Independent Task Force on US Immigration Reform

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Independent Task Force on Immigration and America's Future  
List of Members
As of September 2006

Co-chairs

Spencer Abraham, Chairman and CEO, The Abraham Group, LLC; Distinguished Visiting Fellow, Hoover Institution; Former Secretary of Energy and Senator (R) from Michigan          

Lee Hamilton, President and Director, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars; Former Vice Chair, 9/11 Commission and Member of Congress (D) from Indiana

Director:

Doris Meissner, Senior Fellow, Migration Policy Institute, former Commissioner, United States Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS)

Members:

T. Alexander Aleinikoff, Dean of the Law Center and Executive Vice President for Law Center Affairs, Georgetown University; Former General Counsel, US Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS)

Howard Berman*, (D) Member of Congress, California

Oscar A. Chacón, Director, Enlaces América, Heartland Alliance for Human Needs and Human Rights

Thomas J. Donohue, President and CEO, United States Chamber of Commerce

Jeff Flake*, (R) Member of Congress, Arizona

Fernando Garcia, Executive Director, Border Network for Human Rights

Bill Ong Hing, Professor of Law and Asian American Studies, University of California, Davis                        

Tamar Jacoby, Senior Fellow, Manhattan Institute

Juliette Kayyem, Lecturer in Public Policy, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University; Former member of the National Commission on Terrorism

Edward Kennedy* (D), Senator, Massachusetts

John McCain* (R), Senator, Arizona

Janet Murguia, President and CEO, National Council of La Raza

Leon Panetta, Director, Leon and Sylvia Panetta Institute for Public Policy, California State University at Monterey Bay; Former Chief of Staff to the President; Former Director, Office of Management and Budget (OMB)

Steven J. Rauschenberger, Senator, State of Illinois; Immediate Past President, National Conference of State Legislatures; Deputy Republican Leader and Former Chairman,
Illinois Senate Appropriations Committee

Robert Reischauer, President, Urban Institute; Former Director, Congressional Budget Office (CBO)

Kurt L. Schmoke, Dean, Howard University School of Law; Former Mayor, Baltimore, MD

Frank Sharry, Executive Director, National Immigration Forum

Debra W. Stewart, President, Council of Graduate Schools; Former Vice Chancellor and Dean of the Graduate School, North Carolina State University

C. Stewart Verdery, Principal at Mehlman Vogel Castagnetti, Inc.; Adjunct Fellow, Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS); Former Assistant Secretary, Department of Homeland Security

John Wilhelm, President, Hospitality Industry of UNITE HERE

James W. Ziglar, President and CEO, Cross Match Technologies, Inc.; Former Commissioner, United States Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS)

Ex Officio Members

Malcolm Brown, Assistant Deputy Minister, Strategic and Program Policy,
Citizenship and Immigration Canada

Jean Louis De Brouwer, Director, Directorate B - Immigration, Asylum, and Borders, European Commission Directorate General for Justice, Freedom and Security

Jeff Gorsky, Chief, Legal Advisory Opinion Section, Visa Office, US Department of State

Gerónimo Gutiérrez Fernández, Undersecretary for North America, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Mexico

Observers

Thor Arne Aass, Director General, Department of Migration, Ministry of Labour and Social Inclusion, Norway

Carlos de Icaza, Ambassador to the United States of America, Mexico  

Alexandros Zavos, President, Hellenic Migration Policy Institute

* Because of their legislative roles, currently serving members of Congress were not asked to endorse the Task Force recommendations.


Immigration and America's Future:
A New Chapter
Final Report of the Independent Task Force co-chaired by Spencer Abraham and Lee H. Hamilton

As Congress and the Administration remain deadlocked on how to combat illegal immigration, a high-level, bipartisan task force has called for fundamental reform of the nation’s immigration laws and system.

RESOURCES

The report and recommendations of the Independent Task Force on Immigration and America’s Future, co-chaired by former Sen. Spencer Abraham (R-MI) and former Rep. Lee H. Hamilton (D-IN), address the dilemmas of illegal immigration but also reconcile the need to meet strong economic and social demands for legal immigration with the imperative to strengthen enforcement and safeguard national security. Other Task Force members include prominent business, labor and immigrant advocacy leaders; policy experts; public officials; and members of Congress who came together to find common ground.

Immigration and America’s Future: A New Chapter moves beyond illegal immigration, a symptom of the failures of the current system. It articulates a vision that promotes U.S. global competitiveness in the context of post-9/11 security imperatives, while grappling with many of the technical details that are frustrating reform efforts. The report argues that the nation’s current laws, dating back to the 1950s, are outdated and unsuited to the economic, social and demographic realities of the 21 st century.

Among its recommendations, the Task Force calls on Congress and the President to:

  • Redesign and simplify the immigration system by establishing three streams for immigration – temporary, provisional and permanent. The new provisional category provides a way to align immigration with current economic realities by creating visas for immigrants of all skill levels who have an offer of employment to enter the country legally. The number of nonimmigrant visa classifications would be reduced from 24 to 7 to streamline and make the system more transparent.
  • Create an independent body in the Executive Branch that would introduce flexibility into the system by making regular recommendations to Congress and the President for adjusting immigration levels. Its recommendations would be based on ongoing analysis of labor market needs and changing economic and demographic trends.
  • Provide employers with a verification mechanism that allows them to comply with requirements for hiring only authorized workers, and develop a new, secure Social Security card that enables individuals to readily establish their work eligibility.
  • Accelerate implementation of “Smart Border” measures that use equipment, personnel and cutting-edge technology more effectively and strengthen accountability by establishing measures of effectiveness and an annual progress report on meeting them.
  • Establish a national office to promote the integration of immigrants and provide a focal point at the federal level for state, local and private sector integration initiatives.
  • Provide a path to legal status for unauthorized immigrants who can demonstrate steady employment, knowledge of English, payment of taxes, and passage of a background security check, among other requirements.

After the release of their report in Washington, Task Force members will present the report in various cities across the country and work with policymakers at all levels of government as well as other stakeholders to broaden the scope of the national dialogue on immigration reform.

The report should serve as a durable foundation upon which to build the discourse and policies that can meet the challenges and opportunities posed by immigration for the 21st century. 

The Division of United States Studies and the Mexico Institute of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and Manhattan Institute have collaborated with MPI in convening the Task Force.