State Sen. Bill Kintner of Papillion said he believes the new refugees from the Middle East appear to be “pretty low-risk” because they’ve “been in the pipeline” for a year or two, before concerns about ISIS arose.

During the last legislative session, Kintner proposed a bill to hold refugee resettlement agencies liable for refugees from “high-risk” countries who commit crimes. The areas were mostly majority Muslim and included Syria, Afghanistan, Iran and Iraq.

While that bill didn’t get out of committee, Kintner is considering introducing legislation in January that would put in place more reporting requirements about refugees in the state and the services they’re receiving. The proposal is not meant to deter refugees from entering the state, he said.

“This might not be ideal, but at least the ones we probably have now are not coming here to do nefarious things,” he said. “In the future, as some of these people worm their way in, we might start to have problems.”

That’s where President-elect Donald Trump will come in, Kintner said.

On the campaign trail, Trump said the U.S. would stop accepting Syrian refugees. He also said he would ban Muslims from entering the U.S. and would register Muslims living here.