Immigration in a very English town








Visitors to Redcar enjoy a lemon top on the seafront Visitors to Redcar enjoy a lemon top on the seafront


Immigration is a hot topic ahead of this month’s European elections, but how do voters see the issue in one of the UK’s most British towns?

For years in Redcar tourists and locals alike have licked their lips at the thought of a lemon top ice cream from Pacittos on the seafront, the sticky blob of sorbet proving an ever popular extra ingredient.

The fact that one of the town’s icons was imported to Teesside by an Italian family, however, is somewhat ironic given the area’s ethnic profile.

Redcar and Cleveland has the joint lowest rate of immigration in the UK, according to the last Census. Just 2.2.% of the borough’s population were born overseas.

Despite this, immigration is not far from the minds of voters ahead of this month’s elections.

On the high street, retired steelworker Andrew Morris knows what the statistics say about his hometown but his views are unchanged.

“I always think we should have listened to Enoch Powell. He said what would happen and it’s come to fruition and it’s only going to get worse with them opening the floodgates [to other places in the EU].



Last time out




The top five parties in the North East European Election in 2009:

Labour – 25%

Conservative – 19.8%

Liberal Democrat – 17.6%

UK Independence Party – 15.4%

BNP – 8.9%

The result returned one MEP each for the top three parties based on the D’Hondt voting system.

Full result



“The man that’s speaking the most sense is Nigel Farage. Purely and simply he’s saying ‘give Britain back to us’.

“It might be fine for my generation and the next one but there’s a concern for the future.

“When I was growing up you could leave school and go into the steelworks or if you didn’t like the steelworks you’d go down the docks. It’s not like that now.”

Jobs matter in Redcar, not that migrants are rushing to the town to take them.

Much of the area’s industry is now specialist in sectors like petrochemicals and green energy while there is little in the way of agricultural work that often attracts a large immigrant workforce.

This is traditionally a Labour heartland but currently has a Liberal Democrat MP, Ian Swales, elected in 2010 amid widespread anger over the loss of steelmaking jobs at the Corus plant.

UKIP’s recent posters described “26 million people in Europe” looking for work and lots of shoppers in Redcar pledge to vote for the party.


UKIP election posterUKIP’s election posters were criticised by some

Support for UKIP is far from universal, however. One man angrily points out that “when times are hard people look to the foreigners for the problem”.

Candidates for 22 May’s vote largely agree on the reasons why people may perceive immigration as a problem despite the population figures.



Start Quote

Nigel Farage is not a man of the people, just because he goes and has a pint and a cigarette outside a pub”


End Quote
Jayne Shotton
Labour

Liberal Democrat Angelika Schneider puts it down to the “focus” of the media while Labour’s Jayne Shotton and Conservative Martin Callanan refer to a “drip feeding” of negative news stories and the “national narrative” respectively.

UKIP’s Jonathan Arnott disagrees and points out people living in Redcar are affected by the wider picture.

“Just because one particular place has a lower rate of immigration than other places nearby doesn’t necessarily mean that they aren’t competing for the same jobs.”


‘Control our own destiny’

UKIP, Mr Arnott insists, are not anti-immigration, but “anti-uncontrolled immigration”.

“Working class areas are disproportionately hit because there’s no limit to the amount of immigration from European countries,” he says. “The oversupply of labour is generally of those on the lowest incomes.”

Ms Shotton, for Labour, says her party is addressing the topics, including a lack of housing, that people blame on immigration.

“We’ve got a really hard job to do in getting out the message that UKIP isn’t the solution,” she says.

“Nigel Farage is not a man of the people, just because he goes and has a pint and a cigarette outside a pub. He’s a career politician and his wish to get out of the EU would be absolutely devastating for this region.”

Lib Dem Ms Schneider says UKIP has “very simple answers” to “very complex issues” and appeals to “people’s worst instincts and fears”.

She says: “I’ve been speaking to lots of businesses in the North East and there is a lack of skilled workers in some areas of the manufacturing sector.

“It’s an issue that can be addressed at a UK level through education and training but it’s a long process so immigration can be quite important.”


Windfarm and the Beacon at RedcarRedcar’s seafront has been revamped with the Beacon and a large wind farm

Drinkers in the Pig and Whistle pub squirm slightly when asked about immigration. It is a regular topic of conversation here, it seems.

Ken Jackson, from nearby Eston, says the perception that migrants are taking jobs that would otherwise be occupied by locals creates animosity.

Immigration though, he says, will always happen and in a global economy “people need to take jobs at the lower end of the market and be more realistic”.

Mr Jackson doesn’t believe UKIP is a racist party.

“I don’t think we’ll come out of Europe but we need to control our own destiny,” he says.



Full list of candidates




Voters in the North East will have eight parties to choose from when they cast their vote on 22 May.

A full list of those standing is available on the BBC Politics site.



Further along the bar, landlord Nick Coulson says some people are “paranoid” about immigration, particularly, he says, since benefit reforms introduced by the coalition.

“They might think ‘I’m not getting as much money as I was because we’re supporting all these Poles and so on’,” he says.

In the 2009 European elections UKIP came fourth in the North East, securing just over 15% of the vote in a worse showing than they achieved nationally.

Mr Callanan, the only sitting North East MEP standing for re-election, with Labour’s Steven Hughes and Lib Dem Fiona Hall retiring, says the Conservatives accept that support for the EU is “wafer thin”.

“We think the relationship should be renegotiated so that Europe gets involved less in the micro issues and only deals with the super-national issues that it needs to.”

He suggests voters see European elections as being ripe for taking a free roll of the dice at the ballot box.

“In an election that people don’t perceive as being that important, wrongly in my view, they feel able to cast a protest vote. It doesn’t affect the running of the country as it were.

“It’s a kick to the political establishment.”

Just how hard a kick awaits that establishment in towns like Redcar remains to be seen.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-27123775
Immigration in a very English town
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-27123775
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Recovering from immigration setback, Rubio builds conservative ties

By Gabriel Debenedetti

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – A year after falling out of favor with fellow conservatives over his push to reform the U.S. immigration system, one-time Tea Party golden boy Marco Rubio is rebuilding bridges with activists on the Republican right who could smooth his way toward a possible White House run in 2016.

Rubio’s office is working on economic policies with the influential Heritage Action for America group, which fiercely criticized a bipartisan bill last year partly written by Rubio that would have relaxed immigration laws.

And the first-term U.S. senator from Florida appears to have made up with Tea Party patriarch Jim DeMint, a one-time mentor whose criticism also helped sink the immigration bill.

DeMint, a former senator from South Carolina, leads the Heritage Foundation think tank, which often helps shape the right-wing policy agenda and is affiliated with Heritage Action.

Rubio’s warmer ties with high-profile Tea Partiers do not mean he has regained his position as a star with the Republican Party’s right wing. But they do appear to be part of an attempt to move on from his setback on immigration and shore up some conservative support in a crowded field of possible right-wing Republican candidates.

Although they have received more attention recently, Rubio’s potential conservative rivals in the presidential race, like senators Ted Cruz and Rand Paul, have yet to really break out as candidates, said Republican strategist Ford O’Connell.

That could leave some room for Rubio, a Cuban American, to win over conservatives and redeem himself for what many Tea Party supporters in 2013 saw as his backing for amnesty for illegal immigrants.

“It is no secret we vehemently disagreed with Senator Rubio on amnesty, but the conservative movement is – and the Republican Party should be – large enough for fact-based policy disagreements among friends,” Heritage Action leader Mike Needham said.

“Heritage Action maintains a very productive working relationship with the Senator and his staff – a relationship that existed before and endured throughout the immigration debate.”

Needham’s group described the immigration reform plans as “false promises” in May 2013, and compared them to President Barack Obama’s healthcare and financial regulation overhauls, both of which were despised by the right and which helped fuel the growth of the Tea Party movement of small government and fiscal conservatism.

FRIENDS WITH TEA PARTY KINGMAKER

DeMint said in September that Rubio’s immigration work had hurt him politically.

Rubio said he has also kept his close ties to DeMint and says he speaks to the Tea Party kingmaker frequently. “I see him quite often. We remain very good friends,” Rubio told Reuters.

The senator’s rekindled relationship with Tea Party leaders seemed unlikely as recently as March, when Rubio’s standing among presidential contenders in the Conservative Political Action Conference straw poll of activists dropped to seventh from a close second the previous year.

But Rubio has recently promoted his vision of a robust U.S. foreign policy and has given speeches about favored Tea Party themes such as economic mobility for the middle class and cuts to government spending. He said he is weighing whether to introduce an education financing proposal as an individual bill in Congress.

Rubio, who was elected to the Florida House of Representatives when he was just 28, says he will not decide on a presidential run before midterm elections this November, but in the meantime he projects ambition.

Asked in an interview aired on Sunday on ABC’s Program “This Week” if he thinks he is ready to be president, Rubio said “I do,” noting that even though he is just 42 he has held public office for about 14 years.

Rubio’s presidential dreams could depend on former Florida governor Jeb Bush, who would likely soak up Rubio’s home-state support and money if he were to run. Bush said last month he would decide on whether to run after the November congressional elections.

Rubio said he and Bush “email often” about policies, though they do not talk politics. He would not go into detail about the content of their communications.

Beyond his fence-mending with the right, Rubio has been raising money for groups aligned not with the Tea Party but with the Republican establishment, such as party committees and Karl Rove’s Crossroads organizations.

And a pair of Rubio-affiliated committees have been paying noticeably for consultants and campaign services in South Carolina, a key early voting state in presidential elections.

The Rubio Victory Committee and Rubio’s Reclaim America PAC group spent over $70,000 in South Carolina in the first quarter of 2014, according to campaign finance filings.

Building a large presence in South Carolina early on could help a presidential contender, said Tim Scott, a U.S. senator from the state. He said Rubio was “well received” in the state.

Republican strategist O’Connell said Rubio’s chances as a presidential hopeful are under-rated.

“The rest of the field both on the establishment side and the conservative side is faltering. Cruz hasn’t demonstrated the ability to get beyond the base and Rand Paul’s foreign policy has him crosswise with the establishment. So right now Rubio is undervalued as a 2016 candidate,” he said.

(Reporting by Gabriel Debenedetti; Editing by Alistair Bell and Frances Kerry)

Source Article from http://news.yahoo.com/recovering-immigration-setback-rubio-builds-conservative-ties-192240041.html
Recovering from immigration setback, Rubio builds conservative ties
http://news.yahoo.com/recovering-immigration-setback-rubio-builds-conservative-ties-192240041.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Computer hardware failure in Dallas immigration courts snarling some cases

Computer hardware failure in Dallas immigration courts snarling some cases
http://www.dallasnews.com/news/metro/20140509-computer-hardware-failure-in-dallas-immigration-courts-snarling-some-cases.ece
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Immigration: US warns schools against bias

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration said Thursday that troubling reports continue of school districts raising barriers to enrollment for children brought into the U.S. illegally.

The Justice Department and Education Department issued new guidance reminding schools and districts they have a legal obligation to enroll every student regardless of their immigration status. The guidance says schools should be flexible in deciding which documents they will accept to prove a student’s age or residency.

It also reminds them not to ask about a student’s immigration status or require documents such as a driver’s license, if that would prevent a student from enrolling because of a parent’s immigration status.

The Education Department said it has received 17 complaints since 2011 from states including Colorado, North Carolina, Ohio, Louisiana, Michigan, New Mexico and the District of Columbia.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan said in some instances, school leaders have inappropriately required information such as a child’s visa status or date of entry into the United States.

Sometimes collaboratively with the Education Department and sometime working separately, Justice Department officials said they also have taken action. It has entered into settlement agreements with school districts in states such as Georgia, Florida, and Virginia. And, it said that after it contacted officials in Alabama the state education department sent guidance to districts spelling out that they may not bar or discourage students from enrollment because they lack a Social Security number, birth certificate or because their parents don’t have an Alabama driver’s license.

Officials from the two departments said they have found states and districts are willing to work with the federal government on the issue.

“It’s a tribute to educators around the country that they recognize how important it is for kids to be able to attend school and are willing to take the steps necessary to ensure they aren’t even inadvertently chilling students’ willingness or families’ willingness to attend them,” said Jocelyn Samuels, acting assistant attorney general for civil rights in the Justice Department.

Attorney General Eric Holder told reporters his department “will do everything it can to make sure schools meet this obligation.”

Children brought into the U.S. illegally are guaranteed the right to a K-12 education under the 1982 Supreme Court decision Plyler v. Doe.

Noelle M. Ellerson, associate executive director for policy and advocacy at AASA: The School Superintendents Association, said in an email that the association appreciates the additional clarification.

_____

Follow Kimberly Hefling on Twitter at http://twitter.com/khefling

Source Article from http://news.yahoo.com/immigration-us-warns-schools-against-bias-140415835–politics.html
Immigration: US warns schools against bias
http://news.yahoo.com/immigration-us-warns-schools-against-bias-140415835–politics.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Dixie Rep. Won With Immigration Reform

Rep. Renee Ellmers, the nurse turned North Carolina congresswoman, was a top House target for anti-immigration groups looking to knock of a rare pro-reform House Republican in a GOP primary this year. Beat Ellmers, the thinking went, and teach the rest of the party a lesson.

But on Tuesday night, Ellmers easily beat back a challenge from Frank Roche, a businessman and perennial political candidate who had made Ellmers’s support for immigration reform the centerpiece of his effort to oust her. The race had attracted national attention as a test case of a GOP incumbent facing a conservative primary electorate in the wake of declaring support for an immigration reform bill that would support a path to legal status but not citizenship for the nation’s 11 million undocumented immigrants.

READ MORE Clinton: Enough About Benghazi

In the end, Ellmers won the primary with 58.72 percent of the vote, three points greater than her margin in the 2012 GOP primary, even after withering attacks from Laura Ingraham, RedState.com, NumbersUSA, ALIPAC, and local Tea Party groups, specifically for her immigration stance.

A potentially key piece to Ellmers’s victory was a $250,000 expenditure by Americans for a Conservative Direction, an affiliate of FWD.us, , the 501(c)(4) cofounded by tech giants including Mark Zuckerberg, Sean Parker, and Bill Gates to pass immigration reform.

READ MORE …And Why Democrats Are So Scared of It

“We wanted to send a signal to folks that if you stand up and do the right thing, we’re going to be there for you,” said Brian Walsh, a consultant for Americans for a Conservative Direction. “She had the courage early on to support immigration reform. I think she would have won anyway, but we wanted to give her support.”

Walsh said the group’s ads were designed to “set the record straight” after Ellmers got into an epic on-air smackdown with Ingraham over immigration reform in which Ellmers called Ingraham ignorant on the issue and Ingraham repeatedly accused Ellmers of supporting amnesty for undocumented immigrants.

READ MORE How Republicans Twist Benghazi…

The FWD.us group aired hundreds of thousands of dollars of ads to refute the accusation, a massive ad buy considering Roche raised just $24,000 for his entire campaign and never went up on television. But Walsh said the move was designed to send a larger message.

“It was important for those folks who are standing up to do the right thing to know that their allies are there to support them,” he said. “And Tuesday night’s result was a clear sign that a majority of voters are opposed to keeping the status quo of a broken system.”

READ MORE Hillary Dropped the Ball on Boko Haram

Along with the outside spending in the race, Ellmers raised more than $950,000 on her own and spent about $650,000. She’ll need the leftover funds for her general election matchup, which looks likely to be against American Idol runner-up Clay Aiken, who led his opponent by fewer than 400 votes as of Wednesday.

Frank Sharry, executive director of America’s Voice, a pro-reform group, said Ellmers’s victory has implications well beyond her district.

READ MORE Tea Party Prepared to Fight GOP Forever

“John Boehner and company are afraid to bring up immigration because RedState and Laura Ingraham say that their base will be upset, but where is the evidence?” Sharry said. “The anti-immigration forces are loud but not large. Renee Ellmers was under attack, and she wins by a bigger margin than two years ago. That says something to me.”

Sharry pointed to other fizzling primaries as a sign that the anti-reform movement is simply not as powerful as feared by congressional leadership.

READ MORE 7% of Journalists Are Republicans?

“This year, you have Ellmers being attacked by Laura Ingraham and primaries against Lindsey Graham and Lamar Alexander,” he said. “They’re all based on immigration, and they’re all going nowhere.”

Related from The Daily Beast

Like us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterSign up for The Cheat Sheet Newsletter

Source Article from http://news.yahoo.com/dixie-rep-won-immigration-reform-094500737–politics.html
Dixie Rep. Won With Immigration Reform
http://news.yahoo.com/dixie-rep-won-immigration-reform-094500737–politics.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Immigration Minister lobbied by Liu on rules

Chinese businessman asked Woodhouse for new investment category.


Donghua Liu. Photo / Richard Robinson
Donghua Liu. Photo / Richard Robinson

Immigration Minister Michael Woodhouse has confirmed that he met with Chinese businessman Donghua Liu, and heard his requests for a change in immigration policy.

Mr Woodhouse said Mr Liu – who was involved in National MP Maurice Williamson’s resignation – lobbied him in April or May at the businessman’s Newmarket hotel.

The minister said Mr Liu lobbied him to change the rules of the business migrant scheme.

“We traversed a range of … issues about how the investor category could be improved, and I took on board those issues.”

Mr Liu was seeking a new immigration category in which non-English speakers could invest less than the $10 million threshold.

The minister told reporters that while the investment categories were under review, he had no plans to lower the threshold of the Investor Plus scheme.

“We’ve undergone a review of the investor categories and we’ve found that by and large they’re working very well.

“There are some possibilities for improving the way in which the categories work … but no decisions have been made.”

Mr Woodhouse said any changes to the scheme would focus on “the way in which people invest funds, where they invest funds, and how long they need to spend in the country”.

This could include extending the scheme to migrants who invested in the Canterbury rebuild.

Mr Liu gained residency through the Investor Plus scheme, which was required for non-English speaking migrants to qualify as business migrants.

The Herald has previously reported that his plans for a $70 million development in Newmarket would go ahead following “improvements to New Zealand’s business migrant rules”.

Mr Liu hired professional consultants to lobby ministers to lower the threshold. When he was unsuccessful in getting government to relax the rules, the development stalled.

Mr Williamson lobbied for Mr Liu to gain citizenship, and it was granted in 2010.

The National MP resigned on Thursday after it was revealed that he contacted police about Mr Liu’s domestic violence charges in January.

Mr Woodhouse also said he discussed immigration issues at a National Party fundraiser which was attended by Chinese migrants.

He said he spoke about immigration policy at the November event “as I do at just about everywhere else in the country”.

Donghua Liu

2005: Chinese businessman Donghua Liu gained NZ residency by investing $10 million through the Investor Plus scheme.

2010: Granted citizenship against official advice, after lobbying by former minister Maurice Williamson.

2011-2013: Lobbied ministers to lower $10 million threshold to qualify as business migrant.

Nov 2013: Charged with domestic assault.

January: Williamson calls police to inquire about police charges.

May: Williamson resigns for appearing to interfere with police case.

- NZ Herald

Source Article from http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11251387&ref=rss
Immigration Minister lobbied by Liu on rules
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11251387&ref=rss
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

New Immigration Rules Without Congress

The Department of Homeland Security announced two new proposed rules Tuesday morning aimed at attracting and holding onto highly skilled immigrants. It’s the latest effort by the Obama administration to change immigration policy while Congress continues to stall on passing comprehensive reform legislation.

The rules, presented on a call with reporters by DHS Deputy Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker, will remove obstacles to remaining in the U.S. for certain temporary workers and offer employment visas for some of those workers’ spouses.

READ MORE Happy Huckabee Gets Mad

H-1B visas are temporary employment permits for foreign workers with a theoretical or technical expertise in particular fields such as engineering, science or computer programming among others. Currently, H-1B workers are given a three-year duration of stay that is extendable to six years and, in very specific, special circumstances, up to 10 years. There are, however, a number of obstacles that make it difficult for H-1B workers to remain in the United States after their visas has expired.

The new rules announced Tuesday aim to knock down at least a few of these hurdles, especially for highly skilled professionals like professors and researchers, from Chile, Singapore, Australia, and the Northern Marina Islands who are apparently given priority for such work authorizations and extensions over workers from other countries.

READ MORE Leaning In for Network TV

“For the sake of our economy and our security we need common sense immigration reform that makes immigration legal and efficient,” Mayorkas told reporters. “In the meantime, we will continue to make improvements in the areas where we can make a difference.”

Pritzker pointed to entrepreneurs like Sergey Brin, Google’s Russian-born co-founder and Hamdi Ulukaya, the Turkish immigrant who founded and runs Chobani, just two of the more than 40 percent of Fortune 500 companies that are founded by immigrants or their children.

READ MORE Does America Like Political Dynasties?

“Passing immigration reform is a moral obligation that also makes good economic sense,” Pritzker said.

Currently, DHS does not offer employment authorizations to the dependent spouses of H-1B workers, meaning they cannot legally work in the U.S. while their husbands or wives are temporarily employed at an American company. The new rules will make work visas available to certain individuals whose H-1B spouses have already begun seeking permanent residence through their employer. Mayorkas estimated that approximately 97,000 HB-1 spouses will be eligible to apply for employment authorization under this rule within the first year that it is enacted and then over 30,000 annually after that.

READ MORE The Latest on Benghazi

“These individuals are American families in waiting,” Pritzker said of the people who will benefit from the proposed changes. “Many tire of waiting for green cards to become available and leave the country to work for our competition.”

The proposed rules will be published in the Federal Register and the public will be allowed to comment on them at regulations.gov. Public comments and concerns will be taken into consideration before the final rules are implemented. This process typically takes about 60 days but Mayorkas said “it is our intent to review the comments most expeditiously and publish the rule very quickly thereafter in light of its importance to American competitiveness and the growth of our economy.”

READ MORE Inside North Carolina’s Senate Race

Silicon Valley tech companies have been particularly active in pushing for immigration reform. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, half of Silicon Valley’s science, engineering, and technology workers were born outside the U.S., compared to a quarter of people working in such fields throughout the rest of the country. Last April, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced the creation of FWD.us, a lobbying group co-founded by Zuckerberg and funded by other Silicon Valley entrepreneurs aims to advocate the passing of bipartisan immigration reform legislation that better allows for American companies to recruit the world’s most talented people.

“As leaders of an industry that has benefited from this economic shift, we believe that we have a responsibility to work together to ensure that all members of our society gain from the rewards of modern knowledge economy,” Zuckerberg wrote in a Washington Post op-ed introducing FWD.us.

READ MORE Condi Backs Out Of Rutgers Commencement

Tuesday is the latest move by the Obama administration to make immigration policy changes in lieu of Congress enacting real reform. Easing restrictions on a relatively small number of very specifically skilled, foreign-born workers might not be exactly what immigration reform advocates, who have been calling on Obama to make deportation policies more humane, were looking for. But given Congressional Republicans’ likelihood to kill comprehensive immigration reform at the first sign of any executive action that might be perceived as weakening border security, the proposed changes announced Tuesday seem carefully, and cleverly, calculated.

Related from The Daily Beast

Like us on Facebook -
Follow us on Twitter
Sign up for The Cheat Sheet Newsletter

Source Article from http://uk.news.yahoo.com/immigration-rules-without-congress-175000302–politics.html
New Immigration Rules Without Congress
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/immigration-rules-without-congress-175000302–politics.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Immigration bottleneck at LCCT resolved

SEPANG – Clearing immigration is faster now at the Low Cost Carrier Terminal (LCCT) after more counters were opened following Sunday’s bottleneck where about 1,000 travellers were affected due to a lack of officers.

The affected travellers had also complained about faulty air-conditioning and escalators that had made a bad situation worse. These facilities have since been fixed.

Banker Liew Sen Yee, 30, who arrived from Singapore for work on Monday, said she had no problems passing through especially since there were functioning autogates in addition to manual immigration counters for those with Malaysian passports.

South Korean national Kelly Kwan, 35, said she and her husband passed through immigration, baggage claim and customs in a matter of minutes.

“It was fine. We only took 10 minutes to come out. There were eight counters open for those with foreign passports,” she said.

On Sunday, only three immigration counters had reportedly been open to handle the huge crowd of travellers.

Malaysia Airports Holdings Bhd operation services senior general manager Datuk Azmi Murad said that the bottleneck had been sorted out within two hours.

Operations at the LCCT are moving to KLIA2 and will cease from May 9.

Mesra Indah Jaya Sdn Bhd, the operator of KLIA2′s transportation hub, is working to get facilities running smoothly for travellers.

At present, there is only a trickle using the services and not all the bus companies have started up their operations.

A supervisor from Mesra Indah Jaya, who declined to be identified, said only two bus companies had started operations full time – Aerobus and Skybus.

“Some others are slowly coming in, starting with only one or two buses.

“The remainder have yet to even register to operate at the hub,” he said.

Source Article from http://asiaone.feedsportal.com/c/34151/f/618414/s/3a18b99b/sc/8/l/0L0Sasiaone0N0Cnews0Crelax0Cimmigration0Ebottleneck0Elcct0Eresolved/story01.htm
Immigration bottleneck at LCCT resolved
http://asiaone.feedsportal.com/c/34151/f/618414/s/3a18b99b/sc/8/l/0L0Sasiaone0N0Cnews0Crelax0Cimmigration0Ebottleneck0Elcct0Eresolved/story01.htm
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Immigration DG simply unfit for the job



FMT LETTER: From Government Watchdog, via e-mail

The director-general of Immigration, Aloyah Mamat, should stop blaming others for department’s own shortfall over the congestion at the immigration gates which left about one thousand passengers fuming at the Low-Cost Carrier Terminal (LCCT) in Sepang recently.

Although I was not one of those involved, I empathise with the passengers who had to wait for several hours just to clear through the immigration counters in their own country.

Aloyah’s failure to ensure that the transition goes on smoothly cannot be blamed on AirAsia for its refusal to move to the KLIA2 terminal on May 2. Such a congestion should have been anticipated, and as director-general, it is her duty to ensure that more immigration counters are opened at peak hours.

People are not interested in the internal politics, but as tax payers, we demand that the service, including that of the Immigration Department, is being provided for. Otherwise, Aloyah is simply not fit for the job.

The rakyat would not take such an excuse given by a senior member of an important government agency, otherwise, the next time something happens, the tendency is to always blame others for the failure of the immigration.

For too long, the rakyat has looked with dismay at the influx of illegal foreigners into the country. How is it that the immigration can allow, for example, foreigners coming to Malaysia under the pretext of furthering their education? For this, will immigration take the brunt or blame it on the Ministry of Education or the private institutions for helping these foreigners to apply for their student visas?

While we expect student visas to be approved promptly especially those who are registered with bona fide institutions, we also expect the immigration not only to be strict with those institutions that are ‘suspicious’, but together with the Ministry of Education, to clamp down on them.

So far, what has the immigration done to solve some of these issues, or like what Aloyah is quick to do, blame it on others for the issues faced by the country today? What about the increasing number of illegal Rohingas or other ethnic groups in this country? How did they enter into the country? Has the immigration allowed a loophole in its checkpoint that allows these illegals to enter the country?

What about the fake passports that were used to travel as in the case of the two Iranians on board the MH370 aircraft recently? How is it that they could leave the country using fake passports? Who would Aloyah blame then?

Aloyah should stop the blame game; instead, immediately, deploy her people back to the LCCT to man more counters to avoid the congestion to happen again. Her failure, if not being reprimanded by the government, will reflect badly on prime minister, Najib Tun Abdul Razak.

Source Article from http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/opinion/2014/05/06/immigration-dg-simply-unfit-for-the-job/
Immigration DG simply unfit for the job
http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/opinion/2014/05/06/immigration-dg-simply-unfit-for-the-job/
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Immigration Reform Isn't Just About Numbers—It's About Skills, Too

At a Hollywood conference on innovation on Friday, Vice President Joe Biden credited “constant and overwhelming” immigration for American creativity. Obviously, immigrants have contributed hugely to America’s legendary dynamism. From Alexander Hamilton to Sergey Brin, people born off these shores have founded new companies, invented new products, and disseminated new ideas.

All the most enthusiastic tributes to immigration as a source of renewal are true.

But those tributes are not the whole truth.

Since 1965, American immigration policy has tilted further and further in favor of the poorly educated and the unskilled. In consequence—and with full acknowledgement of the many, many spectacular individual success stories—American immigration policy in the aggregate has degraded the country’s skill levels and pushed the United States down to the bottom of the developed world in literacy, numeracy, and problem-solving.

A new OECD report delivers grim news about how poorly Americans score in the skills necessary to a modern economy: “Larger proportions of adults in the United States than in other [advanced] countries have poor literacy and numeracy skills, and the proportion of adults with poor skills in problem solving is slightly larger than average, despite the relatively high educational attainments among adults in the United States.”

In literacy, for example, the OECD graded populations into five categories, 1 and 2 being the lowest. One in six American adults scored below level 2 for literacy, as compared to one in 20 adults in Japan. Nearly one in three scored below level 2 for numeracy. One in three scored at the lowest level for problem-solving in an advanced technical environment.

Why did Americans score so uniquely badly?

Immigration isn’t the whole answer, but it is the largest—and fastest-growing—part of the explanation of the deskilling of the American labor force.

Only 6 percent of native-born Americans of working age lack a high-school diploma. More than a quarter of working-age immigrants do. The newest arrivals are the worst educated: Almost 28 percent of those who have entered since the year 2000 did not finish high school. The poor schooling of America’s immigrants has massively deskilled the American labor force as a whole. Although immigrants provide only 16 percent of the American labor force, they account for 44 percent of all workers without a high-school degree.

Fareed Zakaria pointed out in a Washington Post column about the skills report that the foreign-born make up an even larger portion of the population in other OECD countries than the United States. This is correct. But a closer look at those numbers reveals the uniqueness of the American immigration flow.


OECD

The OECD country with far and away the highest proportion of foreign-born workers is Luxembourg, where a third of the population consists of nationals of other European states, notably next-door France. That’s not immigration. That’s commuting. The next runner-up is Israel, whose largest sources of migration are the countries of the former Soviet Union and the United States.

Only with migration-receiving countries 4, 5, and 6—New Zealand, Australia, and Canada—do we encounter countries where most migration comes from countries of origin poorer than the receiving country. All three of those countries operate immigration programs very concerned with attracting highly skilled workers. Their migrants are better educated and better skilled than the native born.

Some other OECD countries—notably Sweden—do accept American-scale flows of poorly educated workers in large numbers. Unsurprisingly, they also experience American-style results. Over the past two decades, Sweden has experienced the fastest increase in poverty of any OECD country. The gap between rich and poor has widened faster in Sweden than anywhere else in the OECD over that same period. 

Swedish public policy does, however, struggle to mitigate the deskilling effects of unskilled immigration through—among other things—ambitious early-childhood-education programs. The United States uniquely combines large flows of unskilled immigrants with a low level of social provision. The results are as we see.

Americans console themselves that second and third generations of immigrants will do better than the first. Many immigrants do rise in just this way. Yet the evidence for many of the largest immigrant groups—immigrants from Mexico and Central America—is not encouraging. The second generation does better than the first … but progress stalls after that. Even in the fourth generation, Mexican-American education levels lag far behind those of Anglo Americans, according to the definitive study by Edward Telles and Vilma Ortiz, Generations of Exclusion.

What holds back immigrant progress? Discrimination? Inherited cultural patterns? The economic and cultural obstacles of a society where unskilled labor no longer pays a living wage? Whatever the reason, the outcome is the same. Human capital extends across generations. Those who arrive possessing that capital bequeath it to their descendants. Those who arrive lacking it bequeath that same lack. Progress across generations is slow at best and non-existent at worst—especially as low-skilled migrants to the United States adopt the same single-parent family pattern that prevails among the poorer half of the native-born population.

The contrast between the American experience on the one hand, and the Canadian/Australian/New Zealand experience on the other suggests that the debate about immigration is less a Yes/No debate than a debate over Who? and How Many? Immigration can enhance a nation’s skill level or reduce it. Americans often talk about immigration as if it were some kind of natural phenomenon beyond conscious control. In reality, it’s a policy choice, and different choices are available.

Yet the so-called immigration reform advanced by the Obama Administration is a program of more—much, much more—of the same: more immigration in total, more immigration of the unskilled in particular. We look to the schools to counteract the effects of this mass deskilling. But there’s a limit to what schools can do even under the best circumstances.

Instead, this administration seems bent on making things worse.

Education reform cannot work without an immigration reform worthy of the name: a reform that thinks of immigration in human-capital terms, a reform whose goal is to reduce the total number of migrants while raising their average skill levels. Such a reform would appreciate that the decisions of the past have already laden the United States with a daunting enough educational challenge. The country cannot afford to allow selfish and short-sighted interest groups to add to that load an even more impossible challenge in the decades ahead.

Source Article from http://theatlantic.feedsportal.com/c/34375/f/625835/s/3a15b77d/sc/7/l/0L0Stheatlantic0N0Cpolitics0Carchive0C20A140C0A50Cimmigration0Ereform0Eisnt0Ejust0Eabout0Enumbersits0Eabout0Eskills0Etoo0C361650A0C/story01.htm
Immigration Reform Isn't Just About Numbers—It's About Skills, Too
http://theatlantic.feedsportal.com/c/34375/f/625835/s/3a15b77d/sc/7/l/0L0Stheatlantic0N0Cpolitics0Carchive0C20A140C0A50Cimmigration0Ereform0Eisnt0Ejust0Eabout0Enumbersits0Eabout0Eskills0Etoo0C361650A0C/story01.htm
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results