The Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) filed suit against the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to shift gears and conduct environmental reviews on allowing millions of more people move to the U.S.
CIS says federal agencies have not conducted environmental reviews of immigration policies, despite population growth is the first issue listed under Congress’s “declaration of national environmental policy” in 1970. CIS favors limiting the number of immigrants allowed into the U.S. every year.
“The fact is that 96 percent of population growth in this country between now and 2060 — approximately 75 million people — is going to be driven by immigration,” CIS attorney Julie Axelrod said in a statement.
“DHS should not make sweeping changes to our immigration laws without careful consideration of what massive population growth means for America’s vulnerable natural resources and wildlife,” Axelrod said.
CIS wants DHS to comply with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of 1970 and conduct environmental reviews on allowing more immigrants to move to the U.S.
Axelrod is also the author of a report on the failure of federal agencies to assess the environmental impact of letting tens of millions of people into the country. Axelrod said federal agencies act as if immigration policies “are exempt from compliance” with NEPA and the Endangered Species Act (ESA).
The White House and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service “should explicitly tell agencies to stop ignoring immigration in their environmental compliance procedures, and the public must receive the transparency it deserves on immigration at last, as Congress intended,” Axelrod wrote in her report.
President Richard Nixon signed NEPA into law at a time when population growth was a major concern for environmentalists and government planners. Theories, like the “population bomb,” were in vogue and many feared overpopulation would put too much strain on humanity’s ability to feed people.
Dire overpopulation predictions, however, never came to fruition. Indeed, America’s population has grown by more than 100 million people since 1970 as has food production and standards of living.
While some environmentalists still fear overpopulation, prominent U.S. groups oppose the Trump administration’s plan to build a border wall to stem the flow of illegal immigrants from Central America.
The Center for Biological Diversity and the Sierra Club joined California’s appeal to federal judges to stop the administration’s border wall plans. The coalition argued the Trump administration violated the law by not conducting environmental reviews for the border wall.
California filed a suit against the border wall in 2017, but a U.S. district court judge shot down the lawsuit. The judge sided with the Trump administration, ruling federal law allows environmental reviews to be waived on matters of border security.
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In multiple ways immigration is bad for America and needs to be stopped. A larger population means more pollution of every kind, more mining, and more resources required. Since a larger population needs a place to live, it is the primary reason we are losing forests and farm land to massive housing developments.
There are other costs. Tax payers are supporting programs in the schools such as English as a Second Language. If it wasn’t for immigration, theses expenses wouldn’t exist. A related subject is the cost of tutoring. My wife used to provide private tutoring paid for by the public schools. Essentially all of her students were either immigrants or the children of immigrants.
It is well known that illegal immigrants get free medical care from emergency rooms because these facilities are not permitted to turn anyone away. It is usually for a condition that could be treated by a standard doctor visit. Hospitals pay for this by spreading the expenses among their paying customers and this is one of the causes of our county’s high medical costs.
Immigration is also a form of theft. Families such as mine have for generations built this country to what it is and fought in its warms. Three generations of multiple branches of my family has helped make the US high tech industry what it is. Immigrants come from families that have done nothing to build this county and yet they reap the benefits.
President Trump was right in making America first. Now we need to give what is best for Americans priority over foreigners living in other countries who want to move here.