Critics allege that the new policy is at root ineffective, and--worse--appears to be a simple grab for money, with the fee for fingerprinting and reentry application sitting pretty at $80.00. Further, it requires permanent residents to be almost prescient in order to handle the mountain of paperwork with any efficiency--and it's simply impossible for them to know in advance when relatives overseas will fall ill, or jobs will transfer, or universities will accept them.
Of course, the most obvious criticism of this measure, and all measures that attempt to combat crime with paperwork, is the simple fact that criminals are, well, so criminal. Those who are bent on violence, destruction, and damage certainly aren't concerned with filing proper paperwork to stay out of trouble, which means that the only permanent residents inconvenienced by this new measure are the ones we should be actively recruiting--the type that actually care about doing things right. immmigration law is important