INS gets reprieve on gathering entry and exit data
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INS plans to build on existing systems to gather entry and exit data. The Immigration and Naturalization Service missed its Oct. 1 deadline to develop a system to track foreign visitors as they enter and leave the United States, forcing Congress to give the agency more time. Congress, under the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, originally gave INS until the first of this month to implement an automated entry-exit control
INS plans to The Immigration and Naturalization Service missed its Oct. 1 deadline to develop a Congress, under the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of Congress has extended the deadline until March 30, 2001. Lawmakers included the Even though INS has conducted a couple of small pilots, there is little to show of the Until then, INS will not determine what technology to use, what it will cost or how Without such a system, INS cannot track who leaves the country, which is important in More than 2 million foreign visitors overstay their visas each year, INS officials Congress, under Section 110 of the 1996 immigration law, ordered INS to create a system Capitol Hill lawmakers are angry that the system is nowhere to be seen. INS As it now stands, INS only captures license plate data, not information on the If INS agents suspect something improper, they have to pull a car over and check the Komis denied that INS has done nothing toward creating the system. INS started to run a INS is now using computer simulation and mock port-of-entry stiles at the Federal Law Exit checks have not been made part of INS job, Komis said. Airports are starting Foreign air travelers must fill out entry forms, which they carry with their passports The system will require a large database because some 300 million visitors a year enter Kay argued that technology for the system is available now and criticized INS for At a hearing in July before the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration and Claims, To complicate matters, the Senate twice passed a repeal of Section 110 and had included Senators seeking repeal, among them Sen. Spencer Abraham (R-Mich.), are concerned that Make no mistake, if the House doesnt take timely action repealing Section Smith argued that doing nothing provides a welcome mat for terrorists. The INS devotes most of its manpower to the southern border, where 70 percent of the But for INS it is a challenge to develop the system. We wont be scrapping INS has automated some border crossing processes. Foreigners planning to stay three The new cards will be issued by the State Department, but INS will produce them, Komis At some border crossings, INS runs a pilot in which frequent visitors fill out
build on existing systems to gather entry and exit data.
system to track foreign visitors as they enter and leave the United States, forcing
Congress to give the agency more time.
1996, originally gave INS until the first of this month to implement an automated
entry-exit control system at all 250 U.S. air, land and sea ports of entry.
extension in the fiscal 1999 omnibus budget bill.
new system, INS officials said. And the service will not conduct an initial feasibility
study until January.
long it will take to create the system, INS spokeswoman Elaine Komis said.
determining whether foreign nationals overstay their visa or fail to leave at all, critics
said.
said.
to run checks on individuals as they enter the United States and to conduct exit checks as
aliens leave the country.
barely tried to comply with law, said Allan Kay, spokesman for Rep. Lamar Smith
(R-Texas). The United States is the only industrialized nation that does not track when
and if foreign visitors leave, Kay said.
individuals entering at land borders, said Michael Hrinyak, deputy assistant commissioner
for inspections at INS. The service records the license plate numbers of vehicles entering
the country at the Canadian and Mexican borders. INS agents then enter the data into the
Interagency Border Inspection System to check for any lookout notices posted against
vehicles or vehicles owners.
occupants identifications.
pilot at the border crossing at Eagle Pass, Texas, but complaints from local business
owners halted the test.
Enforcement Training Center in Glynco, Ga., to test ways to implement the system, Komis
said.
to conduct exit checks, but INS must rely on air carriers to collect exit data because INS
does not have exit checkpoints, Komis said.
while here. The airlines then collect the forms when they leave. But that method is
unreliable, Komis said.
the United States at border crossings. The United States hosts about 500 million visitors
a year, INS officials said.
failing to test and develop a system in the two years since the law passed.
representatives from Electronic Data Systems Corp. and TransCore, a subsidiary of Science
Applications International Corp. of San Diego, testified that the technology is available.
But Ann Cohen, vice president of EDS, said INS real challenge is to change the way
it operates.
the repeal in its funding bill for the Commerce, Justice and State departments.
not having an automated system to enforce the provision will lead to gridlock at the
borders.
110, the repercussions for U.S.-Canadian travel, trade and tourism will be immediate and
disastrous, Abraham said.
Canadian Security Intelligence Service reported in April that most of the worlds
terrorist groups have established themselves in Canada and try to enter the United States
through the Canadian border.
illegal drugs enter the United States, Kay said.
systems but building upon the systems we have to provide entry-exit data, Hrinyak
said. The systems INS uses do communicate but dont collect the data required by
Section 110, he said.
days or less had been issued a cardboard border-crossing card. The card is being
redesigned as a sturdier version containing a holographic image, a magnetic stripe and an
embedded computer chip.
said.
applications, undergo background checks and have their fingerprints taken. Once approved
for regular visits, they can move much more quickly across the border in a dedicated
commuter lane, said Bill Strassberger, a public affairs officer in INS Western
region office.
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