Maritime Security
Federal Agencies Have Taken Actions to Address Risks Posed by Seafarers, but Efforts Can Be Strengthened
Gao ID: GAO-11-195 January 14, 2011
The State Department and two components of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and the Coast Guard, are responsible for preventing illegal immigration at U.S. seaports and identifying individuals who are potential security risks. The International Labor Organization (ILO) adopted the Seafarers' Identity Documents Convention (ILO 185) to establish an international framework of seafarer identification documents and reduce their vulnerability to fraud and exploitation. GAO was asked to examine (1) measures federal agencies take to address risks posed by foreign seafarers and the challenges, if any, DHS faces; (2) the challenges, if any, DHS faces in tracking illegal entries by foreign seafarers and how it enforces penalties; and (3) the implementation status of ILO 185. GAO reviewed relevant requirements and agency documents on maritime security, interviewed federal and industry officials, and visited seven seaports based on volume of seafarer arrivals. The visits provided insights, but were not projectable to all seaports.
Federal agencies use a layered security strategy to address foreign seafarer risks, but opportunities exist to enhance DHS seafarer inspection methods. Federal actions include: (1) State Department screening of seafarer non-immigrant visa applicants overseas and (2) DHS advance screening of commercial vessels' seafarer manifests and admissibility inspections of all arriving seafarers. CBP conducts cargo vessel admissibility inspections on board the vessel without the benefit of tools to electronically verify a seafarer's identity or immigration status because of a lack of available connectivity to network communications in the maritime environment. DHS has prioritized the acquisition of a mobile version of this technology capability but expects it to take several years before the technology is developed and available. CBP agrees that obtaining this capability is important but has not assessed the risks of not having it. Until CBP obtains the capability, identifying the risks and options to address them could better position CBP in preventing illegal immigration at seaports. DHS faces challenges in ensuring it has reliable data on illegal entries by foreign seafarers at U.S. seaports and has not adjusted related civil monetary penalties. First, both CBP and Coast Guard track the frequency of absconder (a seafarer CBP has ordered detained on board a vessel in port, but who departs a vessel without permission) and deserter (a seafarer CBP grants permission to leave a vessel, but who does not return when required) incidents at U.S. seaports, but the records of these incidents varied considerably. The Coast Guard reported 73 percent more absconders and almost double the deserters compared to CBP for fiscal years 2005 through 2009. As a result, the data DHS uses to inform its strategic and tactical plans are of undetermined reliability. Second, CBP is responsible for imposing civil monetary penalties on vessel operators whose seafarers illegally enter the United States; however, as of December 2010, CBP and DOJ had not met legal requirements for adjusting the penalties for inflation. Officials reported taking steps to meet these requirements, but have not developed a plan with timelines for doing so. Such a plan would better position CBP and DOJ to demonstrate progress to comply with legal requirements. International implementation of ILO 185 has been limited--18 countries, representing 30 percent of the global seafarer supply, have ratified ILO 185--and key ILO mechanisms to promote compliance are not expected to be in place until later this year. As of January 2011, the United States had not ratified ILO 185 largely due to concerns over a provision for facilitating visa-free shore leave for foreign seafarers. Perspectives varied among the four federal agencies GAO interviewed within DHS and the departments of State, Transportation, and Labor. Within DHS, the Coast Guard reported that it supported U.S. ratification, while CBP stated that ILO 185's lack of oversight did not serve U.S. law enforcement interests. The U.S. has recently undertaken an interagency review to consider ratification but has no timeline for completion. GAO recommends that DHS assess risks of not electronically verifying cargo vessel seafarers for admissibility, identify reasons for absconder and deserter data variances, and, with the Department of Justice (DOJ), develop a plan with timelines to adjust civil monetary penalties for inflation. DHS and DOJ concurred with GAO's recommendations.
Recommendations
Our recommendations from this work are listed below with a Contact for more information. Status will change from "In process" to "Open," "Closed - implemented," or "Closed - not implemented" based on our follow up work.
Director:
Charles A. Jeszeck
Team:
Government Accountability Office: Homeland Security and Justice
Phone:
(202) 512-7036
GAO-11-195, Maritime Security: Federal Agencies Have Taken Actions to Address Risks Posed by Seafarers, but Efforts Can Be Strengthened
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United States Government Accountability Office:
GAO:
Report to the Ranking Member, Committee on Homeland Security, House of
Representatives:
January 2011:
Maritime Security:
Federal Agencies Have Taken Actions to Address Risks Posed by
Seafarers, but Efforts Can Be Strengthened:
GAO-11-195:
GAO Highlights:
Highlights of GAO-11-195, a report to the Ranking Member, Committee on
Homeland Security, House of Representatives.
Why GAO Did This Study:
The State Department and two components of the Department of Homeland
Security (DHS), Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and the Coast
Guard, are responsible for preventing illegal immigration at U.S.
seaports and identifying individuals who are potential security risks.
The International Labor Organization (ILO) adopted the Seafarers‘
Identity Documents Convention (ILO 185) to establish an international
framework of seafarer identification documents and reduce their
vulnerability to fraud and exploitation. GAO was asked to examine (1)
measures federal agencies take to address risks posed by foreign
seafarers and the challenges, if any, DHS faces; (2) the challenges,
if any, DHS faces in tracking illegal entries by foreign seafarers and
how it enforces penalties; and (3) the implementation status of ILO
185. GAO reviewed relevant requirements and agency documents on
maritime security, interviewed federal and industry officials, and
visited seven seaports based on volume of seafarer arrivals. The
visits provided insights, but were not projectable to all seaports.
What GAO Found:
Federal agencies use a layered security strategy to address foreign
seafarer risks, but opportunities exist to enhance DHS seafarer
inspection methods. Federal actions include: (1) State Department
screening of seafarer non-immigrant visa applicants overseas and (2)
DHS advance screening of commercial vessels‘ seafarer manifests and
admissibility inspections of all arriving seafarers. CBP conducts
cargo vessel admissibility inspections on board the vessel without the
benefit of tools to electronically verify a seafarer‘s identity or
immigration status because of a lack of available connectivity to
network communications in the maritime environment. DHS has
prioritized the acquisition of a mobile version of this technology
capability but expects it to take several years before the technology
is developed and available. CBP agrees that obtaining this capability
is important but has not assessed the risks of not having it. Until
CBP obtains the capability, identifying the risks and options to
address them could better position CBP in preventing illegal
immigration at seaports.
DHS faces challenges in ensuring it has reliable data on illegal
entries by foreign seafarers at U.S. seaports and has not adjusted
related civil monetary penalties. First, both CBP and Coast Guard
track the frequency of absconder (a seafarer CBP has ordered detained
on board a vessel in port, but who departs a vessel without
permission) and deserter (a seafarer CBP grants permission to leave a
vessel, but who does not return when required) incidents at U.S.
seaports, but the records of these incidents varied considerably. The
Coast Guard reported 73 percent more absconders and almost double the
deserters compared to CBP for fiscal years 2005 through 2009. As a
result, the data DHS uses to inform its strategic and tactical plans
are of undetermined reliability. Second, CBP is responsible for
imposing civil monetary penalties on vessel operators whose seafarers
illegally enter the United States; however, as of December 2010, CBP
and DOJ had not met legal requirements for adjusting the penalties for
inflation. Officials reported taking steps to meet these requirements,
but have not developed a plan with timelines for doing so. Such a plan
would better position CBP and DOJ to demonstrate progress to comply
with legal requirements.
International implementation of ILO 185 has been limited”-18
countries, representing 30 percent of the global seafarer supply, have
ratified ILO 185”-and key ILO mechanisms to promote compliance are not
expected to be in place until later this year. As of January 2011, the
United States had not ratified ILO 185 largely due to concerns over a
provision for facilitating visa-free shore leave for foreign
seafarers. Perspectives varied among the four federal agencies GAO
interviewed within DHS and the departments of State, Transportation,
and Labor. Within DHS, the Coast Guard reported that it supported U.S.
ratification, while CBP stated that ILO 185‘s lack of oversight did
not serve U.S. law enforcement interests. The U.S. has recently
undertaken an interagency review to consider ratification but has no
timeline for completion.
What GAO Recommends:
GAO recommends that DHS assess risks of not electronically verifying
cargo vessel seafarers for admissibility, identify reasons for
absconder and deserter data variances, and, with the Department of
Justice (DOJ), develop a plan with timelines to adjust civil monetary
penalties for inflation. DHS and DOJ concurred with GAO‘s
recommendations.
View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-195] or key
components. For more information, contact Charles Jeszeck at (202) 512-
7036 or jeszeckc@gao.gov.
[End of section]
Contents:
Letter:
Background:
Federal Agencies Use a Layered Security Strategy to Identify and
Address Foreign Seafarer Risks; Opportunities Exist for CBP to Enhance
Inspection Methods:
DHS Faces Challenges in Ensuring Absconder and Deserter Records Are
Accurate and Reliable and Has Not Adjusted Related Civil Monetary
Penalties, as Required by Law:
ILO 185 Implementation Is Limited; the United States Has Not Ratified
Convention Due to Visa Requirement Concern:
Conclusions:
Recommendations for Executive Action:
Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:
Appendix I: Key International and National Requirements and Guidance
Applicable to Seafarer Security:
Appendix II: Key State Department Actions Since 9/11 to Strengthen
Visa Adjudication Process:
Appendix III: DHS Advance-Targeting Process:
Appendix IV: CBP and Coast Guard Seafarer-Related Enforcement and
Compliance Boardings and Inspections:
Appendix V: Comparison of CBP and Coast Guard Field Unit Reports of
Absconder and Deserter Incidents at Selected Seaports, Fiscal Years
2005 through 2009:
Appendix VI: Summary of International Labor Organization's Seafarers'
Identity Documents Convention (Revised), 2003 (ILO 185):
Appendix VII: President's Committee on the International Labor
Organization (PC/ILO):
Appendix VIII: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security:
Appendix IX: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:
Related GAO Products:
Tables:
Table 1: Top Five Nationalities (by Citizenship) Issued C1/D Visas,
Fiscal Year 2009:
Table 2: Top Five Nationalities (by Citizenship) Issued D Visas,
Fiscal Year 2009:
Table 3: Selected International and Domestic Stakeholders with
Seafarer-Related Security Responsibilities:
Table 4: Select Fineable Sections of the INA Related to Seafarers:
Table 5: ILO 185 Ratifying Nations and ILO 185 SID Issuing Nations:
Table 6: U.S. Government Stakeholder Positions on ILO 185:
Table 7: Key Laws, Conventions, or Guidance Applicable to Seafarer
Security:
Table 8: Selected State Department Initiatives to Strengthen Visa
Adjudication Process:
Table 9: Summary of Seafarers' Identity Documents Convention
(Revised), 2003:
Figures:
Figure 1: Top 20 U.S. Seaports by Number of Foreign Seafarer Arrivals,
Fiscal Year 2009:
Figure 2: Fiscal Year 2009 State Department Issued Non-immigrant Visas
and Share of Seafarer/Air Crew Types:
Figure 3: The State Department C1/D and D Visa Adjudication Process:
Figure 4: DHS Process for Screening and Inspecting Foreign Seafarers
on Commercial Vessels Transiting to U.S. Seaports:
Figure 5: DHS Absconder and Deserter Incident-Reporting Process:
Figure 6: Comparison of CBP Headquarters and CBP Field Unit Reports of
Absconder and Deserter Incidents at Selected U.S. Seaport Areas,
Fiscal Years 2005 through 2009:
Figure 7: Comparison of Coast Guard Intelligence Coordination Center
and Coast Guard Atlantic Area Maritime Intelligence Fusion Center
Reports of Absconders and Deserters in Coast Guard Atlantic Area,
Fiscal Years 2005 through 2009:
Figure 8: Comparison of Coast Guard Headquarters and CBP Headquarters
Reports of Absconder and Deserter Incidents, Fiscal Years 2005 through
2009:
Figure 9: U.S. Screening and Admissibility Determinations of Foreign
Seafarers: Current and Notional Processes:
Figure 10: Comparison of CBP Field Unit and Coast Guard Field Unit
Reports:
Figure 11: ILO 185 Process for Reviewing Country Implementation:
Figure 12: President's Committee on the International Labor
Organization:
Abbreviations:
ANOA: Advance Notice of Arrival:
APIS: Advance Passenger Information System:
ATS-P: Automated Targeting System--Passenger:
CBP: Customs and Border Protection:
DHS: Department of Homeland Security:
CCD: Consular Consolidated Database:
DOT MARAD: Department of Transportation's Maritime Administration:
DOJ: Department of Justice:
ICAO: International Civil Aviation Organization:
ICC: Intelligence Coordination Center:
ICE: Immigration and Customs Enforcement:
ILO: International Labor Organization:
ILO 185: Seafarers' Identity Documents Convention (Revised), 2003:
IMO: International Maritime Organization:
INA: Immigration and Nationality Act:
ISPS: International Ship and Port Facility Security Code:
Labor: Department of Labor:
MIFC: Maritime Intelligence Fusion Center:
MTSA: Maritime Transportation Security Act:
NTC-P: National Targeting Center--Passenger:
NCIC: National Crime Information Center:
PAU: Passenger Analysis Unit:
PC/ILO: President's Committee on the International Labor Organization:
SAO: Security Advisory Opinion:
SCO: Screening Coordination Office:
TAPILS: Tripartite Advisory Panel on International Labor Standards:
SID: Seafarer Identity Document:
US-VISIT: U.S. Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology:
[End of section]
United States Government Accountability Office:
Washington, DC 20548:
January 14, 2011:
The Honorable Bennie G. Thompson:
Ranking Member:
Committee on Homeland Security:
House of Representatives:
Dear Mr. Thompson:
The United States faces the challenge of balancing the need to secure
its borders to prevent the illegal entry of persons while also
facilitating legitimate trade and travel. In fiscal year 2009,
maritime crew--known as seafarers--made about 5 million entries into
U.S. ports on commercial cargo and cruise ship vessels.[Footnote 1]
The overwhelming majority of the seafarers entering U.S. ports are
aliens.[Footnote 2] Because the U.S. government has no control over
foreign government seafarer credentialing practices, concerns have
been raised that extremists may fraudulently obtain seafarer
credentials as a way to gain entry into the United States or conduct
attacks against maritime vessels or port infrastructure. Although
there have been no reported terrorist attacks involving seafarers on
vessels transiting to U.S. seaports, the Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) considers the illegal entry of an alien through a U.S.
seaport by exploitation of maritime industry practices to be a key
concern.
Screening foreign seafarers to identify those who pose security
threats to the United States is a shared responsibility among federal
stakeholders. For example, overseas, State Department consular
officers screen seafarer applicants for non-immigrant visas--a
prerequisite to be eligible for a permit to depart the vessel and
enter the United States--and may deny a visa if, for example, they
determine that an applicant poses a potential security or immigration
risk.[Footnote 3] Within DHS, U.S. Customs and Border Protection
(CBP), the unified federal agency responsible for border security,
inspects all seafarers arriving from foreign waters to determine their
admissibility into the United States and prevent illegal immigration
at U.S. seaports. CBP obtains key support from the Coast Guard, the
lead federal agency responsible for a wide array of maritime safety
and security activities.
In 2003, the United States and other member states of the
International Labor Organization (ILO)--a specialized agency of the
United Nations--adopted the Seafarers' Identity Documents Convention
(Revised) No. 185 (ILO 185).[Footnote 4] One goal of the Convention
was to establish an international framework for harmonizing seafarers'
identity document (SID) issuance to strengthen the reliability of the
documents and reduce their potential vulnerability to fraud and
exploitation. To support this goal, among other things, ILO 185
requires ratifying countries to adopt certain credential features
including fingerprint biometrics and issuance processes, establishes
database requirements to support validation of SIDs at ports of entry,
and establishes an oversight mechanism for assessing country
compliance.
You requested that we review the security procedures federal agencies
take to identify and screen foreign seafarers arriving in U.S.
seaports and to analyze ILO 185 and its potential impact on U.S.
maritime security. This report answers three questions:
* What measures do federal agencies take to address risks posed by
foreign seafarers transiting U.S. seaports, and what challenges, if
any, does DHS face in addressing these risks?
* What challenges, if any, has DHS faced in tracking incidents
involving illegal entry by foreign seafarers at U.S. seaports, and how
does DHS enforce penalties related to these incidents?
* What is the implementation status of ILO 185, including prospects
for U.S. ratification, and what are the perspectives of select
international and national stakeholders?
To answer the first question, we analyzed relevant statutes, such as
provisions of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA)[Footnote 5]
and the Maritime Transportation Security Act (MTSA),[Footnote 6] plus
relevant regulations--such as DHS's Advanced Passenger Information
System (APIS) rule[Footnote 7] and Coast Guard's Advanced Notice of
Arrival (ANOA) rule[Footnote 8]--that set out requirements for how DHS
identifies, screens, inspects, and determines admission of aliens to
the United States. We also reviewed documentation issued by the State
Department and DHS for screening and inspecting seafarers, including
guidance and policy, memoranda, and strategic and operational plans,
as well as risk assessments prepared by DHS components that detail
threats, vulnerabilities, and consequences associated with foreign
seafarers on board vessels arriving at U.S. seaports. To obtain
information on federal screening and inspection practices and
intelligence information on risks identified, we interviewed
headquarters officials at relevant federal agencies at the State
Department (Consular Affairs) and DHS (CBP, Coast Guard, Immigration
and Customs Enforcement, Office of Policy, and Science and Technology
Directorate). We also visited or held teleconferences with CBP seaport
field unit officials and Coast Guard Sector officials responsible for
security at a non-probability sample of eight domestic seaport areas.
[Footnote 9] We visited officials at seven of these locations
(Baltimore, Maryland; Jacksonville, Florida; Los Angeles/Long Beach,
California; Miami, FL; New York/New Jersey; Oakland/San Francisco,
California; and Seattle/Tacoma, Washington) and held a teleconference
with officials from one additional port (Houston/Galveston, Texas). We
selected these eight seaports based on the variety of foreign seafarer
arrival activity (collectively, CBP reported these ports received
approximately 35 percent of fiscal year 2009 foreign seafarer
arrivals) and commercial vessel activity at the port--i.e., cargo
and/or cruise vessel. During these visits, we interviewed CBP field
unit and Coast Guard Sector officials responsible for advance-
screening and seafarer inspections, and observed port operations,
including seafarer inspection activities. While the information we
obtained from personnel at these locations cannot be generalized
across all U.S. seaports, it provided us with a perspective on the
potential risks posed by foreign seafarers transiting to U.S. seaports
and actions taken by federal agencies to address those risks.
To answer the second question, we reviewed and compared fiscal year
2005 through 2009 data of seafarer illegal immigration incidents at
seaports reported by (1) CBP headquarters and the eight CBP seaport
field units we contacted, and (2) Coast Guard headquarters and the
eight Sectors we contacted, as well as Coast Guard's two regional
intelligence centers that track maritime-security related events that
occur in the Pacific area and the Atlantic and Gulf Coast area. We
then reviewed guidance and memoranda issued by CBP and Coast Guard
that detail reporting and collection methods for the data, and
challenges faced in doing both. We interviewed headquarters and field
officials about their data collection and reporting methods and
compared them with criteria in Standards for Internal Control in the
Federal Government, DHS policy guidance for internal agency
coordination and information sharing, and the CBP and Coast Guard
instructions for collecting and tracking data on illegal seafarer
entries.[Footnote 10] We assessed the reliability of these data by
reviewing CBP and Coast Guard data management practices for the data,
but found the data to be of undetermined reliability as discussed
later in this report. In addition, we reviewed statutes that apply to
CBP and Department of Justice authorities to issue and adjust civil
monetary penalties in cases involving illegal seafarer entries in
violation of the INA, and spoke with officials from both agencies
about these authorities. We reviewed the Federal Register to determine
when the U.S. government last adjusted the civil monetary penalties
for cases involving seafarer-related violations of the INA. We also
reviewed CBP records of civil monetary penalties assessed and
collected for seafarer-related violations of the INA, for fiscal years
2005 through 2009. We calculated what the difference in these amounts
would have been had the civil monetary penalties been adjusted for
inflation every 4 years, as required by law.
To answer the third question, we reviewed ILO documents and
interviewed officials from the ILO and relevant federal agencies,
including the State Department, CBP, Coast Guard, the Department of
Labor (Labor), and the Department of Transportation's Maritime
Administration (DOT MARAD). We also developed and used a survey
instrument to obtain information from four foreign governments
regarding views on ILO 185 and their practices for issuing
identification or other credentials to seafarers. We selected these
countries based on two factors: (1) those that are among the top 10
nations that supply seafarers on vessels transiting to the United
States and (2) a mix of nations that have ratified and not ratified
ILO 185. The results of our survey are not generalizable, but provide
perspectives from specific countries. Finally, we reviewed documents
and interviewed representatives from seven industry organizations,
including shipping companies and associations representing ship owners
and/or operators, and three labor organizations about issues including
their positions on ILO 185, standard practices for vetting and hiring
seafarers, and issues related to seafarer rights and access to shore
leave. In part, we selected these groups based on their involvement
with the ILO.
We conducted this performance audit from December 2009 through
December 2010 in accordance with generally accepted government
auditing standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform
the audit to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a
reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit
objectives. We believe that the evidence obtained provides a
reasonable basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit
objectives.
Background:
Number of Foreign Seafarer Arrivals in U.S. Seaports:
Over $1.2 trillion dollars in merchandise of foreign trade is handled
at U.S. seaports each year, and according to DOT MARAD, U.S. ports
accounted for the second highest number of cargo vessel calls
worldwide in 2009.[Footnote 11] In addition, millions of individuals
transit U.S. seaports annually on cruise ships, making the cruise
industry a source of major economic activity. For example, direct
spending for goods and services by the cruise lines and their
passengers in the United States was about $19.1 billion in 2008. The
global labor supply of seafarers who work on commercial vessels to
support these types of activities is estimated at 1.2 to 2 million
individuals. This figure encompasses individuals required for normal
operation and service on board commercial vessels, including
hospitality-related occupations on cruise ships such as food servers
and entertainers.
Compared to the total number of arrivals at U.S. land and air ports of
entry, the number of foreign seafarers arriving in U.S. seaports is
small. For example, according to CBP data, foreign seafarer arrivals
accounted for almost 5 million of the approximately 27 million
passenger and crew arrivals recorded in U.S. seaports in fiscal year
2007. In contrast, for that same year, CBP recorded 92 million
passenger and crew arrivals on international flights and 300 million
passenger and pedestrian arrivals at land border crossings.
According to CBP data, in fiscal year 2009, approximately 80 percent
of seafarers arriving by commercial vessel did so on board passenger
vessels, such as cruise ships with the remaining 20 percent arriving
by cargo or other vessel type. This is because individual cruise ship
routes typically account for regular, frequent arrivals, and cruise
ships typically employ hundreds of seafarers, while cargo ships often
have just a few dozen seafarers on board.[Footnote 12] As a result,
the seaports receiving the largest numbers of seafarers were generally
those that had cruise vessel operations. In fiscal year 2009, CBP
reported 10 of the 132 U.S. seaports of entry received 70 percent of
foreign seafarer arrivals (see figure 1 below).[Footnote 13]
Figure 1: Top 20 U.S. Seaports by Number of Foreign Seafarer Arrivals,
Fiscal Year 2009:
[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated map]
Port: 1. Miami;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 722,579;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 16%.
Port: 2. Port Everglades;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 601,485;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 14%.
Port: 3. Port Canaveral;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 440,570;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 10%.
Port: 4. San Juan;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 303,180;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 7%.
Port: 5. Los Angeles;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 191,746;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 4%.
Port: 6. Seattle;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 186,035;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 4%.
Port: 7. Long Beach;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 175,093;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 4%.
Port: 8. Tampa;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 160,883;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 4%.
Port: 9. San Diego;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 144,631;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 3%.
Port: 10. New York;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 143,139;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 3%.
Port: 11. Honolulu;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 129,056;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 3%.
Port: 12. New Orleans;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 120,711;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 3%.
Port: 13. Galveston;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 100,543;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 2%.
Port: 14. Ketchikan;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 97,030;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 2%.
Port: 15. Newark;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 93,658;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 2%.
Port: 16. Houston;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 82,157;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 2%.
Port: 17. Mobile;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 67,918;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 2%.
Port: 18. Key West;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 60,088;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 1%.
Port: 19. Boston;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 51,762;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 1%.
Port: 20. Baltimore;
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 47,706;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 1%.
Top 10 ports sub-total:
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 3,069,341;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 70%.
Top 20 ports sub-total:
Number of foreign crew arrivals in port: 3,919,970;
Percentage of total foreign crew arrivals in U.S.: 89%.
Sources: GAO analysis of CBP data; Map Resources (map).
[End of figure]
Visa Requirements for Entry into the United States for Shore Leave:
The State Department typically issues two types of non-immigrant visas
to foreign seafarers: C1/D or D.[Footnote 14] D visas are "crewmember"
visas that allow a seafarer to request a conditional permit to land in
the United States[Footnote 15] only if arriving by ship as an active
seafarer. Under the C1 category of the combined C1/D visa, seafarers
are allowed to seek admission into the United States at any port of
entry--such as an airport--for the purpose of transiting to ships for
employment. If arriving by vessel in the capacity of an active
seafarer, the D category of the combined C1/D visa may be used to
request a conditional permit to land. Typically, these visas are valid
for multiple entries over a period of up to 5 years, and the maximum
time allowed in the United States for any single entry is 29 days.
According to CBP data, the vast majority of foreign seafarers who
arrive in U.S. seaports--over 95 percent in fiscal year 2009--
possessed one of these non-immigrant visas. By far, the C1/D visa is
the most frequently issued visa applied for and obtained by seafarers.
Figure 2 below shows the share of C1/D and D visas the State
Department issued in fiscal year 2009.
Figure 2: Fiscal Year 2009 State Department Issued Non-immigrant Visas
and Share of Seafarer/Air Crew Types:
[Refer to PDF for image: pie-chart and subchart]
Total non-immigrant visas: 5.8 million;
C1/D and D visas (229,527): 4%;
* C1/D visas (205,893): 90%;
* D visas (23,634): 10%.
All other non-immigrant visas: (5,574,651): 96%.
Source: GAO analysis of State data.
[End of figure]
Countries of Origin of Foreign Seafarers:
As approximated by C1/D and D visa issuance, a few countries account
for large shares of the foreign seafarers who apply for non-immigrant
visas to enter the United States, with the Philippines supplying by
far the most seafarers, followed by India and the Russian
Federation.[Footnote 16] Tables 1 and 2 below illustrate C1/D and D
visa issuance data for fiscal year 2009.
Table 1: Top Five Nationalities (by Citizenship) Issued C1/D Visas,
Fiscal Year 2009:
Nationality: 1. Philippines;
No. of C1/D visas issued: 45,781;
Percentage of total C1/D visas issued: 22%.
Nationality: 2. India;
No. of C1/D visas issued: 25,182;
Percentage of total C1/D visas issued: 12%.
Nationality: 3. Russia;
No. of C1/D visas issued: 15,785;
Percentage of total C1/D visas issued: 8%.
Nationality: 4. Indonesia;
No. of C1/D visas issued: 10,074;
Percentage of total C1/D visas issued: 5%.
Nationality: 5. Ukraine;
No. of C1/D visas issued: 9,029;
Percentage of total C1/D visas issued: 4%.
Nationality: Top 10;
No. of C1/D visas issued: 127,375;
Percentage of total C1/D visas issued: 62%.
Nationality: Top 20;
No. of C1/D visas issued: 154,613;
Percentage of total C1/D visas issued: 75%.
Nationality: All C1/D visas;
No. of C1/D visas issued: 205,893;
Percentage of total C1/D visas issued: 100%.
Source: GAO analysis of State Department data.
[End of table]
Table 2: Top Five Nationalities (by Citizenship) Issued D Visas,
Fiscal Year 2009:
Nationality: 1. China;
No. of D visas issued: 13,646;
Percentage of total D visas issued: 58%.
Nationality: 2. Philippines;
No. of D visas issued: 4,462;
Percentage of total D visas issued: 19%.
Nationality: 3. Burma;
No. of D visas issued: 2,447;
Percentage of total D visas issued: 10%.
Nationality: 4. Saudi Arabia;
No. of D visas issued: 598;
Percentage of total D visas issued: 3%.
Nationality: 5. Ethiopia;
No. of D visas issued: 490;
Percentage of total D visas issued: 2%.
Nationality: Top 10;
No. of D visas issued: 22,491;
Percentage of total D visas issued: 95%.
Nationality: Top 20;
No. of D visas issued: 23,143;
Percentage of total D visas issued: 98%.
Nationality: All D visas;
No. of D visas issued: 23,634;
Percentage of total D visas issued: 100%.
Source: GAO analysis of State Department data.
[End of table]
Stakeholders Involved with Seafarer Security Issues:
A number of domestic and international stakeholders are involved with
seafarer security issues. For example, among domestic stakeholders,
multiple DHS components share responsibilities for ensuring that
aliens for whom there may be national security or other concerns are
not admitted to the United States. Table 3 lists some of these
organizations and agencies and their roles related to seafarer
security.
Table 3: Selected International and Domestic Stakeholders with
Seafarer-Related Security Responsibilities:
International organizations:
Organization or agency: International Maritime Organization (IMO);
Seafarer-related security activities:
* The IMO is a specialized agency of the United Nations that develops
and maintains a comprehensive regulatory framework for shipping;
scope of work includes maritime safety and security, and facilitation
of maritime traffic.
Organization or agency: International Labor Organization (ILO);
Seafarer-related security activities:
* The ILO is a specialized agency of the United Nations that promotes
social justice and internationally recognized human and labor rights.
The organization established a system of seafarers' identity documents
to promote better working conditions for seafarers and to enhance
maritime security.
Foreign governments:
Organization or agency: Various designated authorities;
Seafarer-related security activities:
* Agencies of IMO member governments or their representatives are
responsible for implementing international maritime security
requirements;
* Responsible for issuing credentials, such as seafarers' identity
documents, to citizens or residents employed as seafarers.
U.S. government:
Organization or agency: Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Coast
Guard;
Seafarer-related security activities:
* Analyzes vessel and seafarer data for security risks prior to
vessels' arrival in U.S. ports from foreign waters;
* Conducts various security activities including law enforcement
boardings, safety and security compliance inspections, and denying
vessel entries to port.
Organization or agency: Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Customs
and Border Protection (CBP);
Seafarer-related security activities:
* Analyzes vessel and seafarer data for security risks prior to
vessels' arrival in U.S. ports from foreign waters;
* Enforces requirements of the INA by inspecting all seafarers
arriving from foreign ports to determine their admissibility for entry
into the United States;
takes action to ensure that non-eligible seafarers are not admitted.
Organization or agency: Department of Homeland Security: U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE);
Seafarer-related security activities:
* May investigate specific cases of seafarers entering or remaining in
the United States illegally, among other border control or immigration
violations.
Organization or agency: State Department;
Seafarer-related security activities:
* Screens individuals abroad who apply for visas to enter the United
States as seafarers, typically for the purpose of transit and/or shore
leave.
International and domestic private sector:
Organization or agency: Vessel owners and operators;
Seafarer-related security activities:
* Along with crew, responsible for implementing vessel security plans,
including measures to prevent unauthorized seafarers from leaving
vessels while in port.
Organization or agency: Manning agencies (labor contractors);
Seafarer-related security activities:
* Recruit seafarers and negotiate seafarer employment contracts with
shipping companies;
agency practices to screen applicants before job placement vary.
Source: GAO analysis.
[End of table]
Legal and Regulatory Framework for Maritime Security Actions:
International and national law and guidance govern maritime security,
and include provisions that apply to seafarers. At the international
level, the IMO, through its International Ship and Port Facility
Security Code (ISPS) and its Convention on Facilitation of
International Maritime Traffic (FAL), lays out the international
framework designed to help ensure maritime security and prevent
unnecessary delays in maritime traffic. In addition, national laws,
regulations, and guidance also direct federal agencies and vessel
operators on a nationwide basis. For example, the INA as amended
requires that all aliens, including foreign seafarers, seeking
admission to the United States be inspected by immigration
officers.[Footnote 17] It also requires foreign seafarers, with
certain exceptions, to obtain a conditional landing permit to land
temporarily in the United States.[Footnote 18] To grant a conditional
landing permit, CBP generally requires foreign seafarers to present a
passport or seaman's book and a non-immigrant visa with a D
classification.[Footnote 19] Appendix I details key international and
national laws, conventions, or guidance pertaining to seafarer
security.
Concerns with Seafarer Exploitation of Maritime Industry:
According to Coast Guard National Maritime Intelligence Center
officials we met, to date there have been no terrorist attacks
involving seafarers on vessels transiting to U.S. ports and no
definitive information to indicate that extremists have entered the
United States as seafarer non-immigrant visa holders. Nevertheless, as
we reported in 2007, security officials in the U.S. government are
concerned about the possibility of a future terrorist attack in a U.S.
port.[Footnote 20] Federal agencies have identified seafarer-related
risks involving either (1) extremists entering U.S. ports as seafarers
and their potential threat to vessels or port infrastructure; or (2)
risks posed generally by illegal immigration into the United States,
[Footnote 21] in particular:
* The State Department has reported that the exploitation of C1/D
visas by aliens is a national security concern because the visas could
be used by extremists to enter the United States. State Department and
DHS reports chronicle several cases where groups of seafarers have
been able to obtain valid visas through fraudulent means and
successfully enter the United States. These fraud cases generally
involved C1/D applicants using what were later determined to be
fraudulent employment letters to obtain their visas. Still, according
to the State Department, the extent of fraud among seafarer visa
types--C1/D and D--is comparable with that encountered with other non-
immigrant visa types and does not constitute a substantial problem.
* As we reported in 2007, the Coast Guard has assessed the
hypothetical possibility that seafarers (or persons posing as
seafarers) could conspire to commandeer a vessel with the intent of
using it as a weapon or disrupting maritime commerce.[Footnote 22]
However, vessel operator and industry group assessments have found
this to be an unlikely scenario in part due to the vetting process
shipping companies use when hiring, and particularly for cargo or
tanker vessels, the technical complexity required for operating the
vessels.
Federal Agencies Use a Layered Security Strategy to Identify and
Address Foreign Seafarer Risks; Opportunities Exist for CBP to Enhance
Inspection Methods:
State Department Screens Seafarers Applying for Visas:
The State Department's visa adjudication process is the first layer of
security implemented by federal agencies to prevent terrorists,
certain criminals, or otherwise inadmissible aliens from gaining entry
into the United States. Aliens wishing to temporarily enter the United
States--such as foreign seafarers--fill out a visa application and
make an appointment for an interview at U.S. embassies or consulates
abroad; pay a fee; and submit photographs and 10-digit fingerprints.
In turn, consular officers review applications, interview applicants,
screen applicant information against federal databases, and review
supporting documents to assess whether the applicant is an intending
immigrant, potential threat to national security, or otherwise
ineligible.[Footnote 23] Among other things, consular officers check
for previous visa refusals, immigration violations, criminal
histories, and terrorism concerns.[Footnote 24] If any such concerns
arise, officers conduct additional security checks by seeking input
through an interagency Security Advisory Opinion (SAO) (see figure 3
for a description of the visa adjudication process). Following these
steps, the State Department will either issue or refuse an applicant's
visa application. Those applicants who are granted visas may then
present the visa to CBP officers to request admission into the United
States when arriving at U.S. ports (CBP's process for admissibility
screening is discussed later in this report). In fiscal year 2009, the
State Department reported that 265,512 applicants had applied for crew
visas--C1/D and D. Of this number, the State Department issued 229,527
(86 percent) and refused 35,985 (14 percent).
Figure 3: The State Department C1/D and D Visa Adjudication Process:
[Refer to PDF for image: illustration]
1. C1/D and D visa applicants apply online and pay $140 application
fee.
2. During appointment at post, applicant submits photograph and
fingerprints. Consular officer reviews documents, runs applicant
information against databases, and interviews applicant.
3. Consular officer reviews name check, fingerprint, and facial
recognition results and determines if further security checks are
needed.
Visa issued: Applicant returns to post to pick up visa; or:
Further checks needed: SAO submitted for interagency check. SAO
results sent to consular officer. Visa issued or visa denied; or:
Visa denied: Consular officer enters photo of refused applicant and
supporting evidence for refusal into the CCD, which is accessible to
State and DHS.
Sources: GAO analysis of State Department information.
[End of figure]
As we previously reported in 2007, the State Department has taken
steps to strengthen the security of the visa adjudication process
since the terrorist attacks of 9/11.[Footnote 25] For example, the
State Department has increased use of internal databases to track
fraud cases and identify trends, conducted an increased number of
studies on visa adjudication practices, and enhanced and expanded
consular officer training courses on fraud (see appendix II for a
summary of selected actions the State Department has taken since 9/11
to strengthen the adjudication process). In addition, in 2007,
following several cases in which seafarers obtained visas fraudulently
from overseas posts, the State Department issued guidance suggesting
additional steps that posts can take to identify fraud among
applicants for non-immigrant seafarer visas--particularly in ensuring
that the ship, visa applicant, and manning agency are bona fide
entities.[Footnote 26]
Within DHS, CBP and Coast Guard Conduct Advance-Screening,
Inspections, and Enforcement Operations:
Before Vessel's Arrival, CBP and Coast Guard Screen Manifests and
Assess Risks:
Before a commercial vessel's arrival, both CBP and Coast Guard are to
receive and screen advance information on commercial vessels scheduled
to arrive at U.S. ports.[Footnote 27] Vessel operators or agents are
required to transmit information to the Coast Guard's National Vessel
Movement Center, including CBP-required advance passenger and crew
information--known as a manifest--and Coast Guard required Advanced
Notice of Arrival (ANOA). Multiple components screen this advance
information to identify national security-related or other concerns.
Nationally, this includes screening by CBP's National Targeting Center-
Passenger (NTC-P) and Coast Guard's Intelligence Coordination Center
(ICC). Locally, CBP field units at seaports of entry screen crew
manifests against various government databases and share the results
with Coast Guard field units--known as Sectors. Appendix III provides
a more detailed description of this advance-screening process.
For all arriving commercial vessels, both CBP and Coast Guard policy
requires that field units prepare risk assessments based on the
results of advance-screening of vessel and seafarer information. CBP
has the lead role with respect to passengers and seafarer issues and
provides the Coast Guard with information on seafarers that raise
initial security concerns. According to the CBP commercial vessel
entry and boarding policy, CBP's risk management approach begins with
a collection of vessel information obtained during advance-targeting
and is followed by an analysis to identify and address risk areas.
CBP's boarding policy identifies 19 different risk factors that field
units are to consider for assessing risks posed by the vessel or
seafarers. Among those risk factors are whether the vessel operator
has had past instances of invalid or incorrect crew manifest lists,
whether the vessel has a history of seafarers unlawfully landing in
the United States, or whether the vessel is making its first arrival
at a U.S. seaport within the past year.
Additionally, for all arriving vessels, Coast Guard policy provides
that field units are to prepare risk assessments to identify those
considered high risk. For example, to quantify the risk factors Coast
Guard uses a national scoring tool to screen vessels against a variety
of items. See figure 4 for a description of the DHS process for
screening, assessing risks, and inspecting foreign seafarers.
Figure 4: DHS Process for Screening and Inspecting Foreign Seafarers
on Commercial Vessels Transiting to U.S. Seaports:
[Refer to PDF for image: illustration]
Vessel transmits crew manifest (Up to 96 hours prior to vessel‘s
arrival):
* Vessel operator/owner transmits passenger and crew manifest
information to Coast Guard and CBP as required by law.
Pre-arrival: DHS advance targeting (Up to 72 hours prior to vessel‘s
arrival):
DHS computer-based targeting of manifest data to identify potential
national security or other concerns;
CBP national and local targeting:
* National Targeting Center;
* Local seaport Passenger Analysis Unit.
CBP and Coast Guard coordinate information.
Coast Guard national targeting:
* Intelligence Coordination Center.
Pre-arrival: Risk assessment (Up to 48 hours prior to vessel‘s
arrival):
Based on advance crew-targeting results, CBP and Coast Guard field
units develop assessment and plan operations to address risks;
* At local level, CBP informs Coast Guard of crew-screening results”-
may recommend Coast Guard deny entry or order high-risk crew detained
on board;
* If ordered to do so, vessel operator/owner submits a plan for
ensuring crew remain on board.
Seaport operations: Crew inspections:
CBP inspects all crew upon arrival to determine admissibility:
* Based on risk assessment, both CBP and Coast Guard may conduct
security or enforcement boardings;
* Coast Guard conducts random inspections of crew to assess compliance
with safety and security regulations;
* CBP inspects vessel prior to departure to ensure that high-risk crew
are on board.
Source: GAO analysis of Coast Guard and CBP information.
[End of figure]
At Port of Entry, CBP Officers Inspect all Seafarers with Coast Guard
Support:
CBP is the lead DHS agency responsible for inspecting all seafarers to
determine whether they are admissible into the United States.[Footnote
28] CBP conducts these inspections to determine the nationality and
identity, and for non-U.S. citizens, the admissibility of each person
wishing to enter the United States and to verify that crew manifest
information provided by a vessel operator matches the advance
information received prior to the vessel's arrival.[Footnote 29] For
foreign seafarers, CBP's seafarer inspection practices focus on (1)
review of identity and travel documentation; (2) a comparison of the
document to the seafarer to determine if he or she is in fact the true
bearer; and (3) interviews to determine admissibility and the
potential risks of the individual violating immigration laws.[Footnote
30] CBP officers rely on interviews with the seafarer, their
experience in observing and assessing seafarer behavior, and
verification of seafarer documents to determine who is or is not
admissible to the United States. CBP requires all arriving seafarers
to have either a passport or seaman's book. While arriving foreign
seafarers are not required to hold a visa to enter a U.S. seaport on a
vessel, CBP requires all foreign seafarers to hold a valid visa to be
eligible for a conditional landing permit for shore leave.[Footnote
31] Appendix IV provides additional information on CBP and Coast Guard
boarding and seafarer inspection activities.
CBP Seeks Additional Tools to Enhance Seafarer Admissibility
Inspections:
The procedures and tools CBP officers use to conduct admissibility
inspections vary to some extent based on whether the seafarer is
arriving on a cargo or cruise vessel. To manage the high number of
both seafarers and passengers, CBP generally conducts cruise vessel
admissibility inspections at dockside inspection facilities similar to
those at airports. To date, cruise line facilities at 15 seaports are
equipped with U.S. Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology
(US-VISIT), which provides biometric identification services to
decision makers--in this case, CBP officers.[Footnote 32]
CBP conducts almost all cargo vessel admissibility inspections on
board the vessel without the benefit of tools--such as mobile passport
readers--for electronically verifying a seafarer's identity or
immigration status.[Footnote 33] In this instance, CBP officers have
to rely on information vetted before boarding the vessel and their
skill sets to identify fraud and grounds of inadmissibility, both in
reviewing documents and in interviewing seafarers.[Footnote 34] CBP
headquarters and officials from seven of eight CBP field units we
visited reported that having mobile or portable technology to
electronically verify the identity of seafarers would enhance their
efforts to identify fraudulent documents and confirm immigration
status. Among the capabilities sought by field officials from the
seaport areas we visited was having a portable device utilizing US-
VISIT technology and providing a real-time response for seafarers
fingerprinted on board their vessel. Field officials also reported
seeking the ability to run background checks in the field and the
ability to machine read visas and passports.
DHS has recommended that DHS components electronically verify all
immigration status determinations. According to 2006 and 2008 guidance
issued by the DHS Screening Coordination Office (SCO), verification of
immigration status should not rely solely on verification of physical
security features present on a credential.[Footnote 35] The guidance
states that electronic verification provides greater security and
should be conducted, particularly where DHS owns the process. A CBP
headquarters official reported that the primary challenge in deploying
mobile biometrics readers or other tools for electronically verifying
the identity of seafarers is a lack of available connectivity to
network communications in the maritime environment.[Footnote 36] CBP
headquarters reported the potential value that such tools would
provide CBP officers for conducting on board seafarer inspections and
that CBP had explored solutions in recent years. For instance, a CBP
headquarters official reported that some field units had tried,
generally without success, to use wireless laptops with access to CBP
data as a way to verify the identity of seafarers arriving at seaports
on board cargo vessels. Of the eight CBP field units we visited, three
reported efforts to use mobile technology as an electronic
verification tool during on board admissibility inspections. Of these
three field offices, two reported efforts to use laptops with
connectivity to CBP databases as an electronic verification tool, one
of which reported some success while the other reported abandoning the
effort because of poor connectivity. The third field office reported
that it had participated in a DHS pilot in which its officers were
provided with hand-held biometric scanners to capture fingerprints--
the office reported the devices had provided value, but that they were
not aware of the status or results of the pilot.
In May 2009, DHS deemed as "high priority" the need for the department
to obtain hand-held mobile biometrics screening capabilities that can
effectively collect data samples from subjects in challenging
operational environments--such as those offshore and at seaports of
entry. To address this, in August 2009, DHS S&T issued a solicitation
for research proposals for developing a hand-held screening
device.[Footnote 37] However, according to the DHS S&T proposal, it is
expected to take several years before this technology can be made
available for use by DHS agencies, such as CBP.[Footnote 38] Moreover,
DHS S&T officials reported that these proposals do not address the
connectivity challenges reported by CBP field officers.
DHS SCO has reported that given the inherent level of risk to security
and immigration or other fraud, visual verification alone of travel
documents poses significant concerns. In this way, by not having the
ability to electronically verify the documents, CBP's methods for
inspecting cargo vessel crew offers less assurance that CBP is
identifying fraud among documents presented by the foreign seafarers
seeking admission into the United States. According to internal
control standards, assessing risk exposure is important to providing
reasonable assurance that program goals and objectives are met and
determining options to address them.[Footnote 39] CBP reported that
its cargo vessel admissibility methods involve multiple levels of
screening to identify risks posed by seafarers. However, CBP reported
that it had not conducted an assessment of the risks associated with
not using electronic verification as part of its admissibility
inspections for cargo vessel seafarers. Consequently, conducting an
assessment to identify the risks of not meeting the DHS SCO
recommendations for electronically verifying documents as part of
immigration status determinations and identifying options for
addressing any identified risks and their costs, would be important
until new tools and technology become available.
DHS Faces Challenges in Ensuring Absconder and Deserter Records Are
Accurate and Reliable and Has Not Adjusted Related Civil Monetary
Penalties, as Required by Law:
DHS Lacks Accurate and Reliable Data on Absconder and Deserter
Incidents:
CBP has primary responsibility for identifying and reporting absconder
and deserter incidents at U.S. seaports--both to Coast Guard and other
federal and local law enforcement stakeholders--and for tracking them
in CBP database systems.[Footnote 40] Meanwhile, the Coast Guard
generally relies on CBP's reporting of these events for populating its
own records of the incidents, with Coast Guard Sectors receiving
initial reports of the incident and disseminating the information
among various components within Coast Guard. Figure 5 summarizes CBP
and the Coast Guard's processes for identifying and reporting
absconder and deserter incidents at U.S. seaports.
Figure 5: DHS Absconder and Deserter Incident-Reporting Process:
[Refer to PDF for image: illustration]
CBP seaport field office:
* Identifies case through report from vessel operator or in course of
crew inspection;
* Reports incident by phone and/or email to Coast Guard, ICE, other
federal law enforcement agencies;
* Enters incident in CBP databases, including ENFORCE, for case
tracking and trend analysis[A].
Coast Guard sector:
* Prepares and disseminates field intelligence report to Coast Guard
headquarters intelligence components[B];
* Local and regional field units may also maintain this data;
* Other sources: Coast Guard obtains information independently from
vessel operators, media, law enforcement, etc.
Coast Guard headquarters:
* Coast Guard national and regional intelligence centers record and
track data.
CBP headquarters:
Management has available records of absconder and deserter incidents
maintained in ENFORCE database for CBP trend and risk analysis.
Sources: GAO analysis of CBP and Coast Guard information.
[A] Owned by ICE, ENFORCE is a DHS shared common database repository
for several law enforcement and homeland security applications.
ENFORCE captures and maintains information related to the
investigation, arrest, booking, detention, and removal of persons
encountered during immigration and criminal law enforcement
investigations and operations conducted by ICE and CBP.
[B] According to Coast Guard guidance, all Coast Guard field units are
to use Field Intelligence Reports as the standard vehicles to report
information of potential intelligence value, such as illegal
immigration by absconders and deserters. These reports provide raw,
unevaluated information of foreign or U.S. activities to support Coast
Guard operations and missions. While the reports are provided for
internal Coast Guard intelligence components, Coast Guard may release
them to external U.S. agencies with homeland security mission
requirements.
[End of figure]
CBP Absconder and Deserter Data Vary between Field and Headquarters:
CBP has reported continuing challenges with its seaport field units'
recording of absconder and deserter incidents in CBP database systems.
Since 2004, CBP has mandated that field units record all absconder and
deserter events and related information in its ENFORCE database, and
through 2007, CBP had issued several memoranda reminding field units
to do so. In 2007, CBP headquarters issued a memorandum to field units
reporting that its review of absconder and deserter cases found that
CBP field units at many seaports of entry had not been properly
utilizing ENFORCE to record these incidents.
CBP headquarters and field units we contacted provided us with data on
the number of absconder and deserter incidents identified at U.S.
seaports from fiscal years 2005 through 2009. The number of incidents
reported by CBP headquarters varied with those reported by seven of
eight CBP field units we contacted--with considerable variations at
six of these seaports. The following figure compares CBP headquarters
and CBP field unit absconder and deserter data we received:
Figure 6: Comparison of CBP Headquarters and CBP Field Unit Reports of
Absconder and Deserter Incidents at Selected U.S. Seaport Areas,
Fiscal Years 2005 through 2009:
[Refer to PDF for image: stacked vertical bar graph]
Seaport: Baltimore HQ;
Deserters: 1;
Absconders: 0.
Seaport: Baltimore Field;
Deserters: 8;
Absconders: 4.
Seaport: Houston/Galveston[A] HQ;
Deserters: 5;
Absconders: 7.
Seaport: Houston/Galveston[A] Field;
Deserters: 41;
Absconders: 14.
Seaport: Jacksonville HQ;
Deserters: 4;
Absconders: 0.
Seaport: Jacksonville Field;
Deserters: 4;
Absconders: 0.
Seaport: Los Angeles/Long Beach HQ;
Deserters: 65;
Absconders: 13.
Seaport: Los Angeles/Long Beach Field;
Deserters: 109;
Absconders: 6.
Seaport: Miami HQ;
Deserters: 21;
Absconders: 16.
Seaport: Miami Field;
Deserters: 22;
Absconders: 19.
Seaport: New York/Newark HQ;
Deserters: 4;
Absconders: 0.
Seaport: New York/Newark Field;
Deserters: 109;
Absconders: 6.
Seaport: Seattle/Tacoma HQ;
Deserters: 1;
Absconders: 1.
Seaport: Seattle/Tacoma Field;
Deserters: 29;
Absconders: 3.
Source: GAO analysis of CBP headquarters and field unit data.
Note: We did not include data in this graph for one of the eight
seaport areas we contacted--San Francisco/Oakland--because the field
unit did not have available data covering fiscal years 2005 through
2009. According to field officials, prior to February 2007, combined
absconder and deserter data covering the maritime and aviation modes
were tracked by CBP at the airport. However, we found variances when
comparing headquarters and field unit data for that seaport as well.
For example, the CBP field unit reported 34 combined absconder and
deserter incidents from February 2007 through April 2010, while CBP
headquarters only reported 3 such incidents from fiscal years 2005
through 2009.
[A] The CBP Houston Field office reported data from fiscal year 2005
through May 2010.
[End of figure]
According to 2007 guidance CBP headquarters issued to field units, it
is critical that CBP field officers properly enter cases of seafarer
incidents into the ENFORCE database in order to maintain data
integrity and develop meaningful analysis of trends and risks.
Further, the guidance notes that when adverse actions--such as
seafarer absconder and deserter incidents--are not properly recorded,
these inaccurate statistics not only impact targeting and analysis,
but also inaccurately reflect workload with regard to staffing
justification and assumptions.
Officials from CBP headquarters and four field units we contacted
reported that they did not know why their absconder and deserter data
varied. A CBP headquarters official responsible for maintaining
absconder and deserter incident data reported that he had used the
ENFORCE database as headquarters' source for the absconder and
deserter data and reported that field unit officials may have been
inexperienced and not known to use ENFORCE to access the data. In
addition, CBP headquarters reported that without comparing the
methodology and data we were provided by headquarters and field units,
it could not conclude why the data varied. Meanwhile, field officials
from two of these field units told us they believed the data they had
provided were accurate. Overall, field officials reported using
various sources to collect the data. For example, four field units
reported they obtained their data from locally maintained sources,
including hard copy incident logs. In July 2010, a CBP headquarters
official responsible for managing the ENFORCE system for CBP stated
that the agency had faced continued challenges with ensuring the
accuracy of the data field officers had entered into ENFORCE
potentially as a result of difficulty field officers experienced in
navigating ENFORCE, and that CBP was working to improve the user
interface of ENFORCE so that it more effectively served the reporting
needs of CBP officers.
According to internal control standards, accurate reporting of
transactions and events are necessary to support management in making
decisions.[Footnote 41] Program managers need operational data to
determine whether they are meeting their agencies' mission goals for
effective and efficient use of resources, while operating information
is also needed to determine whether the agency is achieving its
compliance requirements under various laws and regulations. To do
this, internal control should generally be designed to assure that
ongoing monitoring occurs in the course of normal operations.
Procedures including regular comparisons and reconciliations should be
integrated into an agency's activities.
CBP has reported the importance of accurately recording absconder and
deserter incidents to its targeting and analysis and workload staffing
justification and assumptions. However, CBP headquarters and field
officials were unable to fully explain why their respective records of
these incidents varied so considerably. Because of these variances,
CBP's data are of undetermined reliability. Determining the reasons
that absconder and deserter data varies between headquarters and field
units, and taking any actions necessary to address them, could better
position CBP to provide reasonable assurance that its data are
reliable, thereby facilitating its targeting and analysis activities
to help prevent illegal immigration at seaports.
Coast Guard Concerned about Accuracy of Absconder and Deserter Data:
At the national level, Coast Guard's Intelligence Coordination Center
(ICC) maintains all Coast Guard reported asymmetric events involving
vessels arriving at U.S. seaports, including absconders and deserters,
in a classified database for use by Coast Guard leadership and field
officials.[Footnote 42] Regionally, Coast Guard has command structures
responsible for Atlantic and Pacific area operations, and each of
these command structures has intelligence coordination components--
known as the Atlantic and Pacific Area Maritime Intelligence Fusion
Centers (MIFC-LANT and MIFC-PAC respectively).[Footnote 43] Each of
these fusion centers maintains its own database of absconder and
deserter incidents.
Coast Guard field practices for tracking absconder and deserter cases
vary by location, and Coast Guard ICC data on the number of absconders
and deserters differed from that reported by both MIFC-LANT and MIFC-
PAC. For example, for absconder and deserter incidents reported in the
Coast Guard's Pacific Area during the period of fiscal years 2007
through 2009, the ICC reported 86 total incidents, while MIFC-PAC
reported 123. Similar data variances occurred between ICC and MIFC-
LANT. For example, figure 7 shows that Coast Guard ICC and MIFC-LANT
have reported differing numbers of absconders and deserters at
seaports in the Coast Guard's Atlantic Area during the period of
fiscal years 2005 through 2009, which includes seaports on the east
and gulf coasts, and Puerto Rico.
Figure 7: Comparison of Coast Guard Intelligence Coordination Center
and Coast Guard Atlantic Area Maritime Intelligence Fusion Center
Reports of Absconders and Deserters in Coast Guard Atlantic Area,
Fiscal Years 2005 through 2009:
[Refer to PDF for image: stacked vertical bar graph]
Fiscal year: 2005;
ICC deserters: 86;
ICC absconders: 43;
MIFC-LANT deserters: 73;
MIFC-LANT absconders: 52.
Fiscal year: 2006;
ICC deserters: 69;
ICC absconders: 32;
MIFC-LANT deserters: 69;
MIFC-LANT absconders: 35.
Fiscal year: 2007;
ICC deserters: 59;
ICC absconders: 21;
MIFC-LANT deserters: 73;
MIFC-LANT absconders: 22.
Fiscal year: 2008;
ICC deserters: 56;
ICC absconders: 12;
MIFC-LANT deserters: 61;
MIFC-LANT absconders: 19.
Fiscal year: 2009;
ICC deserters: 26;
ICC absconders: 5;
MIFC-LANT deserters: 24;
MIFC-LANT absconders: 6.
Source: GAO analysis of Coast Guard ICC and MIFC-LANT data.
[End of figure]
Because the ICC and regional intelligence centers do not have a
process in place for comparing their absconder or deserter data on a
systematic basis, the Coast Guard is at risk of inconsistent or double
counting by its MIFCs and ICC. An official with the ICC's Maritime
Smuggling Branch, which maintains this data, told us that Coast Guard
leadership recognizes this risk and is looking to establish business
rules for coordinating this information among its components.
Moreover, according to several intelligence assessments issued by MIFC-
PAC in 2009 and 2010, the sufficiency of reporting absconder and
deserter events is a critical intelligence gap as there is a
substantial likelihood that some absconder and deserter events were
not reported through MIFC-PAC channels. In these reports, MIFC-PAC
questioned the accuracy of the absconder and deserter reporting rates
and the extent to which such incidents had gone unreported.
According to internal control standards, accurate reporting of
transactions and events are necessary to support agency operations and
internal controls should generally be designed to assure that ongoing
monitoring occurs to help ensure such reporting. According to Coast
Guard intelligence assessments, thorough reporting of absconder and
deserter events is essential for asymmetric migration analysis and is
a core input to the Coast Guard's vessel-targeting and threat-ranking
programs. Thus, studying the absconder and deserter reporting and
tracking methods of its components to examine their accuracy and
thoroughness, including why data reported by ICC for absconders and
deserters would vary from that reported by the two regional
intelligence fusion centers, the Coast Guard could be better
positioned to analyze asymmetric migration trends and implement vessel
targeting and threat ranking programs.
CBP and Coast Guard Absconder and Deserter Records Differ:
CBP and Coast Guard absconder and deserter records also varied
considerably between the two agencies--both at the national and local
seaport levels--with Coast Guard reporting far higher total absconder
and deserter incidents than CBP for fiscal years 2005 through 2009.
For example, nationwide, Coast Guard ICC reported 73 percent more
absconder incidents and almost double the number of deserter incidents
than CBP headquarters for this period. Moreover, in only one of these
5 years did CBP and Coast Guard report the same number of either
absconder or deserter incidents. Figure 8 details Coast Guard and CBP
headquarters absconder and deserter reporting for fiscal years 2005
through 2009.
Figure 8: Comparison of Coast Guard Headquarters and CBP Headquarters
Reports of Absconder and Deserter Incidents, Fiscal Years 2005 through
2009:
[Refer to PDF for image: stacked vertical bar graph]
Fiscal year: 2005;
Coast Guard deserters: 140;
Coast Guard absconders: 56;
CBP deserters: 36;
CBP absconders: 12.
Fiscal year: 2006;
Coast Guard deserters: 113;
Coast Guard absconders: 43;
CBP deserters: 40;
CBP absconders: 5.
Fiscal year: 2007;
Coast Guard deserters: 99;
Coast Guard absconders: 26;
CBP deserters: 64;
CBP absconders: 26.
Fiscal year: 2008;
Coast Guard deserters: 81;
Coast Guard absconders: 14;
CBP deserters: 53;
CBP absconders: 25.
Fiscal year: 2009;
Coast Guard deserters: 39;
Coast Guard absconders: 8;
CBP deserters: 47;
CBP absconders: 17.
Source: GAO analysis of Coast Guard ICC and CBP data.
[End of figure]
Disparities also exist between absconder and deserter data reported by
the CBP and Coast Guard field units at seaports we contacted. For
example, CBP and Coast Guard field units at the eight seaports we
visited provided absconder and deserter data for those incidents that
had occurred at their seaport areas of responsibility between fiscal
years 2005 through 2009. Overall, Coast Guard and CBP field data of
total absconder and deserter events varied at six of seven seaports
that provided comparable data.[Footnote 44] For example, at one
seaport, Coast Guard reported double the number of absconders, but
only about half as many deserters as did CBP. See appendix V for port
specific breakout of data.
Both CBP and Coast Guard headquarters reported that they did not know
why the two agencies' records of absconder and deserter events
differed. The agencies reported that one factor may be that they have
different missions and purposes for using the data--with CBP reporting
and tracking the information as part of its immigration and law
enforcement mission, and Coast Guard doing so largely for intelligence
reasons. For example, as a result of their differing missions, Coast
Guard's ICC indicated it did not share its information with CBP. Also,
a Coast Guard intelligence official reported that while Coast Guard's
reports of absconders and deserters are largely based on information
Coast Guard Sectors receive in the field, other sources are used as
well.[Footnote 45] However, both agencies' definition of absconders
and deserters is similar, and guidance is in place for CBP field units
to report the information to Coast Guard Sectors at seaports.
Developing a systematic process for the two agencies' headquarters to
share and reconcile their data could help resolve inconsistencies in
the difference between the Coast Guard and CBP data.
While CBP and Coast Guard have each identified reporting and tracking
absconder and deserter incidents as important for strategic and
tactical reasons, the two agencies have no systematic process for
sharing their absconder and deserter data to ensure they each are
reporting an accurate and reliable representation of actual events. As
a result, although DHS has identified illegal entry into the United
States as a great concern, it is unclear how reliable the department's
records of such events are for determining the extent of the activity
and informing its strategic and tactical planning for addressing it.
According to an official with the Coast Guard's ICC, the lack of
coordination on this data within DHS is a data accuracy issue. He
further noted that there is precedent for Coast Guard and other DHS
agencies to coordinate in tracking data that may provide both law
enforcement and intelligence value--which may benefit both agencies in
their absconder and deserter reporting. For example, Coast Guard
participates in an existing interagency forum for coordinating data
related to narcotics seizures made in the maritime domain. As part of
the Consolidated Counterdrug Database program (CCDB), Coast Guard
officials meet on a quarterly basis with ICE and Drug Enforcement
Administration officials to compare and discuss drug trafficking event
records.[Footnote 46] The purpose of this forum is to review, de-
conflict, and validate drug interdiction records to ensure that DHS
has accurate data.
CBP and Coast Guard have each faced some challenges with respect to
reporting or tracking absconder and deserter events. While the two
agencies have varied missions and collection methods for tracking and
reporting the data, obtaining an understanding of these differences
and the challenges faced would better support DHS's efforts to address
them. Moreover, sharing intelligence information among DHS components
is one of DHS' highest priorities, and although DHS is comprised of
multiple components, it is nevertheless a single unified entity. Since
2007, DHS policy to improve information sharing among DHS components
has called for all relevant information generated and received by
individual entities within DHS to be accessible to and shared between
and among all other DHS components.[Footnote 47] Establishing a
systematic interagency process for sharing and reconciling information
on absconder and deserter incidents consistent with internal control
standards could better support each agency's efforts to prevent
illegal immigration at U.S. seaports and enhance homeland security.
Civil Monetary Penalties for Seafarer Incidents Have Not Been Adjusted
as Required by Law:
The INA requires all aliens, including foreign seafarers, seeking
admission to the United States to be inspected by immigration officers
[Footnote 48] and prohibits the landing of foreign seafarers, with
certain exceptions, without a conditional landing permit.[Footnote 49]
It also places a responsibility on vessel owners and agents, upon
arrival to the United States, to provide immigration officers with a
list of aliens employed on a vessel and detain foreign seafarers until
they are inspected by an immigration officer, among other things.
[Footnote 50] CBP has responsibility for identifying and reporting
violations of these provisions and imposing civil monetary penalties
to those vessel owners or agents that it determines violated the
provisions. These penalties are intended to serve as a deterrent to
future violations. The following table identifies CBP enforcement
authority and associated civil monetary penalties.
Table 4: Select Fineable Sections of the INA Related to Seafarers:
Title 8 Penalty:
8 U.S.C. § 1281: owner, agent, consignee, master, or commanding
officer of each vessel must make an immediate written report to an
immigration officer--as soon as discovered--of all cases in which an
alien crewman has landed illegally in the United States from the
vessel. The penalty is $220 for each alien they fail to report.
Title 8 Penalty:
8 U.S.C. § 1284: owner, agent, consignee, charterer, master, or
commanding officer must detain any alien crewmember on board the
vessel that has not been inspected by an immigration officer or has
not been permitted to land in the United States and to remove any
alien crewmember if required to do so by an immigration officer. The
penalty is $3,300 for each alien crewman in respect to whom failure
occurs.
Title 8 Penalty:
8 U.S.C. § 1287: prohibits any person from knowingly bringing into the
United States as one of the crew of a vessel any alien with the intent
to permit or assist such alien in illegally entering or landing in the
United States and from falsely and knowingly representing to a
consular officer or immigration officer that such alien is a bona fide
member of the crew employed in any capacity regularly required for
normal operation aboard the vessel. The penalty is $11,000 for each
alien crewman in respect to whom failure occurs.
Source: Immigration and Nationality Act.
[End of table]
CBP has not met legal requirements for adjusting these civil penalties
for inflation. In 1996, Congress amended the Federal Civil Penalties
Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990 to require agencies to issue
regulations at least every 4 years adjusting their covered penalties
for inflation.[Footnote 51] The statute (hereinafter referred to as
the "Inflation Adjustment Act") required agencies with covered
penalties to publish initial penalty adjustments in the Federal
Register in 1996, and to adjust their penalties for inflation at least
once every 4 years thereafter. However, our review of the Federal
Register for the years 1996 to 2010 found that civil monetary
penalties for the above violations had not been adjusted for inflation
since calendar year 1999. For fiscal years 2005 through 2009, CBP
reported assessing civil monetary penalties in 320 cases involving a
total of 508 individual seafarers. CBP reported assessing and
collecting approximately $883,000 and about $435,000 respectively, in
2010 dollars.[Footnote 52] However, if the penalties had been adjusted
for inflation at least every 4 years as required under the Inflation
Adjustment Act, these amounts would have been $973,000 and $470,000
respectively.[Footnote 53]
CBP and the Department of Justice (DOJ) share responsibility for
issuing regulations pertaining to these civil penalties.[Footnote 54]
Officials from both agencies acknowledged that they had not met
requirements for adjusting the above civil penalties under the
Inflation Adjustment Act--with CBP reporting that it was because doing
so had not been a priority since DHS was established, in 2003. As a
result, the agencies did not take steps to meet requirements of the
Inflation Adjustment Act. DOJ officials reported that while the two
departments share responsibilities in issuing regulations for these
penalties, DHS was responsible for drafting and initiating development
of the regulation, as DHS is responsible for enforcing the law and
imposing the civil penalties. Officials from CBP's Fines Office
reported first contacting DOJ in fall 2009 to discuss development of a
regulation to adjust the penalties for inflation. However, neither DHS
nor DOJ was able to provide a plan with timeframes for issuing the
regulation, as recommended by project management best practices.
[Footnote 55]
Because CBP has not raised its penalties in over a decade, it has not
exercised the full scope of its enforcement authority with respect to
civil monetary penalties. Developing a plan with timelines for issuing
regulation could better position CBP in assessing its progress to
increase fines in accordance with the law and in ultimately meeting
the intent of the law. Additionally, providing this plan to DHS
leadership and Congress will provide it with key information to help
ensure CBP fulfills these regulatory requirements.
ILO 185 Implementation Is Limited; the United States Has Not Ratified
Convention Due to Visa Requirement Concern:
As of January 2011, ILO 185 Is Not Widely Ratified or Implemented, and
Key ILO Mechanisms to Promote Compliance Are Not in Place:
International implementation of ILO 185[Footnote 56] has been limited
to date--since its adoption in 2003 18 countries representing
approximately 30 percent of the global seafarer supply have ratified
it, and of that number, only 4 have been confirmed to issue ILO 185
seafarers' identity documents (SIDs), according to a senior ILO
official and an ILO meeting document. Table 5 lists the ratifying
nations and dates of ratification, and indicates nations with
confirmed ILO 185 issuance.[Footnote 57] In addition, other countries
are developing ILO 185 issuance capabilities or issuing the
credentials on a small scale. These countries include Canada, France,
Malaysia, Nigeria, and the Republic of Korea, according to the ILO.
Table 5: ILO 185 Ratifying Nations and ILO 185 SID Issuing Nations:
Date of ILO 185 ratification: April 2004;
Country: France;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Empty].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: August 2004;
Country: Jordan;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Empty].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: August 2004;
Country: Nigeria;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Empty].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: March 2005;
Country: Hungary;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Empty].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: July 2006;
Country: Azerbaijan;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Check].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: July 2006;
Country: Vanuatu;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Empty].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: August 2006;
Country: Republic of Moldova;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Empty].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: December 2006;
Country: Bahamas;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Empty].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: December 2006;
Country: Pakistan;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Check]].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: April 2007;
Country: Republic of Korea;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Empty].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: June 2007;
Country: Madagascar;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Empty].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: October 2007;
Country: Albania;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Empty].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: July 2008;
Country: Indonesia;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Check].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: October 2008;
Country: Yemen;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Empty].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: January 2010;
Country: Bosnia and Herzegovina;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Empty].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: January 2010;
Country: Brazil;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Empty].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: February 2010;
Country: Russian Federation;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Check].
Date of ILO 185 ratification: May 2010;
Country: Kazakhstan;
Confirmed Issuance of ILO 185 SID: [Empty].
Source: GAO analysis of ILO and country data.
[End of table]
To help ensure that the minimum requirements of the Convention are met
by ratifying nations, ILO 185 established a review mechanism and
mandates regular independent audits of countries' issuance
processes.[Footnote 58] Nations that satisfactorily complete the
review will be placed on an ILO "List" of compliant countries that
meet the minimum requirements for their SID issuance processes;
nations that do not pass the review risk their credentials' not being
recognized by other nations. However, even though 18 countries have
ratified the Convention--some as long ago as 6 years--no nations' SID
system or credentials have been independently evaluated as prescribed
in the Convention, and no "List" has been created. Figure 11 in
appendix VI illustrates the review process ILO established, but has
not yet implemented, to promote compliance.
In addition to the "List" process that is specific to ILO 185, the ILO
Constitution sets reporting requirements for the implementation of all
ILO conventions. For example, countries must demonstrate progress to
the ILO in implementing conventions within set time periods after
ratification, with the first reports usually submitted within 2 years
of ratification. However, in the case of ILO 185, these implementation
reporting deadlines were extended. The ILO received the first reports
on ILO 185 implementation from some, but not all, countries that were
requested to make submissions in 2010. According to a senior ILO
official and ILO documents, a major reason for the delay in
establishing the "List" process and the extension of regular ILO
implementation reporting deadlines was to give the United States and
other critical port nations more time to consider ratification. The
ILO official noted that some of the ratifying countries were hesitant
to invest in developing or deploying new SID systems if the
credentials would not facilitate shore leave and transit in the United
States. The ILO also wanted U.S. officials to be included in the
review panels to create the first "List," but the panels are only open
to ratifying members.
According to a senior ILO official and ILO documents, the "List"
mechanism was created to strengthen international assurances that
credentials will be issued in accordance with the Convention and is
expected to be implemented starting in 2011. In the meantime, however,
SIDs are being issued that have not undergone the full independent
evaluation and vetting process stipulated in the Convention. For
example, according to the ILO, one ratifying nation issued about 4,000
SIDs that were later found to be non-compliant with the Convention.
These documents were recalled and reissued, but the newly issued SIDs
were not independently evaluated and thus lack assurances that minimum
requirements were met.
U.S. Voted to Adopt ILO 185, but Did Not Ratify Due to Visa Provisions:
As of January 2011, the United States had not ratified ILO 185 largely
due to concerns over a provision for facilitating visa-free shore
leave for foreign seafarers arriving in U.S. seaports with ILO 185
credentials. After 9/11, maritime security concerns in general took on
greater urgency, and the United States submitted a set of proposals to
the International Maritime Organization (IMO) to address specific
vulnerabilities, including those related to seafarers' identity
documents. Among other things, the United States called for more
uniform standards, including document security and biometrics, and a
means by which member states could easily verify the validity of
documents presented at ports of entry on a 24-hour basis. One such
means of verification suggested by the United States was an electronic
database capable of linking biometric information and data elements
such as seafarer name, card number, and issuing authority to specific
credentials and individuals.
Responsibility for addressing these post 9/11 security concerns
related to seafarer credentials shifted from the IMO to the ILO
because of the labor organization's long-standing administration of an
earlier instrument on seafarer credentials, Convention 108.[Footnote
59] In 2002, the ILO invoked a "fast-track" mechanism[Footnote 60] to
revise ILO 108, and the resulting convention--ILO 185--was adopted
almost unanimously by ILO members in 2003. Unlike the earlier
convention, ILO 185 requires countries to adopt certain credential
features and issuance processes, incorporates fingerprint biometrics
connected to national databases for verification purposes, and
establishes a review mechanism to monitor countries' implementation.
The U.S. tripartite delegation of government, industry, and labor
officials was among those that voted to adopt ILO 185 in 2003, and had
been active in the drafting of the Convention, according to ILO and
U.S. officials.[Footnote 61] However, because the Convention retained
provisions that called for visa-free shore leave and other transit
privileges for holders of ILO 185 SIDs, the United States has not
ratified the Convention.[Footnote 62] The U.S. government considers
the State Department's visa adjudication process to be an important
layer of border security to prevent terrorists, illegal immigrants,
and criminals from gaining entry. In a statement issued at the time
the Convention was adopted, the U.S. delegation affirmed its support
for the intent of the Convention, but said that ILO 185 SIDs would not
be accepted in lieu of visas for shore leave or transit--instead,
according to the statement, the United States would consider steps to
facilitate the visa application process for seafarers.
Former and current officials from DOT MARAD and the State Department
involved with the drafting and negotiation of the Convention told us
that the U.S. government had opposed the language that provides for
visa-free shore leave. Although the provision was ultimately kept,
additional language allowed for member countries that could not meet
the requirements for visa-free admission to instead provide
arrangements that were "substantially equivalent." According to ILO
and U.S. officials this softening of the article was intended to give
the United States and other member nations a potential avenue to
ratify the Convention without eliminating its visa requirements. The
Convention itself does not define what mechanisms may qualify as
"substantially equivalent" to visa-free shore leave. However, in 2008
the ILO provided a "discussion paper" to U.S. agencies that outlined
ways to potentially satisfy the Convention and also allow the U.S. to
issue visas to seafarers.[Footnote 63] As of December 2010, the United
States had not yet fully considered these or other potential means to
meet the "substantial equivalence" clause, according to officials we
spoke with from two agencies.
U.S. Controls the Visa Process:
Even if the Convention oversight mechanisms, such as the "List"
process are implemented, some officials from the U.S. agencies we
spoke with believed that foregoing the U.S.-controlled visa process
based on the possession of a SID alone would expose the United States
to potential deficiencies of other nations' processes. Figure 9 below
compares elements of the current U.S. screening process to a notional
scenario in which an ILO 185 SID could be used in lieu of a visa for
shore leave. Note, however, that other scenarios are possible under
the Convention, including retaining the visa requirement, but these
alternatives have not yet been developed.
Figure 9: U.S. Screening and Admissibility Determinations of Foreign
Seafarers: Current and Notional Processes:
[Refer to PDF for image: table]
Current U.S. practice: State Department;
Document Issuance:
* Consular interview overseas;
* Collect biometric data: photograph and 10 fingerprints;
* Check databases for security, criminal, and immigration history with
input from other agencies as necessary;
* Issue machine-readable U.S. visa, which is typically valid for up to
5 years.
Current U.S. practice: Department of Homeland Security;
Advance screening (96 hours to 24 hours before vessel arrival in U.S.
seaport):
* CBP and Coast Guard receive crew manifest and conduct database
checks of crew, including validity of visas;
* CBP and Coast Guard intelligence and field units coordinate with
each other to discuss results of advance screening and need for
planning operational activities to address potential risks;
In-person inspection (upon vessel arrival in U.S. seaport):
* CBP inspects all arriving crew: Interview crew and inspect passport,
visa, and supporting documents to determine admissibility; in some
cases, documents may be verified electronically;
* Crew without valid visas or those with visas whom CBP has deemed a
risk are ordered detained on board.
Notional ILO 185 visa-free shore leave: National Governments/Competent
Authorities;
Document Issuance:
* SID issuance based on certain minimum convention requirements, but
processes ultimately carried out in accordance with national law and
practice; security database checks are recommended but not required by
convention;
* Collect biometric data: photograph and 2 fingerprints;
* Issue machine readable SID, which is potentially valid for 10 years.
Notional ILO 185 visa-free shore leave: Department of Homeland
Security;
Advance screening (96 hours to 24 hours before vessel arrival in U.S.
seaport):
* CBP and Coast Guard receive crew manifest and conduct database
checks of crew;
* Verify that SID is valid by contacting issuing government‘s 24/7
focal point;
* CBP and Coast Guard intelligence and field units coordinate with
each other to discuss results of advance screening and need for
planning operational activities to address potential risks.
In-person inspection (upon vessel arrival in U.S. seaport):
* CBP inspects all arriving crew: Interview crew and inspect passport,
SID, and supporting documents to determine admissibility; in some
cases, documents may be verified electronically; with appropriate
technology, check card-holders fingerprints against those stored on
SID;
* Crew without valid SIDs or those with SIDs whom CBP has deemed a
risk are ordered detained on board.
Source: GAO analysis of DHS, State Department, and ILO information.
[End of figure]
Although the Convention establishes numerous requirements for SID
issuance procedures, countries retain discretion over their processes.
The Convention requires that issuing authorities verify a SID
applicant's identity, nationality or permanent residence, and
occupation as a seafarer. Issuing authorities must also verify "that
the applicant does not constitute a risk to security." Although the
Convention recommends some best practices to achieve these results,
such as vetting applicants against security-related databases, the
specifics of the security vetting process are ultimately determined by
the issuing state. Furthermore, as of January 2011, the ILO has not
finalized arrangements for how and to what extent information in the
national seafarer databases will be accessed. As part of the current
visa adjudication process, the State Department collects applicants'
biometric data and checks it against databases for potential
derogatory information. Even though similar biometric data would be
collected under the ILO 185 SID issuance process, it is not clear that
U.S. agencies could access the data for a similar database check, due
to different privacy protection laws in different countries, according
to ILO documents.
U.S. Agency Components' Positions on ILO 185 Vary; Interagency
Discussions Have Been Renewed:
U.S. Agency Components' Positions on ILO 185 Vary:
Federal agencies involved had varied viewpoints on the implications of
ILO 185. Several agencies and agency components, including the DHS
Office of Policy, CBP, Coast Guard, and ICE within DHS; the State
Department; Labor; and DOT MARAD are involved to differing degrees
with ILO 185 policy issues. Officials representing seven agencies we
spoke with cited both benefits and drawbacks of the Convention, with
all agencies reporting that the visa-free shore leave provision had
been the most significant barrier to potential U.S. ratification.
Agency positions are summarized in table 6 below:
Table 6: U.S. Government Stakeholder Positions on ILO 185:
U.S. agency or component: DHS Office of Policy;
ILO 185 cited benefits:
* Use of biometrics and electronic verification could result in more
secure, reliable seafarer identification;
ILO 185 cited deficiencies/barriers to U.S. ratification:
* Visa-waiver requirement for shore leave;
* United States has no insight/control over application, issuance, and
production processes of foreign governments or their agents.
U.S. agency or component: DHS CBP;
ILO 185 cited benefits:
* Even though CBP does not recognize the ILO 185 SID for admissibility
purposes, it could serve as supporting documentation in establishing a
seafarer's identity or bona fides;
ILO 185 cited deficiencies/barriers to U.S. ratification:
* SIDs, like other credentials, can be counterfeited or fraudulently
obtained;
* Ratification of ILO 185 would remove screening benefits of the visa
process;
* Responsibility for SID issuance is placed on national governments,
which can vary in standard practices;
* Does not permit shore leave to be denied for all the reasons allowed
by current U.S. statutes.
U.S. agency or component: DHS Coast Guard;
ILO 185 cited benefits:
* Provides more uniform standards for credential and issuance process;
* Interoperable biometric system can assist verification;
* More oversight by ILO of SID production can result in greater
assurances of compliance;
* Provides identification of relevant points of contacts in member
countries for prompt query response;
ILO 185 cited deficiencies/barriers to U.S. ratification:
* Visa-waiver requirement for shore leave;
* Does not include specific requirements for screening process
equivalent to that of U.S. visa.
U.S. agency or component: DHS ICE;
ILO 185 cited benefits:
* Potential for improved ILO 185 SID security features to facilitate
positive identification of seafarers;
ILO 185 cited deficiencies/barriers to U.S. ratification:
* Visa-waiver requirement for shore leave;
* Potential variation in foreign governments' SID issuance practices
and maintenance of SID databases.
U.S. agency or component: State Department;
ILO 185 cited benefits:
* May provide additional support/evidence that individuals entering
United States are bona fide seafarers with lower risk of illegal
immigration;
ILO 185 cited deficiencies/barriers to U.S. ratification:
* Visa-waiver requirement for shore leave.
U.S. agency or component: Labor;
ILO 185 cited benefits:
* Adequate access to shore leave is a seafarer safety issue;
ILO 185 cited deficiencies/barriers to U.S. ratification:
* Visa-waiver requirement for shore leave.
U.S. agency or component: DOT MARAD;
ILO 185 cited benefits:
* Could facilitate better access to shore leave and other facilities
for U.S. mariners abroad;
ILO 185 cited deficiencies/barriers to U.S. ratification:
* Visa-waiver requirement for shore leave.
Source: GAO analysis of agency documents and statements by agency
officials.
[End of table]
Differences in agency positions reflect to some extent their differing
missions. For example, in discussing ILO 185, Labor officials cited
shore leave as an important worker right critical to safety while DHS
Office of Policy representatives cited the potential security benefits
of using biometric data to verify identity. DOT MARAD officials, who
serve the U.S. merchant marine population, said that how the United
States grants shore leave to foreign seafarers could impact how U.S
seafarers are granted shore leave abroad. Even within the same agency,
however, component perspectives on ILO 185 varied. For example, while
acknowledging the difficulties associated with the visa-free shore
leave provision, the Coast Guard, a component of DHS, expressed
support for ILO 185. In April 2009, the Coast Guard issued a
regulation that recognized ILO 185 seafarer documents as one of six
acceptable forms of identification for persons arriving in U.S. waters
from foreign ports.[Footnote 64] On the other hand, CBP, also a
component of DHS, reported that although the ILO 185 seafarer document
may provide identity information, it did not meet its requirements as
a travel or admissibility document, and was therefore not accepted for
those CBP purposes. CBP officials we interviewed at seaport field
offices and in headquarters also questioned some of the Convention's
security benefits--including those cited by Coast Guard officials.
Finally, a CBP document noted that the Convention does not provide for
U.S. oversight or periodic review of foreign SID issuance practices.
The law enforcement interests of the United States are not served, the
document maintains, without assurance that the guidelines in the
Convention are adhered to.
Renewed Interagency Discussions on ILO 185:
Officials from relevant U.S. agencies, joined sometimes by ILO and
other stakeholder representatives, met at least six times from 2005
through 2009 to discuss the Convention and related U.S. policy
implications and options. However, according to officials who
represented at least three agencies at these meetings, the discussions
did not lead to any completed analysis or review of the Convention,
and in particular, no definitive resolution was reached as to whether
the United States should pursue "substantially equivalent" options or
if the Convention cannot be ratified. Officials from four of the
participating U.S. agencies said these meetings did not yield more
results because it was difficult to achieve consistent participation
and effort by all relevant agencies, given other demands and limited
resources. For example, officials from the DHS Office of Policy
acknowledged that ILO 185 fell under their purview at the departmental
level, but that the Convention has not been a priority for their
office, and that interagency involvement from the DHS departmental
level has been limited to date.[Footnote 65] In addition, the change
in administration along with legal delays in reestablishing a cabinet
level committee on ILO issues (see below) has also postponed
interagency actions on ILO 185, according to Labor officials.
On May 4, 2010, the Secretary of Labor convened the President's
Committee on the International Labor Organization (PC/ILO) for the
first time since 2000.[Footnote 66] Appendix VII shows the current
members of the PC/ILO and its Tripartite Advisory Panel on
International Labor Standards (TAPILS), as well as the mechanism by
which the committee transmits recommendations to the president about
ratification of ILO conventions.[Footnote 67] At its May 2010 meeting,
the PC/ILO members adopted a series of conclusions that were forwarded
to the President. One of these conclusions urged the TAPILS, in
conjunction with other relevant agencies, to expedite its review of
ILO 185 and where necessary find ways to resolve concerns about U.S.
compliance. DHS is not represented at the cabinet level of this
committee; however, officials from DHS, Coast Guard, CBP, and other
relevant agencies were invited to participate as members of the TAPILS
for the purpose of reviewing ILO 185.
Although earlier interagency discussions were convened by the agencies
themselves, the formation of the PC/ILO represents a more structured
undertaking to review ILO 185 and other ILO conventions for their
congruence with U.S. laws. As of December 2010, the TAPILS had
established a procedure to review ILO 185 provisions that included
creating a working group to develop potential approaches to the legal
issues stemming from Article 6 of the Convention. However, according
to one senior Labor official involved with the working group, there is
no established time frame for the group to complete its review or for
the larger committee to make a recommendation to the President. The
previous 7 TAPILS' law and practice reviews typically took 2 to 3
years to complete.
Industry and Labor Organizations Support ILO 185:
In addition to U.S. government stakeholders, we spoke with
representatives from seven industry and labor organizations, including
the International Shipping Federation (ISF) and the International
Transport Workers' Federation (ITF)--two organizations that represent
industry and labor in the ILO--about their perspectives on ILO 185 and
other seafarer issues. All of the groups generally supported the
Convention, primarily because of its visa-free shore leave provision,
which they view as an important seafarer right and also a safety and
efficiency issue. For example, due to the nature of the shipping
industry, seafarers can spend extended time periods aboard their
vessels. Without adequate time away from the vessel in the form of
shore leave, mental and physical exhaustion can adversely affect
seafarers' welfare and lead to more accidents, according to labor and
industry representatives. Representatives from five groups also
pointed out that seafarers do not always know in advance if their
vessels may call on U.S. ports and therefore may not possess U.S.
visas for shore leave. Furthermore, representatives from the industry
and labor organizations involved with drafting the Convention believed
that ILO 185 has potential to improve maritime security if more widely
implemented, particularly through its use of biometric identification
and national seafarer databases. However, some organizations cited the
cost of developing SID systems as a significant obstacle to
ratification for some countries, particularly if the United States
does not recognize the ILO 185 SIDs for shore leave.
Key Seafarer Suppliers Support Convention:
Officials from the four foreign governments we contacted--which
collectively account for almost 30 percent of the supply of seafarers
transiting to U.S. ports--reported that they support the Convention in
general. Of these four foreign governments, two have ratified the
Convention and two have not, although all issue specialized
credentials to their seafarers. The two non-ratifying countries
reported that they are considering ratification pending legal reviews.
All four countries cited greater facilitation of shore leave for
seafarers as a benefit of the Convention. This allowance, according to
the countries, is an important safety consideration and can also
increase worker productivity. Officials from these countries also
cited the increased security features of cards, more robust background
checks of SID applicants, and potential access to seafarer databases
as benefits of the Convention.
The increased cost of new SID systems is especially important given
the relatively low number of countries that have ratified the
Convention to date. For example, one country that ratified the
Convention reported to us that it had not yet begun to issue the more
secure SIDs because the positions on ILO 185 in a number of important
countries are still unknown. If holding an ILO 185 SID does not afford
seafarers any greater benefit than an older credential, particularly
while in significant port countries like the United States, there is a
disincentive for countries to spend funds upgrading their systems,
according to officials from this country. Although we did not evaluate
the quality of individual security features, the three countries we
contacted that had developed ILO 185 SIDs all reported additional
features compared with prior credentials.
Conclusions:
Given the number of seafarers transiting U.S. ports each year and the
continued threats posed by terrorism to the United States, it is
important that seafarer risks are identified and actions are taken to
ensure security of vessels and port infrastructure, while preventing
illegal immigration. DHS guidance recommends components use both
physical and electronic methods for immigration inspections, but
technology limitations have reportedly been the primary challenge to
implementing this guidance on board cargo vessels. CBP has reported
that electronic verification of immigration status or travel documents
is an important objective. While this capability is unlikely to be
available for several years, opportunities exist for CBP action. By
assessing the risks of relying on physical inspection when conducting
seafarer admissibility inspections on board cargo vessels and
identifying options to address these risks and their costs, CBP could
be in a better position to determine its course of action for
addressing these risks until the technology becomes available. In
addition, both CBP and Coast Guard have reported challenges with
respect to their reporting and tracking of the illegal entry events by
seafarers, known as absconders and deserters, and based on our overall
assessment, we found their data to be of undetermined reliability.
Moreover, Coast Guard and CBP records of these incidents vary
considerably, and consequently, DHS has no accurate and reliable
estimate to gauge the extent of the incidents. For each agency, (1)
conducting a study of reporting methods and challenges faced,
including why their records vary so considerably--within and among the
agencies--and (2) moving forward, establishing a process for the two
agencies to regularly share and reconcile these records could better
position DHS in developing a stronger maritime security strategy.
Finally, CBP has not increased its civil monetary penalties for
seafarer-related immigration violations, as required by law, in over a
decade. Civil monetary penalties are an important element of
regulatory enforcement and can lose their ability to deter if
unadjusted for inflation. While CBP and DOJ reported taking steps to
meet requirements for inflation adjustment, the agencies have not
developed a plan including timelines for issuing required regulation.
Providing a plan with timelines for when this regulation will be
issued could provide DHS leadership and Congress with key information
and help ensure CBP fulfills regulatory requirements.
Recommendations for Executive Action:
To facilitate better agency understanding of the potential need and
feasibility of expanding electronic verification of seafarers, to
improve data collection and sharing, and to comply with the Inflation
Adjustment Act, we are making four recommendations.
We recommend that the Secretary of Homeland Security:
* direct the Commissioner of CBP to assess the national-security and
other risks faced by CBP in the absence of technology to provide
electronic verification as part of CBP's admissibility inspections for
cargo vessel seafarers and identify options for addressing these risks
and their costs;
* direct the Commandant of the Coast Guard and Commissioner of CBP to:
- determine the reasons that absconder and deserter data varies
between headquarters and field units, and between the Coast Guard and
CBP and determine any actions necessary to address any variance; and:
- jointly establish an interagency process for sharing and reconciling
records of absconder and deserter incidents occurring at U.S. seaports.
We further recommend that the Secretary of Homeland Security and the
Attorney General of the United States develop a plan with timelines
for issuing regulations, as required by the Inflation Adjustment Act,
to adjust civil monetary penalties associated with violations of the
Immigration and Nationality Act involving foreign seafarers gaining
illegal entry into the United States and provide this plan to Congress.
Agency Comments and Our Evaluation:
We provided a draft of this report to the departments of State, Labor,
Transportation, Justice, and Homeland Security for their review and
comment. The State Department provided technical comments. Labor, in
an e-mail we received on December 15, 2010, also provided technical
comments as well as a general comment regarding the ILO 185
Convention. The Transportation Department did not provide comments on
the draft. DOJ did not provide official written comments on our
report. However, in an e-mail received December 9, 2010, the DOJ
liaison stated that DOJ concurred with the one recommendation we made
to DOJ in the report. DHS, in written comments received December 17,
2010, concurred with all four of the recommendations in the report
directed to DHS, and identified actions taken, planned, or under way
to implement the recommendations. Written comments are summarized
below and reproduced in appendix VIII. DHS also provided technical
comments that we incorporated as appropriate.
Regarding our recommendation to assess the national-security and other
risks faced by CBP in the absence of technology to provide electronic
verification as part of its admissibility inspections for cargo vessel
seafarers and to identify options for addressing these risks and their
costs, DHS concurred. DHS stated that CBP will work in conjunction
with the DHS Screening Coordination Office to determine parameters to
measure and assess risks associated with the absence of technology for
onboard vessel inspection of seafarers.
Regarding our recommendation to (1) determine the reasons that
absconder and deserter data varies between headquarters and field
units, and between the Coast Guard and CBP and determine any actions
necessary to address them and (2) jointly establish an interagency
process for sharing and reconciling records of absconder and deserter
incidents occurring at U.S. seaports, DHS concurred. DHS stated that
CBP and the Coast Guard would begin to asses the appropriate offices
within each component involved in the review and to establish a
working group to evaluate the current reporting process within each
component, and between CBP and Coast Guard. Further, in its technical
comments, DHS noted that it was working to co-locate the Coast Guard's
ICC Coastwatch and CBP's National Targeting Center-Passenger and that
this would help to eliminate many of the absconder-and deserter-
reporting inconsistencies GAO identified between Coast Guard and CBP.
Regarding our recommendation that the Secretary of Homeland Security
and the Attorney General of the United States develop a plan with
timelines for issuing regulations, as required by the Inflation
Adjustment Act, to adjust civil monetary penalties associated with
violations of the Immigration and Nationality Act involving foreign
seafarers gaining illegal entry into the United States and provide
this plan to Congress, both DHS and DOJ concurred. DHS stated that it
was currently working together with DOJ to develop the regulations and
hoped to issue final regulations in 2011. DOJ stated that it would
report to Congress after GAO issued this report. However, it remains
important that the two departments develop a plan with timelines for
completing these actions and provide this information to Congress.
Finally, while we made no recommendations regarding the status of the
ILO 185 Seafarers' Identity Document Convention, DHS and Labor both
provided comments related to potential incongruence between the
Convention and existing U.S. law. DHS noted that CBP would object to
ratification of the ILO 185 Convention because of limitations of
existing laws for CBP enforcement. Also, in oral and technical
comments provided, Labor's Director of the Office of International
Relations within the Bureau of International Labor Affairs suggested
we note the May 2010 recommendation of the PC/ILO that urged TAPILS
and all relevant U.S. agencies to expedite its review of ILO 185 to
find ways to resolve concerns about U.S. compliance.
We are providing copies of this report to appropriate congressional
committees, to the Secretaries of State, Labor, Transportation, and
Homeland Security, to the Attorney General, and to other interested
parties. This report will also be available at no charge on the GAO
Web site at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov].
If you or your staff has any questions concerning this report, please
contact me at (202) 512-7036 or by e-mail at jeszeckc@gao.gov. Contact
points for our Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs
may be found on the last page of this report. Key contributors to this
report are listed in appendix IX.
Sincerely yours,
Signed by:
Charles A. Jeszeck:
Acting Director:
Homeland Security & Justice Issues:
[End of section]
Appendix I: Key International and National Requirements and Guidance
Applicable to Seafarer Security:
Table 7 below lists select international and national laws,
conventions or guidance that govern various aspects of seafarer
security.
Table 7: Key Laws, Conventions, or Guidance Applicable to Seafarer
Security:
International conventions:
Law, convention, or guidance:
* International Maritime Organization's (IMO) International Ship and
Port Facility Security (ISPS) Code, as implemented through Chapter XI-
2 of the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea;
* IMO's Convention on Facilitation of International Maritime Traffic
(FAL);
Key relevant provisions:
* Sets out many of the international standards for vessel and port
facility security;
* Establishes standards and recommended practices for formalities
including documentary requirements and procedures that should be
applied to a ship;
* 's crew on arrival, stay, and departure.
Federal law:
Law, convention, or guidance:
* Immigration and Nationality Act (1952);
* Maritime Transportation Security Act of 2002 (MTSA);
* Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004;
Key relevant provisions:
* Governs the examination and possible admission of all persons
seeking to enter the United States. Also includes provisions specific
to alien crewmen;
* Establishes a maritime security framework including many of the U.S.
vessel and port facility security requirements and standards;
* Requires information about passengers and crews on cruise ships to
be compared to watch lists to prevent suspected or known terrorists
and their associates from boarding, or to subject them to additional
security scrutiny; required the State Department to identify the posts
experiencing the greatest frequency of visa fraud and place in those
posts at least one fulltime anti-fraud specialist.
Federal guidance:
Law, convention, or guidance:
* Memorandum of Agreement between the Coast Guard and CBP Regarding
the Detention of Certain High-Risk Crewmembers (2004);
Key relevant provisions:
* Since 2004, Coast Guard and CBP have had in place standard operating
procedures for coordinating efforts to identify high-risk crewmembers
and ensure that effective security measures are put in place to
prevent their illegal entry into the United States.
Source: GAO analysis of international conventions, U.S. statutes and
regulations, and agency guidance.
[End of table]
[End of section]
Appendix II: Key State Department Actions Since 9/11 to Strengthen
Visa Adjudication Process:
Following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the State Department sought to
make its visa adjudication process more robust. Table 8 below
describes some of the efforts initiated by the department in the areas
of information/systems management, training, and collaboration with
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Table 8: Selected State Department Initiatives to Strengthen Visa
Adjudication Process:
Information/Systems Management:
* Consular Affairs has increased the use of internal databases to
track visa fraud cases, identify trends, and better allocate fraud-
prevention resources. The Office of Fraud Prevention Programs (FPP)
reported that, since 2006, it has asked posts to record fraud cases
that they referred to their fraud prevention unit (FPU) in the
Consular Consolidated Database (CCD).[A] In June 2009, Consular
Affairs began piloting an enhanced fraud-tracking mechanism to track
fraud trends across cases and integrate more easily with law
enforcement systems. According to officials, 15 overseas posts are
currently piloting the program, including 3 of the top 20 C1/D and D
issuing posts for fiscal year 2009;
* In 2005, FPP carried out a one-time fraud ranking of posts in
response to a provision in the Intelligence Reform and Terrorist
Prevention Act of 2004 that required the State Department to identify
the posts experiencing the greatest frequency of visa fraud and place
in those posts at least one fulltime anti-fraud specialist. The
ranking identified Manila, the post that issued the most C1/D visas in
fiscal year 2009, as the post with the most fraud;
* In 2007, FPP issued a set of best practices for screening applicants
who apply for C1/D seafarer non-immigrant visas, including ship and
shipping-agency checks when evaluating first-time visa applications
from unknown and small shipping agents, and recommended that each post
integrate the practices into its standard operating procedures. State
Department reported that 14 of the top 20 C1/D and D issuing posts
have done so, and another 4 have implemented these best practices
informally;
* The State Department reported conducting an increased number of
validation studies[B] since gaining increased access to DHS US-VISIT
data in 2009. In 2009, the State Department reported conducting 200
validation studies, compared to 68 in 2008. Since 2009, the State
Department reported overseas posts had conducted 6 validation studies
of C1/D issuance;
* In 2010, the State Department moved applications for most non-
immigrant visas, including C1/D and D visas, online. Officials told us
that the new application form requires C1/D and D applicants to
provide additional information, such as the name of their vessel and
manning agent.
Consular Officer Training:
The State Department has expanded visa fraud prevention course
offerings for consular officers since 9/11. For example, the State
Department enhanced its basic consular course by adding classes in
analytical interviewing and fraud prevention in 2003, and expanding
the anti-fraud components in 2006 and 2008. The State Department added
a new course on advanced name checking in 2002, and developed a
version of the course for use overseas in 2006. In 2006, the State
Department also added new distance learning courses on detecting
fraudulent documents and imposters. The State Department expanded the
number of offerings for its managers' fraud prevention course and
added training at DHS's Forensic Documents Laboratory in 2005. In
2007, the State Department enhanced its advanced consular interviewing
course by including an emotion content analysis component and
increased the length of the course in 2009.
Cooperation with DHS at High Fraud Posts:
ICE and State are working together to increase the security of the
visa process through the Visa Security Program. This program places
ICE agents in posts to provide an extra layer of screening in the visa
adjudication process. As of June 2010, State reported there were 30
ICE agents in 14 overseas posts--including 2 that are among the top 20
C1/D and D issuing posts for fiscal year 2009.
Source: GAO analysis of State Department information.
[A] The CCD contains State's worldwide visa records, detailed
applicant biographic information, and applicant photos. It is also
accessible to other federal agencies, including DHS and FBI.
[B] Validation studies--which assess the use of visas to a sample
group of applicants over a set time period--are meant to confirm that
a post's adjudication practices are effective and check to see if
groups of applicants should undergo closer scrutiny.
[End of table]
[End of section]
Appendix III: DHS Advance-Targeting Process:
CBP and Coast Guard each conduct advance-targeting of passenger and
crew information to identify potential threats.
Within CBP, the National Targeting Center-Passenger (NTC-P) screens
passenger and crew manifests against certain databases, such as
records from the Terrorist Screening Data Base (TSDB)--commonly
referred to as the terrorist watch list--and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation's National Crime Information Center (NCIC) database, to
determine their potential risk to the United States. This screening
process is designed to identify individuals with potential terrorism
links or criminal warrants and those passengers and crew with
potential immigration admissibility problems. NTC-P uses an automated
system--known as the Automated Targeting System-Passenger (ATS-P)--to
screen individuals against various data sources. If NTC-P identifies a
potential match to a TSDB record during its targeting, NTC-P refers
the potential match to the FBI's Terrorist Screening Center (TSC) for
further vetting and confirmation. The TSC will make the final
determination that the individual is a positive or negative match to
the terrorist watchlist record. According to CBP officials, the number
of terrorist-positive matches are extremely small in the maritime
environment compared to those transiting to air and land ports of
entry in large part due to the relatively smaller population of
travelers arriving at seaports.
Also at the national level, Coast Guard's ICC performs central
screening of the Advance Notice of Arrival (ANOA) to identify
potential ties to criminal or terrorist activity. Should the ICC
identify potential ties, it will disseminate the results of its
screening to the Coast Guard at the seaport location where the vessel
will be arriving--which will then be shared with the local CBP field
unit at that location.
At the local seaport level, CBP field units also conduct advance-
targeting of crew and passenger manifest information. CBP Passenger
Analysis Units (PAU) review arrival manifests using the ATS-P to
identify individuals who pose security risks and warrant additional
inspection. The screening process by NTC-P and the PAU identifies
persons of interest prior to the inspection and provides support to
the CBP field officer to determine if a seafarer can be authorized
temporary landing privileges in the United States. PAU officers
interact with both the NTC-P and the local Coast Guard Sector if they
identify seafarers posing potential security concerns. Coast Guard
Sectors rely on the ICC and CBP for information regarding any persons
of interest and guidance on what actions to take based on the nature
of the concern.
CBP NTC-P officials reported that while NTC-P and local PAU's
generally reviewed similar information, they played complementary
roles in identifying potential crewmember risks. For example, NTC-P
has access to more terrorist-screening resources than do most local
PAU's and the NTC-P is staffed with officials from other law
enforcement agencies, such as the FBI. Meanwhile, with local knowledge
of seaport point of entry activity, PAU's conduct further screening
with a focus on seafarer immigration and law enforcement risks.
[End of section]
Appendix IV: CBP and Coast Guard Seafarer-Related Enforcement and
Compliance Boardings and Inspections:
CBP and Coast Guard conduct a variety of seafarer-related enforcement
and compliance boardings and inspections. These include:
Selected CBP Seafarer-Related Vessel Boardings and Inspections:
* Cargo Vessel Immigration Admissibility Boardings: To inspect
seafarers arriving on cargo vessels, CBP officers board the vessel,
order the crew to gather in a common area--typically the galley or
crew lounge--and conduct interviews with each seafarer. Since these
inspections occur on board the vessel in an un-automated environment,
CBP officers have to rely on information vetted before boarding the
vessel and their skill sets to identify fraud, both in documents and
during interviews with seafarers. CBP officials report that if a
concern arises regarding the identity of a crew being inspected on
board a cargo vessel, CBP officers are equipped with radios or cell
phones to call back to the CBP PAU or NTC-P for assistance.
* Enforcement and Compliance Inspections: In addition to CBP's
admissibility boardings, CBP boards commercial vessels to inspect crew
as part of compliance inspections or risk-based security operations.
CBP may conduct vessel boardings to address risks identified during
advance-targeting and ensure vessel operator compliance with
immigration regulations. Such boardings include reviewing security
measures in place by the vessel operator to ensure high-risk seafarers
to not depart the vessel.
Selected Coast Guard Seafarer-Related Boardings and Inspections:
Coast Guard uses the results of its targeting assessments to guide the
type and extent of operations field units may conduct on arriving
commercial vessels. For example, based on intelligence, Coast Guard
may conduct armed security boardings to examine seafarer passports and
visas and ensure the crew list submitted via Advance Notice of Arrival
(ANOA) is accurate. It also conducts inspections of vessel crew as
part of its regulatory responsibility under the Maritime
Transportation Security Act (MTSA), International Ship and Port
Facility (ISPS), and Port State Control requirements of vessel
operators. These include inspections of crew identification and travel
documents, and reviews of crew certification and licensing
documentation. From fiscal years 2006 through 2009, Coast Guard
reported it had conducted approximately 17,000 MTSA and 37,000 ISPS
inspections of commercial vessels entering U.S. ports. Of these
inspections, Coast Guard reported finding approximately 5,000 security
violations, which were generally related to access control of the
vessel.
[End of section]
Appendix V: Comparison of CBP and Coast Guard Field Unit Reports of
Absconder and Deserter Incidents at Selected Seaports, Fiscal Years
2005 through 2009:
We requested data from CBP field units and Coast Guard Sectors at
eight domestic seaports summarizing the number of absconder and
deserter incidents that the field units and sectors reported for
fiscal years 2005 through 2009. At six of seven seaports that provided
comparable data, CBP and Coast Guard field units and sectors reported
varying numbers of incidents (see notes below describing our scope and
methods of this analysis). CBP and Coast Guard field units and sectors
reported the same number of incidents at only one seaport
(Jacksonville). Below is a summary of the field unit reported data.
Figure 10: Comparison of CBP Field Unit and Coast Guard Field Unit
Reports:
[Refer to PDF for image: stacked vertical bar graph]
Seaport: Baltimore CG;
Deserters: 1;
Absconders: 3.
Seaport: Baltimore CBP;
Deserters: 8;
Absconders: 4.
Seaport: Houston/Galveston CG;
Deserters: 38
Absconders: 23.
Seaport: Houston/Galveston CBP;
Deserters: 41;
Absconders: 14.
Seaport: Jacksonville[A] CG;
Deserters: 4;
Absconders: 0.
Seaport: Jacksonville[A] CBP;
Deserters: 4;
Absconders: 0.
Seaport: Los Angeles/Long Beach[B] CG;
Deserters: 70;
Absconders: 10.
Seaport: Los Angeles/Long Beach[B] CBP;
Deserters: 109;
Absconders: 6.
Seaport: Miami[C] CG;
Deserters: 0;
Absconders: 0.
Seaport: Miami[C] CBP;
Deserters: 22;
Absconders: 19.
Seaport: New York/Newark[D] CG;
Unspecified absconders and deserters: 80.
Seaport: New York/Newark[D] CBP;
Deserters: 109;
Absconders: 6.
Seaport: Seattle/Tacoma[E] CG;
Deserters: 14;
Absconders: 7.
Seaport: Seattle/Tacoma[E] CBP;
Deserters: 29;
Absconders: 3.
Source: GAO analysis of CBP headquarters and field unit data.
Note: We did not include data in this graph for one of the eight
seaport areas we contacted--San Francisco/Oakland--because the CBP
field unit and Coast Guard Sector reported data that could not be
directly compared. For example, (1) Coast Guard Sector San Francisco
Bay reported it did not have data available for fiscal year 2005 and
provided data covering fiscal years 2006 through 2009 and (2) CBP San
Francisco/Oakland reported that it did not have data available for the
period prior to February 2007. According to a field official, prior to
February 2007, combined absconder and deserter data covering the
maritime and aviation modes was tracked by CBP at the airport. The
field unit provided data from February 2007 through April 2010.
[A] Coast Guard Sector Jacksonville data reported from fiscal year
2005 through March 2010.
[B] Coast Guard Sector Los Angeles/Long Beach reported that data was
in calendar years and was sourced from the Coast Guard Pacific Area
Maritime Intelligence Fusion Center (MIFC-PAC). However, we found the
MIFC-PAC data for Los Angeles/Long Beach varied from the data provided
by Sector Los Angeles/Long Beach--regardless of whether it was based
on calendar or fiscal year.
[C] Coast Guard Sector Miami reported that it had not encountered any
absconders and deserters.
[D] Coast Guard Sector New York reported that its records did not
distinguish between absconders and deserters.
[E] Coast Guard Sector Puget Sound (Seattle/Tacoma) reported data from
2003 through 2009.
[End of figure]
[End of section]
Appendix VI: Summary of International Labor Organization's Seafarers'
Identity Documents Convention (Revised), 2003 (ILO 185):
The International Labor Organization's Convention 185 (ILO 185)
establishes international standards for nationally issued seafarers'
identity documents (SIDs). The Convention seeks to create a framework
for nations to issue more secure, standardized credentials to bona
fide seafarers, which, in turn, helps seafarers gain access to foreign
territories for shore leave and other professional travel, such as
transiting from an airport to meet a vessel in port.
ILO 185 Replaces an Earlier ILO Convention on Seafarers' Identity
Documents:
ILO 185 is a revision of ILO 108, a 1958 convention that established a
structure for international recognition of national seafarers'
identity documents. Ratified by a total of 64 countries that did not
include the United States, Convention 108 required ratifying countries
to issue seafarers' identity documents or seafarer passports to
applicants to facilitate seafarer entry into foreign territories for
shore leave or transit to or from a vessel. Aside from basic
requirements, such as mandating that the documents list a seafarer's
full name and date of birth and contain a photograph, ILO 108 did not
specify how the documents should appear or provide guidance on
issuance processes. According to the ILO, identity documents issued
under ILO 108 varied greatly in appearance and most did not contain
security features. Moreover, according to a 2002 ILO briefing paper,
member states were often unaware of what each others' ILO 108
documents looked like, if the documents were real or counterfeit, and
even whether the government in question had ratified the Convention.
Furthermore, the Convention permitted a ratifying nation to issue
documents to seafarers who were not citizens or permanent residents as
long as they worked on vessels registered in the country or in its
territory. This practice, according to an ILO official, resulted in
some seafarers obtaining valid identification credentials from
multiple nations based on their employment.
To a much greater extent than ILO 108, the revised ILO 185 Convention
sets minimum standards for how ratifying countries produce and issue
their seafarer identity documents, including the data they contain,
security features, and a fingerprint biometric. For example, ILO 185
requires SIDs to comply with certain International Civil Aviation
Organization (ICAO) passport or other travel document specifications
regarding materials used and credential dimensions and placement of
data.[Footnote 68] The Convention also makes certain requirements for
countries to maintain a national database to track credential
issuance, whose information must be accessible to other ratifying
nations, and calls for independent evaluations of SID issuance
processes and ILO certifications of compliance.
The following table summarizes the key provisions of ILO 185:
Table 9: Summary of Seafarers' Identity Documents Convention
(Revised), 2003:
Article or Annex: Article 1: Scope;
Summary: Defines "seafarer" for purposes of Convention as "any person
who is employed or is engaged or works in any capacity on board a
vessel, other than a ship of war, ordinarily engaged in maritime
navigation."
Article or Annex: Article 2: Issuance of seafarers' identity documents;
Summary: A ratifying country must issue seafarers' identity documents
to its nationals who are seafarers and may issue them to its permanent
residents who are seafarers. The credentials and issuance process must
conform to Convention requirements, and may also be subject to
national laws and regulations.
Article or Annex: Article 3: Content and form;
Summary: Seafarers' identity documents shall adhere to ILO standards
regarding technology, design, and content. More detailed requirements
are contained in Annex I.
Article or Annex: Article 4: National electronic database;
Summary: Ratifying countries must maintain a database containing
information on each seafarers' identity document issued, including
biographic and biometric data of the cardholder. The countries must
designate a focal point to respond to inquires from other ratifying
members about the validity of specific seafarers' identity documents.
More detailed requirements are contained in Annex II.
Article or Annex: Article 5: Quality control and evaluations;
Summary: Ratifying countries must meet minimum requirements for
issuing seafarers' identity documents contained in Annex III.
Countries must conduct an independent evaluation of their issuance
processes at least every five years. The ILO will approve and update
as necessary a list of members that fully meet the minimum issuance
requirements.
Article or Annex: Article 6: Facilitation of shore leave and transit
and transfer of seafarers;
Summary: Ratifying countries shall not require seafarers holding valid
ILO 185 identity documents to obtain visas for shore leave. Any member
that is not in a position to fully implement this requirement must
provide arrangements that are substantially equivalent. Seafarers with
valid ILO 185 documents supplemented by passports shall be permitted
entry into a ratifying country for professional travel.
Article or Annex: Article 7: Continuous possession and withdrawal;
Summary: Seafarers' identity documents shall remain in the possession
of the seafarers unless they are granted written permission for the
documents to be held by the master of the ship. Countries must
withdraw the documents if seafarers no longer meet the conditions for
their issuance.
Article or Annex: Article 8: Amendment of the annexes;
Summary: Establishes a process for the ILO and its members to amend
the Annexes of the Convention.
Article or Annex: Article 9: Transitional provision;
Summary: Countries that ratified the earlier ILO 108 Convention may
apply the revised ILO 185 Convention provisionally under certain
circumstances.
Article or Annex: Articles 10-18;
Summary: Various administrative provisions.
Article or Annex: Annex I: Model for seafarers' identity document;
Summary: Specifies required content, security features, biometric
template, machine readable zone, and other features of ILO 185
seafarers' identity documents.
Article or Annex: Annex II: Electronic database;
Summary: Specifies required data elements for the national electronic
database linked to a ratifying member's seafarer identity documents.
Article or Annex: Annex III: Requirements and recommended procedures
and practices concerning the issuance of seafarers' identity documents;
Summary: Sets out minimum requirements for the issuance of seafarers'
identity documents in the areas of production and delivery of blank
documents; custody, handling and accountability for blank and
completed documents; processing of applications, document suspension
or withdrawal, and appeal procedures; operation, security, and
maintenance of the database; and quality control of procedures and
periodic evaluations.
Source: GAO analysis of ILO information.
[End of table]
Proposed ILO "Listing" Process to Promote Convention Compliance:
In accordance with Article 5 of the Convention, in 2005 the ILO
developed a specific process by which its Governing Body could approve
a "List" of ratifying nations that met minimum Convention
requirements. In part due to the limited number of ratifying nations
to date, this process has not yet been implemented, and as of January
2011, there is no list of compliant countries.
Figure 11: ILO 185 Process for Reviewing Country Implementation:
[Refer to PDF for image: illustration]
Independent evaluation:
Submit independent evaluation of SID issuance process and other
documents to ILO.
Initial review:
ILO technical review and invitation for other ratifying members,
industry, and labor to comment on submission.
Tripartite review and recommendation to ILO‘s Governing Body.
Review Group:
2 representatives from government and 1 each from labor and industry
evaluate submission:
If consensus on recommendation: ILO Governing Body decides whether to
include member on list of countries that fully meet minimum
requirements;
If unable to reach consensus on recommendation: Special Review Board:
2 representatives from government and 1 each from labor and industry
evaluate submission; Recommendation by simple majority[A]: ILO
Governing Body decides whether to include member on list of countries
that fully meet minimum requirements.
Sources: GAO analysis of ILO information; Map Source (map).
[A] In the event of an equally split vote, the government
representative serving as the board's chairperson shall have an
additional vote.
[End of figure]
[End of section]
Appendix VII: President's Committee on the International Labor
Organization (PC/ILO):
The President's Committee on the International Labor Organization (PC/
ILO) is a federal advisory committee that, among other things,
evaluates ILO conventions and makes recommendations to the President
concerning potential U.S. ratification. The PC/ILO is chaired by the
Secretary of Labor and consists of other cabinet level representatives
from U.S. government as well as senior officials from labor and
industry. Before the full committee reports to the President, a
committee subgroup, the Tripartite Advisory Panel on International
Labor Standards (TAPILS), reviews selected conventions for conformity
with U.S. law. The PC/ILO was most recently convened in May 2010, and
stated that a review of ILO 185 was a priority. Figure 12 below shows
current PC/ILO membership and the mechanism by which it makes its
recommendations.
Figure 12: President's Committee on the International Labor
Organization:
[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated pyramid]
Base level:
Tripartite Advisory Panel on International Labor Standards (TAPILS):
* Subgroup of representatives from labor, government, and industry
organizations listed above;
* For review of ILO 185, DHS Office of Policy, Coast Guard, CBP, and
DOT MARAD are represented.
First level up:
TAPILS conducts legal review of ILO conventions and submits
conclusions about potential ratification to full committee.
Middle level:
President‘s Committee on the International Labor Organization (PC/ILO):
Labor:
* President of the AFL-CIO;
Government:
* Secretary of Labor, Chair;
* Secretary of State;
* Secretary of Commerce;
* Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs;
* Assistant to the President for Economic Policy;
Industry:
* President of the U.S. Council for International Business.
Top level:
President:
After committee approves TAPILS‘s legal conclusion, a report is
transmitted to the president about potential ratification. President
may submit request for advice and consent to ratification to the U.S.
Senate.
Source: GAO analysis of Labor Department information.
[End of figure]
[End of section]
Appendix VIII: Comments from the Department of Homeland Security:
Department of Homeland Security:
Washington, DC 20528:
December 17, 2010:
Charles A. Jeszeck:
Acting Director, Homeland Security and Justice:
441 G Street, NW:
U.S. Government Accountability Office:
Washington, DC 20548:
Dear Mr. Jeszeck:
Re: Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) Comments on the Government
Accountability Office's (GAO) Draft Report 11-195, "Maritime Security:
Federal Agencies Have Taken Actions to Address Risks Posed by
Seafarers, But These Efforts Can Be Strengthened" (440848)
Thank you for the opportunity to review and offer comments on the GAO
draft report entitled, "Maritime Security: Federal Agencies Have Taken
Actions to Address Risks Posed by Seafarers, But These Efforts Can Be
Strengthened," dated December 2010. DHS's formal response to the draft
report includes CBP's corrective action plans to recommendations made
by GAO and technical comments. DHS concurs with all four of the
recommendations in the report.
DHS would like to note that the United States has not ratified the
International Labor Organization Seafarer's Identity Document
Convention (ILO 185); therefore, there is no current implementation
plan to institute procedural measures for CBP operations. If the
United States is determining a position for ratification of the ILO
185, CBP would object due to limitations of existing laws for CBP
enforcement.
DHS appreciates the opportunity to highlight current efforts that will
not only comply with the recommendations, but will also improve our
overall operational effectiveness. The recommendations and corrective
actions to address the recommendations are described below.
Recommendation 1: Direct the Commissioner of CBP to assess the
national security and other risks faced by CBP in the absence of
technology to provide electronic verification as part of its
admissibility inspections for cargo vessel seafarers and identify-
options for addressing these risks and their costs.
Response: Concur. CBP will work in conjunction with the Screening
Coordination OM (SCO) to determine parameters to measure and assess
risks associated with the absence of technology, specifically for
onboard vessel inspection of crew, CBP and SCO will identify the
appropriate offices within CBP and DHS with equities in this review.
Recommendations 2&3; Direct the Commandant of the Coast Guard and
Commissioner of CBE to:
* Determine the reasons that absconder and deserter data varies
between headquarters and field units, and among the Coast Guard and
CRP and determine any actions necessary to address them; and;
* Jointly establish an interagency process for sharing and reconciling
records of absconder and deserter incidents occurring at U.S. seaports.
Response: Concur. CRP and USCG will begin to assess, at the staff
level, the appropriate offices within each component with equities in
this review. Once determined, a Working Group can be formed to
evaluate the current reporting process within each component, and
between CBE and United States Coast Guard (USCG). A number of
potential discrepancies have already been identified to include, but
not limited to, discrepancies between the geographic definitions of
ports and sectors, definitions of absconder and deserters as they
apply to each components unique mission, and the reporting of
incidents involving U.S. citizens. The progress of the Working group
can be monitored through the Senior Guidance Team Meetings, an
existing process that includes CBE, USCG and U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Recommendation 4: We further recommend that the Secretary of Homeland
Security and the Attorney General of the United States develop a plan
with timelines for issuing regulations, as required by the Inflation
Adjustment Act, to adjust civil monetary penalties associated with
violations of the Immigration and Nationality Act involving foreign
seafarers gaining illegal entry into the United States and provide
this plan to DHS leadership and Congress.
Response: Concur. CBP and the Department of Justice (DOJ) are
currently working together to develop regulations to adjust the civil
monetary penalties associated with violations of provisions of the
Immigration and Nationality Act involving foreign seafarers gaining
illegal entry into the United States and hope to issue final
regulations in 2011.
Thank you for the opportunity to comment on this Draft Report. We look
forward to working with you on future Homeland Security issues.
Sincerely,
Signed by:
Jim H. Crumpacker:
Director:
Departmental GAO/OIG Audit Liaison Office:
Attachment:
[End of section]
Appendix IX: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:
GAO Contact:
Charles A. Jeszeck, (202) 512-7036 or jeszeckc@gao.gov.
Staff Acknowledgments:
In addition to the contact named above, David Bruno, Assistant
Director, and Jason Berman, Analyst-in-Charge, managed this
assignment. Chloe Brown and David Lutter made significant
contributions to this report. Charles Bausell, Kathryn Bernet, Namita
Bhatia Sabharwal, Richard Hung, and Stanley Kostyla assisted with
design and methodology. Tracey King provided legal support. Jessica
Orr provided assistance in report preparation.
[End of section]
Related GAO Products:
Maritime Security: Ferry Security Measures Have Been Implemented, but
Evaluating Existing Studies Could Further Enhance Security.
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-207]. Washington, D.C.:
Dec. 3, 2010.
Maritime Security: Actions Needed to Assess and Update Plan and
Enhance Collaboration among Partners Involved in Countering Piracy off
the Horn of Africa. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-856]. Washington, D.C.: Sep. 24,
2010.
Maritime Security: DHS Progress and Challenges in Key Areas of Port
Security. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-940T].
Washington, D.C.: July 21, 2010.
Maritime Security: Varied Actions Taken to Enhance Cruise Ship
Security, but Some Concerns Remain. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-400]. Washington, D.C.: Apr. 9,
2010.
Supply Chain Security: Feasibility and Cost-Benefit Analysis Would
Assist DHS and Congress in Assessing and Implementing the Requirement
to Scan 100 Percent of U.S.-Bound Containers. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-12]. Washington, D.C.: Oct. 30,
2009.
Maritime Security: Vessel Tracking Systems Provide Key Information,
but the Need for Duplicate Data Should Be Reviewed. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-337]. Washington, D.C.: March 17,
2009.
Supply Chain Security: CBP Works with International Entities to
Promote Global Customs Security Standards and Initiatives, but
Challenges Remain. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-538]. Washington, D.C.: August 15,
2008.
Maritime Security: National Strategy and Supporting Plans Were
Generally Well-Developed and Are Being Implemented. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-672]. Washington, D.C.: June 20,
2008.
Supply Chain Security: Challenges to Scanning 100 Percent of U.S.-
Bound Cargo Containers. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-533T]. Washington, D.C.: June 12,
2008.
Supply Chain Security: U.S. Customs and Border Protection Has Enhanced
Its Partnership with Import Trade Sectors, but Challenges Remain in
Verifying Security Practices. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-240]. Washington, D.C.: April 25,
2008.
Maritime Security: Coast Guard Inspections Identify and Correct
Facility Deficiencies, but More Analysis Needed of Program's Staffing,
Practices, and Data. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-12]. Washington, D.C.: February 14,
2008.
Supply Chain Security: Examinations of High-Risk Cargo at Foreign
Seaports Have Increased, but Improved Data Collection and Performance
Measures Are Needed. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-187]. Washington, D.C.: January 25,
2008.
Maritime Security: Federal Efforts Needed to Address Challenges in
Preventing and Responding to Terrorist Attacks on Energy Commodity
Tankers. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-141].
Washington, D.C.: December 10, 2007.
Maritime Security: The SAFE Port Act: Status and Implementation One
Year Later. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-126T].
Washington, D.C.: October 30, 2007.
Combating Nuclear Smuggling: Additional Actions Needed to Ensure
Adequate Testing of Next Generation Radiation Detection Equipment.
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-1247T]. Washington,
D.C.: September 18, 2007.
Information on Port Security in the Caribbean Basin. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-804R]. Washington, D.C.: June 29,
2007.
Port Risk Management: Additional Federal Guidance Would Aid Ports in
Disaster Planning and Recovery. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-412]. Washington, D.C.: March 28,
2007.
Maritime Security: Public Safety Consequences of a Terrorist Attack on
a Tanker Carrying Liquefied Natural Gas Need Clarification.
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-316]. Washington, D.C.:
February 22, 2007.
Coast Guard: Observations on the Preparation, Response, and Recovery
Missions Related to Hurricane Katrina. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-903]. Washington, D.C.: July 31,
2006.
Maritime Security: Information Sharing Efforts Are Improving.
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-933T]. Washington,
D.C.: July 10, 2006.
Cargo Container Inspections: Preliminary Observations on the Status of
Efforts to Improve the Automated Targeting System. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-591T]. Washington, D.C.: March 30,
2006.
Risk Management: Further Refinements Needed to Assess Risks and
Prioritize Protective Measures at Ports and Other Critical
Infrastructure. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-91].
Washington, D.C.: December 15, 2005.
Homeland Security: Key Cargo Security Programs Can Be Improved.
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-466T]. Washington,
D.C.: May 26, 2005.
Maritime Security: Enhancements Made, But Implementation and
Sustainability Remain Key Challenges. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-448T]. Washington, D.C.: May 17,
2005.
Container Security: A Flexible Staffing Model and Minimum Equipment
Requirements Would Improve Overseas Targeting and Inspection Efforts.
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-557]. Washington, D.C.:
April 26, 2005.
Maritime Security: New Structures Have Improved Information Sharing,
but Security Clearance Processing Requires Further Attention.
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-394]. Washington, D.C.:
April 15, 2005.
Cargo Security: Partnership Program Grants Importers Reduced Scrutiny
with Limited Assurance of Improved Security. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-404]. Washington, D.C.: March 11,
2005.
Maritime Security: Better Planning Needed to Help Ensure an Effective
Port Security Assessment Program. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-1062]. Washington, D.C.: September
30, 2004.
Maritime Security: Partnering Could Reduce Federal Costs and
Facilitate Implementation of Automatic Vessel Identification System.
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-868]. Washington, D.C.:
July 23, 2004.
Maritime Security: Substantial Work Remains to Translate New Planning
Requirements into Effective Port Security. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-838]. Washington, D.C.: June 30,
2004.
Homeland Security: Summary of Challenges Faced in Targeting Oceangoing
Cargo Containers for Inspection. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-557T]. Washington, D.C.: March 31,
2004.
Homeland Security: Preliminary Observations on Efforts to Target
Security Inspections of Cargo Containers. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-325T]. Washington, D.C.: December
16, 2003.
Maritime Security: Progress Made in Implementing Maritime
Transportation Security Act, but Concerns Remain. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-1155T]. Washington, D.C.: September
9, 2003.
Combating Terrorism: Interagency Framework and Agency Programs to
Address the Overseas Threat. [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-03-165]. Washington, D.C.: May 23,
2003.
Nuclear Nonproliferation: U.S. Efforts to Combat Nuclear Smuggling.
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-02-989T]. Washington,
D.C.: July 30, 2002.
Coast Guard: Vessel Identification System Development Needs to Be
Reassessed. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-02-477].
Washington, D.C.: May 24, 2002.
[End of section]
Footnotes:
[1] Cargo vessels include container ships, energy tankers, bulk
carriers, and roll-on-roll-off vessels, among others.
[2] According to CBP data, aliens constituted over 85% of seafarer
arrivals in fiscal year 2009.
[3] Non-immigrant visas are for aliens coming to the United States
temporarily.
[4] The ILO promotes social justice and internationally recognized
human and labor rights.
[5] See, e.g., 8 U.S.C. §§ 1281-88.
[6] Pub. L. No. 107-295, 116 Stat. 2064 (2002).
[7] 19 C.F.R. § 4.7b.
[8] 33 C.F.R. §§ 160.201-.215.
[9] Coast Guard Sectors run all Coast Guard missions at the local and
port level, such as search and rescue, port security, environmental
protection, and law enforcement in ports and surrounding waters, and
oversee a number of smaller Coast Guard units, including small cutters
and small boat stations.
[10] GAO, Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government,
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1]
(Washington, D.C.: Nov.1, 1999). Internal control is an integral
component of an organization's management that provides reasonable
assurance that the following objectives are being achieved:
effectiveness and efficiency of operations, reliability of financial
reporting, and compliance with applicable laws and regulations. These
standards, issued pursuant to the requirements of the Federal
Managers' Financial Integrity Act of 1982 (FMFIA), provide the overall
framework for establishing and maintaining internal control in the
federal government. Also pursuant to FMFIA, the Office of Management
and Budget issued Circular A-123, revised December 21, 2004, to
provide the specific requirements for assessing the reporting on
internal controls. Internal control standards and the definition of
internal control in Circular A-123 are based on the GAO Standards for
Internal Control in the federal government.
[11] Specifically, 55,560 cargo vessel calls, or about 8 percent of
the global total, were made in U.S. seaports in 2009.
[12] The largest cruise ship vessel transiting to the United States is
staffed by approximately 2,300 seafarers. For more information on
cruise ship security see GAO, Maritime Security: Varied Actions Taken
to Enhance Cruise Ship Security, but Some Concerns Remain, GAO-10-400
(Washington, D.C.: Apr. 9, 2010).
[13] According to CBP, there are 327 ports of entry for processing
most individuals and cargo entering the United States, including 132
seaports as of July 2010.
[14] See 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(15)(C), (D). Air crew are also issued C1/D
or D visas. The State Department does not differentiate between or
maintain data on the number of seafarers versus air crew who are
issued these types of visas.
[15] Commonly referred to as "shore leave."
[16] Due to visa reciprocity agreements between the United States and
China, Chinese seafarers are not issued the combined C1/D visas. State
Department estimated that for the countries listed in tables 1 and 2,
the vast majority of C1/D and D visas were issued to seafarers as
opposed to air crew.
[17] 8 U.S.C. § 1225(a)(3).
[18] 8 U.S.C. § 1282(a). Certain alien seafarers who do not meet the
requirements for the conditional landing permit may be paroled into
the United States, on a case-by-case basis, such as for urgent
humanitarian reasons.
[19] A passport is defined as any travel document issued by a
competent authority showing the bearers origin, identity and
nationality, if any, and which is valid for the admission of bearer
into a foreign country. 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(30). A seaman's book is a
record of a seafarer's career certifications and experiences that is
issued by a competent authority.
[20] GAO, Maritime Security: Federal Efforts Needed to Address
Challenges in Preventing and Responding to Terrorist Attacks on Energy
Commodity Tankers, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-141]
(Washington, D.C.: Dec. 10, 2007).
[21] Seafarers who overstay visas or desert are in violation of
immigration law and contribute to the number of illegal immigrants in
the United States.
[22] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-141].
[23] A valid passport or seaman's book and a letter of employment are
the supporting documents required by the State Foreign Affairs Manual.
Some posts also require Standards of Training, Certification and
Watchkeeping for Seafarers (STCW) certificates and a seaman's book in
addition to a passport.
[24] According to the State Department, biographical information is
run against the Consular Lookout and Support System (CLASS), which
contained about 26 million records, 70 percent of which come from
other agencies as of December 2009. Consular officers also use State's
Consular Consolidated Database (CCD)--which contains State's worldwide
visa records, detailed applicant biographic information, and applicant
photos. State runs fingerprints against law enforcement databases and
photographs against a State database, which uses facial recognition
technology and houses photographs provided by several other agencies.
Some consular officers also have access to DHS data tracking foreign
nationals' entries into and most exits out of the United States, which
can help State identify previous visa overstays.
[25] See GAO, Homeland Security: Progress Has been Made to Address the
Vulnerabilities Exposed by 9/11, but Continued Federal Action Is
Needed to Further Mitigate Security Risks, [hyperlink,
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-375] (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 24,
2007).
[26] This guidance also recommends that consular officers verify that
a manning agency is bona fide by cultivating working relationships
with manning agencies and their regulators, using online business
research tools to find more information about company operations, or
running a text search in the CCD to see where else the manning agency
might operate and if other posts have reported fraud.
[27] Under CBP's regulations, operators of certain commercial vessels
are required to provide CBP with advance lists of information on
passengers and seafarers--also known as a manifest--between 24 hours
and 96 hours prior to entering a U.S. port, depending on the voyage
time. Manifest data requirements for seafarers include items such as
full name, date of birth, citizenship, country of residence, passport
number, port of first arrival, and port where transportation to the
United States began. 19 C.F.R. § 4.7b. Coast Guard requires vessel
operators to transmit an Advance Notice of Arrival (ANOA) between 12
and 24 hours in advance of arrival for certain types of vessels
transiting to the United States. This information includes both
seafarer information as well as other information pertaining to the
vessel's history, such as dates the vessel received safety and
security certificates. 33 C.F.R. §§ 160.201-160.215.
[28] The INA requires that all aliens, including foreign seafarers,
seeking admission to the United States be inspected by immigration
officers. 8 U.S.C. § 1225(a)(3).
[29] Seafarers must remain on board the vessel until inspected and
granted shore leave or otherwise allowed to land, and those that are
not granted shore leave must remain on board the vessel while the
vessel remains in U.S. waters. 8 U.S.C. § 1284; 8 C.F.R. § 252.1.
[30] CBP reported that officers examine documents as part of a layered
approach to security, in addition to other steps when reviewing
documentation presented by a foreign seafarer. These steps include the
use of behavior detection methods.
[31] CBP has discretionary authority to deny conditional landing to
anyone who is not clearly entitled to it. 8 C.F.R. § 252.1(c).
According to CBP, CBP may order a seafarer detained on board for a
variety of reasons, such as if the CBP officer has particular security
concerns or considers the individual to pose high risks for illegal
immigration. The INA also provides for civil monetary penalties if the
owner, agent, consignee, charterer, master, or commanding officer
fails to detain these seafarers on board. 8 U.S.C. § 1284(a).
[32] US-VISIT is a program for controlling and monitoring the entry
and exit of foreign visitors by storing and processing biometric and
biographic information. For each foreign seafarer inspected at a US-
VISIT equipped terminal, CBP officers use the system to (1) collect
digital fingerprints and take a digital photo and (2) collect basic
biographic information to record the person's port of arrival and date
and time of entry. The biometric entry capability has operated since
2004; an exit capability is not yet implemented. US-VISIT biometric
entry procedures are currently in place at 15 seaports in 6 states, as
well as Puerto Rico and Canada. CBP uses the biometric information
captured to identify and verify fraud. The system also interacts with
other systems to check biometrics against existing government law
enforcement databases to identify people with criminal histories and
those who may be linked to terrorist activities.
[33] Of the approximately 5 million seafarers CBP inspects at U.S.
ports annually, about 1 million arrive on board cargo vessels.
[34] If a concern should arise, the CBP officer is equipped with a
radio or cell phone to call back to the port for assistance from the
Passenger Analysis Unit (PAU) officers. CBP officers can also contact
the NTC-P to request additional assistance when required and can
complete the inspection of a seafarer at the port if warranted.
[35] The Screening Coordination Office (SCO) was established by DHS to
coordinate and harmonize the numerous and disparate credentialing and
screening initiatives within DHS. According to DHS SCO's 2008
Credentialing Framework Initiative report, visual inspection of
immigration documents does not alone provide the capability to assess
whether changes to the individual's immigration status may have
occurred between the date of issuance and the date of inspection or
whether the person presenting the document is the person to whom it
was issued. Moreover, the report states that given the inherent level
of risk to security and immigration or other fraud, relying solely on
visual verification poses significant concerns. The report describes
verification of a credential as including: making a determination that
the credential presented is authentic (not fraudulently developed);
that the individual is the one to whom the document was issued (not an
impostor), and remains valid (not revoked or expired).
[36] This challenge exists because CBP conducts many seafarer
admissibility inspections in port locations within the confines of the
cargo vessel, usually in the crew lounge or hall. As a result,
portable technology for reading seafarer documents does not function
with any reliability, according to CBP.
[37] Further, a January 2010 Presidential memorandum states that DHS
should aggressively pursue enhanced screening technology, protocols,
and procedures, especially in regard to aviation and other
transportation sectors.
[38] In fall 2010, DHS S&T reported that it had made awards to two
vendors totaling about $2.3 million to develop a hand-held fingerprint
sensor module. According to DHS S&T, the work on these awards will be
completed in early 2012. DHS S&T reports it will issue an additional
solicitation to incorporate the developed fingerprint module with a
mobile document reader.
[39] GAO, Assessing Internal Controls in Performance Audits,
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/OP-4.1.4] (Washington,
D.C.: September 1990).
[40] There are two categories of seafarer illegal entry into the
United States. An absconder is a seafarer CBP has refused a
conditional landing permit to leave the vessel while it is in port and
is ordered detained on board, but departs the vessel without
permission. A deserter is a seafarer with a valid non-immigrant visa
CBP has granted a conditional landing permit to enter into the United
States, but does not depart when required.
[41] GAO, Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government,
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1]
(Washington, D.C.: November 1999).
[42] The ICC is responsible for producing and disseminating
intelligence with a Coast Guard perspective to support U.S. policy
makers and operations. Asymmetric migration is the illegal entry of a
foreign person into a port. In addition to absconders and deserters,
Coast Guard requires field units to report information on (1) maritime
stowaway incidents (individuals who are secreted aboard a vessel
without permission from the vessel's master); (2) un-manifested
persons on vessels; and (3) cases involving fraudulent seafarer
documents.
[43] Coast Guard's two intelligence fusion centers provide information
to operational units, but also work with ICC at the National Maritime
Intelligence Center in Suitland, Maryland. The MIFC-PAC, located in
Alameda, California, tracks maritime incidents occurring on west coast
seaports, including Hawaii and Alaska. The MIFC-LANT, located in Dam
Neck, Virginia, tracks incidents occurring on east and gulf coast
seaports, as well as Puerto Rico.
[44] This analysis does not include one of the eight seaport areas we
contacted--San Francisco/Oakland--because the CBP field unit and Coast
Guard Sector reported data that could not be directly compared. For
example, (1) Coast Guard Sector San Francisco Bay reported it did not
have data available for fiscal year 2005 and provided data covering
fiscal years 2006 through 2009 and (2) CBP San Francisco/Oakland
reported that it did not have data available for the period prior to
February 2007. According to a field official, prior to February 2007,
combined absconder and deserter data covering the maritime and
aviation modes was tracked by CBP at the airport. The field unit
provided data from February 2007 through April 2010.
[45] A Coast Guard Intelligence official reported that intelligence
collection is more flexible because it is not used to support
enforcement of a specific case. Thus, the information may include
information obtained from news reports or other third party sources.
[46] Coast Guard's Drug Interdiction program meets quarterly with its
interagency partners to review all interdiction cases and vet the
information for input into the Drug Database. The purpose of the
quarterly meetings is to review, de-conflict, and validate data inputs
on counter-drug performance indicators, trafficking trends, and
cocaine flow for each fiscal quarter. These data, along with
operational intelligence and tactical performance information
collected from field staff, provide feedback to program managers who
use the information to modify interdiction strategies and re-allocate
resources.
[47] In February 2007, the DHS Secretary issued the DHS Policy for
Internal Information Exchange and Sharing, referred to as the "One
DHS" memorandum, to further direct information exchange within DHS.
According to the memorandum, it is critical that each DHS component
gives the highest priority to the sharing of potential terrorism,
homeland security, law enforcement, and related information. In
addition, in October 2007, the President set out the National Strategy
for Information Sharing which envisions a coordinated and integrated
information sharing environment to effectively fight terrorism and
respond to man-made and natural disasters.
[48] 8 U.S.C. § 1225(a)(3).
[49] 8 U.S.C. § 1282.
[50] 8 U.S.C. §§ 1281, 1284. According to the INA, a vessel owner,
agent, consignee, charterer, master, or commanding officer may be
subject to civil monetary penalties for failing to comply with these
regulations.
[51] Pub. L. No. 101-410, 104 Stat. 890 (1990) (codified as amended at
28 U.S.C. § 2461 note).
[52] According to CBP officials, various factors account for the
amount to which CBP may ultimately collect fines assessed. These
include whether the CBP Fines Office determines it has sufficient
evidence to support the case made by the field officer at the seaport
and the outcome of any appeals submitted by the vessel operator in
mitigating the extent of the fine.
[53] These amounts are in 2010 dollars.
[54] Because the Department of Justice's Board of Immigration Appeals
hears appeals of cases involving these civil penalties, the amounts of
the civil penalties are also published in Department of Justice
regulations. 8 C.F.R. § 1280.53.
[55] Project Management Institute, The Standard for Program Management
(Newton Square, Pa. 2006).
[56] See appendix VI for additional background on ILO 185, and
summaries of the Convention and a related ILO oversight process.
[57] Among ILO 185 ratifying countries, 5 are in the top 10
nationalities (by citizenship) associated with C1/D and D visa
issuances in fiscal year 2009: Brazil, France, Indonesia, Madagascar,
the Republic of Korea, and the Russian Federation.
[58] See ILO 185 Convention Article 5, "Quality Control and
Evaluations" and subsequent ILO guidance issued in 2005, "Arrangements
concerning the list of Members which fully meet the minimum
requirements concerning processes and procedures for the issue of
seafarers' identity documents."
[59] The IMO continued to develop maritime security proposals in other
issue areas, which resulted in the adoption of the International Ship
and Port Facility Security (ISPS) Code, among other things.
[60] The drafting and adoption of ILO 185 was governed by a more
streamlined process than normally used for labor conventions. This
enabled the Convention to be adopted in a shorter time frame.
[61] ILO 185 was adopted by a vote of 392 votes in favor, no votes
against, and 20 abstentions. In addition to government
representatives, labor and industry representatives from each member
nation have voting rights in ILO proceedings.
[62] According to Article 6 of the Convention, if a seafarer possesses
a valid ILO 185 SID and there are no compelling government reasons to
bar entry (e.g., public health or safety), the seafarer shall not be
required to hold a visa for the purpose of shore leave in ratifying
member countries. In addition, the article states that seafarers with
a valid ILO 185 SID plus a passport shall be granted entry into member
countries to join their ship, transfer to another ship, or pass in
transit to join their ship in another country or for repatriations.
See ILO 185, Article 6, "Facilitation of Shore Leave and Transit and
Transfer of Seafarers," paragraphs 6 and 7. Paragraph 6 states "For
the purposes of shore leave seafarers shall not be required to hold a
visa. Any member which is not in a position to fully implement this
requirement shall ensure that its laws and regulations or practice
provide arrangements that are substantially equivalent." Paragraph 7
pertains to entry for transit and transfer.
[63] Specifically, the options ILO presented as warranting further
discussion were: (1) enhanced crew list visa granted shortly prior to
arrival; (2) use of SID to facilitate visa issuance; (3) expedited
visa granted without consular visit; and (4) short-term visa granted
on arrival. Prior to 2004, the United States could issue a single
"crew list" visa to multiple seafarers on a vessel for shore leave
privileges.
[64] As amended by the Security and Accountability for Every Port Act
of 2006, the Maritime Transportation Safety Act of 2002 mandated that
the Secretary of Homeland Security, in consultation with the Attorney
General and Secretary of State, require seafarers on vessels calling
at U.S. ports to carry and present on demand any identification that
the Secretary decides is necessary. 46 U.S.C. § 70111. In 2009, the
Coast Guard issued a rule that defines acceptable seafarer
identification as a (1) passport; (2) U.S. Permanent Residence Card;
(3) U.S. merchant mariner document; (4) U.S. merchant mariner
credential; (5) Transportation Worker Identification Credential; or
(6) SID issued by or under the authority of the government of a
country that has ratified ILO 185, meeting all the requirements of ILO
185. 33 C.F.R. §§ 160.310.
[65] Although State Department consular officials are responsible for
adjudicating visas abroad, the Homeland Security Act of 2002 and a
subsequent Memorandum of Understanding between DHS and the State
Department made DHS the lead agency in establishing visa policy and
reviewing implementation of that policy. See Pub. L. No. 107-296, §
428,116 Stat. 2135, 2187 (2002); Memorandum of Understanding between
the Secretaries of State and Homeland Security Concerning
Implementation of Section 428 of the Homeland Security Act of 2002.
[66] The PC/ILO was chartered as a Federal Advisory Committee in 1980,
and was most recently authorized for a two year period by Executive
Order 13511 on September 29, 2009. Exec. Order No. 13,511, 74 Fed.
Reg. 50,909 (Oct. 1, 2009).
[67] TAPILS conducts a legal review of selected ILO conventions and
submits its conclusions about potential U.S. ratification to the full
PC/ILO committee for consideration. TAPILS expands membership to
include experts from agencies outside the PC/ILO according to the
subject matter of the convention under consideration.
[68] The International Civil Aviation Organization, a specialized
agency of the United Nations, is the global forum for civil aviation.
ICAO develops safety, security, and environmental protection measures
related to international air transport, among other things.
[End of section]
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