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Monday, March 15, 2010 - 11:41:28 PM

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MVarietyNews.com CNMI News Local ‘Don’t go to the ombudsman’s office’

‘Don’t go to the ombudsman’s office’

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A LAWYER is advising guest workers not to register with the federal labor ombudsman’s office, particularly those who have over stayed, unless they have with them their CNMI-issued umbrella permits.

Former Senate legal counsel Steve Woodruff, in a statement, said the ombudsman’s office is likely to share whatever information it will gather from registering all guest workers in the CNMI with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security whose agency, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, is empowered to arrest illegal aliens.

Woodruff said registration with the ombudsman is not mandatory.

He noted that the ombudsman’s office “allowed the names of purported overstayers to be published in the newspapers.”

He said the ombudsman’s office may be preparing “a bait to lure alien workers.”

“If you are an alien in the CNMI and do not have an umbrella permit in your possession, my advice is do not go to the ombudsman’s office and register. Again, do not go to the ombudsman’s office and register unless you have an umbrella permit,” he said.

“Instead, go see a competent attorney. Visit Micronesian Legal Services or any private lawyer on the island,” he added.

The ombudsman has issued a public announcement inviting all foreign workers in the CNMI to register with the office.

The registration form seeks information about an alien worker’s date of first entry in the CNMI, his or her occupation, among other things.

The notice stated that the U.S. Department of the Interior is mandated to make recommendations to the U.S. Congress about the status of long-term guest workers on the islands.

According to Woodruff, however, “the ombudsman’s rushed registration venture is a particularly inefficient and unreliable means of getting a handle on ‘the number of aliens residing in the commonwealth.’ It is also unnecessary for this purpose. There already is information on this subject — and there is a real census (which will provide actual, genuinely reliable data) soon to be conducted.”

He added, “The ombudsman’s venture will provide absolutely no information whatsoever on the legal status under federal law of aliens registering. Instead, it asks them for information on their CNMI status and to confess to being overstayers ‘if applicable.’ ”

He said if the ombudsman’s office “were truly working to produce a report that would lead to improved status for long-term alien residents of the CNMI, it would collect the kind of information that is persuasive in supporting improved status. It is not [doing that].”

The registration, he added, will be a “logistical nightmare.”

"Supposing 30,000 people [will] register with [the] office in the space of 10 working days. That is more than five people every minute having to park at the Marianas Heights II building, go all the way up to the second floor by way of the stairs or the elevator, and be processed through an office with a reception area of less than 90 square feet and only about 4 feet of counter space. Brilliant plan.”

Comments 

 
+4 #7 dr_evil 2009-12-14 14:13 But I thought unicorns were going to be dancing down Beach Road once the Feds took over.
 
 
+8 #6 captain 2009-12-14 07:44 There are many workers without the permits that have valid employment contracts for two years. In regards to the amount of guest workers on island, the DOL and Imm. never have had an accurate count, by their own admission.They never knew how many departed or came, how many legal or otherwise. Again by their own admission.
 
 
+2 #5 RiseUp 2009-12-14 07:44 Speaking of logistical nightmares and bad planning, where was Woodruff when the Department of Labor trotted out their last-minute \"brilliant plan\" for issuing umbrella permits that resulted in long lines in the parking lot under the hot sun for hours on end — all this, just a few short weeks right before November 28?
 
 
+7 #4 Made_n_d_USA 2009-12-14 06:28 It seems that every advocate, lawyer, and anyone out there wants to be a savior of the guest workers. They don\'t know that there is onlly one Savior as what gai aniti had stated. Don\'t be a wanna be Woodruff.
 
 
0 #3 MrCoffee 2009-12-14 05:50 \"It\'s a trap!\"
 
 
+5 #2 gai_aniti 2009-12-14 05:02 Woodruff, if you really cared yourself, you would have help the guest workers by gathering the information so that they will not get caught. How would they report to Congress about the number of guest workers on the island. Don\'t be a savior cuz there is only one.
 
 
-1 #1 Long Time Resident 2009-12-14 04:37 We don\'t have 30,000 aliens. The cap reported by CNMI Labor was in the low 20,000\'s and CNMI Immigration said before 11/28/09 that more than 10,000 of them had left island. So we\'re talking less than 15,000.

There\'s no risk of harm from registering to those with any valid permit.

As mentioned, overstayers without permits may need legal advice before deciding whether to register. They may also want to get advice on the gamble—that registering will eventually put their names on a list for long-term status or on a list for deportation.
 

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