Sunday, November 29, 2009

Kaipat: AG didn’t consult Labor in decision to grant protection to overstayers
Monday, 30 November 2009 00:00
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THE attorney general’s decision to give broad protection to illegal overstayers was a complete surprise to the Department of Labor, its Deputy Secretary Cinta Kaipat said in a media release.

“The attorney general never discussed this plan with us and, so far as we know, he never discussed it with anyone on his interagency working group — not the chamber of commerce, the representatives of foreign workers, the Department of Commerce, Customs, or anyone else,” she added.
The AG formerly had legitimate interests in prosecuting illegal aliens, but as of Nov. 28, 2009, those duties were taken over by the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which is a part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
“The attorney general certainly could use these applications from overstayers for law enforcement purposes,” Kaipat said. “All these records could be turned over to the federal law enforcement authorities so that illegal aliens could be deported.”
She added, “Labor never intended the umbrella permit program to be any general amnesty, and it should not be treated as such by any commonwealth agency. There should be no general grant of permits to illegal aliens. We do not know what the attorney general plans to do, but Labor will not grant any permission to work to any person that Labor has not approved for an umbrella permit. In the commonwealth government, only Labor has the legislative authority to allow aliens to work in the commonwealth.”
According to Kaipat, “Labor has a process by which we certify overstayers to the director of Immigration, who works for the attorney general. Overstayer names are published in the news media a number of times and persons on the list are given an opportunity to come in to Labor and correct the records. After the records have been corrected as necessary, a certified list is created. Once an overstayer is on the certified list, then Labor stays its hand and does not deal administratively with that worker until Immigration allows the worker to come off the list for a good reason.”
Kaipat said most persons put on the list are never removed from it.
By making this informal agreement with the Immigration Division, which is not in writing, Labor has not delegated any of its authority to the attorney general, she added.
Labor is simply cooperating with another commonwealth agency, she said.
“We will no longer be certifying overstayers to the attorney general,” Kaipat said.
Arrangements with federal authorities have not yet been worked out, however.

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