Colleges wait to see how student visa plans pan out ■ President Bush has called for more strict controls to ensure that student visas are properly issued By John Liebhardt Oregon Daily Emerald The jury is still out on President George W. Bush’s call Monday to conduct a thor ough review of student visa policies. The directive came during the first meet ing of the Homeland Security Council. At the meeting, Bush ordered Secretary of State Colin Powell and Attorney General John Ashcroft to enlist the help of Secretary of Education Rod Paige in instituting tighter controls and ensuring that student visas are being issued correctly. “We plan on making sure that if a person has applied for a student visa, they actually go to college or a university,” Bush said dur ing remarks made after the meeting. “And, therefore, we’re going to start asking a lot of questions that heretofore have not been asked.” Higher education groups say it is too early to tell what changes will be made to the stu dent visa program, which regulates the more than 500,000 international students and academics in the United States, includ ing nearly 1,400 at the University. “It appears as though the president was perhaps a half a step ahead of everyone else on this issue,” said Paul Hassen, assistant director of public affairs at American Coun cil on Education, a group of 1,800 colleges and universities. “We plan on making sure that if a person has applied fora student visa, they actually go to a college ora university.” George W. Bush United States president The Bush directive includes funding for a database run by the Immigration and Natu ralization Service that would share informa tion on foreign nationals with other govern ment agencies. “It seems that the administration is seri ous about letting the immigration service do the job they were supposed to do,” said Gin ny Stark, associate director of the Interna tional Office of Education and Exchange. Stark referred to a 1996 law which charged the INS with setting up a database which would allow government agencies to track foreign nationals in the country. While the law created the database, it never gave any funding to the INS to pay for it. Other than funding the database, Bush’s order lacked sufficient details to give high er education groups any chance to gauge what effects it will have. “Oregon Student Association is tradi tionally opposed to legislation that broadly hinders access to groups of people,” said John Wykoff, legislative director of OSA. “Whether this administration will create a broad threat to access is hard to tell.” Student visas have come under congres sional scrutiny since the Sept. 11 attacks. Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s office reported that one of the hijackers of the Sept. 11 attacks was in the country on a student visa. In the weeks after the attack, Feinstein, D-Calif., called for a six month moratorium on all student visas, but rescinded the proposal after meeting with concerned higher education groups. Feinstein has since written legislation with Sen. Jon Kyi, R-Ariz., overhauling the student visa program. Feinstein and Kyi’s proposal requires the INS to conduct back ground checks before the state department can issue student visas and stop issuing stu dent visas to individuals from countries in cluded on the U.S. State Department’s list of terrorist-sponsored states, including Iran, Iraq, Sudan, Libya and Syria. Hassen warned that with competing bills receiving hearings in Congress, not to men tion visa plans submitted by ACE, legisla tive and higher education leaders should at tempt to strike a balance between the desire for international students and national se curity. “We have a good visa system,” he said. “It just needs a little tinkering.” Bush’s plan only reviews student visa policies, not policies of other visa types, which sent up a red flag for Hassen. “By focusing solely on student visas,” he said, “we are doing a disservice to holders of student visas and holders of all type of visas.” John Liebhardt is the higher education editor for the Oregon Daily Emerald. He can be reached atjohnliebhardt@dailyemerald.com. Aviation continued from page 1 The House is working on its own version of the bill, said Jonathan Grella, spokesman for Tom DeLay, R-Tex. The Senate version stipu lates a federal takeover of airport se curity, while the House version of the bill, called the Young bill, would give the president discretion to choose between the private sec tor and the federal government for security on a case-by-case basis, Grella said. President Bush has voiced sup port for the House’s version of the bill but has indicated he will not op pose a bill that requires screening workers to be federal employees, said Lisa Wade Raasch, spokes woman for Sen. Ron Wyden’s office. The bill will likely be discussed in a joint committee once the House passes their own version, which might go through by the end of the week, Grella said. “The Senate was anxious to get the political hot potato off their lap and hastily voted,” Grella said. “(The House) wants to explore this issue. (Senators) are more interest ed in window dressing than keep ing people safe.” Supporters for the Senate’s ver sion stressed that a federal takeover is the only way to keep the country safe. Raasch said that many of the security companies fail to conduct background checks on security screeners and often have turnover rates higher than 120 percent a year. Security companies such as Ar genbright have come under fire for lax safety measures. NPR news re ported Monday night that screening workers routinely miss up to 20 per cent of dangerous objects carried by passengers. “Private screening companies like Argenbright should no longer be allowed to provide security for the front line of defense at our na tion’s airports,’’ DeFazio said. He noted that the company has been fined $1.6 million by the federal government for sloppy hiring prac tices and lying to federal officials. House Republicans favor legisla tion that would give the president control over the security situation. Grella cited hijackings in Western Europe when some countries’ avia tion security was federally operat ed. There were 31 hijackings in Western Europe in the 1970s when some countries had nationalized se curity systems. In the 1990s, Grella said, Western European countries implemented a partnership be tween the private sector and the government; four hijackings oc curred that decade. Democrats in the House re mained firm in their support for fed eralized security. “Right now we’re trusting the front line to convicted felons and minimum wage employees,” Gre co said. Both the House’s and Senate’s bills establish an undersecretary of transportation security that would ensure safety in the airports. The undersecretary would have the au thority to issue emergency securi ty rules without a cost-benefit analysis. “The price of keeping airports safe is $2.50 a ticket,” Blumenauer said. “It’s less than a latte. ” Brook Reinhard is a community reporter forthe Oregon Daily Emerald. He can be reached at brookreinhard@dailyemerald.com. 2001 Charitable Fund Drive Give it Up for Others On October 31st give up your soda, burger, or even just a dollar, and donate the money you saved to charity. Look for collection jars at the Area Desks, the Buzz, the UO Bookstore, and the Greatful Bread. All proceeds will be donated equally to the seven Charitable Fund Federations: Black United Fund of Oregon, Environmental Federation of Oregon, Community Health Charities of Oregon, Children's Trust Fund of Oregon, Equity Foundation, Oregon Habitat for Humanity, and the local United Way.