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Kirk/Quigley/Lipinski
Push for Poland’s
Inclusion in Visa
Waiver Program
March 7, 2010
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contacts:
Lance Trover
(Kirk) 312-886-3506
Aviva
Gibbs (Quigley) 202-641-4290
Nathaniel
Zimmer (Lipinski) 708-305-6289
Kirk:
“Despite its strong support for the United States, Poland remains one of the
only major democratic U.S. allies to be excluded from the Visa
Waiver Program.”
Quigley:
“I’ve been working since the day I
took office for Poland’s inclusion in the Visa Waiver Program because it’s
essential for both our diplomacy and our national security.”
Lipinski:
“Having contributed troops to the fight in Afghanistan
and Iraq, Poland is one
of our most reliable allies, and I strongly believe it should qualify for
participation in the waiver program.”
CHICAGO—On
the same day the State of Illinois honored American Revolutionary War hero
General Casimir
Pulaski, U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) and U.S. Reps. Mike Quigley
(D-Chicago) and Dan
Lipinski (D-Western Springs) pledged today to spearhead bipartisan
legislation to include Poland in the U.S.
Visa Waiver Program (VWP).
“Despite
its strong support for the United States, Poland remains one of the only major
democratic U.S. allies to be excluded from the Visa Waiver Program,” Senator
Kirk said. “The United States should stand by its commitment to
this strong democratic ally and bring Poland into the Visa Waiver Program.”
“On
my trip to Poland last year, I saw firsthand Poland’s commitment to
democracy and importance as our ally,” said Congressman Quigley.
“I’ve been working since the day I took office for Poland’s inclusion in
the Visa Waiver Program because it’s essential for both our diplomacy and
our national security.”
“My
district is home to more than 100,000 people of Polish ancestry, and this
issue is important to many of us, which is why I’ve been working to include
Poland in the Visa Waiver Program for the past six years,” said Congressman
Lipinski, the co-chair of the Congressional Caucus on Poland. “Having
contributed to the fight in Afghanistan and Iraq, Poland is one of our most
reliable allies, and I strongly believe it should qualify for participation in
the waiver program.”
Senator
Kirk and Congressmen Quigley and Lipinski said they will introduce the Secure
Travel and Counterterrorism
Partnership Act in the Senate and House. The legislation aims to update
and modernize VWP requirements, ultimately making Poland and other U.S. allies
eligible to participate in VWP.
The
Kirk/Quigley/Lipinski legislation would make the primary qualifying criteria
for VWP participation a low overstay rate--set at less than 3 percent of foreign
nationals who remain in the United States after their visa expires.
Current practice uses the visa refusal rate, but experts agree that is an
outdated measure that is less relevant to U.S. security, law enforcement, or
contribution to rates of illegal immigration.
The
bill also enhances national security by encouraging information sharing
between the United States and member countries.
Poland
currently is one of the few European nations to be excluded from the VWP,
despite its nearly century-long diplomatic relationship with the United
States. The Polish government repealed its visa
requirement for U.S. citizens traveling to Poland in 1991.
In
his December 2010 meeting with Polish President Bronislaw
Komorowski, President
Barack Obama said he would make Poland’s admission into the VWP a
“priority,” and he pledged to complete that process expeditiously.
Currently,
citizens of 36 foreign nations are eligible to participate in VWP, which
allows foreign visitors to travel to the United States for up to 90 days
without a visa.
Poland,
a member of the European Union
and the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, also participates in the “Schengen
Area,” made up of 25 European nations that allow passport-free travel
across borders.
Congressmen
Lipinski and Quigley and Senator Kirk also pointed out that Poland has been
one of the staunchest U.S. allies during its military campaigns in Iraq and
Afghanistan, where 2,500 Polish soldiers currently are deployed. At
least 24 Polish troops have been killed in action.
No
new nations have been added to the U.S. program since 2008, when Greece
joined. The nations of the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary,
Latvia, Lithuania,
Malta, Slovakia and
South Korea also are among the VWP’s newest members.
The
United States launched its visa waiver program in 1986 to make it easier for
tourists and business travelers from friendly nations to visit without a visa
as long as their homeland met stringent security and law-enforcement
standards.
The
program’s security standards include sharing security-related information
with the United States and the timely reporting of lost or stolen passports.
VWP participants also are required to maintain enhanced counterterrorism, law
enforcement, border control,
and document security standards.
Enhanced
security procedures were added to the program under the Bill Implementing
Recommendations of the 9/11 Commission Act of 2007, including the Electronic
System for Travel Authorization (ESTA) that allows the Department of Homeland
Security to determine, prior to travel, whether an individual eligible for the
VWP poses a law enforcement or security risk to the United States.
A
complete list of the 36 nations that currently participate in the VWP is
available at www.dhs.gov/files/programs/content_multi_image_0021.shtm#4
Information via
email: March 7, 2011
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