On February 16th, as the
holiday weekend was coming to an end, Judge
Andrew S. Hanen of the U.S.
District Court for the Southern District of Texas issued a Memorandum
Opinion and Order in the case of State
of Texas, et al., v. United States, et al., granting the motion of the plaintiff States
for a preliminary injunction against the “Deferred Action for Parents of
Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents” program, known as DAPA, and the
expansion of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, known as DACA, that were
set out in a November
20, 2014 Memorandum from Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson. (The original DACA program, as
instituted in 2012 by then-Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano,
was not challenged by the plaintiff States, and is not affected by the
injunction.) According to Judge Hanen,
the plaintiff States have shown a likelihood of success on the merits of their
claim that DAPA and the DACA expansion were authorized in violation of the
Administrative Procedures Act (APA), as well as meeting the other requirements
for a preliminary injunction.
The Memorandum Opinion and
Order is more than 120 pages long, so a full analysis is not feasible in a blog
post, especially one being published just two days after the Memorandum Opinion
and Order itself. In this blog post,
however, I will focus on what I think is one of the most important conceptual
flaws in the Memorandum Opinion and Order.
It appears to overlook key sources of statutory and regulatory authority
for DAPA and expanded DACA, particularly the portions of DAPA and expanded DACA
which relate to the grant of employment authorization and related benefits.
In the Memorandum Opinion and
Order, Judge Hanen accepts that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), and
in particular the Secretary of Homeland Security, Jeh Johnson, has the
authority to set priorities regarding whom to remove from the United States. “The law is clear that the Secretary’s
ordering of DHS priorities is not subject to judicial second-guessing.” Memorandum Opinion and Order at p. 69. “The States do not dispute that Secretary
Johnson has the legal authority to set these priorities,” Judge Hanen writes, “and
this Court finds nothing unlawful about the Secretary’s priorities.” Memorandum Opinion and Order at 92.
Judge Hanen asserts in his
Memorandum Opinion and Order, however, that DHS’s statutorily granted authority
to set enforcement priorities does not go so far as to authorize DAPA because
of the affirmative benefits which are to be granted under the program. He similarly holds that the usual presumption
against APA review of decisions not to enforce a statute, as set out by the
Supreme Court in Heckler v. Chaney, 470 U.S. 821 (1985), does not apply in this case because DAPA is not merely a
determination not to enforce:
Instead
of merely refusing to enforce the INA’s removal laws against an individual, the
DHS has enacted a wide-reaching program that awards legal presence, to
individuals Congress has deemed deportable or removable, as well as the ability
to obtain Social Security numbers, work authorization permits, and the ability
to travel.
Memorandum Opinion and Order
at 85-86. A similar theme is sounded
later in the opinion when contrasting DHS’s statutory authority to set
priorities, of which Judge Hanen approves, with the benefits conferred under
DAPA:
The [Homeland
Security Act]’s delegation of authority may not be read, however, to delegate
to the DHS the right to establish a national rule or program of awarding legal presence—one which not only awards
a three-year, renewable reprieve, but also awards over four million
individuals, who fall into the category that Congress deems removable, the
right to work, obtain Social Security numbers, and travel in and out of the
country.
Memorandum Opinion and Order
at 92.
Setting aside for the moment the
ability to travel internationally, which is offered only as part of a
subsequent application by those already granted DAPA or DACA and is granted when
appropriate pursuant to the discretionary parole authority of INA
§212(d)(5)(A), 8
U.S.C. §1182(d)(5)(A), the core of Judge Hanen’s concern (or at least a key
portion of it) appears to be with the grant of employment authorization and the
related documentation, such as a Social Security number, for which one who is
granted employment authorization becomes eligible. It is certainly true that those who receive Employment
Authorization Documents (EADs), and are thereby able to receive Social Security
numbers, become in an important sense “documented” where they were previously “undocumented”. But it is not true that DHS has acted
without statutory authority in giving out these important benefits.
It is at this point in the
analysis that Judge Hanen appears to have overlooked a very important part of
the legal landscape, what one might term the elephant in the room. The statutory authority for employment
authorization under the INA is contained in section 274A of the INA, otherwise
known as 8
U.S.C. §1324a. That section lays out
a variety of prohibitions on hiring and employing an “unauthorized alien”, and concludes
by defining the term as follows:
As used
in this section, the term “unauthorized alien” means, with respect to the
employment of an alien at a particular time, that the alien is not at that time
either (A) an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence, or (B) authorized
to be so employed by this chapter or by the Attorney General.
8 U.S.C. §1324a(h)(3).
8 U.S.C. §1324a(h)(3).
That is, the Attorney General
– whose functions have now been in relevant part taken over by the Secretary of
Homeland Security – is statutorily empowered to authorize an alien to be
employed, thus rendering the alien not an “unauthorized alien” under the INA. There are a few restrictions on this authority
noted elsewhere in the INA: for example, 8
U.S.C. §1226(a)(3) states that an alien who is arrested and placed in
removal proceedings may not be provided with work authorization when released from
custody unless he or she is otherwise eligible for such work authorization “without
regard to removal proceedings”. But
overall, the authority provided by 8
U.S.C. §1324a(h)(3) is quite broad.
Moreover, it is not as though
this authority has gone unremarked upon in the context of DAPA and DACA
expansion. The November
20, 2014 Memorandum from Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson regarding
DAPA and DACA (or “Johnson DAPA Memorandum” for short) states that “Each person who applies for
deferred action pursuant to the criteria above shall also be eligible to apply
for work authorization for the period of deferred action, pursuant to my authority
to grant such authorization reflected in section 274A(h)(3) of the Immigration
and Nationality Act.” Johnson DAPA Memorandum
at 4-5. Nonetheless, other than a quote
from this section of the Johnson DAPA Memorandum at page 13 of the Memorandum
Opinion and Order, Judge Hanen’s Memorandum Opinion and Order does not appear
to address the authority provided by INA §274A(h)(3), 8
U.S.C. §1324a(h)(3).
Pursuant to the authority
contained in 8
U.S.C. §1324a(h)(3), the Attorney General and then the Secretary of Homeland
Security have promulgated regulations for many years listing various categories
of people who are authorized to accept employment by virtue of their status, or
who can apply (initially to the INS, and now to USCIS) for authorization to
accept employment. The list is currently
contained in 8
C.F.R. §274a.12, and as noted in earlier
versions
of that regulatory section, it has existed in substantively similar form since
at least 1987, when it was put in place by 52 Fed Reg. 16221. Included on the list are not only such
obvious categories as Lawful Permanent Residents, asylees, and refugees, but
also those with various sorts of pending applications for relief, certain
nonimmigrants, and many other categories.
One subsection of the 8
C.F.R. §274a.12 list that is particularly relevant here is 8
C.F.R. §274a.12(c)(14), the existence of which is acknowledged in passing
by the Memorandum Opinion and Order at page 15 and footnote 66 of page 86 but
is not discussed elsewhere. That
provision has long included among the list of those who may apply for
employment authorization: “An alien who has been granted deferred action, an
act of administrative convenience to the government which gives some cases
lower priority, if the alien establishes an economic necessity for employment.”
As noted in footnote 11 of the
Office
of Legal Counsel memorandum regarding the legal basis for DAPA, which also
addresses much of the authority discussed in the foregoing paragraphs, a prior
version of this regulation authorizing employment for deferred-action
recipients actually dates back to 1981.
But for present purposes, it is sufficient to point out that the 1987
version of the employment-authorization regulations has continued in force,
with various modifications not relevant here, for over 35 years. The validity of 8
C.F.R. §274a.12(c)(14) as it has been in effect for over three decades does
not appear to have been challenged by the plaintiff States or by Judge Hanen,
nor is it clear how it could be, given the broad authority provided by 8
U.S.C. §1324a(h)(3).
This long-existing regulation,
grounded firmly in explicit statutory authorization, clearly states that an
alien beneficiary of “an act of administrative convenience to the government
which gives some cases lower priority,” 8
C.F.R. §274a.12(c)(14), which is called “deferred action,” id., may be granted employment
authorization upon a showing of economic necessity. (Such a showing of economic necessity is, in
fact, required when seeking employment authorization under DACA, the instructions for which require the
filing of the Form
I-765 Worksheet regarding economic necessity; the instructions for DAPA,
when they are published, will presumably have the same requirement.) Thus, the regulation at 8
C.F.R. §274a.12(c)(14) authorizes the very features of DAPA and DACA which
so troubled Judge Hanen as explained in the Memorandum Opinion and Order: the
jump from the setting of enforcement priorities to the granting of affirmative
benefits. The notion that those whose
cases are given lower priority as a matter of administrative convenience to the
government, should potentially be granted employment authorization as a
consequence, is not some new idea created for DAPA and DACA without notice and comment,
but has been set out in regulations for many years.
One might say that DAPA and
DACA are composed of two logically separable components: first, the designation
of certain cases as lower priority, and second, the tangible benefits,
principally employment authorization and related benefits, which flow from that
designation. Judge Hanen has found the
designation of certain cases as lower priority to be unobjectionable, and has
held the provision of tangible benefits in those cases to be in violation of
the APA. But according to a
long-existing regulation which no one has challenged, the second component of
DAPA and DACA may permissibly flow from the first.
It is therefore logically
problematic to say, as Judge Hanen has done in his Memorandum Opinion and
Order, that the provision of benefits under DAPA violates the APA even though
the prioritization of cases would not. The
bridge from the first step to the second was, as it were, installed a long time
ago. Although Judge Hanen refers to “a
new rule that substantially changes both the status and employability of
millions,” Memorandum Opinion and Order at 112, it is in fact a very old
rule that has provided that those who are treated, as a matter of convenience,
as being lower priority, should be made employable if they can demonstrate
economic necessity. Since the prioritization is concededly acceptable, it
follows that the employment authorization and related benefits should be
acceptable as well.
The only thing which
Secretary Johnson’s November 2014 Memorandum really added to the pre-existing
rules governing deferred action and its consequences was a set of criteria for
DHS officers to use in determining whether to grant deferred action. But since the grant of deferred action, as it
has long been described in regulation, is merely “an act of administrative
convenience to the government which gives some cases lower priority,” 8
C.F.R. §274a.12(c)(14), it can hardly be less permissible under the APA, or
for that matter under the Constitution (the basis of another challenge which Judge
Hanen did not reach), to grant deferred action than it is to give certain cases
lower priority. If DHS is indeed free to
give certain cases lower priority, a proposition which is difficult to
seriously dispute given basic background norms of prosecutorial discretion,
then pursuant to 8
C.F.R. §274a.12(c)(14) as promulgated under the authority of 8
U.S.C. §1324a(h)(3), DHS is also free to grant employment authorization to
those whose cases it has given lower priority and who can show economic
necessity for employment.
In a world of finite
resources, deciding which cases are worth pursuing necessarily implies deciding
which cases are not worth pursuing.
Every dollar of funding or hour of officer time that DHS were to spend seeking
to remove someone who meets the DAPA criteria would be a dollar of funding or
hour of time that it could not spend seeking to remove a more worthy target. The DAPA criteria are flexible by their
nature, including a final criterion of “present[ing] no other factors that, in
the exercise of discretion, makes the grant of deferred action inappropriate,” Johnson
Memorandum at 4. But where no such
negative factors exist, DHS has reasonably determined that parents of U.S.
citizens and Lawful Permanent Residents who meet the other DAPA criteria are
likely to be appropriate candidates for deferred action—which is, to repeat,
simply “an act of administrative convenience to the government which gives some
cases lower priority,” 8 C.F.R. §274a.12(c)(14). Having made that determination, DHS is
authorized by both statute and regulation to confer employment authorization on
those whose cases it has given this lower priority. In ruling otherwise, without addressing
either 8
C.F.R. §1324a(h)(3) or the implications of 8
C.F.R. §274a.12(c)(14) promulgated under its authority, Judge Hanen appears
to have overlooked the proverbial elephant in the room.
"Deferred action" is recognized in at least one statute--the REAL ID act. Congress said a person with "deferred action" is eligible for a driver's license.
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