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Lessons of 1986 amnesty

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The anxiety behind the process, she added, led to cases of document fraud by applicants and scams by predatory notaries public.

“We need to avoid the fraud” this time around, Tapia-Ruano said. “The (federal) government has to be a party to this objective.”

If and when a new legalization program is launched, the application process is likely to be more seamless, in part because technology is so much better, Tapia-Ruano and others said.

Federal immigration officials now use an electronic filing system to process applications for visas and other immigration applications. That system is being used for the 150,000 applications filed so far by so-called DREAM Act students who have been granted two years of temporary protected status under an Obama administration order last summer.

Also, Obama and others have embraced the idea of having employers use an electronic verification system connected to a federal database that would guard against illegal hires, with stiffer penalties against companies that hire illegal immigrants.

But a new law will not be effective without also providing immigrants with work visas that can be transferred from job to job, said Pia Orrenius, a senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, who has co-authored several studies about the lasting economic impact of the 1986 law.

The work visa categories used by the government no longer cover the number of jobs available to immigrants, Orrenius said. The government also needs to issue a greater number of work visas, she said.

Republicans want to hinge any immigration reform plan on assurances that the country’s borders are secure. But others argue the large number of illegal immigrants now in the country is partly the result of tight border control — those here illegally don’t go back because they know it will be harder to return.

“Border enforcement cannot do everything; it is not feasible,” Orrenius said. “We know a great majority of that unauthorized flow is for work. So, if we can accommodate a legal pathway to come and work here temporarily, I think that would take a lot of pressure off border enforcement — also the employers.”

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