Lieberman / Leahy Letter
To Secretary Ridge
On Privatization Of Immigration Information Officers
September 4, 2003
The Honorable Tom Ridge
Secretary
U.S. Department of Homeland Security
Washington, DC 20528
Dear Secretary Ridge:
We are writing to express our strong opposition to your
Department's decision to classify Immigration Information Officers
as a "commercial activity", and to subject potentially more than
1100 of those jobs to an immediate competition with contractors.
Immigration Information Officers (IIOs) perform a variety of
substantive governmental functions throughout the country; they
adjudicate claims, expedite the orderly flow of applications of
lawful immigrants, and police against fraudulent applications and
other indications of illegality. These jobs qualify as "inherently
governmental" in every sense of the term, and we urge you to
consider the significant harms that would result if the IIOs were
privatized.
The decision to subject these jobs to possible privatization
would have been objectionable enough prior to the September 11,
2001, terrorist attacks. It defies belief in their wake. In the
aftermath of the attacks, the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration
Services (BCIS) faces greater burdens than ever before in its
attempt to process immigration and naturalization applications while
ensuring that terrorists do not abuse our immigration system.
Information Officers have provided invaluable help in performing
criminal background checks on applicants and reviewing applications
for potential fraud. Indeed, the agency's job description requires
that IIOs have the "[s]kill to identify fraudulent documents in
order to prevent persons from appealing for benefits for which they
are not eligible," a skill that is obviously all the more important
in this era. They are also required to have "[k]nowledge and skill
in interviewing techniques and observation of applicants in order to
determine if an applicant is misrepresenting the facts in order to
appear eligible for a benefit." Weeding out potential fraud in our
immigration system must remain a responsibility of government
employees, especially when the perpetrator of the fraud may be a
dangerous criminal or terrorist.
Immigration Information Officers also help to ensure that
applicants for immigration benefits receive correct information and
assist more senior adjudicators in processing applications. They
increase efficiency, by, as their job description states, exploring
"all avenues of assistance available to the customer; determin[ing]
the benefit most advantageous if more than one exists, and try[ing]
to motivate the customer to file the appropriate application(s)." It
is important to note that these positions require "knowledge of the
exclusion and deportation regulations" and "knowledge and
familiarity with the immigration and nationality laws." In other
words, these positions require extensive knowledge and the use of
discretion – they are not mechanical in nature.
Our offices have relied for years on the expertise of these
experienced and dedicated civil servants, in resolving our
constituents' often complex immigration-related problems. It is hard
to imagine how a low-bidding contractor could immediately train its
workforce to approximate the knowledge and dedication of the
long-serving IIOs. When dealing with immigration matters, mistakes
can have drastic consequences for individuals and businesses.
Considering the President's repeatedly-stated intention to provide
more efficient services for lawful immigrants, we believe that the
last thing the Department of Homeland Security should do is to
replace knowledgeable immigration professionals with contract
employees.
The decision to subject the jobs to a public private competition
represents a continuation of plans already made in the Justice
Department, when the IIOs worked for the old Immigration and
Naturalization Service. The plans were drawn up to implement the
Administration's extreme outsourcing agenda, which required agencies
to compete or convert 15% of the jobs listed on their FAIR Act
inventories by September 30, 2003. On July 24, 2003, the
Administration finally announced that it would comply with the law
prohibiting arbitrary numerical quotas. Nevertheless, your
Department has not revisited its earlier decision to place IIOs on
the FAIR Act inventory and subject them to an immediate competition.
The only possible conclusion is that federal employees will continue
to suffer the effects of illegal numerical quotas long after they
have been purportedly abolished.
Finally, you are presumably sensitive to the crippling effect on
morale this decision will have on BCIS personnel. With the
Department of Homeland Security still struggling to consolidate its
many agencies and diverse staff, we question why the Department's
management would prioritize the Administration's outsourcing agenda
rather than focus on matters more relevant to protecting the
homeland against terrorism.
We urge you to reconsider the Department's decision to
commercialize the jobs of Immigration Information Officers. Thank
you for your attention to this matter, and we look forward to your
response.
Sincerely,
Senators Joseph I. Lieberman, Patrick J. Leahy, Robert C. Byrd,
Edward M. Kennedy, Frank Lautenberg, Harry Reid, Patty Murray,
Daniel K. Akaka, Barbara A. Mikulski, Christopher J. Dodd, Hillary
Rodham Clinton, Jeff Bingaman, James M. Jeffords, Richard J. Durbin,
John Edwards, Thomas R. Carper, Russell D. Feingold, Mark Pryor,
Maria Cantwell, E. Benjamin Nelson, Jack Reed, Barbara Boxer, Paul
S. Sarbanes, Tim Johnson, John F. Kerry, Jon S. Corzine, Ron Wyden,
Byron L. Dorgan, Ernest F. Hollings, Carl Levin, Tom Daschle, Dianne
Feinstein, Mary L. Landrieu and Blanche L. Lincoln.