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FRONT PAGE
INS kicks
off review of NEXUS program
By
Meg Olson
The Immigration
and Naturalization Service is giving NEXUS its 60-day check up
and considering an overhaul on policies and hours of operation.
Were reviewing all kinds of things, said Bob
Okin, deputy director for the Seattle district. We want
to ensure the program is as effective as we want it to be.
Okin said they would start their review with the application process
how long applications are taking to process, how consistent
the application processing time is, and how consistent and efficient
interviews are.
Hours of operation will also get the once over. Theyre
analyzing usage numbers now, trying to find out when the lanes
are used the most and how to best allocate staffing, said
Seattle district public information officer Garrison Courtney.
He said usage figures for the program were not publicly available
at this time.
They will also review denials and why people are being turned
down for the program, Okin said.
There are now 8,245 people approved for NEXUS and 32,000 applications
have been received, according to Courtney. Just over 250 applicants
to the NEXUS system have been denied so far, for reasons ranging
from previous criminal convictions to houseplants in the PACE
lane. Stories are plentiful of long forgotten run-ins with the
law or produce under the seat that had not jeopardized PACE membership
cropping up during a NEXUS interview.
A Ladner resident lost her PACE privileges because she had forgotten
she had a bottle of wine in her trunk, but was reinstated to the
program. However, she was denied NEXUS and told it was because
of a customs violation. I asked if I could appeal it and
they said absolutely no, she said. A Point Roberts resident
was turned down because an onion had been found in the wheel well
of her truck, leading to a PACE warning but not loss of PACE privileges.
On the other hand, one applicant who has been approved for the
program had a warning in the PACE program for a lemon.
There doesnt seem to be any consistency, said
Point Roberts marina manager David Gellatly. I have a pile
of applications here and very few people are taking it because
theres a growing sense of paranoia. There are very few people
in the world who dont have a little skeleton in their closet.
In some cases NEXUS applicants who have crossed the border for
years have found themselves not only denied NEXUS but admission
to the U.S. or Canada. One Point Roberts resident and frequent
border-crosser found himself stranded in Blaine after the inspector
interviewing him found he had a 17-year-old conviction for reckless
driving. He was denied NEXUS and admission to Canada. He was unable
to return home until later that night after his wife brought down
$200 for Canada Immigration to issue a certificate of rehabilitation.
Point Roberts attorney Tom Prescott is getting extra business
thanks to worries about NEXUS. Ive been approached
by people about getting pardons or records expunged. They want
to clean things up before they apply. Prescott himself was
denied NEXUS, and he was surprised. I had a run in with
a border guard a few years ago, he said. Prescotts
PACE privileges were revoked after he drove away from the inspection
booth before instructed to do so by the inspector, incorrectly
assuming he was free to go. He filed a suit in Canadian federal
court and settled with Canada Customs to have the infraction removed,
or so he thought. While he was accepted when he reapplied to PACE,
the infraction came up again in his NEXUS interview. I was
a little miffed. Now I have to go back to court and this time
get an order, he said.
Courtney said that, with a three-percent rejection rate the number
of denials was within an acceptable range. This is a four
agency program and all four agencies rules apply, all the
agencies need to agree, he said. Courtney said he did not
know the rejection rate for the PACE program but estimated it
was lower than the rate of NEXUS rejection, due to tighter standards
and more in-depth information checks. One of the significant
things not like the PACE program is drunk driving convictions,
which are a problem for Canada. People need to comply fully with
the laws of both countries, he said.
Some questions have been raised about what level of stringency
actually has an impact on national security. There needs
to be some sort of statute of limitations, said Point Roberts
resident Ruby White. They shouldnt go back all the
way to when baby-boomers were raising hell. A lot of them grew
up to be good, respectable people. White also felt that
the zero tolerance policy, under which NEXUS participants lose
their privileges after one violation of program or general agency
rules, was appropriate for serious infractions but not for an
onion that fell out of a grocery bag. Thats just bureaucratic
pettiness, she said.
The current review underway is an INS review of the entire process
as it relates to INS function and but Courtney said the information
could be used by other agencies. If we find things that
can be improved on well share that, he said.
In other INS news, staffing increases at Point Roberts in the
last month, though they may not be permanent, have alleviated
monster lines that marked the first weekend in August when the
backups into Canada were observed trickling as far back as the
8th Avenue White Spot. However, Courtney said that, under a new
INS policy they can not release exact staffing numbers. Around
September 11 especially thats very sensitive information,
he said. He confirmed a new permanent port director was expected
for the Point but would not release any further information..
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