Local
Thursday, April 02, 2009
Schorr: Investor, worker rules out in 1 to 2 months
By Haidee V. Eugenio
Reporter
Major business and workers groups are relieved that the start of transition to federal immigration is delayed by 180 days, but they want the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to soon publish the CNMI-only transitional worker and investor regulations.
Jeff Schorr, field representative of the Interior's Office of Insular Affairs, yesterday told Saipan Chamber of Commerce members and guests that these two sets of regulations will be out in “another month or two.”
Homeland Security's decision to delay federalization by 180 days-from June 1, 2009 to Nov. 28, 2009-was welcome news for members of the Saipan Chamber of Commerce, the Tinian Chamber of Commerce, the Rota Casino Gaming Commission and the United Workers Movement NMI.
Doug Brennan, vice president of the Saipan Chamber of Commerce, said the delay gives businesses a breathing room to develop a business plan once these regulations are published.
“Our position paper stated that we are in favor of a delay simply because we want all the rules and regulations in front of us before this takes place. It's very difficult to develop a business plan for any of our member businesses when we don't know what the rules are going to be. What we were told was it will be U.S. immigration but there was talk about various exemptions and waivers. We'd like to see these,” Brennan told Saipan Tribune after the Chamber's general membership meeting at the Pacific Islands Club in San Antonio.
The Saipan Chamber of Commerce is the largest business organization in the CNMI with approximately 150 members.
To date, DHS has released only the Guam-CNMI visa waiver program regulations.
Phillip Mendiola-Long, president of the Tinian Chamber of Commerce, said the 180-day delay was the correct decision considering the lack of time available to make “extremely difficult policy decisions.”
“I frankly did not see it possible to implement Public Law 110-229 in the time frame available because DHS had not completed regulations for the CNMI Transitional Worker Program. They had not completed regulations for existing CNMI foreign investor transitions, or created the new foreign investor policy. They had not established regulations for immediate relatives, and they had not established regulations regarding prevailing wage rates,” Mendiola-Long said.
He said it would not have been prudent for DHS to create regulations in haste just to meet a deadline.
Mendiola-Long said the Tinian Chamber of Commerce appreciates the extension and intends to work closely, as equal stakeholders, with DHS/U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services in the next 180 days “to ensure that policy and regulations promulgated will not bring extreme hardship on the people of the CNMI.”
“One of the main objectives of the Tinian Chamber of Commerce is to ensure that future policy and regulations drafted will address issues affecting all the islands, not just Saipan,” he added.
Mendiola-Long is also executive vice president of Bridge Investment Group-CNMI, which is building a $40 million to $50 million casino and condominiums project on Tinian. The company halted construction at the site because of federalization.
Impact study on Rota
Diego M. Songao, chairman of the Rota Casino Gaming Commission, said the delay will provide an opportunity for the federal government to conduct an impact study, at least on the island of Rota as it tries to develop its casino industry.
Just like Tinian, Rota's casino industry targets mostly Chinese tourists who, along with Russians, will not be exempt from the U.S. visa requirement.
“It will also give them time to put security measures in place to see if the CNMI-Guam visa waiver.may continue to include Chinese and Russians,” Songao told Saipan Tribune.
Rabby Syed, president of the United Workers Movement NMI, is thankful for the federalization delay, and to Delegate Gregorio “Kilili” Sablan for raising with DHS the issue of immediate relatives of Freely Associated States.
“We also like Mr. Sablan to raise other issues like those parents of U.S. citizen children with disabilities, long-term guest workers with U.S.-born children, and to give immigration status to guest workers with unpaid wages so they can stay here until they get their wages,” he said.
Businessman Juan T. Guerrero, a former president of the Saipan Chamber of Commerce, said businesses are thankful for the delay which he said will give them more time to make more appropriate planning.
“The delay will allow us more appropriate time to review them and come up with a solid decision to operate businesses,” he said, adding that the regulations will restrict hiring of non-professional foreign workers.
But Guerrero, president of Herman's Modern Bakery, said professional categories do not include bakers, unless employers pay them the federal wage rates.
“They can qualify but it means you have to be paying U.S. standard rates and you're looking at maybe $30,000 a year. How many employees earning $30,000 can we hire at Herman's Bakery?” he added.
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
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