USCIS to Issue Employment Authorization and Advance Parole Cards for Adjustment of Status Applicants

Employment Authorization CardUnited States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced that it has begun issuing employment and travel authorization on a single card for certain applicants filing a Form I-485, Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status. This new card replaces the paper Advance Parole documents formerly issued to such applicants and offers increased security and durability. The card serves to verify a cardholder’s legal work status in the United States; specifically, employers may use the card as a List A document when completing a Form I-9. Additionally, cardholders can travel abroad and return to the United States without abandoning their pending adjustment application. Cardholders must present the card to request parole through the U.S. port of entry, at which point immigration officials will determine whether to grant parole (i.e., individuals who were unlawfully present in the United States may be denied re-admission).

Obama Pledges Continued Support for Comprehensive Immigration Reform

Despite no significant legislative advances concerning immigration during his first two years in office, and an upcoming legislative session with a Republican majority in the House and increased Republican presence in the Senate, President Obama told the Congressional Hispanic Caucus that he will continue to push for comprehensive immigration reform in 2011, reports Politico. Though the gesture was welcomed by caucus members, it remains uncertain whether Obama will find similar support in his own party given that many new, incoming legislators are veering to the right politically and pushing for more typically conservative initiatives like increased border control and enforcement. The President’s pledge came shortly after the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act (DREAM Act), which would have provided six years of conditional permanent residency to certain undocumented minors who have completed high school and then join the military or attend college for at least two years, failed to garner sufficient Senate votes to overcome a Republican filibuster.

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.

Failed Defense Spending Bill Thwarts DREAM Act

Logo of the United States SenateOn September 21, 2010, a cloture motion on the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011 (S. 3454) fell four votes shy of the 60 required to advance the measure in the Senate. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D–NV) intended to include the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act (DREAM Act) (S. 729) as an amendment to the bill. Also included in the defense bill was a provision to repeal the U.S. military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy.

The DREAM Act is supported by President Obama, various business groups and the AFL-CIO. The Act would provide six years of conditional permanent residency to certain undocumented minors who have completed high school and go on to join the military or attend college for at least two years.

All Republican senators—save for Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), who did not vote—voted against the motion. Two Democrats, Senators Blanche Lincoln (D-NE) and Mark Pryor (D-NV), also cast votes against the motion. As a procedural safeguard, Senator Reid cast a “no” vote in order to retain the right to bring the motion up for vote again.

2009 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics Released

The Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) Office of Immigration Statistics has released the 2009 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics (pdf). The Yearbook provides statistical data on U.S. immigration, specifically:

  • Nonimmigrant Admissions: The number of foreign nationals admitted to the United States on a temporary basis, e.g., as tourists, students, business visitors, or temporary workers. Notably, the number of admissions based on H-1B status (temporary workers in specialty occupations) has decreased from a peak of 461,730 in 2007, down to 409,619 in 2008 and 339,243 in 2009.
  • Legal Permanent Residents: The number of foreign nationals who became legal permanent residents.
  • Refugees and Asylees: The number of asylum or refugee status applicants.
  • Naturalization: How many foreign nationals became naturalized U.S. citizens.
  • Enforcement Actions: What enforcement actions were taken by DHS, including apprehension of illegal aliens, removals and prosecutions.

USCIS Unveils New, More Secure Green Card

New Green Card - FrontUnited States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has unveiled a new, more technologically advanced and secure Permanent Residence Card. The card, commonly known as the “Green Card,” authenticates an individual’s authorization to live and work in the United States on a permanent basis. The intention behind the redesign, which is a collaboration between USCIS and various Department of Homeland Security agencies, is to deter fraud and more quickly authenticate identification. USCIS contends the new card is “nearly impossible to reproduce.”

New Green Card - Back

Highlights of the redesigned card (which, unlike the previous version, is colored green) include:

  • stored biometric information;
  • holographic images and laser-engraved fingerprints of the card holder;
  • high resolution micro-images of every U.S. president and state flag;
  • Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) capability which allows border officials to read the card from a distance and compare it to data immediately; and
  • a preprinted return address allowing found cards to be mailed to the USCIS

As of May 11, 2010, the redesigned cards will be issued to new permanent residents and to individuals renewing or replacing their green cards.

Bill Would Grant Two-Year Visa to Entrepreneurs with U.S. Investor Backing

Senators John Kerry (D-MA) and Richard Lugar (R-IN) have introduced the StartUp Visa Act of 2010 (S. 3029), which would create a new visa category (EB-6) for foreign entrepreneurs. Foreign entrepreneurs would qualify for a two-year visa upon demonstrating that a qualified U.S. investor will dedicate at least $250,000 to his or her startup venture. Moreover, permanent resident status would be available to EB-6 visa holders after two years upon demonstration that the startup has:

  • created five full-time jobs in the United States (excluding employment of the entrepreneur’s spouse or children); and
  • secured $1 million in additional investment capital; or
  • generated $1 million in revenue.

The bill has been referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee.
 

United Kingdom: Critics Question IT Firms' Apparent Overuse of Tier 2 Intra-Company Transfers

The Daily Telegraph reports a significant increase in the number of foreign workers employed in the UK via intra company transfers under Tier 2 of the country’s points-based immigration system. In 2008, more than 48,000 intra-company transfer applications were filed; approximately 30,000 concerned foreign IT workers. In total, over 35,000 foreign IT workers entered the UK that year – three times the amount that entered during the height of the dot com boom in 2000.

The intra-company transfer scheme allows an employer to transfer to the UK its foreign-based staff who have at least six months’ knowledge-specific company experience. Unlike the points-based system’s other schemes, the employer is not required to first advertise the position to British workers. Transferred workers are permitted to work full-time in the UK for up to three years and may work up to 20 hours in supplementary employment in the same profession. After three years, these employees may apply for a two-year extension and, after five years in the UK, they may apply for permanent residency.

Critics warn that these intra-company transfers damage the UK’s economy and worsen the plight of British workers. Some contend that IT companies pay their foreign workers less than market wages.

Responding to these criticisms, the UK Border Agency stated that:

  • contrary to the allegations, employees must be paid the position’s going rate;
  • in early 2010, the requirements will be amended to require employees to have 12 months’ experience (instead of six months as at present) with their employer before they can be transferred to the UK; and
  • it is closing the category as a route to permanent settlement.

Certain Permanent Residence Applications on Hold Until New Vaccine Criteria Take Effect

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services announced (pdf) that since November 13, 2009, it has temporarily held certain applications of individuals seeking to become lawful permanent residents until the new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) vaccination criteria becomes effective on December 14, 2009. Under the new CDC criteria, vaccines for herpes zoster (zoster) and human papillomavirus (HPV), will no longer be required for immigration purposes. The held applications were submitted by applicants who would have been denied a visa because they failed to demonstrate that they had received the zoster or HPV vaccination.

USCIS Considering Application Fee Increases to Offset Budget Deficit

The Houston Chronicle reports that with a budget shortfall of $164 million, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is considering increasing the fees it charges for immigration applications. USCIS also is considering possible cost-saving measures, including staff layoffs. As this blog previously noted, immigration applications (e.g., citizenship, permanent residency), a revenue source for USCIS, have decreased in recent years, thereby straining USCIS’s budget. In fiscal year 2009, citizenship applications decreased by over 25% (1 million in FY 2008; 733,000 in FY 2009). Although USCIS improved its citizenship application processing time after the most recent fee increases (July 2007), it may experience difficulty maintaining the five-month average processing time if the Obama administration succeeds in implementing a legalization program for the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants in the United States.

Obama Repeals Ban on Travel to U.S. by HIV-Positive Individuals

As reported by the New York Times, on October 30, 2009, President Obama repealed the ban on travel to the United States by people who test positive for HIV. The final rule (pdf) lifting the ban will take effect on January 4, 2010. As of the effective date, foreigners wishing to visit the U.S., or seeking U.S. residency, will no longer be required to take an AIDS test.

Photo credit: change.gov

Newly Enacted Measure Ends "Widow Penalty" for Immigrant Spouses

On October 28, 2009, President Obama signed into law the Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2010 (H.R. 2892). The law contains a measure that ends the “widow penalty,” the government’s practice of annulling a foreigner’s permanent residency application when his or her American spouse dies before the marriage is two years old. 

Under the new measure, an immigrant whose American spouse died less than two years after the marriage commenced may submit an individual petition for residency. The petition must be submitted within two years of the spouse’s death and will be rejected if the applicant has remarried or cannot prove a good-faith marriage to the former spouse. The provision applies retroactively, and spouses will have two years from the law’s enactment to petition for residency. 

Photo credit: Pete Souza

Costa Rica: New Law Tightens Financial Requirements for Permanent Residency

Examiner.com reports that under a new immigration law, applicants for residency in Costa Rica will need to demonstrate greater financial security. Those in the “pensionado” (retiree) category must prove they have a monthly government or private pension of at least $1,000 per month, up from $600 per month. The minimum income requirement for “rentista” (small investor) applicants has more than doubled, from $1,000 per month to $2,500. The law, which the Costa Rican Congress unanimously approved, is expected to take effect in early 2010.

The overhaul will particularly impact U.S. citizens, for whom Costa Rica has become the most popular Central American destination for a second home or a permanent relocation.

Skilled Immigrants Leaving the United States in Record Numbers

 Increased unemployment, coupled with immigration restrictions and delays has resulted in many skilled foreign workers electing to leave the United States. A recent study found that of those surveyed, 72% of Chinese nationals and 56% of Indian nationals who emigrated to the United States and then returned home thought professional opportunities were better in their home country, even though wages might not necessarily compare. Researchers estimate that possibly 200,000 skilled Indian and Chinese workers will return home over the next five years, compared with approximately 100,000 over the past 20 years.
 

Obtaining permanent residency can be a long process because only 9,800 green cards per country are awarded annually. BusinessWeek reports that applications from Indian and Chinese nationals can take almost a decade and, while applicants wait, visa restrictions prohibit them from changing positions, companies, or starting their own business without obtaining a separate visa. Although the Obama administration has vowed to push for immigration reform, it remains uncertain how skilled immigrants will be affected.

United States May Lift HIV Travel Ban

File:Aiga immigration.svg

The New York Daily News reports that the U.S. is moving toward ending its ban on HIV-infected foreigners entering the country. New regulations would not require HIV testing for various travel visas or permanent residence exams. The HIV travel ban started in 1987, at the height of the AIDS epidemic, but scientific and social advances have decreased concerns about the disease’s transmittal.

Congress proposed new regulations during George W. Bush’s final year in office, and with current administration backing the ban might be lifted by year’s end. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is currently seeking public comment on the matter and final say will rest with the Department of Health and Human Services.

Requests for Evidence in Relation to H-1B and Green Card Applications Sharply Increasing

The H-1B and permanent residency programs are, as reported by Computerworld, under “assault” by the US Citizenship and Immigration Services and other agencies, which have “dramatically increased” the documentation requested of employers seeking to hire workers under the programs. In recent months, requests for evidence are becoming significantly more frequent and expansive, seeking information such as corporate payroll records, zoning maps and building fire-safety plans. 

Among the possible explanations for the stepped-up enforcement are the increased scrutiny required as part of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (which set new H-1B restrictions on firms that received bailout funds) and findings of various problems, including fraud, in nearly one in five H-1B applications (according to a USCIS study (PDF) released in fall 2008).

Crystal Williams, co-director of the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA), commented that the document requests are "on the border of harassment," and that the agency is "attempting to build a barrier, to make it as difficult as it possibly can be to get a visa." AILA is gathering evidence to demonstrate that the government is overstepping its authority in this area.

U.S. to Stop Issuing Temporary Permanent Resident Stamp

The United States Citizenship and Immigration Services recently changed its procedures regarding the issuance of ADIT stamps. Local USCIS offices will no longer automatically provide an ADIT stamp to an approved permanent resident applicant waiting for his or her green card.

An ADIT stamp is temporary proof of residence in the United States that is generally placed on a passport or an I-94, an Arrival-Departure Record. Previously, USCIS would automatically provide an ADIT stamp to approved applicants because of an almost eight-week delay between approval and receipt of a green card.

ADIT stamps will continue to be provided on a case-by-case basis if applicants can show they need a stamp to be issued.