TheDenverChannel.com










Politics
Related To Story
Illegal Immigrants
Omar Torres, AFP/Getty Images
Mexican immigrants carrying bottles of water attempt to cross the Mexico-U.S. border illegally from Sasabe, in the state of Sonora into the Arizona desert in the United States, April 2006.
IMMIGRATION DEBATE

Understanding House, Senate Immigration Bills

POSTED: 10:36 am MDT May 18, 2006
UPDATED: 10:45 am MDT May 18, 2006

These are the highlights of the House and Senate versions of immigration legislation.

Senate
  • Allows illegal immigrants who have been in the country five years or more to remain, continue working and eventually become legal permanent residents and citizens after paying fines, back taxes and learning English.
  • Requires illegal immigrants in the U.S. between two and five years to go to a point of entry at the border and file an application to return.
  • Requires those in the country less than two years to leave.
  • Illegal immigrants convicted of a felony or three misdemeanors would be deported no matter how long they have been in the U.S.
  • Creates a special guest worker program for an estimated 1.5 million immigrant farm workers, who could also earn legal permanent residency.
  • Provides 200,000 new temporary "guest worker" visas a year.
  • Authorizes 370 miles of new triple-layered fencing plus 500 miles of vehicle barriers along the U.S.-Mexico border.
  • Authorizes hiring an additional 1,000 Border Patrol agents this year, for a total additional 3,000 agents this year.
  • Adds another 14,000 Border Patrol agents by 2011 to the current force of 11,300 agents.
  • Authorizes additional detention facilities for apprehended illegal immigrants.
  • Requires employers and subcontractors to use an electronic system within 18 months to verify new hires are legal. Increases maximum fines to employers for hiring illegal workers to $20,000 for each worker and imposes jail time for repeat offenders.
  • Delays by 17 months, until June 1, 2009, a requirement now in law that Americans re-entering the U.S. after cruises or short visits to Canada and Mexico show a passport or high-tech identification card.

House
  • No provisions providing path to legal residency or citizenship for illegal immigrants. No new temporary guest worker program.
  • Makes illegal presence in the country a felony and increases penalties for first-time illegal entry to the U.S.
  • Makes it a felony to assist, encourage, direct or induce a person to enter or attempt to enter or remain in the United States illegally.
  • Beginning in six years, all employers would have to use a database to verify Social Security numbers of all employees.
  • Increases maximum fines for employers of illegal workers from current $10,000 to $40,000 per violation and establishes prison sentences of up to 30 years for repeat offenders.
  • Requires mandatory detention for all non-Mexican illegal immigrants arrested at ports of entry or at land and sea borders.
  • Establishes mandatory sentences for smuggling illegal immigrants and for re-entering the U.S. illegally after deportation.
  • Makes a drunken driving conviction a deportable offense.
  • Requires building two-layer fences along 700 miles of the 2,000-mile border between Mexico and the United States.

Links We Like

Sponsored Content
Employers generally have options when it comes to hiring. Makes sure you present yourself as professionally as possible, or else. More

To get the most out of your remodel, check out these 10 home updates that have the biggest payoffs when it comes time to sell your home. More

The first step in reducing debt is recognizing how much you have. Let us help you with the rest and get out from under your debt in 12 months. More

Do you want the look of a quality paint job without the hassle of having to redo it over and over? Spray on siding could be the answer. More

Sponsored Links

Real Estate Information

Desktop Alert

Colorado's Geographic Regions
Questions come in all the time about where the different regions of Colorado are. Here, you can learn where to find the foothills versus the plains and the different mountain areas. More