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January 18, 2016
January 8, 2016
INCLUDING EARLY ADJUSTMENT FILING IN PROPOSED DHS RULE IMPACTING HIGH-SKILLED WORKERS WOULD GIVE BIG BOOST TO DELAYED GREEN CARD APPLICANTS
A
proposed DHS rule entitled “Retention
of EB-1, EB-2 and EB-3 Immigrant Workers and Program Improvements Affecting
High Skilled Nonimmigrant Workers” has disappointed beneficiaries of I-140
employment-based immigration visa petitions who are caught in the crushing
employment-based preferences. Everyone was waiting with bated breath about how
the rule would allow beneficiaries to apply for an employment authorization
document (EAD) based on an approved I-140 petitions. The proposed rule was
announced on New Year’s Eve, December 31, 2015, but the balloon hastily deflated well before
New Year. EADs would be issued in a very niggardly manner. This blog’s focus is
not to explain every aspect of the proposed rule, and refers readers to Greg Siskind’s
detailed
summary, but suggests that the DHS also consider adding a rule to allow
early filing of an I-485 adjustment application. Including a rule that would allow
early filing of an I-485 application, along with some of the ameliorative
provisions in the proposed rule, would truly make the rule positively impactful
to those who are seeking relief.
Under
the proposed rule, DHS will provide EADs to beneficiaries in the United States
on E-3, H-1B, H-1B1, L-1 or O-1 nonimmigrant status if they can demonstrate
compelling circumstances. While compelling circumstances have not been defined
in the rule, DHS has suggested that they include serious illness and disabilities,
employer retaliation, other substantial harm to the applicant and significant
disruption to the employer. Regarding what may constitute significant disruption;
DHS has suggested loss of funding for grants that may invalidate a cap-exempt
H-1B status or a corporate restructure that may no longer render an L-1 visa
status valid. The EAD will be renewed if such compelling circumstances continue
to be met, or if the beneficiary’s priority date is within one year of the
official cut-off date.
As
a result of these stringent standards, very few I-140 beneficiaries will be
able to take advantage of this EAD provision. Furthermore, in order to keep the
existing I-140 petition valid, the sponsoring employer must continue to offer the
position to the beneficiary. While the recipient of an EAD can engage in open
market employment, he or she must intend to work for the sponsoring employer
upon the issuance of permanent residency. It is hoped that the final rule will
provide a broader basis for beneficiaries of approved I-140 petitions to obtain
EADs without needing to show compelling circumstances. INA 274A(h)(3) provides
broad authorization to the DHS to issue work authorization to any non-citizen.
While there is broad authority in the INA to issue an EAD, it is difficult to
conceptualize how such a beneficiary may be able to port to another employer
without a pending I-485 application. INA 204(j) requires an I-485 application
to be pending for more than 180 days before a worker can change jobs in a same
or similar occupational classification, while still keeping the I-140 petition
and underlying labor certification intact.
On the other hand, a new employer can re-sponsor a worker if he or she
has an EAD through a new I-140 petition, while retaining the priority date of
the old petition, upon which the worker can consular process for the immigrant
visa if not in a valid nonimmigrant status at the time the final action date
becomes current.
Although
the centerpiece proposal is disappointing, there are some bright spots. I-140
petitions that have been approved for at least 180 days would not be subject to
automatic revocation due to a business closure or withdrawal by the employer. DHS
has invoked its discretion under INA 205 to retain an I-140 even if an employer
withdraws it or the business closes. This assurance would allow workers who
have pending I-485 applications for 180 days or more to safely exercise job
portability under INA 204(j), although this dispensation is not possible if
USCIS revokes the I-140 based on a prior error. Even those without pending
I-485 applications could take advantage of this provision to obtain H-1B
extensions beyond six years under the American Competitiveness in the 21st
Century Act (AC 21). They would also be able to keep their priority dates if a
new employer files another I-140 petition.
The
proposed rule would also allow workers whose jobs are terminated a grace period
of 60 days if they are holding E-1, E-2, E-3, H-1B, H-1B1, L-1 or TN status.
There will also be automatic extensions of an EAD for 180 days, but will take
away the mandatory processing time for an EAD within 90 days.
Notwithstanding
the stingy circumstances under which the DHS proposes to issue EADs to
beneficiaries of approved I-140 petitions, the proposed rule could be salvaged,
and truly resurrected, if workers can file early I-485 adjustment of status
applications. While the proposed rule has not touched upon this, the DHS must
revisit the innovation that was made in the October 2015 Visa Bulletin by
creating a filing date and a final adjudication date. Although the filing dates
got substantially pulled back in the EB-2 for India and China shortly before
the new visa bulletin took effect on October 1, resulting in a lawsuit,
DHS has a chance to redeem itself through this rule to truly benefit high
skilled workers.
INA
245(a)(3) allows for the filing of an I-485 application for adjustment of
status when the visa is “immediately available” to the applicant. The
Department of State (DOS) has historically never advanced
priority dates based on certitude that a visa would actually be available.
There have been many instances when applicants have filed an I-485 application
in a particular month, only to later find that the dates have retrogressed. A
good example is the April 2012 Visa Bulletin, when the EB-2 cut-off dates for
India and China were May 1, 2010. In the very next May 2012 Visa Bulletin
a month later, the EB-2 cut-off dates for India and China retrogressed to
August 15, 2007. If the DOS was absolutely certain that applicants born in
India and China who filed in April 2012 would receive their green cards,
it would not have needed to retrogress dates back to August 15, 2007.
Indeed, those EB-2 applicants who filed their I-485 applications in April
2012 are still waiting and have yet to receive their green cards even as of
today! Another example is when the DOS announced that the July 2007 Visa
Bulletin for EB-2 and EB-3 would become current. Hundreds of thousands filed
during that period (which actually was the extended period from July 17, 2007
to August 17, 2007) . It was obvious that these applicants would not
receive their green cards during that time frame. The DOS then
retrogressed the EB dates substantially the following month, and those who
filed under the India EB-3 in July-August 2007, also known as the class of
2007, are still waiting today.
These two examples, among many, go
to show that “immediately available” in INA 245(a)(3), according to the DOS,
have never meant that visas were actually available to be issued to applicants
as soon as they filed. Rather, it has always been based on a notion of visa
availability at some point of time in the future. The Visa Bulletin in
its new reincarnation, notwithstanding the pulling back of the filing dates
prior to October 1, 2015, now views it
more broadly as “dates for filing visa applications within a time frame
justifying immediate action in the application process.” The USCIS similarly views visa availability opaquely as "eligible
applicants" who "are able to take one of the final steps in the
process of becoming U.S. permanent residents." These new
interpretations provide more flexibility for the State Department to move the
filing date even further, and make it closer to current. While it is acknowledge that certain categories like the
India EB-3 may have no visa availability whatsoever, DOS and DHS can reserve
one visa in the India EB-3 like the proverbial
Thanksgiving turkey. Just like one turkey every Thanksgiving is pardoned by
the President and not consumed, similarly one visa can also be left intact rather
than consumed by the alien beneficiary. So long as there is one
visa kept available, the proposal to allow for an I-485 filing through a
provisional filing date would be consistent with INA §245(a)(3).
The author has proposed the
following amendments to 8 C.F.R. § 245.1(g)(1) in the past with Gary Endelman
(who has since become an Immigration Judge), shown here in bold, that would expand
the definition of visa availability:
An alien is ineligible for the
benefits of section 245 of the Act unless an immigrant visa is immediately
available to him or her at the time the application is filed. If the applicant
is a preference alien, the current Department of State Bureau of Consular
Affairs Visa Bulletin will be consulted to determine whether an immigrant visa
is immediately available. An immigrant visa is considered available for
accepting and processing the application Form I-485 [if] the preference
category applicant has a priority date on the waiting list which is earlier
than the date shown in the Bulletin (or the Bulletin shows that numbers for
visa applicants in his or her category are current) (“final action date”).
An immigrant visa is also considered available for submission of the I-485
application based on a provisional priority date (‘filing date”) without
reference to the final action date. No provisional submission can be undertaken
absent prior approval of the visa petition and only if all visas in the
preference category have not been exhausted in the fiscal year. Final
adjudication only occurs when there is a current final adjudication date.
An immigrant visa is also considered immediately available if the applicant
establishes eligibility for the benefits of Public Law 101-238. Information
concerning the immediate availability of an immigrant visa may be obtained at
any Service office.
If
early adjustment filing consistent with INA 245(a)(3) is included in the final
rule, imagine how many more workers will benefit from it. Having an actual rule in place, as proposed, will prevent the shenanigans that obstructionists in the USCIS have engaged in by arbitrarily holding back the filing date, and in recent months, not even recognizing it for purposes of filing I-485 applications. While an EAD of an
approved I-140 will also be beneficial, being able to port off a pending
adjustment application under INA 204(j) would allow the retention of the
earlier I-140 petition (and underlying labor certification), without the need for
an employer to file a new labor certification and I-140 petition. The filing of
the I-485 application would also be able to protect
a child from aging out under the Child Status Protection Act, which an EAD
off an approved I-140 would not be able to do. Folks whose filing date would not
be current could still take advantage of the EAD based on an approved I-140, but
for those who can file an early I-485, they would incur many more benefits,
including the ability to exercise true portability and eventually adjust to
permanent residence in the United States.
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