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The health crisis caused by the pandemic has pushed many families to the limit. The latest data indicates an increase in self-harm and suicide in minors due to uncertainty and social isolation.

The Spanish Association of Pediatrics has created a multidisciplinary Mental Health in Childhood Working Group made up of pediatric professionals from the Society of Child Psychiatry (SPI), the Spanish Society of Pediatric Emergencies (SEUP) and the Spanish Association of Primary Care Pediatrics (AEPAP) that ask to care for children at risk and their families.

In a statement, pediatricians have warned of the increase in some psychological sequelae such as an increase in suicidal ideation (+244.1%), anxiety (+280.6%) and low self-esteem (+212.3%) during confinement .

During 2020, the ANAR Foundation (Foundation for the Care of Children and Adolescents at Risk) answered 145% more calls from minors with suicidal thoughts and 180% more self-harm compared to the previous two years. Castilla y León and Madrid were the regions with the most cases.

Likewise, that year 14 children under 15 years of age (7 boys and 7 girls) committed suicide in Spain, twice as many as the previous year.

Confinement, socioeconomic pressure from families, fear of the pandemic and mourning for loved ones, and the increase in sedentary activities have been determining factors in the increase in self-harm and suicide attempts in minors.

Confinement-children-technology
The increase in the consumption of video games has deteriorated the mental health of minors. EFE/Marcial Guillen

Absence of a national prevention plan

Pediatric associations denounce the absence of a national plan for the prevention of suicide. Although some Autonomous Communities such as Madrid have their own plan, others do not, which makes it difficult to follow a strategy.

Azucena Díez, member of the Mental Health in Childhood working group of the Spanish Association of Pediatrics (AEP) and president of the AEP Child Psychiatry Society (SPI-AEP), explains to EFEsalud that “a good prevention plan It must include all health professionals who care for minors such as paediatricians, socio-health services and professionals from the world of education”.

The health clarifies that “primary care doctors and paediatricians, together with nursing staff, are a fundamental group to prevent suicidal behavior, since they are in contact with children and their families.”

“Ideally, everyone has basic knowledge, not at the level of a clinical psychiatrist, but they do know how to distinguish whether these self-harms have suicidal intent and determine their severity,” the expert clarifies.

The importance of schools

Schools and other educational centers should be other keys to this strategy. In Spain, schooling is compulsory until the age of 16. Therefore, they can act as “regulators of children’s behavior,” says Azucena Díez.

Díez affirms that “schools must have emotional education subjects, where children are taught to express their feelings, tools to resolve conflicts and, above all, prevention in situations of possible harassment.”

“There is some controversy about whether talking about suicide directly to adolescents can be useful or can give ideas by generating a certain contagious effect. The interesting thing would be to do a more global prevention, ”she explains.

Pediatric organizations establish the following basic priorities:

  • Implement training plans for teachers, counselors and management team.
  • Detect risk factors and establish care and follow-up measures after suicidal behaviour.
  • Know useful strategies to avoid the worsening of the behavior or a possible imitation effect.
  • Communicate with families quickly, smoothly and sensitively.
  • Train support students to detect cases in the school and social networks.
  • Improve and increase material and human resources for mental health care aimed at children and adolescents.
back to school covid
Going back to school after confinement had a negative influence on the mental health of some minors. EFE / Ismael Herrero

How can families take care of children’s mental health?

Azucena Díez emphasizes that “the most important thing is communication, although in the adolescent stage it can be complicated.”

“We have all been teenagers and it seems that our parents become rivals. Many complain that their parents are too busy, they don’t want to worry them, or that expressing their feelings could invalidate them,” says the expert.

Consequently, many children resort to posts on social networks or to people their age to ask for help in this type of situation. However, Díez recalls that “sooner or later they will have to talk to their parents.”

“The first message for parents is to try to create a climate with open and fluid communication to make the adolescent feel comfortable. This seems very easy, but it is really complicated, although you have to try, ”she expresses.

Approaching their subjects of interest, not peppering them with questions and not addressing them in a tone of order or blame are some of the keys to maintaining good communication, according to the pediatrician.

“When a teenager feels sad, depressed or hopeless and they themselves have the ability to tell their parents, it says a lot about the family dynamics”, he values.

How should one act in a case of self-harm or attempted suicide in minors?

Faced with a warning signal, Díez states: “In a case of self-harm or attempted suicide, the ideal would be to speak with the pediatrician first so that he can assess whether the case should be referred to mental health urgently.”

However, the health company warns that other problems arise here, such as the lack of training of professionals. “Oftentimes, primary care physicians and pediatricians don’t feel trained to do a basic exam,” she says.

Additionally, waiting lists, overcrowded programs, and a lack of mental health professions make it difficult to treat cases.

The pediatrician adds that “the social gap is another problem that particularly worries them, since access for many families is very limited.”

“Families that are aware and have financial means will be able to go to a private specialist to speed up this process, and then they have better prognosis. This is very sad and I consider it an injustice,” she notes.

Suicide, the leading cause of unnatural death among young people

The pandemic has exposed the psychological suffering of thousands of people. Young people and children are a particularly affected group, as reported by the Spanish Association of Pediatrics.

Currently, suicide is the first cause of unnatural death in Spain in young people, according to data from the National Institute of Statistics.

The Youth Institute (INJUVE) reports global prevalence rates of emotional disorders between 6.5% for anxiety disorders and 2.6% for depressive disorders in the child and adolescent population (between 6 and 18 years).

a message of hope

Azucena Díez affirms that “all these children should be given a message of hope and that they are not alone because everything has a solution, even if it doesn’t seem like it”.

Also, remember that they can contact an adult such as the school principal, social services or emergency telephone numbers such as 112.

In Spain, there are many ways to ask for help in case of suicide. On the one hand, the hope phone (717 00 37 17), attended by an NGO.

The ANAR Foundationspecifically for children and adolescents, also deals with cases of self-harm and suicide in childhood.

Likewise, the Government approved last December the start-up of 024, a suicide hotline that will be available in May for the entire State.

Social networks such as Instagram, Tik Tok or Facebook have protocols to provide help in case of suicide risk with specific phones for each country.

Reported sexual assaults at the U.S. military academies increased sharply during the 2020-21 school year, as students returned to in-person classes during the coronavirus pandemic.

The increase continues what officials believe is an upward trend at the academies, despite an influx of new sexual assault prevention and treatment programs.

Comparing the totals over the past three years, however, is tricky. The number of reports dropped at all the academies during the pandemic-shortened 2019-20 school year, when in-person classes were canceled and students were sent home in the spring to finish the semester online.

Although there were fewer reports that year than the previous year, one senior defense official said that based on trends the total likely would have shown an increase if students had not left early. In addition, the number of reported assaults in 2020-21 was also higher than the pre-pandemic school year of 2018-19.

According to the Pentagon report released Thursday, the overall jump in cases was driven by increases at the Air Force Academy and the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. There were 131 assaults reported by cadets or midshipmen in 2020-21, compared with 88 the previous year and 122 a year earlier.

Of the 131, cadets at the Air Force Academy in Colorado reported 52 assaults, compared with 46 at West Point in New York and 33 at the U.S. Naval Academy in Maryland.

FILE - This May 10, 2007 file photo shows the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md.

FILE – This May 10, 2007 file photo shows the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md.

During a visit to West Point earlier this month, Army Secretary Christine Wormuth met with academy leaders, staff members and cadets and talked about the sexual assault problem. She said they talked about the so-called Trust Program, which is led by cadets and helps train them to address sexual assault and harassment and encourage intervention when they see questionable behavior.

“West Point is working hard to increase cadets’ trust in their reporting system while at the same time preventing events from happening in the first place,” Wormuth said, adding that West Point has increased resources for victims “to ensure the academy handles each case with care.”

Victims at the academies are encouraged to report assaults, and at times students will come forward to talk about unwanted sexual contact that happened in the years before they started school there. If those episodes of unwanted sexual contact are included, as well as those involving students but reported by individuals outside the schools, the total sexual assault reports for 2020-21 is 161. That also is an increase over the pre-pandemic year, when there were 148.

The latest increase comes as Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and other leaders struggle to curb sexual assaults across the military, amid escalating criticism from Capitol Hill. Lawmakers are demanding better prevention efforts and more aggressive prosecutions.

Austin and others have acknowledged that while they continue to study what works and what doesn’t, they haven’t yet found the answers.

Nate Galbreath, acting director of the Pentagon’s sexual assault prevention office, said the department is encouraged that students are more willing to come forward and report assaults, allowing victims to get help and perpetrators to be held accountable. But the leaders across the military said they are also very concerned that the trends are going in the wrong direction, and Galbreath said that while there is an unprecedented attention on the problem right now, there is “still much more work to be done.”

Galbreath acknowledged that prevention efforts have been under way for years, but he said programs that may have worked in the past do not necessarily work now. He said the department is using scientific studies to narrow down what programs actually are successful.

Officials also say it is difficult to determine what impact the pandemic may have had. Students returned to the academies in the fall of 2020 but faced widespread restrictions, random COVID-19 testing and a mix of online and in-person classes. In many cases bars, restaurants and other businesses around the campuses may have been closed or less accessible.

A planned anonymous survey of the students, which often can provide greater insight into the problem, was not conducted in 2020 due to the pandemic. The survey normally is done every two years, and officials believe it provides a more accurate picture of assaults, harassment and unwanted sexual contact. A survey will be conducted this spring, Galbreath said.

The Secretary of District Education of Cartagena (SED) reported that the deliveries of industrialized rations to students benefiting from the School Feeding Program (PAE) have been affected since last Tuesday by defaults by operators.

Today there are 106,000 students in 205 schools without receiving food rations.

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The contract is backed by the Mercantile Exchange

This contract involves the Mercantile Exchange, who will have to act in the company of the Cartagena district in verifying the causes mentioned by the operators,

According to the District, the operators Cartagena Express and Por los Niños de la Heroica requested last February 14 to suspend deliveries from Tuesday, February 15 until next Monday, citing non-compliance by their suppliers and effects that they say they have due to the impact of high food prices in the country.

The District Secretary of Education rejected the late notice of the operators and recalled that the arguments expressed do not exempt them from the administrative and contractual decisions applied by the District within the framework of the current contracts.

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Even so, the operator suspended the school feeding service between February 16, 17, 18 and 21, 2022.

“This contract involves the Mercantile Exchange, who will have to act in the company of the Cartagena district in verifying the causes mentioned by the operators, and if it is true that all the alternatives were supplied, and if not, they must be sought as soon as possible, all alternatives must be looked at for the reestablishment of this right to education”, assured Juan Carlos Martínez, director of Food to Learn.

District promises legal action

There is no justification for it being due to non-compliance with prices by suppliers. This is not an issue that has occurred from one day to the next, and nobody forces the operator to have the same provider.

The legal team of the Ministry of Education reported that it is analyzing the situation to provide a timely response and take the legal actions that must be applied to the operators within the framework of the contracts for the provision of school meals.

“There is no justification for it being due to non-compliance with prices by suppliers. This is not an issue that has occurred from one day to the next, and nobody forces the operator to have the same provider. It is working all over the country. We cannot unilaterally be causing problems for children, a contract is not resolved in that way,” said Martínez.

The District asked the Ombudsman and other surveillance and control entities to be permanently integrated into the daily tasks of PAE supervision carried out by the Secretary of Education since the beginning of the school calendar, in the company of the School Feeding Committees, made up of teachers and parents.

Cartagena

More news in Colombia

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So far in 2022, crimes in the Montería Metropolitan area have increased one hundred percent compared to the previous year.

The situation also affects the municipality of Cereté, to which crime has migrated with its actions outside the law, including homicides, reaching a 267 percent increase.

The information was delivered by the mayor of Montería, Carlos Ordosgoitia Sanín, who in an extraordinary security council promises to take control actions, hand in hand with personnel from the Army and the National Police.

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The Clan of the Gulf

“We are working forcefully from all fronts to guarantee security in each of the city’s areas,” said Mayor Carlos Ordosgoitia.

According to the investigations carried out by the authorities in Córdoba, the actions recorded at the beginning of the year 2022 point to members of the Clan del Golfo.

“It was determined that 90 percent of the violent acts are the result of the reorganization of the leaders of the Clan del Golfo. The homicides committed in the capital indicate that they are settling accounts of members of this criminal organization, ”he specified.

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He expressed that crime has not respected borders in the same way, so far in 2022.

“With the capture of alias Otoniel, other heads have been regrouping and have also shown strength through their structures in recent criminal acts,” he said.
Control measures.

Night time restriction on
public establishments

…restriction of hours in public establishments until 1:00 a.m. and the restriction of the male barbecue on motorcycles from 8:00 p.m. to 4:00 a.m. the next day

The actions committed by criminals in Montería led the mayor, in coordination with the Army and the National Police, to take more drastic measures at night.

“A restriction of hours will be implemented in public establishments until 1:00 am and the restriction of the male barbecue on motorcycles from 8:00 pm to 4:00 am the next day,” explained Mayor Carlos Ordosgoitia.

(Worth reading: The exciting rescue of sloth bear from a utility pole in Antioquia)

The restrictions will be carried out in the neighborhoods of Los Recuerdos, Los Araujos, Furatena, Alfonso López, La Gloria, Nuevo Horizonte, La Granja, Las Colinas, Brisas del Sinú, Villa Melisa, Galilea, Panzenú, P5, Santander, Santa Fe, Villa Margarita. , Pastrana Borrero, Mocarí, Los Garzones, Comfacor, Boston and Los Cedros.

Reward

…monitor the corridors of drugs, weapons transport and crime that have been detected in some sectors of the urban area and the roads of the rural area

Likewise, the authorities offer reward for whom information leading to the capture of those presumed responsible for the homicides committed.
“We have identified seven individuals for whom we offer 5 million pesos as a reward and also one of the leaders who is in the perimeter part of the urban area of ​​Montería, which is a national operation, for which up to 500 million pesos are offered. pesos,” he added.

He specified that resources will be increased to provide technology to the authorities, with drones and logistical support with the aim of capturing criminals.

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“In addition to the work articulated with the Police and the Prosecutor’s Office, which is added to the work of the National Army to monitor drug corridors, weapons transport and crime that have been detected in some sectors of the urban area and roads in the rural area,” I note.

He has also indicated that the municipal administration and the public force are working to counteract criminal acts in the metropolitan area and the department in general, considering that the situation is a reflection of what is happening in the country.

Francis Xavier Barrios
Special for WEATHER
Hunting

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Last year, the 32 departments of the country and the Capital District stopped receiving more than 750,000 million pesos for cigarette tax, destined for health, recreation and sports.

That’s what the study says Incidence of illegal cigarette consumption in Colombia 2021carried out by the firm Invamer for the National Federation of Departments (FND) and whose results have just been presented.

According to that study, in the last four years Colombia stopped collecting 2.4 billion pesos for the same reason, which represented a huge gap in departmental finances.

In the last four years, Colombia stopped collecting 2.4 billion pesos for this same concept.

The report indicates that despite the fact that the illegal consumption of cigarettes in Colombia fell by one percentage point, going from 34%, in 2020, to 33%, in 2021, the losses were greater. While in 2020 the regions stopped receiving 692,000 million pesos from cigarette tax, last year that figure increased to 750,000 million pesos.

“The number that was not received increased, although illegal consumption decreased, because the market grew,” says the Executive Director of the FND, Didier Tavera Amado. However, according to Tavera, due to the percentage point that consumption in the country decreased, “territorial entities have more than 59,000 million saved, which is equivalent to investing in the admission to school of 55,000 minors on average.”
(You may be interested in: Mass robbery in a Medellín restaurant during a birthday celebration)

According to the report, which was conducted among people aged 18 to 64 from all socioeconomic strata, on average, each smoker consumes 7 illegal cigarettes a day in urban areas; in rural areas this consumption rises to 8 illegal cigarettes per day.

For this reason, according to the study, in the countryside the consumption of illegal cigarettes reaches 52% while in urban areas it is 27%.

On average, each smoker consumes 7 illegal cigarettes per day in urban areas; in rural areas this consumption rises to 8 illegal cigarettes per day.

In terms of stratum and age range, the main consumer of illegal cigarettes is between 55 and 64 years old, and belongs mostly to strata 1 and 2. In these strata, the per capita consumption of illegal cigarettes per week is 53 cigarettes, while strata 4, 5 and 6 reach 48 cigarettes.

The people who consume the most are those over 55 years of age, 60 cigarettes a week; while those between 18 and 24 consume almost 40 per week.

For Tavera, the good news that the study reveals is that the upward trend that had been marking the illegal market has been stopped: “Since 2016, the percentage of illegal cigarettes has been rising consistently: it went from 13 percent, in 2016, to 34 percent in 2020, and for 2021 that rise is stopped and it is possible to reduce even one point: 33 percent”.
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“The results of the study are encouraging, since they demonstrate the effectiveness of the strategies implemented at the national level, which have been segmented to meet the needs and characteristics of each of the regions,” he adds.

cigarette smuggling

The Tax and Customs Police, Medellín Division, in coordination with the DIAN) and Revenues of Antioquia have carried out several anti-smuggling operations in the Aburrá Valley metropolitan area.

The results of the study show that among the departments in which the consumption of illegal cigarettes was reduced is Antioquia, which in 2020 was at the top.

The results of the study show that among the departments in which the consumption of illegal cigarettes was reduced is Antioquia, which in 2020 was at the top.

Antioquia went from 47 percent in consumption to 34 percent, a considerable decrease of 13 percent, which the FND and the Dian attribute to the so-called Antioquia Plan, which began in the middle of last year to combat the sale and consumption of cigarettes. smuggled.

Martín Orozco, general director of Invamer, assures that when the national 33 percent is disaggregated among the departments, the case of Antioquia stands out because it weighs a lot within the industry: it represents 5.4 percent. “It is a department where many cigarettes are consumed and therefore the improvements achieved there are reflected in the national figure,” he maintains.

The study showed that the departments with the highest rate of illegal cigarette consumption are La Guajira (94%), Cesar (85%), Magdalena (84%), Sucre (70%), Norte de Santander (68%), Bolívar ( 62%), Córdoba (58%), Atlántico (47%), Santander (35%), Tolima (35%), Chocó (34%), Guaviare (34%) and Antioquia (34%).

For their part, the regions that increased the most in the consumption of illegal cigarettes compared to 2020 were Bolívar (15%), Cesar (11%), Chocó (10%) and Risaralda (10%).
(Also: Young woman would have been tied up and killed inside her house in Medellín)

The study also found that the illegal cigarette market tends to use more informal and high-traffic channels, such as neighborhood stores. In Colombia there are about 600,000 neighborhood stores.

According to the Invamer study, 82 percent of people who consume contraband cigarettes say they buy them in stores.

More than 6 million packs were seized in 2021

According to the DIAN, the main illegal cigarette brands available in Colombia are Rumba, from Uruguay; Carnival, from South Korea; Ultima, from India, and Marshal and Marble, from China.
In 2021, according to that entity, more than 6 million cigarette packs, 112 thousand bottles of liquor (750ml), and 709 thousand beers (350ml) were seized. This merchandise is commercially valued at more than 24 billion pesos. In 2022, more than 16,900 million pesos will be invested in the fight against smuggling.

Interviewed credits:

Jonathan Bock, director of the Flip

RPTV NEWS AGENCY team:

Journalist: Julian Pena

Camera and Edition: Angelo Ramirez

BOGOTA COLOMBIA). Wednesday, February 9, 2022 (RPTV NEWS AGENCY). Exercising journalism in Colombia is not an easy task, according to figures from the Foundation for Press Freedom in 2021 there were more than 700 attacks against communicators throughout the national territory.

“167 threats, a murdered journalist, the case of Marcos Efraín Montalvo in the city of Tuluá, and all this ends up making Colombia the second most violent country in Latin America after Mexico,” said Jonathan Bock, director of Flip.

During the first week of 2022, at least 7 journalists from Arauca have received pressure and threats in the midst of confrontations by the FARC and Eln dissidents.

“This deep crisis is added to other events that have also occurred such as the economic crisis in the media and the lack of independence of the public media,” added Jonathan Bock, director of Flip.

For these reasons, FLIP and the media continue to make an urgent call to the authorities to protect the daily work carried out by journalists in the different regions of the country.

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MANAGING DIRECTOR

Rafael Poveda

CO-ADDRESS

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EDITORIAL COORDINATOR

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2021




The Biden administration has proposed raising the fees on almost all nonimmigrant visas. While U.S. officials say the move is needed to better align visa prices with what it costs to provide them, critics worry that if the administration does not address visa wait times, the cost increase could mean even fewer travelers and students coming to the United States.

According to a Federal Register notice, the State Department expects the new prices to go into effect by September, and it is accepting comments on the proposed increases until February 28.

“All of the fee increases are happening at a time when tourism and travel to the United States is already at an all-time low, and the State Department is imposing waits of six months to a year in many places for a tourist- or business-travel visa,” David Bier, an immigration policy expert at the Cato Institute, told VOA.

State Department figures show the visas with the highest numbers of applications are tourism, business, and study.

A nonimmigrant visa allows the holder to travel as a tourist or live, work or study temporarily in the U.S. under certain conditions. Visa applications for tourism, B1 and B2, and student visas, F, M, J, will increase from $160 to $245, a 54% increase. While employment-based visas, H, L, O, P, Q and R, are going from $190 to $310, a 63% increase.

Proposed Prices for Popular US Visas

Proposed Prices for Popular US Visas

“The most important thing is whether visas are issued promptly. If the administration increases costs, but there’s not a vast improvement in service from the State Department, then the result will be far fewer travelers,” Bier added.

U.S. airport traffic has fallen in recent years, counting both domestic and international travelers. According to the Transportation Security Administration, it screened a total of 1.1 million people on January 26. On the same date in 2019, before the coronavirus pandemic, that number was more than 2 million.

Promises

Addressing America’s immigration system was one of President Joe Biden’s key campaign promises. On his first day in office, he unveiled the U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021, sweeping immigration reform legislation that included an eight-year path to citizenship for the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S., a plan to clear employment-based visa backlogs, and a plan to prevent dependents of employment-based visa holders from “aging out” of the system, among other changes.

But the legislation stalled in Congress and is largely viewed as all but dead.

“Immigrants have done so much for America during the pandemic — as they have throughout our history. The country supports immigration reform. Congress should act,” Biden said.

Immigration experts say that while Biden reversed many of his predecessor’s policies often described as anti-immigration, a Trump administration executive order that limited legal immigration and the issuance of temporary work visas contributed to longer wait times for nonimmigrant visas.

Also, the State Department temporarily suspended routine visa services at all U.S. embassies and consulates in 2020 because of COVID-19 restrictions. They are reopening under a phased resumption of visa services, but about a fourth are partly or fully closed, according to the Cato Institute.

U.S. consulates around the world are a major component of the immigration system, processing visas “that authorize travel to the United States, but many consulates remain closed, and the open ones are reporting record wait times — [more than one year] in dozens of locations,” Bier wrote in a recent analysis.

A State Department official told VOA that U.S. embassies and consulates have online information on operating status and which services are currently offered.

According to Bier, in January most consulates reported waits of 202 days for a visa appointment for business travelers and tourists, up from 95 days in April 2021. For students and exchange visitors, the wait was about 38 days, up from 25 days about a year ago, and 62 days for everyone else, including skilled temporary workers, up from 40 days in April 2021.

FILE - Students make their way through the University of Chicago campus, in Chicago, May 6, 2021.

FILE – Students make their way through the University of Chicago campus, in Chicago, May 6, 2021.

Effect on students, workers

A State spokesperson explained that the department’s consular operations are largely funded by fees for services and the proposed fee increase is to ensure the agency is fully recovering the costs of providing these services.

“Visa fees charged by the Department are generally based on the cost of providing visa services and are determined after conducting a study of the cost of such service,” the spokesperson told VOA by email. “The assessment of the actual cost of service in combination with demand projections over many years determined the fees published in the proposed fee schedule.”

Increased fees need to translate into better service, especially shorter wait times, which is particularly important for students, said Jill Welch, senior policy adviser to the Presidents’ Alliance on Higher Education and Immigration.

“We’re still evaluating the potential impact of the proposed rule on international student flows to the United States. … It’s important for [the State Department] to have adequate resources to process visa applications, particularly for those students and scholars who are on tight timelines for obtaining their visas in order to arrive on time for the academic term,” Welch said.

International students at U.S. colleges and universities contributed nearly $41 billion to the U.S. economy and supported 458,290 jobs in the 2018-19 academic year, according to a study by NAFSA: Association of International Educators. In the 2020-21 academic year, international students contributed $28.4 billion to the U.S. economy, a decline of nearly 27%, or $10.3 billion, largely because of the pandemic.

But not everyone believes higher visa costs will have a big impact.

Marcelo Barros, an international student career expert in Washington, told VOA that although the fee increase was “unfortunate,” it wouldn’t stop people from coming to the U.S.

“This is not going to have any meaningful impact on [student] enrollment or on [employment-based visas]. This will not have any meaningful impact on the desire of companies to hire talent outside the U.S.,” he said, adding that if travelers, students or high-skill workers want to come to the United States, they will pay the new fee.

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