Real ID, Bush signed

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President's Statement on H.R. 1268

Today, I have signed into law H.R. 1268, the "Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act for Defense, the Global War on Terror, and Tsunami Relief Act, 2005" (the "Act"). The Act provides funds for ongoing military and intelligence operations in Iraq and Afghanistan and selected other international activities, including tsunami relief and reconstruction. The Act supports new benefits for service members who have suffered traumatic injury and for survivors of fallen service members. The Act also provides additional border enforcement resources, which will strengthen the Nation's ability to prevent foreign terrorists from operating in the United States.

The executive branch shall construe subsection 1025(d) of the Act, which purports to determine the command relationships among certain elements of the U.S. Navy forces, as advisory, as any other construction would conflict with the President's constitutional authority as Commander in Chief.

Provisions of the Act, such as sections 2104 and 6024, purport to require congressional committee approval prior to certain obligations or expenditures of funds appropriated by the Act. The executive branch shall construe such provisions to require only prior notification to congressional committees, as any other construction would be contrary to the constitutional principles set forth by the Supreme Court of the United States in 1983 in INS v. Chadha.

Section 6025 purports to regulate the content of the President's annual budget submission, which is a proposal for enactment of legislation to appropriate funds. In addition, section 301 calls for submission of legislative recommendations by an executive branch official to the Congress. The executive branch shall construe these and any other similar provisions in a manner consistent with the Constitution's commitment to the President of exclusive authority to supervise the unitary executive branch and to recommend for the consideration of the Congress such measures as the President shall judge necessary and expedient.

Several provisions of the Act, including sections 6041, 6042, 6043, 6052, 6053, 6069, 6070, 6071, and 6072 make specified changes in statements of managers of the House Senate conference committees that accompanied various bills reported from conference that ultimately became laws. As with other committee materials, statements of managers accompanying a conference report do not have the force of law. Accordingly, although changes to these statements are directed by the terms of the Act, the statements themselves are not legally binding.

GEORGE W. BUSH

THE WHITE HOUSE,

May 11, 2005.
 
it was fast!! :) finally, no more caps for asylees. The end of the 10-20 years adjustment waiting!
 
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Congratulation!!!

I had my doubts until the last minute, but this is relly amazing and I want to say to all of us Congratulations and hopefully from now on the life will be much easier for everyone. :)
 
hello007 said:
it was fast!! :) finally, no more caps for asylees. The end of the 10-20 years adjustment waiting!
Please do not overestimate the impact of this bill. There are 185,000 adjustment applications pending. The immigration workers are overworked and they will take their time to adjust these cases on a first-come first-served basis The refugees do not have a cap and their applications are backed up 3 years. So, yes it wont take 20 years but it will not happen tomorrow. Relax and enjoy your life and it will come one day.
 
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Yeah! I think it would still take a long time to process all the backlog. I think only people who are applying for asylum based adjustment nowadays should be happy. They probably would'nt have to wait 12 years.
 
Work for free

shamshon said:
... The immigration workers are overworked and they will take their time to adjust these cases ...QUOTE]
shamshon said:
They are not overworked. It is regular 9-5 job. Do they work on weekends like their cousins of the IRS ?
There are many in this forum who would be prepared to work that job for half the salary. As for me, I would put in some days for free if they need my services.
After all, what is so complex in sorting out AND classifying documents/papers?
 
augustasylee said:
shamshon said:
... The immigration workers are overworked and they will take their time to adjust these cases ...QUOTE]
shamshon said:
They are not overworked. It is regular 9-5 job. Do they work on weekends like their cousins of the IRS ?
There are many in this forum who would be prepared to work that job for half the salary. As for me, I would put in some days for free if they need my services.
After all, what is so complex in sorting out AND classifying documents/papers?
Absolutely agree.
 
augustasylee said:
shamshon said:
... The immigration workers are overworked and they will take their time to adjust these cases ...QUOTE]
shamshon said:
They are not overworked. It is regular 9-5 job. Do they work on weekends like their cousins of the IRS ?
There are many in this forum who would be prepared to work that job for half the salary. As for me, I would put in some days for free if they need my services.
After all, what is so complex in sorting out AND classifying documents/papers?

I cannot argue with you. Yes, they are not over worked! I have seen how they take their sweetie time attending their customers in local offices.
Further more everything is now all computerlised. and they already have all the documentation required. It does'nt take years to process finger prints, sort, verify and file the paperwork.
We are now talking about a bunch of lazy lizards.
 
They are not lazy but they have no motivation. Usually government workers get raises every year..no matter what they have done. For instance if an asylee officer came to work and played games all day and went home..he would still get a raise...THey other parts of goverment including DHS need to implement a Pay-for-perfromance pay raise as they are done here at USPS..or else you wouldn't get your mail in 1-2 days in front of your house...If you perform and prove you did..you get a pay raise...DHS doesnt have it.
 
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wantmygcnow said:
OIk in plain english is the cap removal a law now..as of tommmorrow? ..how does things work..hamptoN???


REAL ID Act is now the law of the land. Various components have different effective dates. The removal removal section is to take effect immediately. So the cap is officially gone.

But it will take sometime before the INS can decide how to implement this. Relax and give them some time.
 
wantmygcnow said:
Hampton, is till monday enough time for the bastards at USCIS?


I doubt it. It could be a few months. Last year they removed the adjustment cap for some Indochinese paroless and it took the INS four months to implement it.
 
1) Agree. It will still take long time to get the plastic.
2) How did you get the number of 12 years? Do the math. There are almost 190K waiting. 10K/per year, you will have to wait 19 years if approved today.

What a shame the cap. What a shame of Mr.Cliton.


Lazerthegreat said:
Yeah! I think it would still take a long time to process all the backlog. I think only people who are applying for asylum based adjustment nowadays should be happy. They probably would'nt have to wait 12 years.
 
There are full of idiots in INS.

Once I applied for my travel document, and got a letter from them asking me to show them my "green card". What a crap!!



augustasylee said:
shamshon said:
... The immigration workers are overworked and they will take their time to adjust these cases ...QUOTE]
shamshon said:
They are not overworked. It is regular 9-5 job. Do they work on weekends like their cousins of the IRS ?
There are many in this forum who would be prepared to work that job for half the salary. As for me, I would put in some days for free if they need my services.
After all, what is so complex in sorting out AND classifying documents/papers?
 
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