Hospitals & Asylums    

 

Dr. Emiliano Gonzalez Director Citizenship and Immigration Service v. Alberto Gonzalez, Attorney General

 

Supported by Gonzalez, Juan of the Department of Labor National Contact Center with whom the author, Sanders, Tony J., pleads for the revocation of the unexplained email censure and assistance in settling the AK Steel lock-out.

Ruling Amending and Repealing Title III of the Border Security Act of 2006 S. 2394 HA-11-4-06

The following Amendments and Repeals are introduced as a Compromise to the Committee on Migrant Workers, Organization of American States, Senate Judiciary Committee, Supreme Court and US President to appoint the legitimate government of US Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS) as a full Cabinet level office with expanded legal and administrative staff proportionate to the enhancement of enforcement personnel and to repeal Title III of the Act pursuant to Blakely v. Washington No. 02-1632 of June 24, 2004 that eliminates mandatory minimum sentencing and orders criminal sentencing to be adjusted downward rather than upward so as to naturalize the 11 million primarily poor undocumented aliens and deport aliens convicted of aggravated felonies.  The plan is to reduce the number of US detention beds while dramatically increasing in the size of the documented labor force. 

 

INSERT

 

SEC 3 Statistics regarding Immigration to the USA

(1) Legal immigration increased after World War II to around 300,000 persons per year and remained around that level until shortly after 1960.

(2) With the Immigration Act of 1965 and other related changes, annual legal immigration increased to about 400,000 and remained fairly stable until 1977.

(3) Between 1977 and 1990, legal immigration once again increased, averaging about 580,0007 per year.

(4) The Immigration Act of 1990, which took effect in fiscal year 1992, restructured the immigration categories and increased significantly the number of immigrants who may legally enter the United States. (5) Legal immigration averaged about 837,000 persons per year during the period 1992 through 2004.

(6) The number of legal immigrants in 2004 is estimated to be 946,000 persons. For 2004, net legal immigration (after considering emigration) is estimated to be about 710,000 persons. Net other immigration is estimated to be 400,000 persons.

(7) For 2005, net legal immigration is estimated to be 675,000 for the intermediate, 720,000 for low cost and 630,000 for the high cost assumptions. Net other immigration for 2005 is estimated to be 400,000 persons for all three assumptions.

(8) The total level of net immigration (legal and other, combined) under the intermediate projection is assumed to be 1,075,000 persons in 2006, and 900,000 persons in 2026 and for each year afterward.

(9) For the low cost assumptions, net immigration is assumed to increase slightly from a level of 1,270,000 persons in 2006 to an ultimate level of 1,300,000 persons for each year 2026 and later.

(10) Under the high cost assumptions, net immigration is assumed to be 810,000 persons in 2006, and 672,500 persons for each year after 2015.

(11) Hundreds of people die crossing our international border with Mexico every year.

(12) Illegal narcotic smuggling along the Southwest border of the United States is both dangerous and prolific.

(13) Over 155,000 non-Mexican individuals were apprehended trying to enter the United States along the Southwest border in fiscal year 2005.

(14) The number of illegal entrants into the United States through the Southwest border is estimated to exceed one million people a year.

(15) There an estimated 12 million illegal aliens residing in the USA

(16) DHS apprehended an estimated 1,241,089 foreign nationals. Ninety-two percent were natives of Mexico.

(17) There were 58,727 investigations initiated and 46,656 closed for immigration related activities including crime, compliance enforcement, work site enforcement, identity and benefit fraud, alien smuggling, and counter terrorism.

(18) ICE detained approximately 235,247 foreign nationals for a minimum of 24 hours.

(19) There were 202,842 foreign nationals formally removed from the United States. The leading countries of origin of formal removals were Mexico (73 percent), Guatemala (4.1 percent) and Honduras (4.0 percent). More than 1,035,000 other foreign nationals accepted an offer of voluntary departure.

 

SEC 4 Appointment of the United States Citizenship and Immigration Service to the Cabinet

 

(A) On March 1, 2003, service and benefit functions of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) transitioned into the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) as the U.S Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). Fifteen thousand (15,000) federal employees and contractors working in approximately 250 Headquarters and field offices around the world comprise the USCIS. USCIS processes more than six million immigration benefits applications annually, only 51% of which are approved.  The USCIS is responsible for the administration of immigration and naturalization adjudication functions and establishing immigration services policies and priorities to fundamentally transform and improve the delivery of immigration and citizenship services, while enhancing our nation's security.  These functions include: (1) Adjudication of immigrant visa petitions;   (2) Adjudication of naturalization petitions; (3) Adjudication of asylum and refugee applications; (4) Adjudications performed at the service centers, and (5) All other adjudications formerly performed by the INS.

 

(B) It is time for the US Government to respect the rights and dignity of their citizens by appointing USCIS to the Cabinet, whereas it would be in the best interest of the US for USCIS to counsel the Commander in Chief directly.  To balance the 3,000 enforcement officer increase it is recommended to hire at least 1,000 new immigration attorneys and 2,000 administrative personnel to speed up the naturalization and deportation process sufficiently to handle the expected increase in enforcement actions without requiring any new detention centers.

 

SEC 5 UN Committee on Migrant Workers 

(A) The United States is a Member of the International Organization on Migration (IOM).  The Committee on Migrant Workers and Members of their Families (CMW) was established in Part VII of the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families 18 December 1990 by its State parties. It is the newest treaty body which held its first session in March 2004.  It a part of the Human Rights Council. All States parties are obliged to submit regular reports to the Committee on how the rights are being implemented. States must report initially one year after acceding to the Convention and then every five years.  The 14 expert Committee will examine each report and address its concerns and recommendations to the State party in the form of “concluding observations”.  The Committee meets in Geneva and normally holds one session per year.  The US hereby accedes to the treaty.

SEC 10 Principles

 

(1) Migrant workers and members of their families shall have the right to liberty and security of person.

 

(2) Migrant workers and members of their families shall be entitled to effective protection by the State against violence, physical injury, threats and intimidation, whether by public officials or by private individuals, groups or institutions.

(3) No migrant worker or member of his or her family shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment or held in slavery and involuntary servitude.

(4) Any verification by law enforcement officials of the identity of migrant workers or members of their families shall be carried out in accordance with procedure established by law.

(5) Migrant workers and members of their families are considered as documented or in a regular situation if they are authorized to enter, to stay and to engage in a remunerated activity in the State of employment pursuant to the law of that State and to international agreements to which that State is a party and are considered as non-documented or in an irregular if they do not comply.

(6) Migrant workers and members of their families shall not be subjected individually or collectively to arbitrary arrest or detention; they shall not be deprived o their liberty except on such grounds and in accordance with such procedures as are established by law.

 

(7) When a migrant worker or a member of his or her family is arrested or committed to prison or custody pending trial or is detained in any other manner their consulate should be informed and facilitated to represent them and they shall be entitled to a fair trial a language that they understand.   

(8) Migrant workers and members of their families shall not be subject to measures of collective expulsion. Each case of expulsion shall be examined and decided individually.

(9) Migrant workers and members of their families shall have the right to receive any medical care that is urgently required for the preservation of their life or the avoidance of irreparable harm to their health on the basis of equality of treatment with nationals of the State concerned. Each child of a migrant worker shall have the basic right of access to education on the basis of equality of treatment with nationals of the State concerned.

 

(10) It is policy that the processing of an immigration benefit application should be completed not later than 180 days after the initial filing of the application, except that a petition for a nonimmigrant visa under 8USC§1184(c) and should be processed not later than 30 days after the filing of the petition. All aliens subject to detention under 8USC(12)II-IV§1226(c) and §1231(a) whereby, when an alien is ordered removed, the alien shall be removes from the United States within a period of 90 days; All inadmissible or deportable aliens subject to proceedings under §1228 or §1225(b)(2)(A) or  of this title whereby any alien who at any time after admission is convicted of  two or more crimes involving moral turpitude, not arising out of a single scheme of criminal misconduct, regardless of whether confined therefore and regardless of whether the convictions were in a single trial, is deportable. Any alien who is convicted of an aggravated felony at any time after admission is deportable.  An alien may also voluntarily leave at their own expense.

 

REPEALS OTHER THAN TITLE III

 

Section 104 (c) pertaining to technology and infrastructure needs to be repealed whereas it states,

 

“(c) Detention Facilities- (1) CONSTRUCTION- The Attorney General shall plan, construct, maintain, and acquire additional detention facilities for the purpose of immigration detention and removal. (2) USE OF CLOSED OR UNUSED MILITARY INSTALLATIONS- The Secretary, in consultation with the Secretary of Defense, shall conduct a study of the feasibility of using military installations designated for closure or realignment as possible immigration detention centers.”

 

Background

 

(A) The Border Protection, Antiterrorism, and Illegal Immigration Control Act of 2005 (Referred to Senate Committee after being Received from House) HR 4437 that Passed the House of Representatives December 16, 2005 and the Border Security Act S. 2394 is the newest treason of the Department of Homeland Security intent upon overthrowing the good governance of the USA.  This time it is once again the US Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS) who is threatened to be overthrown with the use of armed force in contravention to 18USC(115)§2385 that prohibits Advocating the Overthrow of the Government (by the use of force). 

(B) Sec. 1002 Construction of Fencing and Security Improvements in Border Area from Pacific Ocean to Gulf of Mexico, is the material issue in this Bill that happens to be at odds with the Advisory Opinion of the International Court of Justice regarding the Consequences of Constructing a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territories No. 131 on 9 July 2004 and should probably be done with greater consultation with the Mexican Government but is probably a good idea.  The plan is to provide for least 2 layers of reinforced fencing, the installation of additional physical barriers, roads, lighting, cameras, and sensors--

(i) extending from 10 miles west of the Tecate, California, port of entry to 10 miles east of the Tecate, California, port of entry;

(ii) extending from 10 miles west of the Calexico, California, port of entry to 5 miles east of the Douglas, Arizona, port of entry;

(iii) extending from 5 miles west of the Columbus, New Mexico, port of entry to 10 miles east of El Paso, Texas;

(iv) extending from 5 miles northwest of the Del Rio, Texas, port of entry to 5 miles southeast of the Eagle Pass, Texas, port of entry; and

(v) extending 15 miles northwest of the Laredo, Texas, port of entry to the Brownsville, Texas, port of entry.

(B) PRIORITY AREAS- With respect to the border described--

(i) in subparagraph (A)(ii), the Secretary shall ensure that an interlocking surveillance camera system is installed along such area by May 30, 2006 and that fence construction is completed by May 30, 2007; and

(ii) in subparagraph (A)(v), the Secretary shall ensure that fence construction from 15 miles northwest of the Laredo, Texas port of entry to 15 southeast of the Laredo, Texas port of entry is completed by December 31, 2006.

(C) EXCEPTION- If the topography of a specific area has an elevation grade that exceeds 10%, the Secretary may use other means to secure such area, including the use of surveillance and barrier tools.'.

 

(C) The Bill is very unpopular in the Latin American community where it is viewed as an infringement upon their liberty and security.  In El Pueblo: El Periodico de la Raza of 7 April 2006 there were a number of articles decrying the Act that are translated.  The Director of the paper Renan Gorriti wrote, Negocio Redondo, where he explained that the debate regarding migration is divided along the lines of border security and the legalization of undocumented aliens.  Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist has sought to exclude the program for temporary workers.  The Judicial Committee, on the other hand, proposed an initiative to legalize as many as 11 million undocumented workers.  It is important to note that US embassies charge an estimated $2,000 for visas that they approve only 53% of the time.  Citizenship also requires that a person live in the US for 6 years and pass an exam.  In the program for temporary workers the undocumented aliens receive a visa for three years that they can renew one time, for a total of six years whereby they would be eligible for citizenship.  La Red de Inmagrantes de Ohio (RIO) is planning to march on Washington DC on May first to talk to Congress with churches, publications and US citizens in regards to the criminalization of undocumented aliens and their children, the criminalization of churches, organizations and employers who harbor foreigners, extension of the wall along the border between Mexico and the USA.

 

(1) Attorney Iversy Velez wrote Necesitamos reglas para una adecuada legalization explained that the issues facing the Judicial Committee are (1) the creation of a voluntary program whereby illegal aliens would report to the government to acquire a temporary permit to be in the USA with the requirements to pay taxes, have a work history and learn English (2) issuance of at least 400,000 work visas to employers not satisfied with the domestic labor market.  (3) Measure to secure the border and new system of verification for the eligibility of employment and the imposition of greater penalties for immigrants captured crossing the frontier and employers who do not comply with the new system of verification. (4) Accelerate the process of reunifying families waiting for visas. (5) Offer a way to legalization for certain agricultural work and underage students.  We hope that a bipartisan coalition will debate at the Judicial Committee to amend the legislation to expand the ways of legalization for a bill worth approving because it expands upon the opportunities for immigrants to enter the US legally instead of illegally.

 

(2) Annibal Sanchez wrote, La Migracion Externa: un fenomeno creciente in which he wrote, migration occurs as a consequence of certain economic and social factors.  In a recent poll in a Peruvian university 54.7% planned to leave the country.  Of these people 49.7% planned to study abroad, 31.4% planned to work, 15.2% wanted to improve their quality of life and 3.7% hoped to open a business.  Jose Angel Oropeza, American Regional Counsel of the International Migration Organization (IMO) answered the question, “What motivates migration?” with the answer, “The inequality of income, economic growth, poverty and the world economy as we are more globally integrated than ever.  There is also forced migration as the result of the degradation of natural resources, degradation of the environment, persecution and conflict”.  According the IMO international migration accounted for 192 million people, 2.9% of the global population.  The vast majority of these migrants moved to industrialized nations, 85 million of them as laborers.  A large portion of the migration occurs in Latin America where an estimated 120 million migrants live, the vast majority in the USA but there are also many who stay in Spanish speaking nations.  Migration has a significant economic impact upon the nation.  Receiving nations tend to benefit from the assimilation of the labor force for the productive process and internal services however it can also generate unemployment and underemployment from the displacement of the occupations of native workers.  The sending state loses a part of their work force and intellectuals with emigration.  The Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems of the Bank for International Settlements and the World Bank released a consultative report on General principles for international remittance services on 13 March 2006.  The flow of funds from migrant workers back to their families in their home country is an important source of income in many developing economies. The total value of these remittances has been increasing steadily over the past decade and it is estimated that in 2005 the total value worldwide was over $230 billion equivalent, involving some 175 million migrants.

(D) The Border Security Act of 2006 S. 2394 fails to justify itself on humanitarian or statistical grounds and is heavy on enforcement.  It is not a very visionary act whose criminal provisions, including the construction of more detention centers are illegal and need to be repealed because they are in contravention to Blakely v. Washington No. 02-1632 of June 24, 2004 that eliminated sentencing guidelines schemes and ordered that in both legislative and litigate practice criminal sentences must be adjusted downward rather upward.  Whereas there is an enormous surplus of prison beds and unjust sentences in the US and the Attorney General is incompetent to do more than incited genocide, treason and break all the laws governing arrest and detention with particular concern for war crimes and the US led by Washington DC has the highest concentration of prisoners in the world, prison construction is a serious offense that cannot be permitted and Title III pertaining the enhancement of penalties for alien smuggling will need to be repealed in its entirety and Section 104 (c) pertaining to technology and infrastructure needs to be repealed whereas it states,

 

“(c) Detention Facilities- (1) CONSTRUCTION- The Attorney General shall plan, construct, maintain, and acquire additional detention facilities for the purpose of immigration detention and removal. (2) USE OF CLOSED OR UNUSED MILITARY INSTALLATIONS- The Secretary, in consultation with the Secretary of Defense, shall conduct a study of the feasibility of using military installations designated for closure or realignment as possible immigration detention centers.”

 

(E) The burden upon the civil society created by the employment of 3,000 new enforcement officers for the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection and the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement must be offset through the improvement of the efficiency of repatriation programs and the elimination of the imaginary provisions that an illegal alien must serve out their entire sentence before being returned to their home country although a felony conviction is grounds for deportation under  (e) Other Personnel- In each of fiscal years 2007 through 2011, the Secretary and the Attorney General shall increase, to the extent determined necessary by the Secretary and the Attorney General, the number of--

 

(1) Department of Homeland Security personnel, including attorneys, who have responsibilities involving illegal aliens or immigration issues;

(2) attorneys participating in the Federal Defenders Program;

(3) attorneys in United States Attorneys' Offices;

(4) attorneys in the Office of Immigration Litigation;

(5) deputy marshals in the United States Marshals Service; and

(6) immigration judges.

 

(F) The primary mission of the Border Patrol is to secure the 8,000 miles of land and water boundaries of the United States between ports of entry. Its major objectives are to prevent illegal entry into the United States of illegal aliens and foreign nationals suspected of terrorism and other criminal activity, interdict drug smugglers and other criminals, and compel those persons seeking admission to present them selves legally at ports of entry for inspection. Border Patrol operations are divided into geographic regions referred to as sectors.  Immigration investigations activity focuses on the enforcement of immigration laws within the interior of the United States. Special agents plan and conduct investigations of persons and events subject to the administrative and criminal provisions of the INA. Agents investigate violations of immigration law and aliens involved in criminal activities.

 

(G) The Annual Report of the Office of Immigration Statistics on Immigration Enforcement Actions 2004 reports that an estimated 235,247 aliens were detained by ICE during 2004. Approximately 120,049 (51 percent) of these aliens had criminal records. The average daily detention population was 21,919.

 

(1) 52 percent of all detainees were aliens from Mexico, their relatively short stays detention meant that they accounted for only 22 percent of detention bed days. The other leading countries were:

(2) Cuba (8 percent of bed days);

(3) Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala (7 percent each);

(4) People’s Republic of China (4 percent);

(5) Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, Brazil, and Haiti (3 percent each).

 

(H) The purposes of Immigration Services Infrastructure Improvement under 8USC(13)II§1571 are to - (1) Provide the Immigration and Naturalization Service with the mechanisms it needs to eliminate the current backlog in the processing of immigration benefit applications within 1 year after October 17, 2000, and to maintain the elimination of the backlog in future years; for which funds have been available since 25 November 2002 and (2) Provide for regular congressional oversight of the performance of the Immigration and Naturalization Service in eliminating the backlog and processing delays in immigration benefits adjudications.

 

(I) It is policy that the processing of an immigration benefit application should be completed not later than 180 days after the initial filing of the application, except that a petition for a nonimmigrant visa under 8USC§1184(c) should be processed not later than 30 days after the filing of the petition.

 

(J) All aliens subject to detention under 8USC(12)II-IV§1226(c) and §1231(a) whereby, when an alien is ordered removed, the alien shall be removes from the United States within a period of 90 days.  All inadmissible or deportable aliens subject to proceedings under §1228 or §1225(b)(2)(A) whereby any alien who at any time after admission is convicted of  two or more crimes involving moral turpitude, not arising out of a single scheme of criminal misconduct, regardless of whether confined therefore and regardless of whether the convictions were in a single trial, is deportable. In cases involving aggravated felony any alien who is convicted of an aggravated felony at any time after admission is deportable.  An alien may also voluntarily leave at their own expense. The federal government must not pay for the detention of foreign nationals in the USA, this is the responsibility of the local government to prevent slavery, money laundering and racketeering from occurring between the armed forces of different jurisdictions.

 

(K) Canadian Immigration News of April 2006 strengthens the bid of Emiliano Gonzalez, Director of Citizenship and Immigration for equal rights in the Cabinet and equal pay with his “evil twin” Alberto Gonzalez, Attorney General.  Canada’s new minister of Citizenship and Immigration, Monte Solberg, outlined the immigration priorities of the new Conservative government at a recent conference in Vancouver. The government remains committed to openness, fairness and equality for Canadian immigrants. Among the priorities is a commitment to cut the current landing fee of $975 CDN in half, leaving more money in the pockets of newcomers. The government also committed to streamlining the application and decision processes in a bid to make them faster and more efficient. Additionally, the government will coordinate with Human Resources and Development Canada in an attempt to make it easier for skilled immigrants with foreign credentials to practice their skills in Canada. Finally, the Minster committed to making it easier for the adoptive children of Canadians to come to Canada. This aim of this program is to help unite immigrant families in Canada.  Children of visible-minority immigrants to Canada strive for higher education in even greater numbers than their Canadian peers, a recent study finds. The study by the University of Alberta found that 78% of immigrant children hope to complete at least one University degree, compared with only 57% of their Canadian-born peers. Newcomers to Canada place a high value on higher education. The study also shows that Canada is a place where immigrant families feel their children can thrive in higher education. This is further reflected by Statistics Canada which reports over 55 000 foreign students came to Canada in 2004 to enroll in higher education. That number, too, is expected to grow when the final totals for 2005 are reported.

 

(L) The government of Saskatchewan has committed new money to welcome immigrants to the Western province. The government offered $150 000 to the Open Door Societies of Regina and Saskatoon to help integrate and welcome newcomers to Saskatchewan. These funds, along with a matching commitment from the federal government, will help to make the province a more attractive place for newcomers to settle.  Included in the province’s plans is a commitment to end the “Designated Skills Shortage” list, allowing skilled newcomers in any trade to immigrate to Saskatchewan.  Ontario's Minister of Citizenship and Immigration explained the government's commitments to newcomers at a recent conference. The province hopes to continue growing its labour force position itself as a world leader in attracting newcomersThe Ontario government continues its commitment to welcoming newcomers to the province with the launch of a new website: OntarioImmigration.ca. More than half of all newcomers to Canada choose Ontario as their new home. By providing information about culture, history and every-day life in Ontario, the government hopes to attract even more newcomers to the province, and help them succeed in their new lives. Immigration accounts for a significant portion of Ontario’s ever-growing labour force. As such, the government hopes that the new website will be a valuable source of information, helping thousands of newcomers to integrate successfully into the Ontario economy. 

(M) Canada has the lowest tuition rates among New Zealand, Australian, UK and American universities. The average cost for foreign students enrolling in one year of undergraduate study is C$11 903. Canada maintains an extremely high standard for post-secondary education. Despite this, tuition costs in Canada remain affordable. In fact, Canada has the lowest tuition rates among New Zealand, Australian, UK and American universities. The average cost for foreign students enrolling in one year of undergraduate study is C$11 903. Depending on the province and course of study, an undergraduate student in Canada can expect to pay between C$4462 and $16 533. Graduate students can expect to pay between C$1630 for the arts and humanities, and $45 000 for professional graduate programme. 

(N) On 27 January 2005, shortly before the confirmation of Alberto Gonzalez, Attorney General HA-6-1-05, Juan Gonzalez 
from the Department of Labor National Contact Center wrote the Disclaimer: "This response is for information purposes only 
and does not constitute an official communication of the U.S. Department of Labor. For an official response, please write: U.S. 
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington DC 20210." And Following.  The U.S. Social Security 
Administration (SSA) is responsible for the nation's social security program, and related numbers, cards, and benefits. For more 
information from the Social Security Administration, call (800) 772-1213.
 
(O) Questions about Short and Long Term Disability Benefits can best be handled by the State Department of Labor and not the 
U.S. Department of Labor. Short or long term disability insurance provides individuals, who are unable to work due to a non work- 
related illness or injury, with disability benefits.  This absence from work is compensated, but not job- protected.  Individuals can 
obtain short or long- term disability insurance by purchasing disability insurance through a private company.  However, disability 
insurance must be purchased prior to the illness or injury.  Some states have a state disability insurance (SDI) program, which is a 
wage-replacement insurance plan for a particular state's workers.  The U.S. Department of Labor does not address this issue.  To 
contact your State Department of Labor, select your state. 
 
(P) The U.S. Department of Labor would like to suggest that you use the Health Benefits eLaws Advisor or the Retirement Savings 
eLaws Advisor.  You can go online and the Advisors will help to answer questions about employee benefit and pension plan laws.  
Each takes only a few minutes to use.  This website also provides the law, the regulations, and compliance assistance materials-such 
as the eLaws Advisors and Employment Law Guide chapter- specifically for the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA).  
These regulations are enforced by the Employee Benefit Security Administration (EBSA).  
 
(Q) Questions about Group Benefit Plans can best be handled by the Employee Benefits Security Administration.  The Employee 
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) is a federal law that sets minimum standards for group benefit and pension plans 
in private industry.  ERISA does not require any employer to establish a group benefit or pension plan.  It only requires that those 
who establish plans must meet certain minimum standards. For more information from the Employee Benefits Security Administration 
(EBSA), call (866) 444-3272 
 
(R) Questions about Unemployment can best be handled by the Employment Training Administration. State unemployment 
compensation programs provide unemployment benefits to eligible workers who are unemployed through no fault of their own.  
Each State administers a separate unemployment insurance program meaning that State law determines benefit eligibility, amounts, 
and duration.  For more information about your state's program and your local office, please contact the Employment and Training 
Administration (ETA). For more information from the Employment Training Administration (ETA), call (877) 872-5627.
 
(S) Questions about Resources for Job Seekers with Disabilities can best be handled by the Office of Disability Employment Policy.  
For comprehensive information about government resources and services for people with disabilities, such as employment, housing, 
transportation, health, income support, technology, community life, and civil rights, please visit the federal government's online 
resource for Americans with disabilities.  For additional information you should contact the Job Accommodation Network (JAN), which 
is an information and referral service on resources, funding, and education related to the employment of people with disabilities. For more 
information from the Job Accommodation Network, call (800) 526-7234.  
  
(T) The Employment and Training Administration's Toll-free Helpline provide you with contact information for these offices.  There is 
also a website that provides links to these information resources mentioned.  For more information from the Employment and Training 
Administration's (ETA) Toll-free Helpline, call (877) 872-5627.  The federal government has taken a number of actions over the last few 
years to ensure that federal employment opportunities are available to individuals with disabilities on a non-discriminatory basis.  
 
(U) The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) has a helpful website called, Federal Employment of People with Disabilities.  The site 
describes the federal employment process and provides a variety of resources for job seekers with disabilities.  Regarding specific positions 
with the federal government, check OPM's USA Jobs web site or call the OPM Jobline.  There is a website that provides links to these 
information resources mentioned.  For more information from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), call (703) 724-1850.
 
(V) The Small Business Self-Employment Service (SBSES), which is available through the Job Accommodation Network (JAN), provides 
online information and available resources for starting, financing and operating a small business.  There is a website that provides links to these 
information resources mentioned. For more information from the Small Business Self-Employment Service (SBSES), call (800) 526-7234.  
Financial assistance for persons with disabilities preparing for entry or re-entry into the workforce may be available through your local One-Stop 
Career Center and your local state vocational rehabilitation agency.  You may locate your One Stop Career Center by calling the Employment and 
Training Administration's (ETA) Toll-free Helpline, call (877) 872-5627. 
 
(W) There are many types of assistance for people with disabilities who want to attend college.  A good place to start is HEATH, a national 
clearinghouse on post-secondary education information for individuals with disabilities.  By checking with your state's vocational rehabilitation 
agency and exploring the various education-related links at the federal government's online resource for Americans with disabilities you can find 
other education resources.  There is a website that provides links to these information resources mentioned. For more information from HEATH, 
call (800) 544-3284. 
 

(X) On 14 April 2006 Vincenta Montoya the new chairperson of the Progressive Democrats of America Working Group on Immigration was written to encourage her to take the (Supreme Court) case Emiliano Gonzalez v. Alberto Gonzalez to the President of the US under Article 2 Section 2 of the US Constitution so that Emiliano Gonzalez could enjoy equal rights under the Constitution and equal pay as a Level I Executive in the Pay Schedule set forth in 5USCIIID(53)II§5312, if he would only staff an email address on the US Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS) website. 

 

(Y) Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist MD advocated for the Border Security Act S. 2394, however he was not entirely pleased with the tornado and bear attack upon children in Tennessee and the Senate was dissolved without further ado in unspoken agreement that it was time to repeal Title 3 of the Homeland Security Act of 2002 for the safety of government employees and the general populace.  On the Cinco de Mayo May 5, 2006 Congressman John Boehner (OH-8) who didn’t have the opportunity to preside over the Border Protection, Antiterrorism, and Illegal Immigration Control Act of 2005 (Referred to Senate Committee after being Received from House) HR 4437 that Passed the House of Representatives December 16, 2005 highlighted another month of strong job creation announced by the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) this morning.  DOL announced that 138,000 jobs were created in April, for a total of more than 5.3 million new jobs since August 2003.  Unemployment remained low at 4.7 percent – lower than the average of the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. With more than two million new job opportunities in the last year alone, low unemployment, and high consumer confidence, the resiliency of our strong and growing economy is undeniable.  Temporary work visas for the undocumented work force as suggested by the President offers to provide security for billions of tax dollars that are currently either unreported or falsely documented that could be a windfall for federal budget revenues.    

 

(Z) Having brought together Emiliano Gonzalez, Director of the Citizenship and Immigration Service and Alberto Gonzalez, Attorney General, who is reprimanded for the treason of threatening prison construction, it is time to ensure that America’s 11 million undocumented aliens are conferred their temporary work visas under 8USC§1184(c) without censure of the services provided by Juan Gonzalez from the Department of Labor National Contact Center on 27 January 2005, above. The $2,000 immigration service fee could be deducted from the paychecks of these migrant workers at such a time they were not entitled to a refund, after they had been safely admitted to the US taxation and social security system.  It is hoped that the Senate Judiciary Committee, will entertain this classic case of merit to the Archivist of the US Supreme Court as an Original Action under Art. 3 Section 2 Clause 2, as the result of its ubiquitious title: Emiliano Gonzalez v. Alberto Gonzalez and merit under Art. 1 Section 9 Clause 1 of the US Constitution that confers to Congress authority regarding, “the migration or importation of such persons as any of the states now existing shall think proper to admit.”

(AA) It is hoped that this case will lead to two similar cases of both original and appellate merit to the Supreme Court that can be found in the Autobiography of Anthony J. Sanders: Anthony J. Sanders v. Anthony J. Principi and AJ Stephani v. AJ Sanders.  This Ruling Amending and Repealing Title 3 of the Border Security Act of 2006 by both the judiciary and legislature is hoped to teach Hospitals & Asylums and the United States to better accept their rights responsibilities under the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families 18 December 1990.  To sweeten the deal for all American people it is encouraged to promote an increase in the federal minimum wage from $5.15 to $7.15 an hour, a move that is calculated to directly benefit the lives of 7.3 million people and stimulate spending in the local economy without causing a significant amount of inflation that might be detrimental to pensioners, as sought by the Working America. Economic Policy Institute: January 2006, and petitioned in both Pennsylvania and Ohio.