Obama Requests More Immigration Judges
Todd Ruger, Legal Times
July 8, 2014
The U.S. Department of Justice would get $64 million and about 40 additional
immigration judges under President Obama's new plan to address the
increased number of immigrants illegally crossing the Southwest border.
The White House plan asks Congress for $45.4 million to hire judge and
support staff teams to reduce the processing time of immigration cases,
as well as expand courtroom capacity with additional video conferencing
and other equipment, White House officials announced Tuesday.
The request also includes $1.1 million for more immigration litigation
attorneys, and $15 million for legal representation of children in immigration
proceedings, the White House said. Another $2.5 million would expand legal
orientation programs that provide assistance to adults and custodians
of children in the immigration court system.
Overall, Obama wants to spend $3.7 billion on an "aggressive deterrence
and enforcement strategy" to address the high rates of apprehensions
and processing of children and individuals from Central America crossing
the border in the Rio Grande valley.
"This surge of resources means that cases are processed fairly and
as quickly as possible, ensuring the protection of asylum seekers and
refugees while enabling the prompt removal of individuals who do not qualify
for asylum or other forms of relief from removal," the White House
said in a written statement.
Obama on Tuesday will send the supplemental appropriation request to Congress
for fiscal year 2014, which ends Sept. 30. The fate of the request on
Capitol Hill is unclear, particularly with budget constraints that have
loomed over lawmakers for years.
White House officials, on a conference call with reporters, said they
hope the request "will be treated as the urgent humanitarian issue
that it is" and met with bipartisan support.
Obama has already requested Congress spend $17 million in fiscal year
2015 for 35 new immigration teams and 15 Board of Immigration Appeals
attorneys in the Justice Department's Executive Office for Immigration Review.
The immigration court's caseload is increasing to unsustainable levels,
the Justice Department said. Between fiscal years 2009 and 2013, the matters
pending adjudication grew by 56 percent, from 229,000 cases to 358,000.
Combined, the 40 judicial teams in Tuesday's emergency request and
the 35 judge teams from the fiscal year 2015 budget request would provide
sufficient resources to process an additional 55,000 to 75,000 cases annually,
the White House said.
Still, that number falls far short of the number of judges that would
have been added under the leading immigration reform bill that passed
in the Senate in June 2013. That bill, the Border Security, Economic Opportunity
and Immigration Modernization Act, calls for nearly doubling the number
of immigration court judges, with 225 hires over the next three years.
However, the reform bill never got a vote in the House, and Obama and
House Republicans have all but abandoned it during this election year.
Contact Todd Ruger at truger@alm.com. On Twitter: @ToddRuger.
Categories:
In light of the Coronavirus (COVID-19), all consultations will be conducted
by phone or Skype until further notice. We are open and fully operational
for servicing our clients, but our office will be closed to the public.
Please contact the firm for more information at (386) 968-8880.