HR3012폐기 ==>> HR3012 법안이 한국사람에게 좋은 법안이랍니다

  • #499790
    HR3012폐기 71.***.248.38 6341

    어제 12월 8일 전화 다시 했습니다.

    HR 3012 법안 발의한 차베츠 의원 사무실
    http://chaffetz.house.gov


    1)  진행상황이 어떻게 되나?  답)  하원은 통과했으나 상원에서 홀드 중이다
    2)  왜 이런 법안을 발의했나?  답) 모르겠다 (의원과 직접 통화한 것이 아니니)

    HR 3012 법안 홀드한 그레슬리 상원의원 사무실

    http://www.grassley.senate.gov/
    135 Hart Senate Office Building

    Washington, DC 20510

    (202) 224 – 3744

    Fax: (202) 224-6020

    Grassley State Offices

    Cedar Rapids

    150 1st Avenue NE

    Suite 325

    Cedar Rapids, IA 52401

    (319) 363-6832

    Fax: (319) 363-7179

    Council Bluffs

    307 Federal Building

    8 South 6th Street

    Council Bluffs, IA 51501

    (712) 322-7103

    Fax: (712) 322-7196

    Davenport

    131 West 3rd Street

    Suite 180

    Davenport, IA 52801

    (563) 322-4331

    Fax: (563) 322-8552

    Des Moines

    721 Federal Building

    210 Walnut Street

    Des Moines, IA 50309

    (515) 288-1145

    Fax: (515) 288-5097

    Sioux City

    120 Federal Building

    320 6th Street

    Sioux City, IA 51101

    (712) 233-1860

    Fax: (712) 233-1634

    Waterloo

    210 Waterloo Building

    531 Commercial Street

    Waterloo, IA 50701

    (319) 232-6657

    Fax: (319) 232-9965


    1) 계속 홀드해 달라.  답) 그럴 생각이다

    HR 3012 법안 코스폰선 구티에레즈 상원의원 사무실

    http://www.gutierrez.house.gov/

    Washington DC Office

    2266 Rayburn Building
    Washington, DC 20515
    Tel: (202) 225-8203
    Fax: (202) 225-7810

    Chicago Office

    3210 West North Ave.
    Chicago, IL 60647
    Tel: (773) 342-0774
    Fax: (773) 342-0776

    1) 나 한국사람인데 왜 이런 법안 발의했나?  답) 모르겠다. 기다려 보라 (홍보담당 바꿔 줌)

    2) 왜 이런 법안을 발의했나?   답) 좋은 법안 아니냐고 오히려 반문, 취업이민은 인도 중국 한국 사람들에게 도움이 된다.

    3) 전혀 아니다. 나 너희 민주당 찍고 싶어도 이렇게 되면 어느 세월에 영주권 따고 시민권 따서 투표하겠냐. 한국 사람들이 캠페인 후원하고 싶어도 시민권자만 해당되니 안 되지 않는가……..    답) 한국 사람들에게 불리한지 몰랐다.  그런 내용이 있으면 이 메일 달라

    홍보 담당은 Douglas Rivlin 입니다.
    contact Douglas Rivlin

    douglas.rivlin@mail.house.gov 
    (202) 225-8203

    부탁 드립니다.
    왜 HR 3012가 한국인들에게 안 좋은 법안인지를
    구티에레즈 상원의원 홍보담당에게
    http://www.americanprogress.org/events/2011/04/inf/RivlinDouglas.html
    이메일 부탁 드립니다.

    douglas.rivlin@mail.house.gov 

    많은 분들이 함께 해 주셨으면 합니다.

    시카고나 유타에 사시는 분들이 계시면 위의 의원들 지역구에 연락해서 면담을 요청하셨으면 좋겠습니다.
    그리고 가능하신 분들은 각 지역구 의원들에게 연락해 면담 요청이나 이메일 전화 등을 통해  HR3012 에 반대한다는 입장을 전해 주셨으면 합니다.

    혹시 각 지역 한인회 회장이나 미주총연회 관계자들을 개인적으로 아시면 이 분들에게 요청했을 때 도와 주실런지 …
    어찌 되었건 자신의 권리는 자신이 찾아야 하므로
    많은 분들이 계속 HR 3012 반대 청원서를 보내 주셨으면 합니다. 간곡하게 부탁 드립니다.

    • 흠.. 96.***.174.180

      원글님…너무 멋지세요….
      다른것 떠나서 이렇게 나서서 열심히 하는것 쉽지 않은거 잘 압니다…
      정말 감사드립니다…

    • 굿 74.***.38.194

      감사합니다… 멋지십니다.

    • 멕시칸 136.***.251.100

      행동하는 지성. 대단하시네요.

    • 박수 63.***.129.195

      저도 박수와 함께 경의를 표합니다.

    • 무대리 69.***.7.185

      님의 행동이 남에게 축복과 희망이 되는군요. 님도 복 많이 받으세요…
      한국인이것이 자랑스럽군요…

    • 권 혁희 75.***.45.39

      3102 기습적으로 깜짝승인될 까 두렵네요…
      Posted on Thursday, 12.08.11
      Posted on Thursday, 12.08.11
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      tool nameclose [x] tool goes here .IMMIGRATION
      One small step toward immigration reform
      By TAMAR JACOBY
      .By TAMAR JACOBY
      http://www.latimes.com
      Among Republican presidential candidates, it’s been demagoguery as usual. Why have a substantive debate when you can exchange inflammatory sound bites instead, especially on immigration?

      But something surprising happened last week far from the campaign trail — on Capitol Hill, of all places. Just when we thought Congress would never act to address the nation’s broken immigration system, members of the House made a critical breakthrough, voting overwhelmingly to approve a fix that will make American companies more competitive and the immigration system fairer and more welcoming.

      The Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act is not a broad, far-reaching bill. It’s nothing like the comprehensive overhaul Congress has been debating for years. But this small change could have significant consequences, for thousands of immigrants and for the politics of immigration.

      The per-country caps that would be eliminated by the bill are among the most absurd and cumbersome features of the U.S. immigration system. Under current law, thousands of foreigners are approved each year to enter the United States as legal permanent residents, some sponsored by employers who need their skills, others by family members who arrived before them and became citizens.

      But this approval is not enough to guarantee a visa. Instead, approved candidates get in line and wait for their number to come up under the annual cap for their countries. And because until now visas were allotted equally to all countries, no matter how big or small, candidates from big countries with strong ties to the United States have often waited years. Backlogs have gotten so bad that workers from India, for example, currently face waits of 70 years — in other words, many never get visas — and family members from Mexico wait more than a decade.

      Phasing out the caps would dramatically reduce waits for many of the highly skilled workers that America needs to remain a globally competitive knowledge economy. American companies will find it easier to hire researchers, engineers and other top talent from the big countries that produce most of the brainpower they rely on to do business. The United States will become a more-attractive destination for foreign innovators and entrepreneurs. And they in turn will help create jobs for Americans, a much-needed boost for economic recovery.

      Many immigration reformers wish the measure went further, not just easing and eliminating country caps but also expanding the number of legal permanent residence permits, or green cards, issued every year. Unless we do this too, the critics argue, easing the caps is no more than a palliative. It robs slots from some countries and awards them to others, shortening waits for Indians and Mexicans but lengthening them for immigrants from other, smaller countries.

      The critics aren’t wrong: We do need more green cards. But that isn’t politically possible today, not with unemployment hovering above 8 percent and politicians so gun-shy about immigration.

      Still, the House bill represents a huge political breakthrough. Lawmakers in Washington have been trying to fix the system for a decade. Democrats and Republicans have been unable to agree on an approach. The politics of immigration have grown so polarized that it sometimes seems Democrats own the issue, while few Republicans will touch it.

      The process that produced the Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act was very different. The bill was proposed by Republicans. With some unusually nimble negotiating, its GOP sponsors persuaded influential pro-immigration Democrats to work with them. The resulting bipartisan measure was approved overwhelmingly, by a vote of 389 to 15. And although it has encountered some obstacles in the Senate, it has broad bipartisan support there as well.

      Perhaps most important, the bill could usher in a new approach to immigration reform. For a decade, the conventional wisdom among reformers has been “all or nothing.” We shouldn’t pass any small fixes, the thinking went, because that would take the pressure off — we’d lose the head of steam we needed to pass comprehensive reform. But this strategy has produced only stalemate.

      So maybe it’s time to try a different approach: not all or nothing but step by step.

      Tamar Jacoby, a fellow at the New America Foundation, is president of ImmigrationWorks USA, a national federation of small-business owners.

      ©2011 The Los Angeles Times

      Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/12/08/2537857/one-small-step-toward-immigration.html#ixzz1g8f40RDM

    • BP 99.***.2.107

      Dear Mr. Ravlin,

      Hi. I’m BP in Elk Grove Village, IL

      I am surprised that Senator Gutierez had co-sponsored this HR 3012 bill, which will effectively alienate immigrants from countries like Republic of Korea.

      Korean-American community here in Chicagoland are grossly not happy with this bill, as this bill, if passed and put into effect, will unduly elongate their waiting time for more than several years.

      Many of the highly skilled employment-based Korean-Amerian green card applicants have already waited about 5 to 6 years and additional several years’ wait because of this unfair bill would be too much for them.

      This bill might “only marginally” help skilled immigrants from countries with largest populaces such as India & China because of their sheer number of green card applicants.

      At the same time, it will definitely put immigrants from the rest of the world in dire situations. What good is there to this bill, when its benefits are only marginal to only a handful of countries and its costs are astronomical to the rest of the world ?

      If this bill could somehow help Amercian recovery under the circumstances, waiting several more years would not be such a pain for most of the immigrants, but I do not see any causal link between this bill and the American economy. In fact, this bill is just for handful of countries with large population and not for America nor the rest of the American diversity mix. What we need here in the US is true diversity in everything from education, employment, and immigration. To be truly diverse, we need more countries than just 2 or 3. When it’s only 2 or 3 involved, we don’t call it diversity. We call it oligopoly. This bill is virtually creating an oligopolistic immigration regime, effectively stifling the healthy and diverse flow of highly-skilled immigrants from around the world. Please ask Senator Gutierez to reconsider this bill.

      Sincerely,

      BP

      라고 보냈습니다.

    • Hope 155.***.183.23

      I don’t think this bill will get passed and become a law anytime soon due to the following reasons:
      1) As you know this is an election season and no Senator wants to speak up or touch a politically sensitive issue. The reason for hooding this bill is that it is not beneficial to solve the current high unemployment issue for Americans.
      2) To put this bill in front of President Obama for his final signature, the Senate pass the exact same bill as passed in the House without any amendments, which would not practically be feasible in my opinion. If the Senate pass the amended bill, it will need to go back to the House, meaning that it would take long enough to be out of time before the election. As expected, the Republican takes the wheel, who knows how the political mode changes around the immigration matter.
      With that being said, let’s keep the hope in mind and do whatever we can do against this freaking bill…

    • BP 99.***.2.107

      윗글에 대한 답변이 바로 왔네요. 별건 아니지만.

      Thanks for your note. I will pass your concerns on to the Congressman.

      Douglas G. Rivlin

      Press Secretary

      Office of Rep. Luis V. Gutierrez (IL-04)

      U.S. House of Representatives

      2266 Rayburn HOB

      Washington, DC 20515-1304

      douglas.rivlin@mail.house.gov // http://twitter.com/douglasrivlin

      phone: (202) 225-8203 // fax: (202) 225-7810

      Follow Congressman Gutierrez on Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube.

    • vd 63.***.193.4

      BP님….참 글 잘 쓰시네요…..ㅎㅎ 갑자기 다시 영어공부가 막 하고 싶어진다는…..
      에휴…푸념이었습니다.
      암튼, 정말 대단하시네요 다들.

    • BP 99.***.2.107

      Thnx. 멋적어서 다시 보니, Senator가 아니라 Rep. 내요. 이런 실수를….

    • 공부하자 67.***.163.10

      그러게요..
      BP님 무슨 공부를 하셨는지 모르겠지만 부럽습니다. 전 한국말로도 이런 글 잘 못쓰는데…

    • 중국 인도 76.***.140.41

      인구가 절대적으로 한국보다 우세한 인도인과 중국인들이 똘똘뭉쳐서 지금 뭘 할까 생각하면 저희도 BP님 하시는 일에 뭐든 동참해서 도와야한다고 생각합니다.

    • 동참자 50.***.105.211

      BP님 정말 존경합니다…
      영어도 안되고, 글도 잘 못써서 이리저리 반대투표만 했어요..
      정말 감사드립니다…

    • BP 98.***.230.181

      일리노이 연방 상원의원으로 상원 법사위 소속 Dick Durbin 의원이 보낸 답신입니다.

      December 12, 2011

      Dear Mr. BP:

      Thank you for your message regarding the Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act, H.R. 3012/S. 1857. I appreciate hearing from you.

      Representative Jason Chaffetz of Utah introduced H.R. 3012 in September 2011. The bill would amend the Immigration and Nationality Act to eliminate the country-based cap for the number of employment-based immigrant visas issued annually. It also would increase the country-based limit for family-sponsored immigration. In October 2011, the House Judiciary Committee approved this bill. The House passed this bill 389-15 on November 29, and it has been received by the Senate. Senator Charles Grassley of Iowa has placed a hold on this bill.

      In November 2011, Senator Mike Lee of Utah introduced S. 1857, a Senate companion measure to H.R. 3012. It has been referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee, of which I am a member. I will keep your thoughts in mind as these bills are considered further.

      As the son of an immigrant, I believe one of America’s strengths is its diversity. It is in our national interest to build upon that strength through a system that maximizes the positive opportunities legal immigration affords by allowing qualified immigrants to contribute to our economy and share their talents and strengths with our communities.

      Thank you again for contacting me. Please feel free to keep in touch.

      Sincerely,
      Richard J. Durbin
      United States Senator

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