Flynn & Clark, P.C. is
pleased to provide this Immigration Update as a service to our clients and
friends.
Headlines:
Ø
1.
E-Verify Deadline Approaches for Federal Contractors
- Federal contractors and subcontractors will be required to begin using the
E-Verify online work authorization verification system starting January 15,
2009.
Ø
2.
Canada Fast-Tracks Skilled Workers
-
Applicants who are not eligible for
the federal skilled worker category may qualify under another category.
Ø
3.
USCIS Revises Religious Worker Regulations
- The final rule requires that employers submit a formal petition for temporary
religious workers.
Ø
4.
DHS Adds Countries to Visa Waiver Program; CBP
Requires Travel Authorization
- Countries added include the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia,
Lithuania, the Republic of Korea, and the Slovak Republic.
Ø
5.
TPS Re-Registration Period Extended for Nicaraguans,
Hondurans
-
The re-registration period is extended through December 30, 2008.
Ø
6.
Guestworkers
To
Recover Wages -
Unreimbursed expenses incurred by
guestworkers for a large forestry contractor may be recovered, a judge has found.
Ø
7.
CDC Expands Scope of Medical Exam
- The CDC has changed the scope of the medical examination for certain persons
wishing to enter the U.S.
Ø
8.
Student and Exchange Visitor Program Office Moves
- Until direct mail service
is established, SEVP recommends that all correspondence be mailed to an office
in Washington, D.C.
Also in this issue:
New Publications and Items of Interest
Recent News from ABIL Members
Government Agency Links
Details...
1. E-Verify Deadline Approaches for
Federal Contractors
Federal contractors and subcontractors will
be required to begin using U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services' (USCIS)
E-Verify system starting January 15, 2009, to verify their employees'
eligibility to work legally in the United States. In a final rule, the Civilian
Agency Acquisition Council and the Defense Acquisition Regulations Council
amended the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) to reflect this change.
The new rule implements Executive Order
12989, as amended by President George W. Bush on June 6, 2008, directing federal
agencies to require that federal contractors agree to electronically verify the
employment eligibility of their employees. The amended Executive Order
reinforces the policy, first announced in 1996, that the federal government does
business only with companies that have a workforce that is authorized to work in
the U.S. This new rule requires federal contractors to agree, through language
inserted into their federal contracts, to use E-Verify to confirm the employment
eligibility of all persons hired during a contract term, and to confirm the
employment eligibility of federal contractors' current employees who perform
contract services for the federal government within the U.S.
Federal contracts awarded and solicitations
issued after January 15, 2009, will include a clause committing government
contractors to use E-Verify. The same clause will also be required in
subcontracts over $3,000 for services or construction. Contracts exempt from
this rule include those that are for less than $100,000 and those that are for
commercially available off-the-shelf items. Companies awarded a contract with
the federal government will be required to enroll in E-Verify within 30 days of
the contract award date. They also will need to begin using the E-Verify system
to confirm that all of their new hires and their employees directly working on
federal contracts are authorized to work in the U.S.
The final rule reflects some changes from the
proposed rule. The changes are intended to lighten the burden on small
businesses that decide to accept federal contracts, and to provide contractors
with flexible means of complying with the basic requirement that all persons
working on federal contracts be electronically verified.
More than 92,000 employers currently use
E-Verify, an Internet-based system operated by the DHS in partnership with the
Social Security Administration that allows participating employers to verify the
employment eligibility of their employees electronically. During fiscal year
2008, more than 6.6 million employment verification queries were run through the
system, representing one out of every eight people hired in the U.S.
Approximately 96.1 percent of all cases queried through E-Verify are found to be
employment-authorized, and individuals who are not immediately cleared are given
the opportunity to correct their records, USCIS said.
The final rule is available at
http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2008/pdf/E8-26904.pdf.
A related USCIS announcement is available at
http://www.uscis.gov/files/article/FAR_13Nov08.pdf.
A USCIS "frequently asked questions" sheet is available at
http://www.uscis.gov/files/article/FAR_FAQ_13nov08.pdf.
2.
Canada Fast-Tracks Skilled Workers
Jason Kenney, Canada's Minister of
Citizenship, Immigration and Multiculturalism, announced on November 28, 2008,
that retroactive to February 27, 2008, the "Action Plan for Faster Immigration"
includes issuing instructions to visa officers reviewing new federal skilled
worker applications to process those from candidates who:
-
include an offer of arranged
employment; or
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are from a foreign national
living legally in Canada for one year as a temporary foreign worker or
international student; or
-
are from a skilled worker who
has at least one year of experience under one or more of the 38 occupations
listed at
http://www.cic.gc.ca/eligible.
The list of 38 occupations was
developed after consultations with the provinces and territories, business,
labor, and other stakeholders. New federal skilled worker applications that do
not meet the eligibility criteria outlined above will not be processed, and the
application fee will be refunded. Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) said
in a statement that this effort, along with funds set aside in the 2008 budget
to improve the immigration system, "will stop the backlog from growing and will
start to draw it down."
"The eligibility criteria apply
only to new federal skilled worker applicants and will not affect Canada's
family reunification or refugee protection goals," Minister Kenney said. He
noted that applicants who are not eligible for the federal skilled worker
category may qualify under another category, such as the Provincial Nominee
Program, or as temporary foreign workers, which could then put them on a path to
permanent residence through the new Canadian Experience Class.
"We expect new federal skilled
worker applicants, including those with arranged employment, to receive a
decision within six to 12 months compared with up to six years under the old
system," said Minister Kenney. "All other economic class applications—including
applicants chosen by Quebec, provincial nominees, the Canadian Experience Class,
and live-in caregivers—will continue to be given priority."
All applications made before
February 27, 2008, will be processed according to the rules that were in effect
at that time.
CIC said that these changes "bring
Canada in line with two of its main competitors for highly skilled labor:
Australia and New Zealand. Both of these countries have eliminated their
backlogs and have systems that deliver final decisions for economic applicants
within a year."
Canada plans to admit between
240,000 and 265,000 new permanent residents in 2009, Minister Kenney said,
noting that the planned numbers are on par with last year and are among the
highest for Canada during the past 15 years. The 2009 plan includes up to
156,600 immigrants in the economic category; 71,000 in the family category; and
37,400 in the humanitarian category.
Minister Kenney noted that "[t]he
recent steps this Government has taken to improve our immigration system will
help ensure that Canada remains competitive internationally and responsive to
labour market needs domestically." Critics, however, expressed concerns that the
new emphasis on skilled workers would create two classes of immigrants and that
less-skilled workers would be at a disadvantage, and that doubling the number of
temporary workers would depress wages.
"It's bad for the Canadian economy and it's
bad for [the temporary workers], because they cannot bring in their families and
often are open to exploitation and abuse," said New Democrat Olivia Chow.
CIC has expanded its web site. The
site now includes a section for employers (http://www.cic.gc.ca/employers)
and a new interactive tool (http://www.cic.gc.ca/cometocanada)
that matches information provided by potential applicants with immigration
programs.
The ministerial instructions are
available at
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/department/media/backgrounders/2008/2008-11-28a.asp.
A notice announcing the instructions is available at
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/department/media/backgrounders/2008/2008-11-28.asp.
For more information on the new initiatives, see
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/department/media/releases/2008/2008-11-28.asp.
3.
USCIS Revises Religious Worker
Regulations
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)
announced that it has revised significantly the special immigrant and
nonimmigrant (R-1) religious worker visa classification regulations. USCIS said
the final rule "will ensure the integrity of the religious worker program by
establishing a requirement that employers submit a formal petition for temporary
religious workers, and by providing for increased inspections, evaluations,
verifications, and compliance reviews of religious organizations." The rule
"also fulfills the recent Congressional mandate to issue final regulations to
eliminate or reduce fraud in the religious worker program."
Previously, foreign religious workers were
able to request an R-1 religious worker visa at a consular post without any
previous stateside review of the religious organization or job offer. The final
rule will require individuals seeking to enter the U.S. through the nonimmigrant
religious worker program to provide a consular officer an approved Form I-129,
Petition for Alien Worker. Stateside review of the petition will allow USCIS to
verify that the petitioner and the job offer are legitimate before the State
Department issues a visa and admits the religious worker to the U.S.
Among other things, the rule also reduces the
initial period of admission for a nonimmigrant from three years to a period of
up to 30 months. USCIS said this will allow it an earlier opportunity to review
whether the terms of the visa have been met before extending the nonimmigrant
religious worker's stay in the U.S. Religious workers will be allowed one
extension of up to an additional 30 months.
The final rule was published in the Federal
Register on November 26, 2008, and was effective the same day. The full text of
the final rule is available at
http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2008/pdf/E8-28225.pdf.
A questions-and-answers sheet is available at
http://www.uscis.gov/files/article/religious_work_faq_21nov08.pdf.
A related fact sheet is available at
http://www.uscis.gov/files/article/religious_worker_factsheet_21nov08.pdf.
A policy memorandum on handling non-minister special immigrant religious worker
petitions affected by the October 1, 2008, sunset date is available at
http://www.uscis.gov/files/nativedocuments/SpecialImmigrantRWPetitionsOct1sunset91908.pdf.
4. DHS Adds Countries to Visa Waiver
Program; CBP Requires Travel Authorization
Effective November 17, 2008, the Department of Homeland Security has added the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, the Republic of Korea, and the Slovak Republic to the list of countries authorized to participate in the Visa Waiver Program (VWP).
Citizens and eligible nationals of VWP countries may apply for admission at a U.S. port of entry as nonimmigrants for up to 90 days for business or pleasure without obtaining a nonimmigrant visa, provided that they are otherwise eligible for admission under applicable statutory and regulatory requirements. The designated countries in the VWP include Andorra, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brunei, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, San Marino, Singapore, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom (defined for VWP purposes as England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man).
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) also
announced on November 13, 2008, that beginning January 12, 2009, all VWP
nonimmigrants traveling to the U.S. must obtain an approved travel authorization
from the Department's Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA). To
comply with ESTA, VWP travelers must provide electronically to CBP the
information currently collected on the I-94W Nonimmigrant Alien
Arrival/Departure (Form I-94W) through the CBP ESTA Web site and receive
authorization to travel before embarking on travel to the U.S. The ESTA Web site is at
https://esta.cbp.dhs.gov/esta/esta.html?_flowExecutionKey=_cD88DB6CB-CF0E-B36E-3AE3-4C453B4C386E_k613ED908-DCC2-7541-9CDA-5DB7BB3E0773.
The final rule adding the VWP countries is available at http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2008/pdf/E8-27062.pdf. The CBP notice about obtaining travel authorization is available at http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2008/pdf/E8-26997.pdf.
5. TPS Re-Registration Period Extended for
Nicaraguans, Hondurans
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)
has announced an extension to the re-registration period for nationals of
Nicaragua
and Honduras
who have been granted temporary protected status (TPS) and are now eligible to
re-register and maintain their status an additional 18 months. Initially, the
60-day re-registration period for nationals of Honduras and Nicaragua began
October 1, 2008, and ended on December 1, 2008. The re-registration period is
being extended through December 30, 2008, because of tropical storm activity in
the region.
Additionally, USCIS has automatically
extended the validity of employment authorization documents (EADs) for eligible
Honduran and Nicaraguan TPS beneficiaries for 6 months, through July 5, 2009.
USCIS said this is intended to allow sufficient time for eligible TPS
beneficiaries to re-register and receive an EAD without any lapse in employment
authorization.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
announced in October 2008 that the TPS designations of
Honduras
and Nicaragua
were extended through July 5, 2010. The extension will make those who have
already been granted TPS eligible to re-register and maintain their status for
an additional 18 months.
Nicaraguan and Honduran TPS beneficiaries are
strongly encouraged to apply as soon as possible within the registration period
that now ends December 30, 2008.
There are approximately 3,500 nationals of
Nicaragua and 70,000 nationals of Honduras (and people having no nationality who
last habitually resided in Honduras and Nicaragua) eligible for TPS
re-registration. TPS does not apply to Nicaraguan or Honduran nationals who
entered the U.S. after Dec. 30, 1998.
TPS beneficiaries must submit an
Application for Temporary
Protected Status, Form I-821, without the application fee and
the Application for
Employment Authorization, Form I-765, to re-register for TPS.
A separate biometric service fee, or a fee waiver request, must be submitted by
re-registrants 14-years of age and older. If the applicant is only seeking to
re-register for TPS and is not seeking an extension of employment authorization,
he or she must submit the I-765 for data-gathering purposes only and is not
required to submit the I-765 filing fee. All applicants seeking an extension of
employment authorization through July 5, 2010, must submit the required
application filing fee with the I-765 or a fee waiver request with proper
documentation.
The announcement is available at
http://www.uscis.gov/files/article/tps_nicaragua_honduras_extend_21nov08).pdf.
USCIS published a related notice in the Federal Register on November 24, 2008,
available at
http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2008/pdf/E8-27702.pdf
(Honduras) and
http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2008/pdf/E8-27703.pdf
(Nicaragua).
6.
Guestworkers To Recover
Wages
In a class action lawsuit, U.S.
District Court Judge Clarence Cooper found that unreimbursed expenses incurred
by guestworkers for a large forestry contractor, Eller and Sons Trees, Inc., of
Franklin, Georgia, may be recovered and that actual damages sought by the
workers may exceed $500,000. The employer had sought to cap the damages.
The named plaintiffs are three
migrant farmworkers. Eller and Sons
Trees provides forest reforestation (tree planting) and forestry services such
as brush clearing, boundary marking, and chemical spraying. Most of its
employees are engaged in tree planting, predominantly in the southern U.S.
during the months of December, January, and February. Eller and Sons Trees
cannot find enough employees in the U.S. to perform the work, the decision
noted. As a result, most of the workers come from outside the U.S., with the
vast majority coming from Guatemala, and others coming from Mexico, Honduras,
and Colombia. Eller and Sons Trees obtains temporary seasonal employees through
the H-2B visa program.
The guestworkers were represented
by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC),
and the Legal Aid Justice Center of Virginia
is serving as co-counsel.
The SPLC said it now must prove how much money is owed to the workers.
"This is a great victory for these forestry
workers," said Mary Bauer, director of the SPLC's Immigrant Justice Project.
"For too long this industry has seen guestworkers as a disposable workforce to
be used, abused and thrown away. This decision is a signal that those days are
coming to an end."
According to the SPLC, the court also found
that the representations an employer makes to the government on H-2B visa
applications, such as the total number of hours the employees will work per
week, can be enforced by the workers even if they are unaware of what the
employer reported to the government. This finding would hold an employer liable
for a 40-hour work week promised on its application to federal government, even
if the employer never made such an agreement with its workers, the SPLC noted.
The judge in this case found that an employer cannot drive a worker's pay below
the minimum wage rate by deducting expenses for things that primarily benefit
the employer. The court also found that the prevailing wage rate for the area,
rather than the lower minimum wage rate, is protected from such deductions under
this principle. The SPLC said that this is the first time such a decision has
been reached in a contested case.
The judge found that the costs of passports,
visas, and other travel costs not only drove the workers' pay below the
protected rate level but resulted in workers having "negative incomes" in their
first week of work. The judge awarded $53,890 to the case's plaintiffs for
expenses that were not reimbursed during their first work week, citing the Fair
Labor Standards Act. The SPLC believes that damages for the rest of the class,
which the organization expects number into the thousands of workers, may reach
into the millions of dollars.
The case records for Escolastico de
Leon-Granados et al. v. Eller and Sons Trees, Inc., are available at
http://www.splcenter.org/legal/docket/files.jsp?cdrID=49&sortID=4.
The SPLC has filed a number of other guestworker lawsuits.
7. CDC Expands Scope of Medical Exam
The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) published an interim final rule in October 2008 that changed
the "definition of a communicable disease of public health significance, the
scope of the medical examination for aliens, and the evaluation criteria for
tuberculosis," the Department of State announced. The definition of communicable
disease of public health significance continues to include the previous list of
eight specific diseases (including HIV infection) and adds two new disease
categories: (1) quarantinable diseases designated by Presidential Executive
Order, and (2) diseases that meet the criteria of a public health emergency of
international concern, which require notification to the World Heath
Organization under revised international health regulations. The scope of the
medical examination for certain foreign persons wishing to come to the U.S. has
been "amended to incorporate a more flexible, risk-based approach based on
medical and epidemiologic factors," the Department noted.
The Department of State's notice, sent to all
diplomatic and consular posts in November 2008, is available at
http://travel.state.gov/visa/laws/telegrams/telegrams_4388.html.
Further information from the CDC is available at
http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dq/ifr_main.htm.
8. Student and Exchange Visitor Program
Office Moves
The Student and Exchange Visitor
Program (SEVP) office has moved. Until direct mail service is established, SEVP
recommends that all correspondence be mailed to: Student and Exchange Visitor
Program, Attn: (Branch Name), Potomac Center North, 500 12th Street, SW,
Washington, DC 20024. The new main telephone number is (703) 603-3400. E-mail
addresses have not changed, so inquiries may be sent to SEVP staff through their
previous e-mail or through
SEVIS.Source@dhs.gov.
For more information on
SEVP, see http://www.ice.gov/sevis/index.htm?searchstring=sevp.
New Publications and Items of Interest
State legislation on
immigration. The "State
Responses to Immigration" database contains all bills and resolutions related to
immigrants or immigration that were considered by state legislators across the
U.S. The database contains all immigration-related legislation for 2007. Data
for 2008 and historic 2001-2006 data will be added in the coming months.
The searchable database is classified by
state, region, subject area, legislative type, and bill status. The database
allows users to find out, for example, the status of enforcement initiatives
introduced in their state, compare the number of bills regulating employment, or
evaluate the passage rate of certain bills across the nation. The database
assigns a bill's status based on its status as of December 31 of the given year.
The database notes that in 2007, 1,059
immigration-related state bills and resolutions were introduced in state
legislatures nationwide, of which only 167 (or 16 percent) were enacted into
law. The vast majority of bills proposed in 2007 either expired (33 percent) or
remained pending (45 percent) without any legislative resolution. The report is
available at
http://www.migrationpolicy.org/pubs/2007methodology.pdf.
State Responses to Immigration (http://www.migrationinformation.org/datahub/statelaws_home.cfm)
is a joint project of the Migration Policy Institute (MPI) and a research team
at the New York University School of Law (NYU).
The Small Business Administration's Office of
Advocacy has published "Estimating the Contribution of Immigrant Business Owners
to the U.S. Economy." Among other things, the report finds that:
-
The total business income generated by
immigrant business owners is $67 billion, representing 11.6 percent of all
business income in the U.S.
-
Immigrants are nearly 30 percent more
likely to start a business than are nonimmigrants, and they represent 16.7
percent of all new business owners in the United States
-
Immigrant business owners make
significant contributions to business income, generating $67 billion of the
$577 billion in U.S. business income, as estimated from 2000 U.S. Census
data. They generate nearly one-quarter of all business income in
California—nearly $20 billion—and nearly one-fifth of business income in New
York, Florida, and New Jersey.
-
Immigrant business ownership is
geographically concentrated in a few states. Nearly 30 percent of all
business owners in California are immigrants, compared with about 12.5
percent of the population of U.S. business owners.
-
Immigrants own 11.2 percent of businesses
with $100,000 or more in sales and 10.8 percent of businesses with
employees.
-
Immigrants' contributions differ across
sectors of the economy. They own a large share—more than one-fifth—of
businesses in the arts, entertainment, and recreation industry. They also
contribute significantly to other services, transportation, and wholesale
and retail trade.
-
Although business owners from Mexico
constitute the largest share of immigrant business owners, total immigrant
business ownership, formation, and income originate with immigrant business
owners from around the world.
The report is available at
http://www.sba.gov/advo/research/rs334tot.pdf.
The Department of Labor's Office of Foreign
Labor Certification released a fact sheet in October 2008 that offers selected
statistics and highlights of PERM processing in fiscal year 2008. See
http://www.globallawcenters.com/pdfs/27006.pdf.
Recent News from ABIL Members
Stephen Yale-Loehr (bio:
http://www.abil.com/lawyers/lawyers-loehr.cfm)
moderated an immigration discussion at the National Press Club in Washington,
D.C. Hosted by Cornell Law School on November 19, 2008, the panel discussed
immigration policy in an Obama administration, including how the new Congress
and new administration will affect immigration policy in the U.S. Speakers
included Doris Meissner, former Immigration and Naturalization Service
Commissioner; Frank Sharry, former Executive Director of the National
Immigration Forum; and Jeanne Butterfield, Executive Director of the American
Immigration Lawyers Association.
Government Agency Links
Follow these links to access current
processing times of the USCIS Service Centers and the Department of Labor, or
the Department of State's latest Visa Bulletin with the most recent cut-off
dates for visa numbers:
USCIS Service Center processing times online:
https://egov.uscis.gov/cris/jsps/ptimes.jsp
Department of Labor processing times and
information on backlogs:
http://www.foreignlaborcert.doleta.gov/times.cfm
Department of State Visa Bulletin:
http://travel.state.gov/visa/frvi/bulletin/bulletin_1360.html
The Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers
(ABIL) is an entity that offers a single point of contact for customer needs,
news alerts, staff training and other programs that benefit the client through
the collaboration of the 140 member attorneys and their 460 staff. Corporate
counsel, human resource professionals, in-house immigration managers and other
corporate decision-makers turn to ABIL attorneys for outstanding legal skills
and services. ABIL's work also includes advocating for enlightened immigration
reform, providing speakers and media sources, presenting conferences, publishing
books and articles on cutting-edge immigration topics, and sharing best
practices, all with the ultimate goal of offering value-added services to
business immigration clients.
The Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers'
website is:
http://www.abil.com/.
Contact Your Flynn & Clark Attorney for Further Information
Steven A. Clark
Jane P. Devlin
Vincent W. Lau
Mary E. Gilbert
FLYNN & CLARK, P.C.,
provides a full range of inbound as well as outbound immigration legal services
for United States and foreign companies under the leadership of Steven Clark,
Past President of the American Immigration Lawyers’ Association (AILA)
which has over 11,000 members worldwide. The Immigration Update provides
periodic alerts about noteworthy developments in immigration affecting the
business community. It is provided as a service of the Firm regarding legal
developments; it is not a substitute for legal counseling and may constitute
advertising material in some jurisdictions.
FLYNN & CLARK, P.C.,
is a member of ABIL, The Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers. ABIL is an
entity that offers a single point of contact for customer needs, news alerts,
staff training and other programs that benefit the client through the
collaboration of the 140 member attorneys and their 460 staff. Corporate
counsel, human resource professionals, in-house immigration managers and other
corporate decision-makers turn to ABIL attorneys for outstanding legal skills
and services. ABIL's work also includes advocating for enlightened immigration
reform, providing speakers and media sources, presenting conferences, publishing
books and articles on cutting-edge immigration topics, and sharing best
practices, all with the ultimate goal of offering value-added services to
business immigration clients. This newsletter if produced through Flynn &
Clark's collaboration with ABIL.
Disclaimer/Reminder
This e-mail does not constitute direct legal
advice and is for informational purposes only. The information provided should
never replace informed counsel when specific immigration-related guidance is
needed.