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- <text id=91TT2273>
- <title>
- Oct. 14, 1991: Give Me Your Rich, Your Lucky. . .
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Oct. 14, 1991 Jodie Foster:A Director Is Born
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 26
- IMMIGRATION
- Give Me Your Rich, Your Lucky...
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In the most sweeping policy revision in 25 years, the U.S. will
- welcome increasing numbers of Europeans and well-heeled
- foreigners
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Dan Cray/Los Angeles and Moira
- M. O'Donnell and Andrea Sachs/New York
- </p>
- <p> Wu Wen-shuo, a Taiwanese student, will be finishing
- medical school next year at UCLA. After that, he would like to
- remain in the U.S. So would many foreign residents. But Wu has
- an edge: cash, and lots of it. Under one provision of the
- sweeping new immigration law that took effect last week,
- permanent residency can go to investors who put at least $1
- million--or half that in rural or depressed areas--into an
- American business that employs 10 or more workers. So, Wu, 22,
- is injecting $1.1 million, which he got mostly from his family,
- into a new gas station and car wash in Chula Vista, Calif. David
- Liang, a San Diego real estate broker who led Wu to the
- investment, claims there are plenty of other prospective
- Americans ready to plunk down their money for a fast track to
- permanent residency, the major step toward citizenship. "This
- is only my first project," he says. "If it turns out well, I
- have 11 other people who would like me to help them get a
- business started here."
- </p>
- <p> It may be time to expand the plaque at the base of the
- Statue of Liberty that bears the famous lines by Emma Lazarus:
- "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses..." These
- days the call is also out for your skilled, your rich and your
- lucky. That change is the result of a law that went into effect
- this month, the Immigration Act of 1990, the most fundamental
- revision of immigration policy since the 1965 law, which opened
- the door to large numbers of non-Europeans. At a time when
- America is losing ground in the global economic competition, the
- new law represents a major shift in philosophy about who should
- get permanent residency, the "green card" status that makes
- immigrants eligible for full citizenship in five years. The old
- system stressed family reunification: 90% of slots went to the
- relatives of earlier arrivals. Now brainpower and purchasing
- power will also count.
- </p>
- <p> Investor slots like the one that Wu hopes to fill--10,000 each year under the new law--are only part of the
- story. The law also creates more openings for immigrants from
- Europe through a so-called lottery that has thousands of
- applicants scrambling for a chance at legal residency. Other
- reforms will almost triple, from 54,000 to 140,000, the number
- of skilled workers who can enter the U.S. legally each year
- because American employers sponsor them. As a result, businesses
- and universities will have a greatly expanded chance to import
- professionals they cannot find at home. The growth of the U.S.
- labor force is expected to slow over the coming decade, which
- will make more room for skilled foreign workers--especially
- in fields that are expected to show the greatest shortages, like
- engineering, mathematics, chemistry and physics.
- </p>
- <p> The new policy brings the U.S. in line with other nations,
- like Canada and Australia, that have long been luring the best
- and the brightest. "Virtually every other country reviews its
- immigrant applications based on skills," says former Colorado
- Governor Richard Lamm, co-author of The Immigration Time Bomb.
- "We're the only country in the world that brings in whole
- generations of poor people every year." The Federal Government
- estimates that investor visas will generate $10 billion over the
- next five years. That sum will only be raised if at least 3,000
- investors enter the country each year. By mid-September,
- immigration officials had received only 100 preliminary
- applications. Some argue that the policy also threatens some
- cherished notions about fairness. "The whole implication is that
- if you're poor and uneducated, America doesn't want you,"
- complains Peter Schey, director of the Center for Human Rights
- and Constitutional Law in Los Angeles.
- </p>
- <p> That might be true if the poor were being excluded to make
- room for the privileged. In fact, the new law is accommodating
- both rich and poor by expanding the total pool of legal aliens,
- from more than 500,000 annually to 700,000 for each of the next
- three years. The impact on the ethnic makeup and economic level
- of new arrivals will be limited at first. In keeping with
- policies set in 1965, the great majority of newcomers will still
- be the relatives of people who are legal residents, regardless
- of their economic circumstances.
- </p>
- <p> For European immigrants, whose numbers have fallen off
- sharply in recent years, the law represents a long-awaited shot
- at a visa. From 1955 to 1964, 50% of all new Americans came
- from Europe. By 1989, that figure was down to 8%, while 29%
- arrived from Asia and 56% from Canada, Mexico, Central America
- and the Caribbean. To avoid charges that whites are again being
- favored over Hispanics, blacks and Asians, the new law increases
- the number of slots for family members of aliens, which will
- largely benefit non-Europeans (from 446,000 to 520,000), while
- providing 40,000 visas in each of the first three years to
- natives of 34 countries, most of them in Europe, whose nationals
- had lost ground. They, in turn, will be able to petition for the
- entry of family members they left back home.
- </p>
- <p> These visas will be distributed by an unusual method: the
- winners will be the first 40,000 qualifying people whose
- applications are received after midnight on Oct. 14 at a
- post-office box in Arlington, Va. Immigrants and their lawyers
- are converging on Arlington to dump thousands of applications
- directly at the post office. About 40% of the slots are reserved
- for people from Ireland, which reflects not only the clout of
- Massachusetts Senator Edward Kennedy but also recognition of the
- problem posed by the presence of as many as 100,000 illegal
- Irish immigrants.
- </p>
- <p> The visa lottery--it's been dubbed the Irish sweepstakes--has enterprising immigrants filling out hundreds of
- applications in the hope of improving their chances. Fears that
- revealing their names and addresses will make them vulnerable
- to arrest and deportation have been muted because the names are
- being collected by the State Department, not the immigration
- service, and because an earlier lottery of this kind did not
- result in sweeps.
- </p>
- <p> In Boston and New York City bars, Irish hopefuls hand out
- hundreds of applications to friends and ask their help in
- completing them. "I plan to fill out at least a thousand
- applications," said Joanne O'Connell, who was at Stephen's Green
- Pub in Queens, N.Y., last week, helping other Irish immigrants
- with their forms. "It's worth it."
- </p>
- <p> Not content to wait another 25 years before it comes to
- terms with the question again, Congress has decided to review
- immigration quotas every three years. If the new law really
- widens the American talent pool, a further shift in favor of the
- skilled and wealthy is likely. In addition to the people with
- a dream of succeeding here, America wants the people who have
- already succeeded at home.
- </p>
- <p>HOW TO GET A GREEN CARD
- </p>
- <p>-- The new law raises the number of immigrants from 500,000
- to 700,000 annually during the first three years. Afterward the
- number will be 675,000.
- </p>
- <p>-- Under one provision of the law, 10,000 visas will be
- issued to those willing to invest at least $1 million ($500,000
- in rural or depressed areas) in an American business that
- creates at least 10 jobs.
- </p>
- <p>-- The legislation will provide 40,000 visas to natives of
- 34 countries that were shortchanged in recent years.
- Applications must be received by mail no earlier than Oct. 14,
- and visas will be distributed on a first-come, first-served
- basis.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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