US panel votes to speed up airport fingerprinting of immigrants

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – High-tech systems for tracking the movements of immigrants and other foreigners when leaving the United States would be installed at major US airports under a plan approved by a congressional panel yesterday.

The Senate Judiciary Committee voted 13-5 for an amendment to a wide-ranging immigration bill that would require the installation of devices to check immigrants’ fingerprints at the 10 busiest US airports within two years of enactment of the legislation.

Checks currently are made at airports for foreigners arriving and re-entering the country but not when they leave. “It’s just a matter of having records we can keep so we know where we’re going,” Republican Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah told reporters of his successful amendment.But opponents questioned whether the move would improve the ferreting out of foreigners who have overstayed their visas and expressed concerns that it could open the door to broader fingerprinting of travellers.

If the “biometrics” systems at major airports work out, they would be expanded to more airports across the United States and eventually be used at land and sea ports as well, under the amendment.

The Senate panel is trying to wrap up work by mid-week on a nearly 900-page immigration bill that aims to ratchet up security along the southwestern US border with Mexico and establish a path to citizenship for 11 million illegal immigrants already in the United States.

The bipartisan bill also would create new visa system so that farmers, high-tech firms and other American companies could get better access to both low- and high-skilled foreign workers.

If the measure is passed by the Senate Judiciary Committee this week, it could be ready for debate in the full Senate next month – a debate that could take several weeks to complete on the first major overhaul of US immigration law in 27 years.

The US has been trying for years to tighten the monitoring of entries and exits by visa holders. An estimated 40 per cent of the 11 million illegal immigrants are people who have overstayed their visas, according to government estimates.

But the implementation of equipment at ports has lagged.

Last week, the Senate Judiciary panel defeated an amendment from Republican Jeff Sessions that would have required the installation of biometric equipment at all US ports before any of the 11 million undocumented could be eligible for permanent residency, or a green card.

Senator Sessions of Alabama, an outspoken opponent of the immigration bill moving through the Democratic-controlled Senate, argued yesterday that the United States has the ability to fully implement the programme now.
Saying that many local police departments already use the technology in their cars, Sessions said, “I’m getting … tired” of the delays.

The issue is sure to be debated again in the full Senate, as even some Democrats have concerns over major airports’ ability to set up the screening equipment within the two-year time frame. Some also worry that U.S. citizens could eventually be subjected to the fingerprinting.

Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont, who chairs the Judiciary Committee, voted against the amendment.

Meanwhile, senators were working behind the scenes on a controversial move to increase the number of foreign workers that would be available to US high-tech firms.

Hatch has emerged as one of the most influential lawmakers working on the immigration bill and has introduced amendments to make it easier for companies to hire foreigners.

In an attempt to secure his vote, Democratic Senator Charles Schumer of New York is trying to broker a deal between technology companies and the AFL-CIO labour organisation on the high-skilled H-1B work visa programme.