The Secure Border
Initiative (SBI) is a comprehensive multi-year plan to secure
America’s borders and reduce illegal migration. Homeland
Security Secretary Michael Chertoff has announced an overall
vision for the SBI which includes:
•More agents to patrol the borders, secure
ports of entry and enforce immigration laws.
•Expanded detention and removal capabilities
to eliminate catch and release.
•A comprehensive and systemic upgrading of
the technology used in controlling the border, including
increased manned aerial assets, expanded use of UAVs, and
next-generation detection technology.
•Increased investment in infrastructure
improvements at the border – providing additional physical
security to sharply reduce illegal border crossings.
•Greatly increased interior enforcement of
immigration laws – including more robust worksite enforcement.
Technology and infrastructure
DHS will field the most effective mix of
current and next generation technology with appropriately
trained personnel. The goal is to ultimately have the capacity
to integrate multiple state of the art systems and sensor arrays
into a single comprehensive detection suite.
•Improved Technology: DHS will improve
security in the areas between ports of entry by integrating and
coordinating the use of technology including more Unmanned
Aerial Vehicles, aerial assets, Remote Video Surveillance camera
systems, and sensors. DHS will create an integrated border
security system, with awards beginning in fiscal year 2006 and
deployment beginning in fiscal year 2007.
DHS obtained a Predator B UAV to enhance its
ability to secure the southwest border, and it is taking
opportunities to partner with the Department of Defense to
utilize advanced but proven military technologies to help with
its border security mission.
•Enhanced Infrastructure: DHS will expand
infrastructure systems throughout the border where appropriate
to strengthen efforts to reduce illegal entry to the United
States-exemplified by Secretary Chertoff’s announcement to waive
certain legal requirements necessary to ensure expeditious
completion of the 14-mile Border Infrastructure System near San
Diego, Calif.
As in San Diego, DHS will improve border
infrastructure in certain areas by increasing physical layers of
security, building access roads to enable Border Patrol to speed
response efforts, installing stadium style lighting to deter
border crossers, and providing surveillance cameras to monitor
incursion along targeted areas of the border.
Interior enforcement
DHS will strengthen interior enforcement
efforts to target those who enter illegally by enforcing laws
and making sure that removal is achieved.
•Workplace Enforcement: DHS will implement an
employer self-compliance program that will link government and
business in a united effort to reduce the employment of
unauthorized aliens in specific industries. The partnership will
assemble a best practices methodology that employers will use to
minimize certain known vulnerabilities in the legally required
employment eligibility verification process. The employers will
assist DHS by using their corporate and industry leadership to
influence competitors, vendors, and contractors to adopt the
best practices methods to ensure all businesses dealing with
participating corporations are in compliance with legal hiring
requirements.
DHS will seek to strengthen current worksite
enforcement regulations to place an affirmative duty on
employers to make inquiries on information suggesting that their
employee is not authorized to work.
•State and Local Partnerships: DHS employs
existing authority to work with corrections departments of
selected states, authorizing correctional officers to identify,
process, and begin removal proceedings for incarcerated
criminals before they are released. This facilitates their
expeditious removal from the United States when their sentence
ends. Currently, programs have been established in Alabama,
Florida, Arizona, and certain counties in California. DHS is
also exploring using these partnerships as force multipliers in
fugitive operations as well.
•Criminal Alien Program (CAP): CAP seeks to
identify and remove all incarcerated criminal aliens from the
United States. Key to this effort is identifying and screening
foreign born aliens incarcerated in federal, state and major
metropolitan jails and placing them into immigration proceedings
prior to their release. The goal for CAP, with appropriate
resources, is to screen 90 percent of all foreign born aliens in
state and federal jails by FY09. Additionally, by FY10, a large
percentage of aliens in major metropolitan jails will also be
screened.
•Fugitive Operations: Currently, there are
more than 450,000 absconders, and that number is growing at a
rate of 40,000 per year. DHS will expand the national fugitive
operations program so that in 10 years, DHS will eliminate the
fugitive absconder population assuming appropriate resources. To
achieve this goal will require the establishment of 100 fugitive
operations teams nationwide (up from the current 44) as well as
increased efficiencies in the program.
International
Border-related crime affects communities on
both sides of our land boundaries, and a shared approach is
imperative to disrupting criminal groups and saving lives. SBI
will be implemented in a way that entails an appropriate
dialogue with the governments of Mexico and Canada.
DHS will also work with other foreign
governments to ensure they provide timely travel documents in
order to remove the backlog of their nationals in U.S. detention
facilities.
•Country Clearances: Working with the
Department of State, DHS is in the process of streamlining
country clearances and internal U.S. government process changes
that could cut several days from every escorted deportation.
•Repatriation: DHS has begun to aggressively
examine this process with foreign governments to ensure better
coordination with other nations in regard to our repatriation
efforts. Often individuals who are removable remain in detention
facilities because the foreign country has failed to provide a
travel document in a timely fashion.