The best way for a great nation of immigrants
such as America to showcase its richness and diversity is through fine ethnic
restaurants. A better appreciation of different cuisines can also foster
tolerance and social harmony. Cities and towns become more interesting and
thrive if they have restaurants with diverse cuisines. For such restaurants to exist,
though, there needs to be an immigration policy that would allow restaurants to
access foreign specialty chefs. This unfortunately is not the case. The United
States Immigration and Citizenship Services (USCIS) views applications for
chefs under the limited and narrowly drawn nonimmigrant visa categories with a
jaundiced eye. One such pathway for chefs is the L-1B visa for specialized
knowledge employees who are being transferred from a foreign entity to a
qualifying US entity. The Brazilian
restaurant chain Fogo de Chao successfully brought in 200 specialty chefs on
the L-1B visa, when the USCIS changed its mind and denied one of their visas.
The restaurant appealed the denial.
On October 21, 2014, the United States Court
of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in Fogo
de Chao v. DHS, No. 13-5301, skewered the USCIS for denying the L-1B
visa to a Brazilian churrasqueiro or gaucho chef. Fogo de Chao contended that it sought to recreate
for its customers in the United States an authentic churrascaria experience,
and it did so by employing a number of gaucho chefs from Brazil who learned
this style of cooking first hand by growing up in the Rio Girande do Sul region
and through training and at least two years of experience in Fogo de Chao’s
Brazilian restaurants. A gaucho chef who possessed this knowledge would be capable
of i) preparing and cooking five to six skewers of meat on an open grill; ii)
circulating through the dining room to carve meats for guests; iii) educating
those guests about both the cuts of meat being served and gaucho culinary and
cultural traditions, and iv) monitoring the estimated future demand for food
over the course of the evening.
The key issue in Fogo was whether a foreign national chef could gain such specialized
knowledge through one’s own cultural traditions, upbringing or life experience.
The USCIS, including its Administrative Appeals Office, held that one’s own
cultural upbringing falls within the realm of general knowledge rather than
specialized knowledge, and thus such a chef would not qualify for an L-1B visa.
The Court of Appeals in Fogo disagreed
with the USCIS’s rather wooden
application of the law. (Many immigration practitioners like me will take great
delight in the scolding given to the USCIS for being so wooden as we have experienced this
tendency first hand!) The Fogo Court
held that there was nothing in INA section 214(c)(2)(B) which precludes culturally
acquired knowledge as a form of specialized knowledge. That INA section defines
specialized knowledge in a rather circular way, as follows:
…an alien is
considered to be serving in a capacity involving specialized knowledge with
respect to a company if the alien has a special knowledge of the company
product and its application in international markets or has an advanced level
of knowledge of processes and procedures of the company
A government agency’s interpretation of an
ambiguous statute is entitled to deference under Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council,
Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984)—often abbreviated as “Chevron deference”. Most
are deterred from seeking review of a “wooden” decision in federal court to
challenge an erroneous decision of the USCIS because of the Chevron deference the court will give to
the government’s interpretation of a particular visa statutory provision. The Fogo
Court gave no such deference because
the USCIS regulation at 8 CFR section 214.2(l)(1)(ii)(D) merely parroted the
statutory L-1B definition in the same circular manner, and a parroting
regulation deserves no deference. Gonzales v Oregon, 546 US 243, 257
(2006). Instead, the Court applied the lower standard under Skidmore v. Swift & Co, 323 U.S.
134 (1944) where the weight accorded to an administrative interpretation or
judgment “depends upon the thoroughness evident in its consideration, the
validity of its reasoning, its consistency with earlier and later pronouncements,
and all those facts which give it power to persuade, if lacking power to
control.” Even under the
lower Skidmore standard, the Fogo Court held that the Administrative Appeals Office lacked the power
to persuade that it could categorically exclude cultural knowledge as a basis
for specialized knowledge.
Also noteworthy in Fogo was the government’s dismissal of the relevance of the economic hardship the restaurant
would suffer if it had to train another
employee to perform the gaucho chef’s proposed duties. The Fogo Court disagreed, emphasizing that economic inconvenience is sometimes the most
concrete evidence that can be used to determine whether knowledge is
specialized. According to the Fogo
Court: “Consideration of evidence of this type provides some predictability to
a comparative analysis otherwise relatively devoid of settled guideposts….That
specialized knowledge may ultimately be a ‘relative and empty idea which cannot
have plain meaning’...is not a feature to be celebrated and certainly not a
license for the government to apply a sliding scale of specialness that varies
from petition to petition without explanation. Suddenly departing from policy
guidance and rejecting outright the relevance of Fogo de Chao’s evidence of economic
inconvenience threatens just that.” Id.
at 28 (citations omitted).
Although Fogo applied to a Brazilian gaucho chef, it can arguably be applied
to other occupations involving specialized knowledge. Skills gained through
certain cultural practices may be relevant in determining specialized knowledge
in other settings, such as Japanese management techniques. Similarly, acquiring
deep knowledge in a particular software application through another employer
can equip the L-1B visa applicant with specialized knowledge that can stand out
in comparison to others. Moreover, demonstrating economic hardship as a way to
prove specialized knowledge has gained more force after Fogo. The 1994 Puleo
Memorandum was resurrected in Fogo, which
endorsed a dictionary definition of the terms “special” and “advance” rather
than solely tether specialized knowledge to the company’s products or processes.
Fogo has also paved the way to argue
that the USCIS’s interpretation of specialized knowledge does not deserve Chevron deference. Finally,
Fogo ought to potentially have more precedential
value than other circuit court decisions since under 28 U.S.C. §1391(e)(1)(B) a petitioner could seek review in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia as the Administrative Appeals
Office is located in the District of Columbia.
In recent times, the USICS has had the upper hand in L-1B visa adjudications by literally reading specialized knowledge out of the statute. Fogo thus comes as a breath of fresh air and should hopefully temper the USCIS’s zeal in “woodenly” debarring specialized knowledge workers who can otherwise bring great value to America. We all need to forcefully deploy the hidden nuggets in Fogo to restore the more commonsensical definition of specialized knowledge.
In recent times, the USICS has had the upper hand in L-1B visa adjudications by literally reading specialized knowledge out of the statute. Fogo thus comes as a breath of fresh air and should hopefully temper the USCIS’s zeal in “woodenly” debarring specialized knowledge workers who can otherwise bring great value to America. We all need to forcefully deploy the hidden nuggets in Fogo to restore the more commonsensical definition of specialized knowledge.