President Obama Comments on E-Verify

During a recent White House press conference, President Obama was asked whether he would veto a mandatory E-Verify bill that did not include immigration reform provisions. Without directly answering the question, Obama stated, “We may not be able to get everything that I would like to see in a package, but we have to have a balanced package.” Though Obama acknowledged that the E-Verify employment authorization system can be “an important [immigration] enforcement tool,” he added a caveat – “if it’s not riddled with errors.”

Skepticism surrounding E-Verify’s accuracy is not new. The Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services have been gradually making improvements to the E-Verify system, many of which are intended to improve its accuracy rate.

The need to attain an acceptable level of accuracy grows as the number of E-Verify users expands. Computerworld reports that more than 250,000 U.S. employers have already signed up for E-Verify, with another 1,300 new businesses enrolling each week. State and local legislation mandating E-Verify use is continually rising. Additionally, in June 2011 two bills were introduced in Congress that would require all employers to use E-Verify. 

Some Businesses Are Reluctant to Use E-Verify

The Fresno Bee reports that some employers, particularly within the agriculture industry, will not use E-Verify, the federal electronic employment verification system, to authenticate new hires’ legal work status. Relying on figures provided by the federal government, the paper states that “[o]ut of thousands of businesses in Fresno, for example, only 179 use the program… although those numbers don't account for businesses that contract with personnel companies using the program.” Businesses cite two main reasons for their non-participation in E-Verify: (1) administrative burden; and (2) a shortage of available legal workers.

Administrative Burden

Businesses unwilling to use E-Verify often point to the associated administrative burden. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which runs E-Verify, acknowledges that simply preparing to use E-Verify requires between a few days to several months, depending on a business’s size and processes. Human resources staff must devote time to enrolling in the program, and learning how to use it (via DHS manuals or online tutorials). Conducting the verification process and addressing issues that arise if E-Verify finds an individual ineligible to work requires time and resources.

However, the risks of noncompliance are significant. As previously reported here, the current administration’s approach to immigration enforcement centers upon employer audits. In April 2009, DHS issued a fact sheet, which revised its Worksite Enforcement Strategy to strengthen its focus on employer noncompliance. Two months later, 652 businesses received Notices of Inspections from Immigration and Customs Enforcement; at the end of the year, in December 2009, 1,000 faced audits, and the trend continues in 2010. From October 2009 to July 2010, businesses in Texas alone were fined over $600,000.

Also, although federal law makes E-Verify mandatory only for federal contractors, an increasing number of state and local governments have passed laws mandating the use of E-Verify. These laws typically apply only to public employers and contractors, but some states and municipalities require private employers to use E-Verify. In certain states and municipalities with proposed or actual immigration-related laws, use of E-Verify benefits employers because it provides a good faith defense to hiring violations.

The Legal Workforce

The lack of an available and willing legal workforce is another justification companies put forth for not using E-Verify. As an agricultural employer told The Fresno Bee, “[E-Verify] may work for Costco, but Costco doesn't have the problem I have,” i.e., a legal workforce shortage. The United Farm Workers of America, a large agricultural workers union, recently ran a campaign called “Take Our Jobs” that challenged individuals with legal U.S. work status to take illegal immigrants’ positions working in the fields. As noted by The Hill, only seven individuals accepted the challenge, the most notable being Stephen Colbert of Comedy Central’s “The Colbert Report,” who testified (in character) about his experience before the House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, Refugees, Border Security, and International Law.

Farmers interviewed by The Fresno Bee stated their preference for a legal workforce, and some pending bills aim for this result. In October 2010, Senator Saxby Chambliss introduced a bill (S. 3912) that aims to provide a non-amnesty option for temporary agricultural workers and streamline the H-2A temporary worker program. The Menendez-Leahy comprehensive immigration reform bill seeks, among other things, to address shortcomings in existing worker programs that have led to undocumented migration.

Employers or individuals wanting to learn more about E-Verify can read Littler’s Insight, A Basic Guide to E-Verify and Related Immigration Compliance: Everything Federal Contractors and Others Need to Know to Comply with E-Verify Requirements, this blog’s E-Verify entries, or visit the DHS E-Verify page.

USCIS Issues Two Binding Precedent Appeals Decisions

United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has announced that two decisions from its Administrative Appeals Office (AAO) will be binding precedent for the agency, i.e., USCIS must follow the decisions’ holdings when evaluating future petitions. AAO precedent decisions result from a collaboration between the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice. The two decisions are not new, having been decided in 2005 and 2006, but it was not until October 20, 2010, that both were deemed binding.

The first decision, Matter of Al Wazzan (pdf), affirms USCIS’s denial of an application to adjust status to permanent residence and holds that an employment-based petition must be "valid" initially if it is to "remain valid with respect to a new job."

The second decision, Matter of Chawathe (pdf), reverses USCIS’s denial of an application to preserve residence for naturalization purposes and clarifies the definition of employment by an "American firm or corporation."

Matter of Al Wazzan

In Matter of Al Wazzan, 25 I&N Dec. 359 (AAO 2010) [initially decided Jan. 12, 2005], the applicant’s employer filed an initial immigrant visa petition in 1998, which the director denied on February 2, 2000. An appeal was dismissed on January 8, 2001. The employer filed a second petition on August 26, 2002, and the applicant filed an application for adjustment of status on September 18, 2002 – both were denied over one year later, in August and September 2003, respectively.

The applicant argued that the director erred in denying his application for adjustment of status because resolution took over 180 days. This argument was based on a 2000 amendment to 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(5)(A)(iv), which stated that:

A petition . . . for an individual whose application for adjustment of status . . . has been filed and remained unadjudicated for 180 days or more shall remain valid with respect to a new job if the individual changes jobs or employers if the new job is in the same or a similar occupational classification as the job for which the petition was filed.

The applicant contended that the petition became “valid” if the agency did not resolve the matter within six months. The AAO noted that this interpretation would have immigration courts “construe the term ‘valid’ to include denied or unadjudicated petitions.”

The AAO found no basis for the applicant’s interpretation. After examining the statute’s plain language, legislative history, prior immigration decisions, and recognizing that petitions could only be approved after USCIS investigated a petition and determined eligibility, it concluded that it “would be irrational to believe that Congress intended to throw out the entire statutorily mandated scheme regulating immigrant visas whenever that scheme requires more than 180 days to effectuate.”

Concerning petitioner’s argument that the legislative intent was to alleviate immigration petition backlogs, the AAO held this interpretation “would create a situation where ineligible aliens would gain a ‘valid’ visa simply by filing frivolous visa petitions and adjustment applications, thereby increasing USCIS backlogs, in the hopes that the application might remain unadjudicated for 180 days.”

Accordingly, because the applicant’s visa petition had been properly denied, the applicant was ineligible to have his immigration status adjusted and denial of the applications was proper.

Matter of Chawathe

The primary question presented in Matter of Chawathe, 25 I&N Dec. 369 (AAO 2010) [initially decided Jan. 11, 2006], was “whether a publicly traded corporation may be considered an ‘American firm or corporation,’ [for immigration law purposes]... when its stock ownership is widely dispersed and there is no readily available means to determine the nationality of its owners.”

In Chawathe, the applicant was a U.S. permanent resident who intended to apply for U.S. citizenship, but would be working overseas for between two to three years. To qualify for citizenship, the applicant would need to reside continuously in the U.S. as a lawful permanent resident for the five years prior to filing an application, and be physically present in the United States for at least half of the residency period. However, the law provides that no period of absence from the United States will break the residency continuity if the individual was: (1) physically present and residing in the U.S., after gaining permanent residency, for an uninterrupted one-year period; and (2) employed by an “American firm or corporation” or subsidiary thereof.

Seeking to preserve his U.S. residency, the applicant filed the required preservation of residency petition. The director denied the petition based on two determinations: (1) that the applicant did not work for an American firm or corporation; and (2) that the applicant’s temporary overseas employer did not qualify as a subsidiary of an American firm or corporation. The applicant appealed both determinations.

American Firm or Corporation

The AAO held that a company’s incorporation in a U.S. state does not in itself establish the entity as an American firm or corporation. To qualify, more than 50% of the company must be owned by American citizens. In Chawathe, proving ownership would be an onerous task: the applicant’s employer was a publicly-traded company on the New York and San Francisco stock exchanges that could issue 4.1 billion shares, so the applicant would need to demonstrate that American citizens owned more than 2.05 billion shares. Understanding the difficulty of tracing nationalities and ownership interests of public companies, the AAO found it “reasonable to presume” a public company qualified as an American firm or corporation for immigration law purposes if the company was both incorporated in the United States and traded its stock exclusively on U.S. stock markets.

Subsidiaries

The AAO also concluded that the applicant had demonstrated that his temporary overseas employer was a subsidiary of an American firm or corporation. The temporary overseas employer was listed as a subsidiary in the company’s Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filings. Moreover, the applicant provided a letter from the American company’s Assistant to the President stating that the temporary overseas employer was a wholly-owned subsidiary, and that although the applicant would be working for the temporary overseas employer for two to three years his salary would be paid by the American company. The AAO held that, although the applicant could have provided more probative evidence of the temporary overseas employer’s subsidiary status, the SEC filing and corporate letter established, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the temporary overseas employer was a wholly-owned subsidiary of the applicant’s American employer. Because qualifying for citizenship based on permanent resident status only required the applicant to prove his eligibility by a preponderance of the evidence (compared to the heightened standard of “clear and convincing evidence” for petitions based on marriage), he provided sufficient evidence for the director to conclude that “more likely than not” the applicant satisfied his burden of proof.

Accordingly, the AAO sustained the appeal, finding the employer an American firm or corporation and the temporary overseas employer a qualifying subsidiary, and concluding that the applicant met the requirements for preserving his U.S. residency while abroad.

Senators Menendez and Leahy Introduce Comprehensive Immigration Reform Bill

On September 29, 2010, Senators Robert Menendez (D–NJ) and Patrick Leahy (D–VT) introduced “The Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2010” (S. 3932). According to Senator Menendez, the bill “addresses long-standing, wide-ranging flaws in the immigration system that have been priorities of groups on each side of the immigration reform debate.” The bill was introduced shortly before Congress adjourned for its mid-term election recess. As reported by The Hill, Senator Menendez defended his timing for introducing the bill by stating that it could lead to possible “lame-duck movement” on the legislation, and in the longer term it serves as an "invitation to bring Republican colleagues to discussion" on immigration reform.

S.3932 addresses six major immigration topics, highlights of which include:

  • Border Enforcement
    • Establishes border enforcement “triggers” that must be met before unauthorized immigrants can apply for permanent residency.
    • Requires the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to review assets and staffing needed for border security and enforcement, and funds improvements and hiring in accordance with this review.
    • Clarifies that the power to regulate immigration rests with the federal government, not states and local authorities, and that the latter have no “inherent authority” to enforce federal immigration laws (outside of 287(g) agreements).
  • Interior Enforcement
    • Requires DHS to track noncitizens’ departures to ensure they do not overstay their visas.
    • Expands penalties for passport, visa and immigration fraud.
    • Denies “visa waiver” privileges to countries whose citizens attempt to overstay visas.
  • Worksite Enforcement
    • Requires that all employers adopt an employment verification system within five years.
    • Creates a new fraud- and tamper-resistant Social Security card.
    • Requires workers to use fraud- and tamper-resistant documents to verify work authorization.
  • Reforming the Legal Immigration System
    • Creates the structure for a new nonimmigrant visa program (H‐2C) to address shortcomings in existing worker programs that have led to undocumented migration.
    • Expands labor protections in current H-2A, H-2B, H-1B and L-1 visa programs.
    • Incorporates the AgJOBS bill, which provides a path to permanent residency for farm workers and revises agricultural employer sponsorship requirements.
  • Legalization of Undocumented Individuals
    • Creates Lawful Prospective Immigrant (LPI) status for non-criminal undocumented immigrants living in the United States since September 30, 2010. LPI applicants must, among other requirements, submit biometric and biographical data, undergo security and law enforcement checks, and pay a fine.
    • Incorporates the DREAM Act, which creates a path to legal status for individuals brought illegally to the United States as children, provided they meet certain criteria and enroll in college or the U.S. military.
  • Immigration Integration and Other Reforms
    • Enhances programs and policies to help immigrants learn U.S. civics and the English language.
    • Provides humanitarian visas for Haitian children orphaned by the 2010 earthquake.
    • Requires the State Department to develop a strategy to reduce migration pressures.

January Contreras Appointed as USCIS Ombudsman

On November 23, 2009, January Contreras was appointed as the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) Ombudsman. As Ombudsman, Contreras will be responsible for helping USCIS resolve obstacles to accessing services, identify areas in need of improvement, and recommend actions that will improve services. Previously, Contreras was a Senior Adviser to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano.

Obama Administration to Advance Immigration Reform in Early 2010

Immigration passport stamp

The New York Times reports that the Obama Administration will push to implement immigration reform measures in the first quarter of 2010. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano indicated today in an address to the Center for American Progress that immigration reform will be put on the political agenda early in 2010. Napolitano sent a clear message to Congress that it should be ready for movement on immigration. Specifically, Napolitano referred to a "three-legged stool" approach that will incorporate tougher enforcement laws aimed at employers and illegal immigrants, a streamlined system for legal immigration, and a stringent process to allow illegal immigrants to become legal. It is anticipated that the Administration's focus on securing the border and targeting employers that hire undocumented workers will substantially increase while the foundation is laid to introduce an immigration reform initiative to Congress.

This entry was written by Ian R. Macdonald.

Photo credit: David Franklin

Alejandro Mayorkas Confirmed as Director of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services

On Friday the Senate confirmed the nomination of Alejandro Mayorkas to serve as the director of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), the agency within the Department of Homeland Security responsible for overseeing lawful immigration to this country. In addition to establishing immigration-related policies and services, the USCIS adjudicates the petitions and applications of potential immigrants and guest workers. Continue reading about this development on Littler's Washington D.C. Employment Law Update blog.

Nomination of Mayorkas to Lead USCIS Clears Committee and Heads to Full Senate

The nomination of Alejandro Mayorkas as director of the Department of Homeland Security’s Citizenship and Immigration Services was recommended by the Senate Judiciary Committee and the matter now goes to the full Senate for consideration.

Mayorkas served as U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California for 12 years. He has proposed an overall review of the agency, improving the department’s fraud prevention and detection operations, increasing interdepartmental cooperation, and improving E-Verify’s efficiency.

E-Verify Usage Continues to Increase

A recent USCIS study reports that American businesses authenticate 1 in 4 new hires’ work status using E-Verify. According to a Homeland Security Insight & Analysis article, in 2009 there have been about 6 million E-Verify queries, a considerable increase from previous years. E-Verify boasts a 96.9% accuracy rate, and the program is frequently analyzed and updated. Substantial improvements are scheduled to occur in August 2009.

Although E-Verify has been praised by many in the business community, caution over mandating usage among all employers, particularly smaller employers, has been expressed. Others, however, believe that the system represents an efficient and effective way to curb illegal immigration, and are hoping that Congress increases funding and expands the program.


 

Senator Schumer Wants to Replace E-Verify with Biometric Identity Cards

Senator Charles Schumer (D-NY), chairman of the Senate Judiciary subcommittee on immigration, has strongly criticized the E-Verify system and proposes replacing it with a biometric-based federal employment verification system. As reported by Workforce Management, Schumer has called E-Verify “unfair” because it singles out individuals with Hispanic surnames and “ineffective” because unauthorized workers can slip through the system by using stolen Social Security numbers and fake IDs.

However, it is far from certain that Schumer’s plan to scrap E-Verify will succeed. The House recently approved a homeland security appropriations bill that includes a two-year reauthorization of E-Verify, and it also has approved redirecting $50 million of the DHS budget to the U.S. Customs and Immigration Services for E-Verify enhancements.

A Basic Guide to E-Verify and Related Immigration Compliance: Everything Federal Contractors and Others Need to Know to Comply with E-Verify Requirements

E-Verify is an Internet-based system operated by the Department of Homeland Security's U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (DHS) in partnership with the Social Security Administration (SSA) that allows participating employers to verify electronically the identity and employment eligibility of their newly hired employees, regardless of citizenship. Specifically, the SSA will verify that the name, Social Security number, and date of birth are correct, and the DHS will verify that the employee is in an employment-authorized immigration status.  Continue reading the April 2009 Littler "Insight" publication "A Basic Guide to E-Verify and Related Immigration Compliance: Everything Federal Contractors and Others Need to Know to Comply with E-Verify Requirements," written by Jorge R. Lopez, Joshua S. Roffman, Aimee Clark Todd, Shin-I Lowe and Lisa A. Cottle.
 

 

 

Napolitano Expresses Support for Extending E-Verify Beyond September 30 Expiration Date

As reported at the DailyRecord.com, Department of Homeland Security Secretary, Janet Napolitano, has stated that she supports the E-Verify program and would like to see it extended beyond its current expiration date of September 30, 2009. Napolitano also remarked that the Obama administration has not yet taken a position on whether to require all U.S. employers to use E-Verify.

During her interview with Gannett Washington Bureau, Napolitano referred to her experience with E-Verify while she was governor of Arizona. Napolitano stated:

Some of the arguments that are made about how [E-Verify] works or does not work don’t carry much water with me. I’ve already used it for several years. It works.
 

Countdown to Effective Date of New I-9

As discussed in our previous entry, the new Form I-9 (revision date 2/02/2009) is currently scheduled to go into effect on April 3, 2009. The new I-9 form is available on the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services website. The new I-9 and the interim rule creating it were originally published in the Federal Register on December 17, 2008, with a correction published on January 16, 2009. However, on January 30, 2009, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced that implementation of the new I-9 would be postponed until April 3, 2009. Notice of the delay appeared in the February 3, 2009 edition of the Federal Register. Continue reading Littler ASAP "Countdown to Effective Date of New I-9" by Jorge R. Lopez and Lisa A. Cottle.

 

Illinois Court Considers Constitutional Challenge to E-Verify Program

On March 12, 2009, a federal district court in Illinois ruled that a state law prohibiting employers from enrolling in the federal E-Verify program violates the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution. United States v Illinois, CDIll, No 07-3261 (Mar. 12, 2009). The Illinois Right to Privacy in the Workplace Act (Ill. P.A. 95-137), scheduled to take effect on January 1, 2008, amended the Illinois Right to Privacy Act by prohibiting employers in the state from enrolling in the E-Verify program until the Social Security Administration and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) were able to achieve a 99% accuracy rating with regard to making a determination on tentative nonconfirmation notices within three days of issuance.

The DHS sued the State of Illinois to repeal the law saying that it interfered with an employer’s right to participate in the voluntary federal program to verify whether a potential employee has valid U.S. work authorization. The federal district court in Illinois sided with DHS, holding that the law is preempted by the Supremacy Clause. Even though the E-Verify program is not mandatory, the court reasoned that the state law frustrates Congress’ intent to make the program available to all employers. The district court enjoined the State of Illinois from enforcing the law.

This article was written by Jorge R. Lopez, a shareholder in Littler's Miami office.

Michael Chertoff Discusses Future of Immigration Policy

The global economic crisis has triggered calls in some U.S. policy circles to tighten immigration rules in order to safeguard scarce jobs for American citizens. Yet despite difficult economic conditions, lawmakers should be considering immigration policy revisions based on the country's eventual economic revival, says former Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Michael Chertoff. In this interview, Chertoff discusses the future of immigration policy, and offers his advice that the U.S. increase communication efforts with the Mexican government to coordinate the legal flow of migrant workers to the United States.

Obama will Nominate John Morton to Lead ICE, and Esther Olavarria Named as DHS Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy

President Obama has announced his intention to nominate John Morton to be the Assistant Secretary for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano named Esther Olavarria as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy.

Secretary Napolitano said:

John Morton and Esther Olavarria are tremendous additions to our Homeland Security team. Both have demonstrated an extraordinary commitment to public service and both will be able and effective partners as we tackle the very complex issues surrounding immigration and securing of our borders.
 

NPR Broadcasts Interview of Napolitano on Topic of Immigration Priorities

Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Janet Napolitano spoke with National Public Radio reporter Madeleine Brand about her views on federal immigration policy. Topics discussed include enforcement along the border, human trafficking, and criminal sanctions against employers who violate laws.

Use of E-Verify Program Proves Challenging and Controversial

USA Today reports that the federal E-Verify system is becoming increasingly popular with states, despite the pitfalls and controversies that surround its use. The problems, identified in a report commissioned by the Homeland Security Department, include the following:

  • false preliminary rejections that may result in increased discrimination against foreign-born employees
  • improper use of E-Verify to check the status of job applicants
  • lack of measures to prevent the use of fraudulent IDs

Janet Napolitano, new head of the Department of Homeland Security and a strong supporter of E-Verify, has ordered a review of the program, due February 20, 2009.

DHS Secretary Napolitano Issues Immigration and Border Security Action Directive

On January 30, U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Janet Napolitano announced a wide-ranging action directive on immigration and border security. The directive requires specific DHS offices and components to “work together and with state and local partners to review and assess the plans and policies” to address:

  • criminal and fugitive aliens;
  • legal immigration benefit backlogs;
  • southbound gun smuggling;
  • cooperation with the National Guard at or near the border;
  • widows and widowers of U.S. citizens whose petitions for the alien spouse’s immigration were denied;
  • immigration detention centers (detention standards); and
  • electronic employee verification.

For each assessment, a final report is due by February 20, 2009.
 

Implementation of New I-9 Delayed

On December 17, 2008, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) published in the Federal Register an interim final rule revising the Form I-9 and List of Acceptable Documents attached thereto. A correction was subsequently published on January 16, 2009, contributing to the confusion already surrounding the new form. DHS later posted the new I-9 at www.uscis.gov indicating that it must be used by all employers effective February 2, 2009. Consequently, numerous interest groups proposed that the implementation of the I-9 be delayed. Late in the afternoon on January 30, 2009, that request was answered – DHS filed a last minute notice announcing that implementation of the form would be postponed until April 3, 2009. Notice of the delay appears in the February 3, 2009 edition of the Federal Register.

The interim rule alters both the I-9 form and the List of Acceptable Documents by changing some of the language on the form itself and adding to and deleting from the List of Acceptable Documents. In Section 1, the employee portion of the Form I-9, DHS has amended the language to include a noncitizen national. A noncitizen national includes someone born in American Samoa, certain citizens of the Trust territories of the Pacific Islands, and some children of noncitizen nationals born outside the United States.
 

The remainder of the changes imposed by the interim rule deal with Section 2, the employer portion of the Form I-9, and the List of Acceptable Documents. Under the law’s current incarnation, the U.S. passport and all List B documents are acceptable even if they are expired. A document containing no expiration date, such as a Social Security card, is considered “unexpired” and is therefore acceptable for I-9 purposes.

Under the interim rule, DHS has changed the List of Acceptable Documents to include the new U.S. Passport Card in List A. Two other documents have also been added to List A, and they will verify both identity and work authorization:

1. A foreign passport notation on a machine-readable immigrant visa that is pre-printed with a temporary I-551 notation (confirmation of legal permanent residence status); and

2. A passport from the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM) or the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI) with a valid Form I-94 demonstrating valid status pursuant to the Compact of Free Association with the United States.

A number of documents have been removed from List A because DHS no longer issues them and any such documents previously issued have now expired. These include:

1. Form I-688, Temporary Resident Card;

2. Form I-688A, Employment Authorization Card; and

3. Form I-688B, Employment Authorization Card.

Finally, the interim rule deletes all references to the former U.S. Department of Justice Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”) and replaces such references with “DHS” wherever “INS” appears in the relevant laws and documents. 

This entry was authored by Lisa Cottle, an associate in Littler's Cleveland office.
 

Maryland Senators and Congressman Seek Help for H2B Employers

A press release issued by the office of Senator Barbara A. Mikulski (D-Md.) states that Senator Mikulski, along with Senator Benjamin L. Cardin (D-Md.) and Congressman Frank M. Kratovil, Jr. (D-Md.), sent a letter to the Department of Labor and the Department of Homeland Security urging them to “use all means necessary” to protect small businesses throughout the country so they can keep their doors open this year. The reason for their concern is that, as of January 8, 2009, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) had already received enough applications to exceed the cap for H2B visas for the second half of fiscal year 2009.

Senator Mikulski said,

Companies in Maryland and around the country are unable to get the H2B visas, and workers, that they need and depend on because of bureaucratic slowdowns. Small and seasonal businesses are counting on us. We need this problem resolved quickly so we can reward people who are playing by the rules, instead of letting them down.
 

New DOL & DHS Regulations to Expand Agricultural Guest Worker Program

For the first time in 20 years, the H-2A guest worker program for agricultural employees is slated for reform. On Dec. 11, the Department of Labor (DOL) and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) issued final rules regarding the hiring of foreign agricultural workers, ostensibly to streamline the hiring process of these temporary and seasonal employees. Continue reading entry on Littler's Washington DC Employment Law Update blog.

 

 

Workplace Immigration Programs Likely to be Extended

Given the current economic crisis and other pressing issues facing the new president, sweeping immigration legislation is unlikely. Immigration policy in general is a contentious topic, so expect more piecemeal legislation as opposed to radical, across-the-board reform, as even in this economy there are areas where the shortages are not meeting our demographic needs, such as healthcare recruitment. Continue reading entry on Littler's Washington DC Employment Law update blog.