2009 Immigration Videos

This year, Jim Griesemer, the Director of SIP, will sit down with our speakers for one-on-one follow up interviews which will be posted here.  If you would like further information about these interviews, please contact us.

Interview with Peter Schuck1/7/2009: Interview with Professor and Author Peter H. Schuck

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Professor Schuck describes the 5 key areas for effective immigration policy: enforcement, amnesty or a path for legal status, an effective guest worker program, revamping the green card system to address the need for workers, and the role of state and local governments in enforcing immigration policy.

 

Interview with John Suthers1/8/2009: Interview with Colorado Attorney General John Suthers

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Colorado’s Attorney General John Suthers says that while the U.S. could and should do a better job with border security, our border will never be totally secure.  One of the problems he identifies is that U.S. policy is not dealing with the economic reality of the demand for non-citizen workers.  The number of work permits allowed currently is “wholly inadequate” which then creates the demand for illegal workers.  From a law enforcement perspective, he stresses that ICE and other enforcement agencies need more resources; that Americans need to understand and approve the costs involved in improving border security; and that the public also needs to understand that not all local law enforcement officers have the authority to detain suspected illegal immigrants.

 

Interview with Troy Eid1/8/2009: Interview with U.S. Attorney Troy Eid

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U.S. Attorney Troy Eid stresses the distinction of the types of people who are here in the U.S. illegally.  Although they entered the U.S. illegally, the majority of the people working and living in the U.S. illegally are law-abiding.  Given the economics of our country, people working here illegally will be here, like it or not.  What we need to do from a security and law enforcement viewpoint is identify the people who are here. Identifying people should include a background check which will help ensure that criminals are kept out of the U.S.

 

Interview with Ann Allott1/8/2009: Interview with Immigration Attorney Ann Allott

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"Our legal immigration system at this moment is broken," says immigration attorney Ann Allott.  The visa numbers have remained virtually the same since 1952.  There are not enough visas issued every year to meet the demand for people to legally come to the U.S.  For example, of the 1 million visas issued every year, 250,000 are employment-based.  However, let’s say an architect is issued a work visa, his wife and children are also issued visas from the work-based pool.  One step toward a meaningful solution to the inadequacies of the present system, Ann believes, would be to have a Presidentially-appointed board to determine the visa numbers on a yearly basis.

 

Interview with Gov Bill Ritter

1/29/2009: Interview with Colorado Governor Bill Ritter

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Colorado Governor Bill Ritter describes the complexity of the issue of immigration.  The topic is multi-layered with overlapping effects on our economy, health care system, education system and social policy.  He applauds the University of Denver for tackling the issue from an academic perspective.    “It’s so easy for people to speak ill of illegal immigrants,” said the Governor, “without really understanding all these difficult and complicated layers.”   He addresses the need for a reasoned approach to immigration and expresses looking forward to our panel’s recommendations to the state and country.

Interview with Joe Blake1/29/2009: Interview with Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce President & CEO, Joe Blake

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President and CEO of Denver’s Metro Chamber of Commerce Joe Blake discussed why immigration is so vital to the businesses in Colorado.  Our panel, he said, has a historic opportunity to talk about the issue.  In a robust economy, immigration drives the economy.  Now that the economy has all but collapsed in many sectors, the panel has an opportunity to examine and discuss the topic in a helpful way.

 

Interview with John Stulp

1/29/2009: Interview with Colorado Commissioner of Agriculture John Stulp

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John Stulp, Colorado’s Commissioner of Agriculture, addressed the panel on the impact of immigration on the agricultural community.  There is a tremendous need for seasonal workers, he said, in Colorado and other states.  Colorado needs an estimated 9,000 seasonal workers annually.  As fewer Americans work in the agricultural business, agribusiness reliance on migrant workers and foreign workers increases.  Working with the Department of Labor, the Colorado Department of Agriculture developed a pilot program to bring seasonal workers to Colorado to try to meet the needs of farmers.  The program was inspired by a similar program in Canada.  The idea is to bring transparency to the agents that bring seasonal foreign workers to the state, to expedite visa paperwork, and to hold agents accountable for foreign workers to return to their home country after the season, thus relieving the local systems of the costs associated with a new population.