[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 171 (Thursday, November 19, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S8151]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REFORMING THE EB-5 REGIONAL CENTER PROGRAM
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, I have championed the EB-5 Regional Center
Program for many years. I have done so because I have seen its ability
to generate investment and create jobs in distressed communities. But
the program is facing some pressing challenges. Reports of rampant
fraud and abuse raise serious concerns and threaten to cripple the
program's integrity. The incentives Congress established to invest in
high unemployment and rural communities are also routinely abused,
undermining a core objective of the program--to spur growth and create
jobs in underserved areas. The Regional Center Program is set to expire
on December 11. It should be reauthorized, but we should not extend it
blindly. There is bipartisan consensus that the program is in dire need
of reform, and we cannot squander this opportunity.
I have long sought reforms to the Regional Center Program. Last
Congress, my EB-5 amendment to Comprehensive Immigration Reform
provided the Department of Homeland Security additional authority to
revoke suspect regional center designations or immigrant petitions. It
also provided for increased reporting, background checks, and
securities oversight. My amendment was unanimously approved in the
Judiciary Committee, but unfortunately the improvements it contained
have all had to wait, as the House of Representatives failed to allow a
vote on the bipartisan immigration reform bill that passed the Senate
last Congress.
In the past year, only more concerns have emerged. In January, I
joined Senators Grassley, Corker, Johnson, and others in requesting
that the Government Accountability Office, GAO, audit the EB-5 program.
The GAO report released in August detailed fraud vulnerabilities within
the program and questioned its economic impact. Separate reports from
the Department of Homeland Security's Office of Intelligence and
Analysis and Office of the Inspector General highlighted additional
issues that need to be addressed.
I am also troubled by the fact that the incentives Congress created
to promote EB-5 investment in rural and high unemployment areas have
been rendered meaningless. Investors are provided a discount if they
choose to invest in rural or high unemployment areas, known as targeted
employment areas or TEAs. At present, however, the most affluent
neighborhoods in the country routinely qualify as TEAs by selectively
stitching together otherwise unrelated census tracts. Department of
Homeland Security Secretary Johnson rightly described this practice as
gerrymandering. I do not suggest that affluent areas should not benefit
from EB-5; they should. But they should not qualify for incentives
intended to benefit high unemployment and rural areas. These areas
typically do not have access to significant capital and often struggle
to create jobs.
Secretary Johnson himself called for significant reforms to
strengthen the Regional Center Program. In a letter to the Judiciary
Committee last April, he asked for authority to quickly act on criminal
and national security concerns, additional protections for investors,
enhanced reporting and auditing, improved integrity of TEAs, increased
minimum investment amounts, and more.
I have now worked for over 2 years to develop legislation that would
provide a necessary overhaul of the Regional Center Program. In June, I
was joined by Chairman Grassley in introducing this reform-oriented
legislation, S.1501. Since then, Chairman Grassley and I have worked
with House Judiciary Chairman Goodlatte on a bicameral bill based on
S.1501.
This bicameral bill would provide the Department with the authorities
and investigative tools necessary to address national security concerns
and fraud. The reforms include further expanding background checks,
conducting a more thorough vetting of immigrant investors and proposed
investments, and providing for the ability to proactively investigate
fraud, both in the United States and abroad, using a dedicated fund
paid for by certain program participants. The bill would provide
greater protections for investors and clarity and shorter processing
times for project developers. It would also raise minimum investment
thresholds so more money goes to the communities that need it. And it
would help to restore the program to its original intent, by ensuring
that incentives to invest in distressed and undercapitalized areas are
restored.
Such reforms would answer the concerns raised by Secretary Johnson,
the Department's inspector general, the GAO, and others, instilling
both confidence and transparency in the program. I believe these
reforms would result in a secure EB-5 program that creates American
jobs and promotes economic growth throughout our country. We cannot
continue to leave the Department ill-equipped to administer this job
creation program. We know what is needed to fix it. And we should fix
it now.
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