wall that Mexico was going to pay for. Remember that whopper?

Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf visited Arizona last week to check on border wall construction. He found that 181 miles of walls ranging in height from 18 to 30 feet have been erected along our southern border since Trump took office in January, 2017, and 190 miles more are currently under construction. Thats good news for those of us who believe in secure borders and the Rule of Law.

Im glad the federal government is paying attention to our southern border during the coronavirus crisis because public safety is a top priority.

Guy W. Farmer is the Appeals senior political columnist.

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Guy Farmer: COVID-19 on the U.S.-Mexico border - Nevada Appeal

DHS Issues Waiver for Barrier and Road Construction Around Laredo – Immigration Blog

On Friday, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) published a notice in the Federal Register that will clear the way for the construction of barriers and roads from the Columbia Solidarity International Bridge southalong the Rio Grande to just north of San Ignacio, Texas. That approximately 69-mile stretch includes Laredo, Texas, as well as sections of the Southwest border just north of that city's downtown through Webb and Zapata Counties.

I would give you a list of the 25 laws (by my count) that are waived by that notice, but your eyes would likely glaze over. That said, under the authority in section 102(c) of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA) (as amended by various statutes, including the REAL ID Act of 2005 and the Secure Fence Act of 2006, both of which I worked on), Acting DHS Secretary Chad Wolf waived, among other provisions: the National Environmental Policy Act; the Endangered Species Act; the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (not to be confused with the Migratory Bird Conservation Act, which is also waived); the Paleontological Resources Preservation Act; the Federal Cave Resources Protection Act of 1988; the Noise Control Act; the Archaeological and Historic Preservation Act; the Antiquities Act; the Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act; the National Trails System Act; the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899; and the Eagle Protection Act.

I discussed the history of these waivers and the secretary's authority thereunder in congressional testimony in February 2018. Simply put, however, Congress has given DHS significant authority to waive federal statutes "to ensure that there is sufficient fencing and tactical infrastructure to support the Border Patrol in its mission."

And, as much as I dislike noise and enjoy migratory birds and in particular eagles that waiver was plainly needed. In my February 2020 post, "The View from Laredo: Not enough Border Patrol agents or infrastructure", I explained that:

The notice states:

In fiscal year 2019, the Border Patrol apprehended over 38,000 illegal aliens attempting to enter the United States between border crossings in the Laredo Sector. In that same time period, the Border Patrol had over 400 drug-related events between border crossings in the Laredo Sector, through which it seized over 36,000 pounds of marijuana, over 500 pounds of cocaine, over 28 pounds of heroin, and over 500 pounds of methamphetamine.

Given the overwhelming responsibilities those 1,800 Border Patrol employees must handle, and the limited infrastructure they have to assist them in that effort, I have a feeling that those "400 drug-related events" are just the tip of the iceberg.

I will also note that although the Wuhan coronavirus has many Americans sheltering in place, things have not gotten much quieter along that border. In FY 2020, Border Patrol has already made 21,000 apprehensions and seized 19,000 pounds of drugs in in Laredo Sector. U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has noted:

The majority of its activity is occurring in areas where Laredo Sector lacks infrastructure, access and mobility, and technology. These projects will improve Laredo Sector's ability to impede and deny illegal border crossings and the drug and human smuggling activities of transnational criminal organizations.

The former sentence is unsurprising, and the latter is an understatement. Laredo, Texas, and Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, Mexico two fairly good-sized cities sit just hundreds of feet apart. Without infrastructure, Border Patrol's task is impossible. With it, it becomes merely herculean.

I trust that this waiver will be met with lawsuits and congressional bloviation, but in the end, those barriers and roads will likely be built, and South Texas, and the United States as a whole, will undoubtedly be safer for it.

One last point: CBP's website shows where there are existing barriers along the border (in black) and where the new border wall system is planned (in red). There is a lot more red than black, and if you zoom in on the heavily trafficked Laredo and Rio Grande Valley Border Patrol Sectors (which combined accounted for 42 percent of the single adult apprehensions by Border Patrol along the Southwest border in FY 2019), there is not much black at all. In light of this, I expect that Friday's notice will be the first of many.

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DHS Issues Waiver for Barrier and Road Construction Around Laredo - Immigration Blog

The 1924 Law That Slammed the Door on Immigrants and the Politicians Who Pushed it Back Open – Smithsonian.com

AMERICA OF THE MELTING POT COMES TO END, the New York Times headline blared in late April 1924. The opinion piece that followed, penned by Senator David Reed of Pennsylvania, claimed recent immigrants from southern and Eastern European countries had failed to satisfactorily assimilate and championed his recently passed legislation to severely restrict immigration to the United States. He proudly proclaimed, The racial composition of America at the present time thus is made permanent.

The 1924 Johnson-Reed Act, which Congress had overwhelmingly passed just weeks before and which President Coolidge would sign into law the following month, marked the start of a dark chapter in the nations immigration history. It drastically cut the total number of immigrants allowed in each year and effectively cut off all immigration from Asia. It made permanent strict quotasdefined as two percent of the total number of people of each nationality in the United States as of the 1890 national censusin order to favor immigrants from northern and Western Europe and preserve the homogeneity of the nation. The new system also required immigrants to apply for and receive visas before arriving and established the U.S. Border Patrol.

The restrictions imposed by the law sparked a prolonged fight to reverse them, driven by politicians who decried the laws xenophobia and by presidents who worried about the foreign policy consequences of such exclusions. In her new book, One Mighty and Irresistible Tide: The Epic Struggle Over American Immigration, 1924-1965, journalist Jia Lynn Yang, a deputy national editor at The New York Times, details the drive to implement and sustain the 1924 legislation and the intense campaign to reverse it, a battle that culminated in the Immigration and Naturalization Act of 1965. That law eliminated the quotas, increased the number of visas issued each year, prioritized immigration for skilled workers and instituted a policy of family unification.

Yang spoke with Smithsonian about the advocates who led the way, the forces they battled and the legacy of their fight.

The 1924 Johnson-Reed Act marked a schism in the countrys immigration history. How did the nation get to that point?

Before the act, there were these smaller attempts to restrict immigration. The most important was the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, which was quite a bold law that singled out, for the first time, an ethnic group for restriction.

Starting in the 1880s you have this historic wave of immigrants coming from southern and Eastern Europe. Jews, Italians. Lawmakers are continually trying to kind of stem that wave, and really its not until 1924 that they truly succeed. Because everything else they've tried [such as literacy tests] either gets vetoed by a president or doesn't really work.

1924 is really a watershed moment. Once you add a whole visa process, once you add these strict quotas, youre just in a whole different regime of immigration. The system really just changes forever, and its a moment when the country I think symbolically says, Were not going to do things like this anymore. You cant just show up.

How did the theory of eugenics play a role in the new immigration system?

It became very important, because people with a lot of social influence really embraced it. These are leading economists, leading scientists, people who are really kind of dictating intellectual American life at the time. And [eugenics was] completely mainstream and considered very cutting edge, and just very current. If people could figure out a way to make a better society through this science, people didn't question why that was necessary or why their methods would work. And these experts began to testify before Congress as they're looking at immigration.

One of the primary examples would be [prominent eugenicist] Harry Laughlin. He hasn't spent his whole life being trained as a scientist, but he gets very excited about eugenics, joins people who are really hardcore scientists, and gets involved in the political side. Lawmakers treat him as kind of an in-house expert, essentially. Hes writing up reports at their behest, and pointing out, if you do the laws this way, you will actually improve the American bloodstream, and that's why you should do this. [Eugenicists] are people who were already very nativist and wanted to restrict immigration. But once they get the sort of scientific backing, it really strengthens their arguments, and that's how they're able to push this dramatic bill through in the 20s.

The 1924 act was met with resistance during its passage and efforts to overturn it started immediately. What were the laws opponents up against?

I think this notionit's still very powerful nowthat America should have some kind of ethnic makeup is actually a very hard thing to argue against. Their defense is one that I think you still see today, which is, We're not being racist. We just want to keep a level of ethnic homogeneity in our societywe can't introduce new elements too quickly, and this is how we protect the stability of our country.

I would also add that if you look at the polling on immigration over timeGallup, for instance, has looked at this question for many, many years nowyou hardly ever see Americans clamoring for more immigrants.

In fact, the people who want to change [immigration policy] are often presidents who are dealing with the foreign policy [consequences of the 1924 law.] Thats one thing that really surprised me in my research, is how immigration was driven by foreign policy concerns. So there are presidents who don't want to insult other leaders by saying, We don't want people from your country.

But your mainstream American is really not thinking about loosening immigration laws as a giant priority. Even now, you can see that both Democrats and Republicans are pretty leery of making that kind of super pro-loosening immigration laws argument. I don't think it's ever that politically popular to do that.

What finally led to the overhaul of the nations immigration laws in the 1960s?

Its kind of an amazing confluence of events. Right before President Kennedy died, he introduced a bill to abolish these ethnic origins quotas. The bill doesn't really go anywhere, just as every other effort hadn't gone anywhere in 40 years. As usual, there's just not a lot of interest in changing the immigration quotas.

But when he is killed, President Johnson looks at the unfinished business of Kennedy and [thinks], Let's honor the memory of our late president. Let's really do right by his memory. Let's make this stuff work. We've got to pass it.

LBJ is leading the country in mourning, yes, but he also spots an extraordinary political opportunity to pass legislation, I think, that would otherwise never pass. The Civil Rights Act, Voting Rights Act, these are all kind of in that moment. But the immigration bill, too, has that kind of moral momentum from Kennedys death. You've got people talking about racial equality. We're going to be getting rid of Jim Crow laws, so we should also look at our immigration laws in the same way. They have a similar kind of racial and discriminatory problem to them.

At the same time youve got the Cold War argumentthat these laws are embarrassing to us. They're not helping us win an ideological war against the Soviet Union. The other thing too is labor unions were anti-immigrant before. This is a moment where they actually flip sides. Once labor unions switch to the other side, that removes one of the big political opponents to changing the quotas.

Kennedy supported immigration reform and Johnson signed the 1965 act into law, but this wasnt a consuming passion for either president. Who fought the legislation into being?

Emanuel Manny Celler was chair of the House Judiciary Committee for many, many years. Right when he becomes a Congressman, in 1923, he sees the quotas passed and is horrified, because he himself is from a German Jewish family and he represents a district in Brooklyn that is basically all immigrants from Europe. He basically spends the next 40 years trying to get rid of [the quotas]. He sees during World War II how [the quotas] make it impossible to admit Jewish refugees. After the war, he's still fighting and fighting and fighting, constantly losing. Hes sort of the rare person who in is there to see the victory, but not everybody does.

Im thinking of Herbert Lehman. He is from the famous Lehman Brothers family, and comes from a huge amount of money from New York. He was the first Jewish governor of New York, and he was kind of a righthand man to FDR. He spends much of his senate career in the '50s fighting [for immigration reform] and loses again and again, just like Celler and others, because of the Red Scare and a lot of anti-communist sentiment, which translates into anti-immigrant sentiment on the Hill.

Celebrating America as a nation of immigrants is a surprisingly recent idea. How did that idea develop and play into the 1965 legislation?

The story of Kennedys Nation of Immigrants [a book published posthumously in 1964.] is sort of instructive with this. He is leaning on, and borrowing from, the work of immigration historian Oscar Handlin, who wrote this book called The Uprooted, which won a Pulitzer Prize in the early 1950s and was, at one point, assigned to a lot of schoolchildren to read. It was basically the seminal text that, for the first time that anyone could point to, celebrated all these immigrants who had come to this country and sort of pointed out the successive waves of people.

We often think of nationalism and immigration as opposing ideas and forces. The really interesting political turn in the '50s is to bring immigrants into this idea of American nationalism. Its not that immigrants make America less special. It's that immigrants are what make America special.

Whereas in the '20s the argument was, Keep America American by keeping out immigrants. Now it was, If you're not going to welcome immigrants, you're not going to celebrate all these different waves of immigration, the Jews, the Italians, the Germans, you're just being un-American. You don't love this part of the American story.

That is still a very powerful idea on the Left, in the Democratic Party. But I was really surprised in the research just how recent that is. That was a work of history. A historian had to put his finger on it. Then it had to then be translated into the political sphere to take on its own momentum, to become its own argument for immigrants.

What did advocates for the 1965 act expect when the law was signed? What has it looked like in reality?

The system they come up with is still really interesting to think about because it's very much the one we have today. They get rid of the quotas, and they prioritize family reunification. The people who get top priority for visas are people who already have family in the U.S. This is what the Trump administration wants to end. Just to give you a sense of just how little [the lawmakers] predicted what would happen: [reunification] was actually a compromise to nativists who wanted to keep America white.

Yet because of family reunification, once you do get enough people here who are outside Europe, their numbers actually grew and grew and grew and grew. A bunch of presidents kept adding these special carve-outs for different refugee populations, like the Cubans and Vietnamese.

Over time, the entire stream of immigrants just becomes much, much less European, much less white. To the point that now, I think we take for granted that a lot of our immigrants are from the Middle East, Africa, Asia, Latin America.

That is not something that I think almost anyone who was involved in the debate would have expected. In fact, they kept downplaying how much the law would change the actual demographics of the U.S. What's interesting to me is that no one quite knew what standing for the principle [of racial equality] would lead to in terms of what this country looked like.

How is what passed in 1965 tied to todays immigration crisis?

At the end of this whole journey in 1965, [advocates] have to make a bunch of compromises and they added a numerical cap for the very first time on immigration from the Western hemisphere. So until that pointincredible to imagine right now because we are so fixated on securing the borderthere was no numerical cap to how many people could come from Latin America and Canada. It was just totally open. That was, again, a foreign policy decision. It was an idea that you had to be friendly to your neighbors.

[The cap introduces] the idea of illegal immigrants from Mexico on this mass scale that didn't exist before. That just changed the nature of how we thought about Mexican immigrants forever, and which we are still living in the shadow of.

The law is lauded as a civil rights achievement by some, in that it basically bans racial discrimination in immigration laws and gets rid of these old ethnic quotas. But it really transforms our whole notion of our neighbors and our relationship to them as sources of immigration.

What were you most surprised to discover while researching and writing your book?

I got into this whole project for very personal reasons. I wanted to understand why my family had been allowed to come to this country [from Taiwan and China]. In retrospect, I feel kind of nave for not having thought about it before. I so bought into this idea of America as a nation of immigrants that I hadn't even really seriously considered a possibility that my parents would have been rejected.

What was surprising to me was just to learn how easily that could have happenedand not just for me and my family but every family I know in America, basically, that's not from Europe. I now wonder, who among us would just not be here if not for the 1965 Immigration Nationality Act? And I think [it was surprising] understanding how hard that fight was to get it, how many times it didn't work, how many times it failed, how when it finally worked it was only because of this perfect convergence of all these different circumstances, literally from a president's assassination to somebody negotiating at the end, We'll reunify families because that'll keep America more white, and then getting it wrong.

What is it like to release your book as the COVID-19 outbreak has led to a spike in Anti-Asian sentiment and a resurgence of xenophobia?

When I started this book it was early 2016, before President Trump was elected. I never imagined how timely it would be. It really started as an exploration of, in a way, family history through American political history.

Knowing that history, knowing how recent [Asian Americans'] arrival is as a large racial group in this country, helps me to process what's happening now. Because I think part of what the xenophobia is revealing is just how tenuous, in a way, the Asian American political category can be. It's a group that often lacks a lot of political power and political voice.

I think of ourselves as very much in the tradition of other immigrants who've sort of come before, each of whom has also kind of had to establish their place in America.

For people like me, who are children of immigrants, who were able to come here because of the 1965 law, it's a chance to say, Okay, this is our political history as a people. This is how we got here.

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The 1924 Law That Slammed the Door on Immigrants and the Politicians Who Pushed it Back Open - Smithsonian.com