letter to Lou Dobbs @ CNN

me72

Registered Users (C)
FYI to highlight our 485 back log issue sent the
following to Lou Dobbs today. If you guys wanna
add your voice you can email him at: cnn.com/lou



Lou,

I watch your program almost every day and I cant help but
notice the amount of coverage you give to immgration
related issues.

I think thats a good thing considering the issue gets rarely
discussed on any other program. However, most of your stories
have an anti-immigration tilt. Which again I could understand
in terms of illegal immigration.

However, I have yet to see any story on your program that
highlight the issues faced by legal immigrants. I am a high
tech worker and and I have been in this country for almost
ten years all legally but I have yet to get my permanent
residence thanks to the delays and backlogs at the USCIS.

I started my application process over three years ago and filed
for my 485/adjustment of status in 2002 but I have yet to see
the end of the tunnel. I know of people that have been waiting
since 2000 and 2001 just to get this last step processed.

Even the US congress has expressed the opinion that a reasonable time
to process these application is around 6 months however the
processing time seems to be growing longer and longer. During this
time our lives and careers are on hold with all sorts of unreasonable
restrictions from the USCIS.

I think if the USCIS makes it so hard for higly skilled people who
are the most favorable class of immigrants. How could it ever
encourage anyone to take the legal route to immration in this country.

To be even handed and fair in your immigration coverage, I hope that you
will highlight this and other such issues faced by law abiding people
who have been contributing to the american economy in a huge way but
have yet to gain their freedom in this land of the free.



Please Note: Recently a law suit has also been filed against
the USCIS on this very issue. You can get more info. on
this at: http://www.immigration.com/litigation/I-485_litigation.html
 
MEDIA/PRESS

Good letter buddy,

It is good to see people doing something that can help the cause, the lawsuit. Here is an article from the Washington Post (posted so you need no registration, about backlogs).

washingtonpost.com
A Long, Nervous Wait
Backlog at U.S. Agency Complicates Immigrants' Lives

By Mary Beth Sheridan
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, February 11, 2004; Page B01


Yonas Haile is an American boy in every aspect but the one that counts. The gangly, 14-year-old student has grown up in Franconia playing basketball, tuning in to MTV and developing a taste for fried chicken. His father is a U.S. citizen, as are his three sisters.

But the Ethiopian-born teenager has no legal status, despite having submitted a voluminous application to become a permanent U.S. resident five years ago.

"We are very much worried," said his father, Aweke Haile, a Brooks Brothers salesman. Before long, he said, his son will want to get a driver's license, work and go to college -- but he lacks legal documents.

Yonas is one of millions of foreigners affected by a ballooning backlog in applications at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, which has been struggling to incorporate a new system of anti-terrorism checks.

Even as President Bush presses for a giant new program for foreign workers, the current system is overwhelmed, according to immigration lawyers and workers. The backlog for such benefits as citizenship and green cards -- which allow foreigners to live and work in the United States indefinitely -- has grown about 60 percent in the past three years, to more than 6 million applications, according to a new GAO report.

Some question whether the immigration service can handle a sweeping new program.

"Over the last six to 12 months, we've crossed the line into crisis proportions," said Crystal Williams of the American Immigration Lawyers Association. "I've never seen backlogs to this extent."

Bush took office vowing to have every immigration application processed within six months of submission. And in fact, the immigration agency has spent hundreds of millions of dollars in an effort to reduce the delays. Nonetheless, processing time for many applications has grown -- in some cases to more than four years.

The main reason is the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. The president's plan to slash the backlog "was just thrown out the door" as officials scrambled to increase security, said Russ Knocke, a spokesman for the immigration service, part of the Department of Homeland Security. Officials frantically ran extra checks on 3.2 million existing petitions, he said.

The immigration service then ordered that each new applicant be run twice through a database of lawbreakers, alleged terrorists and other potential undesirables, Knocke said. About 7 percent of the names on applications in the last fiscal year got "hits" requiring further investigation, and 2.3 percent were confirmed to be the people in the database, although the percentage with alleged ties to terrorism was "infinitesimal," he said.

"We obviously aren't happy about the backlog. But we aren't making any apologies. The commitment was, and continues to be, national security," Knocke said. He added that his agency has addressed those concerns sufficiently and is refocusing on cutting the backlog. In recent days, it has announced an increase in fees for immigration applications and requested a 60 percent increase in federal funds to attack the pile of petitions.

But immigration lawyers say the new security system continues to be unwieldy and slow. In addition, immigration officials are devoting extra scrutiny to the documents submitted with applications, for fear of inadvertently aiding a terrorist.

"What our members have seen is a tremendous spike in requests for additional information on the applications," said Williams, who added that much of it was redundant or unnecessary.

Mary Lynch, vice president of AFGE Local 2076, the union at the Vermont immigration processing center, which handles applications for a broad area including Washington, said staffing problems have added to the delays. The center is trying to add employees, but it often takes a year to get security clearances, she said.

"We don't have enough staff on board to do anything but keep our heads above water right now," she said. She added that security checks on applicants have resulted in a decline of about 50 percent in productivity.

The bureaucratic snarls can have painful consequences for immigrants, some of whom are in the United States and others abroad. Many already here are unable to leave the country while their documents are being processed. Young people might not be able to get into college without legal papers. In the worst cases, people can lose their jobs or be deported as they wait for their green cards to come through.

Yonas has been lucky. He was placed in deportation proceedings years ago, but immigration officials have allowed him to stay because of his family situation.

"Still, we are nervous," said his father, a former businessman in Ethiopia, who accompanied his son to an interview in his lawyer's office. "There is no freedom unless you have the green card."

Like many immigrants, Yonas followed a long and tortuous path to residency. He arrived in 1989 in the arms of his mother, who sought asylum from Ethiopia's socialist government. She was denied, but because her older daughter was an American citizen, she was given permanent residency.

Yonas's father, who also got a green card, sponsored the boy in April 1999 for permanent residency, the first step toward citizenship. At the time, authorities said the application could take 21/2 years to process.

Nearly five years later, Yonas is still waiting.

In the past year, the average processing time for people who are sponsoring family members has doubled, to 51 months, according to the GAO report. Officials said that time period reflects the new security measures, some of which were implemented fully only recently.

The teenager's attorney, Alberto Benitez, argues that his client shouldn't have to wait so long. Because his father became a citizen in August, Yonas should be given higher priority, as normally happens with the children of Americans, the lawyer said.

"He's a 14-year-old boy. There's no reason for this to be delayed," said Benitez, who heads the immigration clinic run by George Washington University. But officials at the Vermont processing center have argued that it's too late to change the boy's petition, Benitez said.

Immigration officials say they don't bear all the blame for the glacial pace of processing. Knocke said about 500,000 applications have been slowed because immigrants were late in providing documents or failed tests and had to retake them. In addition to the processing delays, some foreigners must wait for years for their green cards because of annual caps set by Congress on how many immigrants each country can send.

But the immigration system is straining. It will have difficulty handling Bush's proposed new program without an infusion of personnel, according to immigration workers and lawyers. Administration officials have said the estimated 8 million illegal immigrants in the country could apply for temporary-worker visas under Bush's plan, which also would be open to foreigners coming to fill U.S. jobs. Some of those workers eventually could apply for green cards.

Lynch's union estimates that, with current staffing levels, it would take 10 years just to do the security checks on 8 million applicants. "Unless we have a better program for allocation of resources . . . it will sink us," she declared.

Knocke said the program would need adequate staffing. "That would have to be something that Congress takes into consideration" if it approves the new immigration plan, he said.

Even as the new program is debated, the backlog feeds on itself. Many immigrants awaiting green cards must apply annually for documents to work or to travel outside the country, increasing paperwork choking the system.

The Rev. Christopher Halliday is one of those caught in the paper chase. The Irish minister arrived at St. George's Episcopal Church in the Southern Maryland town of Valley Lee four years ago with a temporary religious worker's visa. He was promptly sponsored by the church, his employer, for permanent residence.

While waiting for his green card, Halliday has been able to get continued work authorization and annual permits to leave the country. But the latest travel permit for which he applied in October hasn't arrived.

"We can't move," he said, explaining that his old permit expired in January. He worries about not being able to visit his family in Ireland, including his 84-year-old mother-in-law and his brother-in-law, who had a stroke.

Halliday was dumbfounded when he learned recently why his travel papers were held up: The Vermont processing center has run low on the counterfeit-proof paper used for the documents.

"If this was somewhere in the middle of nowhere in the world, you might just about accept that was possible," he fumed. "But this is America."
 
Very good letter

I like the message that you sent to LOU. First off, his program dealt with Finance and money matters. Off late he's deviating from that since his speculation is no good in the financial world, he has moved to the immigration world. There's total sarcasm in his voice and program. I use to be a big fan of CNN before this moron started with anti-immigration agenda. I prefer to watch "will and grace" than this worthless piece of garbage ! Immigration should be free legal and illegal. If this is the land of freedom, why are we not free?
 
I think we should send a notice, the wpost article and few cases to Sixty Minutes

I think, they would be very interested in producing a program out of it. Especially striking the new Bush proposal for 8 million illegal immigrants while 3 milyon legal immigrants are waiting years for paper processing
 
Yes, excellent letter me72. Indian_in_USA, you're right, Lou Dobbs' pet peeve is outsourcing and he just loves to thrash India, China, Philippines, et al. That guy makes me sick. On one hand he doesn't want immigrants coming here, on the other he doesn't want jobs going out, and yet he beats his chest that America is the land of free. I guess it's time CNN got rid of that imbecile.
 
me72,
I entirely agree with Indian_in_USA. Your letter is excellent and to the point but to a wrong person/Network. CNN recently has dropped way below in viewership due to people like Lou and Aaron. MSNBC, FOX, CBS are doing far better. Even if Lou raises the concerns you mentioned in your letter, it will have very little impact. We need the issue to be raised by 60 Minutes or similar program to really have the impact it deserves. Nonetheless, great effort on your part. Thanks
TRISAM
 
Is it a right letter to a Wrong person ?

It is a good letter but I always saw Lou having an anti immigration tilt. Also, if anything good happens from India - he mentions it as Asia and if anything bad happens from China/Phillipines etc, he will immediately start giving out examples and clippings citing and showing India. However, it is good to drive the point.

I somehow dislike Lou's coverage due to its anti India sentiment - probably it is my feeling - but that is how I feel. While I watch this program, I feel that a big bread, punched with some holes is talking without brains.

And Aron Brown ? I do not know who said he is the sexiest man. I hate to see his lip-biting acts and always wondered if a paper ball got stuck in his throat. :-)
 
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Latter to Lou Dobbs may not be very helpful

I have been watching Lou Dobbs carefully for a long time. Every immigration issue he deals with tells stories about how immigrants (whether legal or illegal) have done harm to Americans. He never focusses on hard work they do to grwo the economy of this country. He focusses on outsourcing, and jobs gone abroad. He never mentions the other side of the story --with cheaper labor abroad, the products have become cheaper here and an average American can afford more luxuries than he/she could 2 decades ago. He interviews executives and officers from various Indian groups and companies and asks humilating questions as if they are stealing American jobs. He doesn't do the same for American firms who ship their jobs (probably they don't want to be interviewed by Lou).

I had high regards for Lou Dobbs. But after watching his series on immigration and outsourcing, I think he is very partial and he neither respects nor cares about the interests of immigrants and other minority communities. So now I have decided not to watch that program of CNN anymore.
 
Lou Dobbs

I have been watching Lou Dobbs for many years now. He is very anti-immigrant. He however is not a racist. He may even be happy that INS is sitting on our cases for a long time. He tries to use every issue like population growth, pollution, job less economy, and rising housing cost to attach legal/illegal immigration. He single handedly made this issue of outsourcing and immigration to get noticed by people in the congress and outside. Senators and Congressmen qoute Lou Dobbs, when they speak about anti-immigration or outsourcing. He will not give a sympathetic response to this letter. If you want to know anything happening in this country against immigration or outsourcing just watch his program daily. I think “anti-immigration and outsourcing tonight” could be a more appropriate name to his program.
 
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