Anonymous source and we all know how that can go,
But what a hell of an idea, that should have been implemented long ago
I don't find the idea to strange either, since you do the same thing, when seeking a mortgage loan
You pre qualify to see if you're even eligible
It saves a lot of your time and the mortgage company's money
It does cost money for title searches and appraisals, not to mention all those contracts that have to be drawn up that the mortgage company pays for up front, even if they do stick you with the bill in the end.
There's no point in any of it, if a person doesn't qualify in the end, in order to sign the contract, so the mortgage company can get it's upfront fees back.
And they sure don't work for free
It would behoove us as a Country to apply the same logic the mortgage company does
And save us alot of money in the long run. Only 10% of those seeking asylum actually qualify, but the duration of their application can go on for up to 10 years, and during that time "We" the People are paying them an allowance to live, and it's sizably more than 5 dollars a week.
President Donald Trump is reportedly preparing to give law enforcement officials the authority to conduct interviews with asylum seekers arriving on the U.S.-Mexico border.
Under the upcoming plan, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) officers would train Border Patrol agents deployed on the southern border on how to perform “credible fear interviews,” according to sources who spoke with the Washington Examiner. A migrant illegally crossing the border would be subjected to an interview by an agent shortly after apprehension and would only be allowed to claim asylum if they pass the interview.
The changes would reduce the number of migrants who are waiting for a decision on their asylum case, alleviating an immigration court system bogged down with some 900,000 pending cases, and more quickly deport foreign nationals who do not qualify.
“If that gets rolled out and we actually start deporting people within a timely manner, you’re going to see the numbers drop exponentially,” an official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said to the Examiner.