CIR may not even pass based on the ferocious opposition to the biometric security card.<\/p>\n
While it may sound like a good idea on the surface, the proposed biometric security card as part of CIR is creating a major flap. Interestingly enough, it\u2019s not just one side that opposes it, it\u2019s both. Generally speaking, the idea behind the biometric security card is that a person\u2019s work authorization eligibility is stored in a chip on the card.<\/p>\n
\u201cThe data would not be stored in any central government database; something that doesn\u2019t make a great deal of sense to a number of people. If you lose it, you have a problem. However, the issue here is privacy and civil liberties,\u201d said Sally Odell, an immigration lawyer at Rifkin Fox-Isicoff, P.A., in Miami and Orlando, Florida.<\/p>\n
In some ways it\u2019s amusing that civil liberties are touted as being important and that is why the data would not (more…)<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" CIR may not even pass based on the ferocious opposition to the biometric security card. While it may sound like a good idea on the surface, the proposed biometric security card as part of CIR is creating a major flap.…<\/span><\/p>\n