Retention of EB-1, EB-2, and EB-3 Immigrant Workers and Program Improvements Affecting High-Skilled Nonimmigrant Workers, 81899-81945 [2015-32666]
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Vol. 80
Thursday,
No. 251
December 31, 2015
Part III
Department of Homeland Security
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8 CFR Parts 204, 205, 214, et al.
Retention of EB–1, EB–2, and EB–3 Immigrant Workers and Program
Improvements Affecting High-Skilled Nonimmigrant Workers; Proposed
Rules
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 251 / Thursday, December 31, 2015 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
8 CFR Parts 204, 205, 214, 245 and
274a
[CIS No. 2571–15; DHS Docket No. USCIS–
2015–0008]
RIN 1615–AC05
Retention of EB–1, EB–2, and EB–3
Immigrant Workers and Program
Improvements Affecting High-Skilled
Nonimmigrant Workers
U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services, DHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) is proposing to amend
its regulations related to certain
employment-based immigrant and
nonimmigrant visa programs. The
proposed amendments would provide
various benefits to participants in those
programs, including: Improved
processes for U.S. employers seeking to
sponsor and retain immigrant and
nonimmigrant workers, greater stability
and job flexibility for such workers, and
increased transparency and consistency
in the application of agency policy
related to affected classifications. Many
of these changes are primarily aimed at
improving the ability of U.S. employers
to hire and retain high-skilled workers
who are beneficiaries of approved
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions and are waiting to become
lawful permanent residents (LPRs),
while increasing the ability of such
workers to seek promotions, accept
lateral positions with current
employers, change employers, or pursue
other employment options.
First, DHS proposes to amend its
regulations consistent with certain
worker portability and other provisions
in the American Competitiveness in the
Twenty-first Century Act of 2000
(AC21), as amended, as well as the
American Competitiveness and
Workforce Improvement Act of 1998
(ACWIA). These proposed amendments
would clarify and improve longstanding
agency policies and procedures—
previously articulated in agency
memoranda and precedent decisions—
implementing sections of AC21 and
ACWIA related to certain foreign
workers, including sections specific to
workers who have been sponsored for
LPR status by their employers. In so
doing, the proposed rule would enhance
consistency among agency adjudicators
and provide a primary repository of
governing rules for the regulated
community. In addition, the proposed
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SUMMARY:
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rule would clarify several interpretive
questions raised by AC21 and ACWIA.
Second, consistent with existing DHS
authorities and the goals of AC21 and
ACWIA, DHS proposes to amend its
regulations governing certain
employment-based immigrant and
nonimmigrant visa programs to provide
additional stability and flexibility to
employers and workers in those
programs. The proposed rule would,
among other things: improve job
portability for certain beneficiaries of
approved employment-based immigrant
visa petitions by limiting the grounds
for automatic revocation of petition
approval; further enhance job portability
for such beneficiaries by increasing their
ability to retain their priority dates for
use with subsequently approved
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions; establish or extend grace
periods for certain high-skilled
nonimmigrant workers so that they may
more easily maintain their
nonimmigrant status when changing
employment opportunities; and provide
additional stability and flexibility to
certain high-skilled workers by allowing
those who are working in the United
States in certain nonimmigrant statuses,
are the beneficiaries of approved
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions, are subject to immigrant visa
backlogs, and demonstrate compelling
circumstances to independently apply
for employment authorization for a
limited period. These and other
proposed changes would provide much
needed flexibility to the beneficiaries of
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions, as well as the U.S. employers
who employ and sponsor them for
permanent residence.
Finally, to provide additional
certainty and stability to certain
employment-authorized individuals and
their U.S. employers, DHS is also
proposing changes to its regulations
governing the processing of applications
for employment authorization to
minimize the risk of any gaps in such
authorization. These changes would
provide for the automatic extension of
the validity of certain Employment
Authorization Documents (EADs or
Forms I–766) for an interim period upon
the timely filing of an application to
renew such documents. At the same
time, in light of national security and
fraud concerns, DHS is proposing to
remove regulations that provide a 90day processing timeline for EAD
applications and that require the
issuance of interim EADs if processing
extends beyond the 90-day mark.
DATES: Written comments must be
received on or before February 29, 2016.
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You may submit comments,
identified by DHS Docket No. USCIS–
2015–0008, by one of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: You
may submit comments to USCIS by
visiting https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
• Email: You may submit comments
directly to USCIS by emailing them to:
USCISFRComment@dhs.gov. Please
include DHS Docket No. USCIS–2015–
0008 in the subject line of the message.
• Mail: You may submit comments
directly to USCIS by mailing them to:
Laura Dawkins, Chief, Regulatory
Coordination Division, Office of Policy
and Strategy, U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services, Department of
Homeland Security, 20 Massachusetts
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20529.
This mailing address may be used for
paper, disk, or CD–ROM submissions.
To ensure proper handling, please
reference DHS Docket No. USCIS–2015–
0008 on your correspondence.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: You may
submit comments directly to USCIS by
hand delivery or courier to: Laura
Dawkins, Chief, Regulatory
Coordination Division, Office of Policy
and Strategy, U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services, Department of
Homeland Security, 20 Massachusetts
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20529.
The contact telephone number is (202)
272–8377. To ensure proper handling,
please reference DHS Docket No.
USCIS–2015–0008 on your delivery.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kathleen Angustia or Nikki LomaxLarson, Adjudications Officers (Policy),
Office of Policy and Strategy, U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services,
Department of Homeland Security, 20
Massachusetts Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20529. The contact
telephone number is (202) 272–8377.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ADDRESSES:
Table of Contents
I. Public Participation
II. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Summary of the Regulatory
Action
B. Legal Authority
C. Costs and Benefits
III. Background
A. Permanent Employment-Based
Immigration
1. Employment-Based Immigrant Visa
Preference Categories
2. The Employment-Based Immigrant Visa
Process
B. Nonimmigrant Visa Classifications
1. The H–1B Nonimmigrant Visa
Classification
2. Other Relevant Nonimmigrant Visa
Classifications
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C. ACWIA and AC21
1. The American Competitiveness and
Workforce Improvement Act of 1998
2. The American Competitiveness in the
Twenty-first Century Act of 2000
a. AC21 Provisions Relating to
Employment-Based Immigrant Visas
b. AC21 Provisions Seeking to Improve the
H–1B Nonimmigrant Worker
Classification
i. Exemptions From the H–1B Numerical
Cap
ii. Application of the H–1B Numerical Cap
to Persons Previously Counted
iii. H–1B Portability
D. The Processing of Applications for
Employment Authorization Documents
E. The Increasing Damage Caused by
Immigrant Visa Backlogs
IV. Proposed Regulatory Changes
A. Proposed Implementation of AC21 and
ACWIA
1. Extending H–1B Nonimmigrant Status
for Certain Individuals Who Are Being
Sponsored for Lawful Permanent
Residence
a. H–1B Extensions for Individuals
Affected by the Per-Country Limitations
b. H–1B Extensions for Individuals
Affected by Lengthy Adjudication Delays
2. Job Portability Under AC21 for Certain
Applicants for Adjustment of Status
3. Job Portability for H–1B Nonimmigrant
Workers
4. Calculating the H–1B Admission Period
5. Exemptions From the H–1B Numerical
Cap Under AC21 and ACWIA
a. Employers Not Subject to H–1B
Numerical Limitations
b. Counting Previously Exempt H–1B
Nonimmigrant Workers
6. Whistleblower Protections in the H–1B
Program
B. Additional Changes to Further Improve
Stability and Job Flexibility for Certain
Foreign Workers
1. Revocation of Approved EmploymentBased Immigrant Visa Petitions
2. Retention of Priority Dates
3. Nonimmigrant Grace Periods
a. Extending 10-Day Grace Periods to
Certain Nonimmigrant Classifications
b. Providing a 60-Day Grace Period to
Certain Nonimmigrant Classifications
4. Eligibility for Employment
Authorization in Compelling
Circumstances
5. H–1B Licensing Requirements
C. Processing of Applications for
Employment Authorization Documents
1. Automatic Extensions of EADs in
Certain Circumstances
2. Elimination of 90-Day Processing
Timeframe and Interim EADs
3. Conforming and Technical Amendments
V. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements
A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
(Regulatory Planning and Review)
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
D. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996
E. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
F. Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice
Reform)
G. Paperwork Reduction Act
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I. Public Participation
All interested parties are invited to
participate in this rulemaking by
submitting written data, views, or
comments on all aspects of this
proposed rule. DHS and USCIS also
invite comments that relate to the
economic, environmental, or federalism
effects that might result from this
proposed rule. To provide the most
assistance to USCIS in implementing
these changes, comments should
reference a specific portion of the
proposed rule, explain the reason for
any recommended change, and include
data, information, or authority that
supports such recommended change.
Instructions: All submissions must
include the agency name and DHS
Docket No. USCIS–2015–0008 for this
rulemaking. Regardless of the method
used for submitting comments or
material, all submissions will be posted,
without change, to the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov, and will include
any personal information you provide.
Submitted information will be made
public. You may thus wish to consider
limiting the amount of personal
information that you provide in any
voluntary public comment submission
you make to DHS. DHS may withhold
information provided in comments from
public viewing if DHS determines that
such information is offensive or may
impact the privacy of an individual. For
additional information, please read the
Privacy Act notice that is available via
the link in the footer of https://
www.regulations.gov.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov and enter this
rulemaking’s eDocket number: USCIS–
2015–0008.
II. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Summary of the
Regulatory Action
DHS is proposing to amend its
regulations related to certain
employment-based immigrant and
nonimmigrant visa programs. The
proposed rule is intended to benefit U.S.
employers and foreign workers
participating in these programs, by
streamlining the processes for employer
sponsorship of nonimmigrant workers
for lawful permanent resident (LPR)
status, increasing job portability and
otherwise providing stability and
flexibility for such workers, and
providing additional transparency and
consistency in the application of agency
policies and procedures related to these
programs. These changes are primarily
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intended to better enable U.S.
employers to employ and retain highskilled workers who are beneficiaries of
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions, while increasing the ability of
such workers to further their careers by
accepting promotions, changing
positions with current employers,
changing employers, and pursuing other
employment opportunities.
First, this proposed rule would largely
conform DHS regulations to
longstanding agency policies and
procedures established in response to
certain sections of the American
Competitiveness and Workforce
Improvement Act of 1998 (ACWIA),
Public Law 105–277, div. C, tit. IV, 112
Stat. 2681, and the American
Competitiveness in the Twenty-first
Century Act of 2000 (AC21), Public Law
106–313, 114 Stat. 1251, as amended by
the 21st Century Department of Justice
Appropriations Authorization Act,
Public Law 107–273, 116 Stat. 1758
(2002). These sections were intended,
among other things, to provide greater
flexibility and job portability to certain
nonimmigrant workers, particularly
those who have been sponsored for LPR
status as an employment-based
immigrant, while enhancing
opportunities for innovation and
expansion, maintaining U.S.
competitiveness, and protecting U.S.
workers. The proposed rule would
further clarify and improve agency
policies and procedures in this area—
policies and procedures that have long
been set through a series of policy
memoranda and a precedent decision of
the USCIS Administrative Appeals
Office. By clarifying such policies in
regulation, DHS would provide greater
transparency and certainty to affected
employers and workers, while
increasing consistency among agency
adjudications. In addition, the proposed
rule would clarify several interpretive
questions raised by AC21 and ACWIA.
Specifically, this proposed rule would
clarify and improve policies and
practices related to:
• The ability of H–1B nonimmigrant
workers who are being sponsored for
lawful permanent residence (and their
dependents in H–4 nonimmigrant
status) to extend their nonimmigrant
status beyond the otherwise-applicable
6-year limit pursuant to AC21.
• The ability of certain workers who
have pending applications for
adjustment of status to change
employers or jobs without endangering
the approved employment-based
immigrant visa petitions filed on their
behalf.
• The ability of H–1B nonimmigrant
workers to change jobs or employers,
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including: (1) The ability to begin
employment with new H–1B employers
that have filed non-frivolous petitions
for new H–1B employment; and (2) the
ability of H–1B employers to file
successive H–1B portability petitions
(often referred to as ‘‘bridge petitions’’)
and how these petitions affect lawful
status and work authorization.
• The way in which H–1B
nonimmigrant workers are counted
against the annual H–1B numerical cap,
including: (1) The method for
calculating when such workers may
access so-called ‘‘remainder time’’ (i.e.,
time when they were physically outside
the United States), thus allowing them
to use their full period of H–1B status;
and (2) the method for determining
which H–1B nonimmigrant workers are
‘‘cap-exempt’’ as a result of previously
being counted against the cap.
• The method for determining which
H–1B nonimmigrant workers are exempt
from the H–1B numerical cap due to
their employment with an institution of
higher education, a nonprofit entity
related to or affiliated with such an
institution, or a governmental or
nonprofit research organization,
including a revision to the definition of
the term ‘‘related or affiliated nonprofit
entity’’ for such purposes.
• The ability of H–1B nonimmigrant
workers who are disclosing information
in aid of, or otherwise participating in,
investigations regarding alleged
violations of Labor Condition
Application obligations in the H–1B
program to provide documentary
evidence to USCIS to demonstrate that
their resulting failure to maintain H–1B
status was due to ‘‘extraordinary
circumstances.’’
Except where changes to current
policies and practices are noted in the
preamble of this proposed rule, DHS
intends these proposals to effectively
capture the longstanding policies and
procedures that have developed since
enactment of AC21 and ACWIA. The
Department welcomes comments that
identify any such proposals that
commenters believe are unintentionally
inconsistent with current practices, so
that any such inconsistencies can be
resolved in the final rule.
Second, this rulemaking builds on the
provisions listed above by proposing
additional changes consistent with the
immigration laws to further provide
stability and flexibility in certain
immigrant and nonimmigrant visa
categories. These provisions would
improve the ability of certain foreign
workers, particularly those who are
successfully sponsored for LPR status by
their employers, to accept new
employment opportunities, pursue
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normal career progression, better
establish their lives in the United States,
and contribute more fully to the U.S.
economy. The changes would also
provide certainty in the regulated
community and improve consistency
across agency adjudications, thereby
enhancing the agency’s ability to fulfill
its responsibilities related to U.S.
employers and certain foreign workers.
Specifically, this proposed rule would
provide the following:
• Retention of employment-based
immigrant visa petitions. DHS proposes
to enhance job portability for certain
workers who have approved immigrant
visa petitions in the employment-based
first preference (EB–1), second
preference (EB–2), and third preference
(EB–3) categories but who are unable to
obtain those visas in the foreseeable
future due to significant immigrant visa
backlogs. Specifically, DHS proposes to
amend its automatic revocation
regulations so that immigrant visa
petitions that have been approved for
180 days or more would no longer be
subject to automatic revocation based
solely on withdrawal by the petitioner
or termination of the petitioner’s
business. As long as the petition
approval has not been revoked for fraud,
material misrepresentation, the
invalidation or revocation of a labor
certification, or USCIS error, the
petition will generally continue to be
valid to the beneficiary for various job
portability and status extension
purposes under the immigration laws.
Such a beneficiary, however, must
obtain a new job offer and may need
another immigrant visa petition
approved on his or her behalf to
ultimately obtain status as an LPR.
• Retention of priority dates. DHS
proposes to further enhance job
portability for workers with approved
EB–1, EB–2, and EB–3 immigrant visa
petitions by providing greater clarity
regarding when they may retain the
priority dates assigned to those petitions
and effectively transfer those dates to
new and subsequently approved
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions. As with the immediately
preceding provision, priority date
retention generally would be available
so long as the initial immigrant visa
petition was approved and this approval
has not been revoked for fraud, material
misrepresentation, the invalidation or
revocation of a labor certification, or
USCIS error. This provision would
improve the ability of certain workers to
accept promotions, change employers,
or accept other employment
opportunities without fear of losing
their place in line for immigrant visas
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based on the skills they contribute to the
U.S. economy.
• Nonimmigrant grace periods. To
enhance job portability for certain highskilled nonimmigrants, DHS proposes to
generally establish a one-time grace
period, during an authorized validity
period, of up to 60 days whenever
employment ends for individuals
holding E–1, E–2, E–3, H–1B, H–1B1, L–
1, or TN nonimmigrant status. This
proposal would allow these high-skilled
workers to more readily pursue new
employment should they be eligible for
other employer-sponsored
nonimmigrant classifications or for the
same classification with a new
employer. Conversely, the proposal
allows U.S. employers to more easily
facilitate changes in employment for
existing or newly recruited
nonimmigrant workers. The individual
may not work during the grace period,
unless otherwise authorized by
regulation. As needed, DHS in its
discretion may eliminate or shorten the
60-day period on a case-by-case basis.
• Eligibility for employment
authorization in compelling
circumstances. DHS also proposes to
provide additional stability and
flexibility to certain high-skilled
nonimmigrant workers in the United
States who are the beneficiaries of
approved employment-based immigrant
visa petitions but who cannot obtain an
immigrant visa number due to statutory
limits on immigrant visa issuance and
are experiencing compelling
circumstances. Specifically, DHS
proposes to allow such beneficiaries in
the United States on E–3, H–1B, H–1B1,
L–1, or O–1 nonimmigrant status to
apply for separate employment
authorization for a limited period if
there are compelling circumstances that,
in the discretionary determination of
DHS, justify the consideration of such
employment authorization.
• H–1B licensing. DHS proposes to
clarify exceptions to the requirement
that make approval of an H–1B petition
contingent upon licensure where such
licensure is required to fully perform
the duties of the specialty occupation.
The proposed rule would generally
allow a petitioning employer that has
filed an H–1B petition for an unlicensed
worker to meet the licensure
requirement by demonstrating that the
worker has filed a request for such
license but is unable to obtain it, or is
unable to file a request for such a
license, because a state or locality
requires a social security number or the
issuance of employment authorization
before accepting or approving such
requests. The proposed rule also
clarifies that DHS may approve an H–1B
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petition on behalf of an unlicensed
worker if he or she will work in a State
that allows such individuals to be
employed in the occupation under the
supervision of licensed senior or
supervisory personnel.
As noted above, these changes would
help improve various employmentbased immigrant and nonimmigrant visa
classifications, including by making it
easier to hire and retain nonimmigrant
workers who have approved immigrant
visa petitions and giving such workers
additional career options as they wait
for immigrant visa numbers to become
available. These improvements are
increasingly important considering the
lengthy and growing backlogs of
immigrant visas.
Finally, to provide additional stability
and certainty to U.S. employers and
individuals eligible for employment
authorization in the United States, DHS
is also proposing several changes to its
regulations governing its processing of
applications for employment
authorization. First, to minimize the risk
of any gaps in employment
authorization, DHS proposes to
automatically extend the validity of
Employment Authorization Documents
(EADs or Forms I–766) in certain
circumstances based on the timely filing
of an application to renew such EADs.
Specifically, DHS would automatically
extend the employment authorization
and validity of existing EADs issued to
certain employment-eligible individuals
for up to 180 days from the date of the
cards’ expiration, so long as: (1) A
renewal application is filed based on the
same employment authorization
category as the previously issued EAD
(or the renewal application is for an
individual approved for Temporary
Protected Status (TPS) whose EAD was
issued pursuant to 8 CFR
274a.12(c)(19)); (2) such renewal
application is timely filed prior to the
expiration of the EAD and remains
pending; and (3) the individual’s
eligibility for employment authorization
continues beyond the expiration of his
or her EAD, and an independent
adjudication of the individual’s
underlying eligibility is not a
prerequisite to the extension of
employment authorization. At the same
time, DHS would eliminate the current
regulatory provisions that require
adjudication of EAD applications within
90 days of filing and that authorize
interim EADs in cases where such
adjudications are not conducted within
the 90-day timeframe. These changes
would provide enhanced stability and
certainty to employment-authorized
individuals and their employers, while
reducing opportunities for fraud and
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protecting the security-related processes
undertaken for each EAD application.
B. Legal Authority
The authority of the Secretary of
Homeland Security (Secretary) for these
regulatory amendments is found in
various sections of the Immigration and
Nationality Act (INA), 8 U.S.C. 1101 et
seq., ACWIA, AC21, and the Homeland
Security Act of 2002 (HSA), Public Law
107–296, 116 Stat. 2135, 6 U.S.C. 101 et
seq. General authority for issuing the
proposed rule is found in section 103(a)
of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1103(a), which
authorizes the Secretary to administer
and enforce the immigration and
nationality laws, as well as section 102
of the HSA, 6 U.S.C. 112, which vests
all of the functions of DHS in the
Secretary and authorizes the Secretary
to issue regulations. Further authority
for the regulatory amendments in the
proposed rule is found in:
• Section 205 of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1155, which grants the Secretary broad
discretion in determining whether and
how to revoke any immigrant visa
petition approved under section 204 of
the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1154;
• Section 214(a)(1) of the INA, 8
U.S.C. 1184(a)(1), which authorizes the
Secretary to prescribe by regulation the
terms and conditions of the admission
of nonimmigrants;
• Section 274A(h)(3)(B) of the INA, 8
U.S.C. 1324a(h)(3)(B), which recognizes
the Secretary’s authority to extend
employment authorization to
noncitizens in the United States;
• Section 413(a) of ACWIA, which
amended Section 212(n)(2)(C) of the
INA, 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(2)(C), to authorize
the Secretary to provide certain
whistleblower protections to H–1B
nonimmigrant workers;
• Section 414 of ACWIA, which
added section 214(c)(9) of the INA, 8
U.S.C. 1184(c)(9), to authorize the
Secretary to impose a fee on certain H–
1B petitioners to fund the training and
education of U.S. workers;
• Section 103 of AC21, which
amended section 214(g) of the INA, 8
U.S.C. 1184(g), to provide: (1) An
exemption from the H–1B numerical
cap for certain H–1B nonimmigrant
workers employed at institutions of
higher education, nonprofit entities
related to or affiliated with such
institutions, and nonprofit or
governmental research organizations;
and (2) that a worker who has been
counted against the H–1B numerical cap
within the 6 years prior to petition
approval will not again be counted
against the cap unless the individual
would be eligible for a new 6-year
period of authorized H–1B admission.
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• Section 104(c) of AC21, which
authorizes the extension of H–1B status
beyond the general 6-year maximum for
H–1B nonimmigrant workers who have
approved EB–1, EB–2, or EB–3
immigrant visa petitions but are subject
to backlogs due to application of certain
‘‘per-country’’ limitations on immigrant
visas;
• Section 105 of AC21, which added
what is now section 214(n) of the INA,
8 U.S.C. 1184(n),1 to allow an H–1B
nonimmigrant worker to begin
concurrent or new H–1B employment
upon the filing of a timely, nonfrivolous H–1B petition;
• Sections 106(a) and (b) of AC21,
which, as amended, authorize the
extension of H–1B status beyond the
general 6-year maximum for H–1B
nonimmigrant workers who have been
sponsored for permanent residence by
their employers and who are subject to
certain lengthy adjudication or
processing delays;
• Section 106(c) of AC21, which
added section 204(j) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1154(j), to authorize certain
beneficiaries of approved EB–1, EB–2,
and EB–3 immigrant visa petitions who
have filed applications for adjustment of
status to change jobs or employers
without invalidating their approved
petitions; and
• Section 101(b)(1)(F) of the HSA, 6
U.S.C. 111(b)(1)(F), which establishes as
a primary mission of DHS the duty to
‘‘ensure that the overall economic
security of the United States is not
diminished by efforts, activities, and
programs aimed at securing the
homeland.’’
C. Costs and Benefits
Taken together, the proposed
amendments aim to reduce unnecessary
disruption to businesses and families
caused by immigrant visa backlogs, as
described in Section III.E. The benefits
from these proposed amendments add
value to the U.S. economy by retaining
high-skilled workers who make
important contributions to the U.S.
economy, including technological
advances and research and development
endeavors, which are highly correlated
with overall economic growth and job
creation.2 For more information, the
1 Section 8(a)(3) of the Trafficking Victims
Protection Reauthorization Act of 2003, Public Law
108–193, (Dec. 19, 2003), redesignated section
214(m) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(m), as section
214(n) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(n).
2 Hart, David, et al., ‘‘High-tech Immigrant
Entrepreneurship in the United States,’’ Small
Business Administration Office of Advocacy (July
2009), available at: https://www.sba.gov/sites/
default/files/rs349tot_0.pdf. See also Fairlie,
Robert., ‘‘Open for Business: How Immigrants are
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public may consult the Regulatory
Impact Analysis, reflecting that
although there may be short-term
negative or neutral impacts, the addition
of high-skilled workers presents longterm benefits to the U.S. economy.3
DHS has analyzed potential costs of
these proposed regulations and has
determined that the changes proposed
by DHS have direct impacts to
individual beneficiaries of employmentbased nonimmigrant and immigrant visa
petitions in the form of filing costs,
consular processing costs, and potential
for longer processing times for EAD
applications during filing surges, among
other costs. Due to the fact that some of
these petitions are filed by a sponsoring
employer, this rule also has indirect
effects on employers in the form of
employee replacement costs.
The proposed amendments would
clarify and amend policies and practices
in various employment-based immigrant
and nonimmigrant visa programs, with
the primary aim of providing additional
stability and flexibility to both foreign
workers and U.S. employers
participating in those programs. In part,
the proposed rule clarifies and improves
upon longstanding policies adopted in
response to the enactment of ACWIA
and AC21 to ensure greater consistency
across agency adjudications and provide
greater certainty to regulated employers
and workers. These changes would
provide various benefits to U.S.
employers and certain foreign workers,
including the enhanced ability of such
workers to accept promotions or change
positions with their employers, as well
as change employers or pursue other
employment opportunities. These
proposals also benefit the regulated
community by providing instructive
rules governing: Extensions of stay for
certain H–1B nonimmigrant workers
facing long delays in the immigrant visa
process; the ability of workers who have
been sponsored by their employers for
LPR status to change jobs or employers
180 days after they file applications for
Driving Small Business Creation in the United
States,’’ The Partnership for a New American
Economy (August 2012), available at: https://
www.renewoureconomy.org/sites/all/themes/pnae/
openforbusiness.pdf; ‘‘Immigrant Small Business
Owners a Significant and Growing Part of the
Economy,’’ Fiscal Policy Institute (June 2012),
available at: https://www.fiscalpolicy.org/immigrantsmall-business-owners-FPI-20120614.pdf;
Anderson, Stuart, ‘‘American Made 2.0 How
Immigrant Entrepreneurs Continue to Contribute to
the U.S. Economy,’’ National Venture Capital
Association (June 2013), available at: https://
nvca.org/research/stats-studies/.
3 ‘‘The Economic Impact of S. 744, the Border
Security, Economic Opportunity, and Immigration
Modernization Act,’’ June 18, 2013, available at
https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/
attachments/44346-Immigration.pdf.
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adjustment of status; the circumstances
under which H–1B nonimmigrant
workers may begin employment with a
new employer; how H–1B
nonimmigrant workers count time
toward maximum periods of stay; which
entities are properly considered related
to or affiliated with institutions of
higher education for purposes of the H–
1B program; and when H–1B
nonimmigrant workers can claim
whistleblower protections. The
increased clarity provided by these rules
will enhance the ability of these workers
to take advantage of the job portability
and related provisions in AC21 and
ACWIA.
The proposed rule would also amend
the current regulatory scheme governing
certain immigrant and nonimmigrant
visa programs to enhance job portability
for certain workers and improve the
ability of U.S. businesses to retain
highly valued individuals. These
benefits are achieved by: Proposing a
revised method to retain the approval of
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions already adjudicated by DHS
and to retain priority dates of these
approved petitions for purposes of
immigrant visa or adjustment of status
processing; providing a grace period to
certain nonimmigrants to enhance their
ability to seek an authorized change of
employment; establishing a means for
certain nonimmigrant workers with
approved employment-based immigrant
visa petitions to directly request
separate employment authorization for a
limited time when facing compelling
circumstances; and identifying
exceptions to licensing requirements
applicable to certain H–1B
nonimmigrant workers.
Finally, the proposed rule would also
amend current regulations governing the
processing of applications for
employment authorization to provide
additional stability to certain
employment-authorized individuals in
the United States while addressing
fraud and national security concerns. To
prevent gaps in employment for such
individuals and their employers, the
proposed rule would provide for the
automatic extension of EADs (and,
where necessary, employment
authorization) upon the timely filing of
a renewal application. To protect
against fraud and other abuses, the
proposed rule would also eliminate
current regulatory provisions that
require adjudication of applications for
employment authorization in 90 days
and that authorize interim EADs when
that timeframe is not met.
DHS has prepared a full costs and
benefits analysis of the proposed
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regulation, which can be found on
regulations.gov.
III. Background
A. Permanent Employment-Based
Immigration
1. Employment-Based Immigrant Visa
Preference Categories
Current employment-based immigrant
visa (i.e., permanent visa) 4 levels were
set 25 years ago with the enactment of
the Immigration Act of 1990 (‘‘IMMACT
90’’), Public Law 101–649, 104 Stat.
4978. As amended by IMMACT 90, the
INA generally makes 140,000
employment-based immigrant visas
available each fiscal year, plus any
family-sponsored immigrant visas
authorized under section 203(a) of the
INA, 8 U.S.C. 1153(a) that went unused
during the previous fiscal year. See INA
section 201(d), 8 U.S.C. 1151(d). The
INA allots the minimum 140,000
immigrant visas per fiscal year through
five separate employment-based (EB)
‘‘preference categories’’ as follows:
• First Preference (EB–1) Category:
40,040 immigrant visas for so-called
‘‘priority workers,’’ including (1) ‘‘aliens
with extraordinary ability,’’ (2)
‘‘outstanding professors and
researchers,’’ and (3) ‘‘certain
multinational executives and
managers.’’ INA section 203(b)(1), 8
U.S.C. 1153(b)(1).
• Second Preference (EB–2) Category:
40,040 immigrant visas for (1)
‘‘members of the professions holding
advanced degrees’’ and (2) ‘‘aliens of
exceptional ability.’’ INA section
203(b)(2), 8 U.S.C. 1153(b)(2).
• Third Preference (EB–3) Category:
40,040 immigrant visas for (1) ‘‘skilled
workers’’ (workers with at least 2 years
of training or experience), (2)
‘‘professionals’’ (members of the
professions holding baccalaureate
degrees), and (3) ‘‘other workers’’
(unskilled workers of less than 2 years
of training or experience). INA section
203(b)(3), 8 U.S.C. 1153(b)(3).
• Fourth Preference (EB–4) Category:
9,940 immigrant visas for certain
‘‘special immigrants’’ described in
section 101(a)(27) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(27). INA section 203(b)(4), 8
U.S.C. 1153(b)(4).
• Fifth Preference (EB–5) Category:
9,940 immigrant visas for employmentcreation immigrant investors seeking to
enter the United States for the purpose
of engaging in a ‘‘new commercial
4 Immigrant visas are essentially permanent visas
that lead to LPR status. The employment-based
immigration process discussed here focuses on the
process through which an individual may obtain
LPR status in the United States through an
employment-based immigration category.
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enterprise.’’ INA section 203(b)(5), 8
U.S.C. 1153(b)(5).5
The INA further provides that
immigrant visa numbers authorized in
one preference category may be moved
to other preference categories when
demand for visas in the original
preference category is insufficient to use
all available visas. See generally INA
section 203(b), 8 U.S.C. 1153(b).
Although the INA makes the above
minimum number of employment-based
immigrant visas available each fiscal
year, the INA requires that no more than
27 percent of the available number be
issued in any of the first 3 quarters of
the fiscal year. See INA section
201(a)(2), 8 U.S.C. 1151(a)(2). Moreover,
these immigrant visa numbers are
subject to what are known as ‘‘percountry’’ limitations. See INA section
202(a)(2), 8 U.S.C. 1152(a)(2). Generally,
in any fiscal year, individuals born in
any given country may be allocated no
more than 7 percent of the total number
of immigrant visas. As discussed further
below, depending on the level of
demand in the governing preference
category, the individual’s country of
birth, and the applicability of any
statutory exceptions to these limitations,
an individual may be subject to lengthy
delays in the employment-based
immigration process due to lack of
immigrant visa availability.
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2. The Employment-Based Immigrant
Visa Process
Individuals seeking to obtain LPR
status in the United States through the
EB–1, EB–2, or EB–3 preference
categories must often go through a
complex, multi-step process. With
respect to most individuals described in
the EB–2 and EB–3 categories, the
immigrant visa process normally begins
when a U.S. employer seeks to obtain a
labor certification from the U.S.
Department of Labor (DOL).6 See INA
section 212(a)(5), 8 U.S.C. 1182(a)(5); 8
CFR 204.5. Generally, the U.S. employer
is required to test the U.S. labor market
for the offered position by advertising
the position and attempting to recruit
qualified U.S. workers in the area of
intended employment. See 20 CFR
656.17. In the alternative, the employer
5 This proposed rule largely does not affect
individuals applying for immigrant visas in the EB–
4 and EB–5 preference categories. Accordingly, the
remainder of this section concerns only individuals
seeking immigrant visas under the EB–1, EB–2, and
EB–3 preference categories.
6 Labor certifications are unnecessary for petitions
seeking EB–1 classification and for petitions
seeking a ‘‘national interest waiver’’ under the EB–
2 category. See INA sections 203(b)(2)(B) and
212(a)(5)(D), 8 U.S.C. 1153(b)(2)(B) and
1182(a)(5)(D); 8 CFR 204.5(h)(5), (i)(3)(iii), (j)(5),
(k)(4)(ii).
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may provide evidence to USCIS that the
position to be filled by the worker
qualifies for what is known as a
‘‘Schedule A’’ designation due to a
shortage of U.S. workers in a specific
occupation. See 20 CFR 656.5, 656.15.
Schedule A applications are not
required to obtain labor certification
through DOL prior to petitioning USCIS.
Id.
Upon completion of the recruitment
process (if recruitment is required), the
employer files an ‘‘Application for
Permanent Employment Certification’’
(ETA Form 9089) with DOL’s Office of
Foreign Labor Certification. See 20 CFR
656.17(a). The application constitutes a
request for DOL to certify, among other
things, that (1) there ‘‘are not sufficient
workers who are able, willing, qualified
. . . , and available’’ to perform the
advertised job, and (2) the individual’s
admission to the United States ‘‘will not
adversely affect the wages and working
conditions’’ of U.S. workers. INA
section 212(a)(5)(A)(i), 8 U.S.C.
1182(a)(5)(A)(i). For immigrant visa
petitions that require an approved
permanent labor certification from DOL,
the date the application for labor
certification is accepted by DOL for
processing is the employee’s ‘‘priority
date.’’ See 8 CFR 204.5(d). The priority
date sets an individual’s place in the
queue for the allocation of employmentbased immigrant visas.
After obtaining an approved
permanent labor certification from DOL,
or if no such certification is required for
the classification sought, the U.S.
employer files an immigrant visa
petition with USCIS on behalf of the
worker (or ‘‘beneficiary’’).7 See INA
section 204(a)(1)(F), 8 U.S.C.
1154(a)(1)(F). Such petition is known as
an ‘‘Immigrant Petition for Alien
Worker,’’ or USCIS Form I–140. The
purpose of the petition is to demonstrate
that the job offered and the beneficiary’s
qualifications meet the requirements of
the requested immigrant visa
classification under section 203(b) of the
INA, 8 U.S.C. 1153(b), and pertinent
regulatory requirements, see 8 CFR
204.5. If no labor certification was
required, the employee’s priority date
(i.e., place in the queue for an
employment-based immigrant visa) is
the date the immigrant visa petition is
7 Individuals seeking immigrant visas through the
EB–1 preference category as workers with
extraordinary ability (rather than as outstanding
professors and researchers or multinational
executives and managers), or through the EB–2
preference category with ‘‘national interest
waivers,’’ may file immigrant visa petitions on their
own behalf and thus do not require sponsorship by
a U.S. employer. See INA sections 203(b)(1)(B),
(b)(1)(C), and (b)(2)(B)(i), 8 U.S.C. 1153(b)(1)(B),
(b)(1)(C), and (b)(2)(B)(i).
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81905
properly filed with USCIS. See 8 CFR
204.5(d); see also 22 CFR 42.53(a).
If the immigrant visa petition is
approved, the beneficiary must take
additional steps to obtain LPR status, by
either requesting an immigrant visa to
enter the United States from abroad or
filing an application for adjustment of
status while in the United States. The
ability to take such steps, however, is
limited by the number of immigrant
visas authorized for issuance and any
superseding demand for such visas. As
mentioned above, the beneficiary’s
priority date determines the duration of
that beneficiary’s wait for an immigrant
visa by positioning the beneficiary
behind individuals with earlier priority
dates in the same employment-based
preference category and country of
birth. In certain situations, the
beneficiary of an approved EB–1, EB–2,
or EB–3 immigrant visa petition may
retain the priority date listed in the
approved petition for use in a
subsequent immigrant visa petition. See
8 CFR 204.5(e).
The beneficiary of an approved
immigrant visa petition may be able to
obtain LPR status in one of two ways.
The beneficiary may apply at a U.S.
consular post abroad for an immigrant
visa, which, once received, would allow
the beneficiary to apply for admission to
the United States as an LPR.8 Such a
beneficiary must generally wait to
receive visa application instructions
from the U.S. Department of State (DOS)
National Visa Center. After receiving
these instructions, the beneficiary
collects required information and files
the immigrant visa application with
DOS. Depending on the demand for
immigrant visas in the beneficiary’s
preference category and country of
birth, the beneficiary may be required to
wait further for visa issuance. Once DOS
allocates visa numbers to be issued to
applicants in the relevant preference
category and country of birth with the
beneficiary’s priority date, DOS contacts
the beneficiary for an immigrant visa
interview. If the beneficiary’s
application is ultimately approved, he
or she is issued an immigrant visa and,
on the date of admission to the United
States, obtains LPR status. DOS
publishes a monthly ‘‘Visa Bulletin’’
that indicates when individuals may
expect to receive their visa application
instructions, as well as whether they are
currently authorized to be issued
immigrant visas by DOS consular offices
abroad. See INA sections 203(e) and (g),
245(a), 8 U.S.C. 1153(e) and (g), 1255(a);
see also 8 CFR 245.1(g)(1) and
8 INA sections 203, 221 and 222; 8 U.S.C. 1153,
1201 and 1202.
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245.2(a)(2)(i)(B), 22 CFR 42.51 through
42.55.
In the alternative, a beneficiary who is
in the United States in lawful
nonimmigrant status, with limited
exception, may seek LPR status by filing
with USCIS an application for
adjustment of status to that of a lawful
permanent resident (‘‘application for
adjustment of status’’) in accordance
with section 245 of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1255. Before filing such an application,
however, the beneficiary must wait until
an immigrant visa is ‘‘immediately
available’’ to him or her. See INA
section 245(a), 8 U.S.C. 1255(a); 8 CFR
245.2(a)(2)(i)(B) and (C). An immigrant
visa is considered ‘‘immediately
available’’ to the beneficiary if his or her
priority date for the preference category
is earlier than the relevant cut-off date
indicated in the monthly DOS Visa
Bulletin.9 See 8 CFR 245.1(g)(1) and
245.2(a)(2)(i)(B). These dates allow
individuals to determine—based on
their priority dates, countries of birth,
and preference categories—whether
they can file applications for adjustment
of status and when they may expect to
have their status adjusted to that of an
LPR.
After the application for adjustment of
status is filed, USCIS commences its
adjudication. It is possible, however,
that while the application is pending,
higher than expected demand for
immigrant visas will cause DOS to
determine that immigrant visas that
previously were available are no longer
available to the applicant and cannot be
authorized for issuance to him or her.
This is often referred to as ‘‘visa
retrogression.’’ In such cases, USCIS
may not approve the application until
an immigrant visa is again available and
authorized for issuance to the applicant
under the Visa Bulletin. USCIS will
place these cases on ‘‘hold’’ in the
interim. Similarly, retrogression may
cause a DOS consular post abroad to no
longer be able to issue an immigrant
visa to an overseas applicant.
B. Nonimmigrant Visa Classifications
Prior to being sponsored for an
immigrant visa by a U.S. employer,
many foreign national employees first
come to the United States pursuant to a
nonimmigrant visa, such as an H–1B
visa for ‘‘specialty occupation workers’’
or an L–1 visa for ‘‘intracompany
transferees.’’ These and other
nonimmigrant visa classifications allow
these individuals to be employed in the
United States for temporary periods.
9 The Visa Bulletin, which is issued monthly, is
available at https://travel.state.gov/visa/bulletin/
bulletin_1360.html.
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Each classification has its own
eligibility requirements, as well as
requirements related to duration of
status, ability to renew status, ability to
change jobs or employers, minimum
wages, and worker protections.
1. The H–1B Nonimmigrant Visa
Classification
A U.S. employer seeking to
temporarily employ a foreign national in
the United States in a ‘‘specialty
occupation’’ may file a petition to obtain
H–1B nonimmigrant classification on
behalf of the individual.10 See INA
section 101(a)(15)(H)(i)(B), 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(H)(i)(B). A specialty
occupation is defined as an occupation
that requires (1) ‘‘theoretical and
practical application of a body of highly
specialized knowledge’’ and (2) ‘‘the
attainment of a bachelor’s or higher
degree in the specific specialty (or its
equivalent) as a minimum qualification
for entry into the occupation in the
United States.’’ See INA section
214(i)(l), 8 U.S.C. 1184(i)(1). Subject to
certain exemptions, the total number of
individuals who may be issued H–1B
visas or otherwise accorded H–1B status
in a fiscal year may not exceed 65,000.
See INA section 214(g)(1)(A)(vii), 8
U.S.C. 1184(g)(1)(A)(vii). Employers
eligible to file H–1B petitions include
the actual employer of the worker as
well as certain agents that satisfy DHS
regulatory requirements. See 8 CFR
214.2(h)(2)(i)(A) and (F).
Before filing an H–1B petition, the
U.S. employer (or ‘‘petitioner’’)
generally must first file a Labor
Condition Application (LCA) with DOL
that covers the proposed dates of H–1B
employment.11 See INA sections
101(a)(15)(H)(i)(B) and 212(n), 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(H)(i)(B) and 1182(n). Among
other things, the LCA requires the
petitioner to attest to the occupational
classification in which the worker will
be employed, the wage to be paid to the
worker, and the location(s) where the
employment will occur. See INA section
212(n), 8 U.S.C. 1182(n); see also 20
CFR 655.730(c)(4). If DOL certifies the
LCA, the petitioner may then file a
Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker
(Form I–129) with USCIS seeking
approval of H–1B classification for the
10 An H–1B petition can be filed for a foreign
national to perform services in a specialty
occupation, services relating to a Department of
Defense (DOD) cooperative research and
development project or coproduction project, or
services of distinguished merit and ability in the
field of fashion modeling. 8 CFR 214.2(h)(4)(i)(A).
11 Petitions for H–1B visas relating to Department
of Defense cooperative research, development, and
coproduction projects do not require petitioners to
file a Labor Condition Application. See 8 CFR
214.2(h)(4)(vi).
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worker (or ‘‘beneficiary’’).12 See INA
section 214(c)(1), 8 U.S.C. 1184(c)(1); 8
CFR 214.2(h)(4)(i)(B)(1). If the H–1B
position requires a state or local license
to fully perform the job duties, the H–
1B petition may not be approved unless
the beneficiary possesses the required
license. See 8 CFR 214.2(h)(4)(v)(A).
If the H–1B petition is approved, H–
1B classification may generally be
issued for a period of up to 3 years but
may not exceed the validity period of
the LCA.13 See 8 CFR
214.2(h)(9)(iii)(A)(1). Subsequently, the
original petitioner or a different
petitioner may petition USCIS to
authorize continued or new
employment of the beneficiary as an H–
1B nonimmigrant worker. Such a
renewal petition may, if the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker is in the United
States and (with limited exception)
maintaining H–1B status at the time the
petition is filed, include a request to
extend his or her stay in H–1B status.
See 8 CFR 214.1(c)(1) and
214.2(h)(2)(i)(D), (h)(14) and (h)(15).
The maximum period of authorized
admission of an individual in the H–1B
classification is generally limited to 6
years. See INA section 214(g)(4), 8
U.S.C. 1184(g)(4).14 Typically, an H–1B
petition may not be approved for a
beneficiary who has stayed for the
maximum allowable amount of time in
the United States as an H–1B (or L–1 15)
nonimmigrant worker, unless the
beneficiary has resided and been
physically present outside the United
States for the immediate prior year. See
8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(A). The INA
defines the terms ‘‘admission’’ and
‘‘admitted’’ to mean ‘‘the lawful entry of
the [foreign national] into the United
States after inspection and authorization
by an immigration officer.’’ See INA
section 101(a)(13), 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(13).
Therefore, DHS calculates an H–1B
nonimmigrant worker’s period of
authorized admission by excluding time
spent outside the United States during
the validity of an H–1B petition. Such
12 In such case, the worker would be considered
the beneficiary of the H–1B petition.
13 H–1B visas relating to Department of Defense
cooperative research, development, and
coproduction projects may be issued for up to 5
years, and they may be renewed for a maximum H–
1B period of 10 years. See Public Law 101–649,
section 222(a)(2), 104 Stat. 4978 (Nov. 29, 1990); 8
CFR 214.2(h)(9)(iii)(A)(2).
14 The maximum period of authorized admission
for Department of Defense H–1B nonimmigrant
workers is 10 years. As explained in detail below,
AC21, as amended, contains two provisions that
allow for USCIS to approve H–1B petitions for
beneficiaries beyond the otherwise applicable
statutory 6-year maximum period of authorized
admission.
15 The L–1 nonimmigrant classification is
described further below.
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‘‘remainder time’’ is effectively added
back to the period of stay allowed the
individual as an H–1B nonimmigrant
worker. Reclaiming this time is referred
to as ‘‘recapture’’ of H–1B time (i.e., the
time allowed an individual to be
employed in H–1B status within the 6year period of authorized admission).16
Spouses and minor, unmarried
children of an H–1B nonimmigrant
worker are eligible for H–4
nonimmigrant status subject to the same
period of admission and limits as the H–
1B nonimmigrant. See 8 CFR
214.2(h)(9)(iv). H–1B nonimmigrant
workers and their H–4 nonimmigrant
dependents are currently afforded a
grace period of up to 10 days to remain
in the United States after the end of the
petition validity period. See 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(i)(A). During any such
grace period, the H–1B nonimmigrant
worker is considered ‘‘admitted to the
United States,’’ but not authorized to
work. Id.
Generally, a request for an extension
of H–1B stay may be filed only if the
individual’s H–1B status has not
expired. See 8 CFR 214.1(c)(4) and
214.2(h)(14). Under certain
circumstances, failure to file a request
for an extension of H–1B stay before H–
1B nonimmigrant status has expired
may be excused. Id. In such cases, the
petitioner must demonstrate that:
• The delay was due to extraordinary
circumstances beyond the control of the
foreign national or petitioner, and
USCIS finds the delay commensurate
with the circumstances;
• The foreign national has not
otherwise violated his or her
nonimmigrant status;
• The foreign national remains a bona
fide nonimmigrant; and
• The foreign national is not the
subject of deportation proceedings
under section 242 of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1252 (prior to April 1, 1997), or removal
proceedings under section 240 of the
INA, 8 U.S.C. 1229a.
Id. If such a request for an extension
of H–1B stay is approved, the extension
may be granted from the date the
previously authorized stay expired. Id.
2. Other Relevant Nonimmigrant Visa
Classifications
Foreign nationals may also work in
the United States in other temporary
nonimmigrant statuses. The
employment-based nonimmigrant
statuses that are relevant to this
proposed rule are described below.
16 See USCIS Memorandum from Michael Aytes,
‘‘Procedures for Calculating Maximum Period of
Stay Regarding the Limitations on Admission for
H–1B and L–1 Nonimmigrants,’’ (Oct. 21, 2005)
(‘‘Aytes Memo Oct. 2005’’).
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E–1 classification. The E–1
nonimmigrant classification allows
nationals of certain ‘‘treaty countries’’ to
be admitted to the United States solely
to engage in international trade on his
or her own behalf. To qualify for E–1
classification, the ‘‘treaty trader’’ must:
(1) Be a national of a country with
which the United States maintains a
qualifying treaty; and (2) carry on
substantial trade, principally between
the United States and the treaty country
that qualifies the treaty trader for E–1
classification. See 8 CFR 214.2(e)(1).
Certain employees of such a person or
of a qualifying organization may also be
eligible for this classification. A treaty
trader or employee may only engage in
the trade activity or work in the
employment for which he or she was
approved at the time the classification
was granted. See 8 CFR 214.2(e)(8)(i).
An E–1 employee, however, may also
work for the treaty organization’s parent
company or one of its subsidiaries in
certain circumstances. See 8 CFR
214.2(e)(8)(ii). Treaty traders may be
admitted in E–1 nonimmigrant status for
a period of up to 2 years, and such
status may be renewed indefinitely so
long as the individual continues to meet
the relevant qualifications. See 8 CFR
214.2(e)(19) and (20).
E–2 classification. The E–2
nonimmigrant classification concerns
nationals of treaty countries who invest
a substantial amount of capital in a U.S.
enterprise. To qualify for E–2
classification, the ‘‘treaty investor’’
must: (1) Be a national of a country with
which the United States maintains a
qualifying treaty; (2) have invested, or
be actively in the process of investing,
a substantial amount of capital in a bona
fide enterprise in the United States; and
(3) be seeking to enter the United States
solely to develop and direct the
enterprise. Certain employees of such a
person or of a qualifying organization
may also be eligible for this
classification. A ‘‘treaty investor’’ or
employee in E–2 nonimmigrant status
may only engage in the investment
activity or work in the employment for
which he or she was approved at the
time the classification was granted. See
8 CFR 214.2(e)(8)(i). An E–2
nonimmigrant employee, however, may
also work for the treaty organization’s
parent company or one of its
subsidiaries in certain circumstances.
See 8 CFR 214.2(e)(8)(ii). Treaty
investors may be admitted in E–2
nonimmigrant status for a period of 2
years, and such status may be renewed
indefinitely so long as the individual
continues to meet the relevant
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qualifications. See 8 CFR 214.2(e)(19)
and (20).
E–3 classification. The E–3
nonimmigrant visa classification
concerns specialty occupation workers
who are nationals of the Commonwealth
of Australia. See INA section
101(a)(15)(E)(iii), 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(E)(iii). The definition of the
term ‘‘specialty occupation’’ is the same
for E–3 classification as that for the H–
1B classification. See INA section
214(i)(1), 8 U.S.C. 1184(i)(1). To qualify
for E–3 classification, the applicant
must present a Labor Condition
Application in accordance with section
212(t)(1) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1182(t)(1).
The total number of Australian
nationals who may be accorded E–3
nonimmigrant status in a fiscal year is
capped at 10,500. See INA section
214(g)(11)(B), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(11)(B).
E–3 nonimmigrant workers may be
admitted initially for a period not to
exceed the validity period of the
accompanying LCA (granted for 2 years)
and may be granted indefinite
extensions of stay in increments of up
to 2 years. See 20 CFR 655.750(a)(2).17
H–1B1 classification. Similar to the
H–1B and E–3 classifications, the H–
1B1 classification is for specialty
occupation workers, but is limited to
temporary workers from Chile and
Singapore. See INA sections
101(a)(15)(H)(i)(b)(1) and 214(i), 8
U.S.C. 1101(a)(15)(H)(i)(b)(1) and
1184(i). Consistent with Free Trade
Agreements with Chile and Singapore,
up to 1,400 nationals from Chile and
5,400 nationals from Singapore may
enter the United States annually in the
H–1B1 classification to perform
specialty occupation work. See INA
section 214(g)(8)(B), 8 U.S.C.
1184(g)(8)(B). Individuals admitted in
such status are counted against the
overall H–1B annual numerical
limitation of 65,000. Id. The H–1B1
nonimmigrant classification requires the
filing of an LCA certified by DOL. See
INA sections 101(a)(15)(H)(i)(B)(1) and
212(t), 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(15)(H)(i)(B)(1)
and 1182(t). H–1B1 nonimmigrants may
be admitted for a period of up to 1 year,
and may extend their period of stay in
the United States in up to 1-year
increments. See INA section
214(g)(8)(C), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(8)(C).
L–1 classification. The L–1
nonimmigrant visa classification
17 See Michael Aytes Memorandum: Processing
Guidelines for E–3 Australian Specialty Occupation
Workers and Employment Authorization for E–3
Dependent Spouses (Dec. 15, 2005), available at
https://www.uscis.gov/sites/default/files/USCIS/
Laws/Memoranda/Static_Files_Memoranda/
Archives%201998-2008/2005/e3polgdnc_
121505.pdf.
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concerns ‘‘intracompany transferees’’ of
multinational entities who are
executives, managers, or employees
with specialized knowledge and who
are transferring from an office abroad to
a qualifying office in the United States.
See INA section 101(a)(15)(L), 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(L). Executive and
managerial employees qualify for L–1A
status and are admitted for a maximum
initial stay of 3 years, with extensions
of stay granted in increments of up to 2
years, until the employee has reached
the maximum limit of 7 years. See INA
section 214(c)(1)(D)(i), 8 U.S.C.
1184(c)(1)(D)(i); see also 8 CFR
214.2(l)(12)(i) and (15)(ii). Specialized
knowledge employees qualify for L–1B
status and are admitted for a maximum
initial stay of 3 years, with extensions
of stay granted in increments of up to 2
years, until the employee has reached
the maximum limit of 5 years. See INA
section 214(c)(1)(D)(ii); see also 8 CFR
214.2(l)(12)(i) and (15)(ii).
O–1 classification. The O–1
nonimmigrant visa classification
includes individuals who either: (1)
Have ‘‘extraordinary ability’’ in the
sciences, arts, education, business or
athletics, as demonstrated by sustained
national or international acclaim; or (2)
have a demonstrated record of
extraordinary achievements in the
motion picture or television industry, as
recognized in the field through
extensive documentation. See INA
section 101(a)(15)(O), 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(O). O–1 nonimmigrants
must be coming temporarily to the
United States to continue work in the
relevant area of extraordinary ability or
achievement. Id. O–1 nonimmigrants
may be admitted to the United States for
up to 3 years, plus a period of up to 10
days before the validity period begins
and 10 days after the validity period
ends. See 8 CFR 214.2(o)(6)(iii)(A) and
(o)(10). Extensions of status may be
authorized in increments of up to 1
year, and such status may be renewed
indefinitely so long as the individual
continues to meet the relevant
qualifications. See 8 CFR
214.2(o)(12)(ii).
TN Classification. The TN
nonimmigrant classification, established
in the North American Free Trade
Agreement,18 permits qualified
Canadian and Mexican citizens to seek
temporary entry into the United States
to engage in business activities at a
professional level. See INA section
214(e), 8 U.S.C. 1184(e); see also 8 CFR
214.6(b). The TN nonimmigrant worker
may not intend to establish a business
18 See 58 FR 69205 (Dec. 30, 1993); 58 FR 68526
(Dec. 28, 1993).
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in the United States or be self-employed
in this country, and he or she must be
arriving pursuant to a prearranged
agreement with a U.S. employer. Id. The
TN nonimmigrant worker must also
demonstrate that he or she possesses at
least the minimum qualification
prescribed for his or her respective
profession and that he or she intends to
remain in the United States temporarily.
See 8 CFR 214.6(a), (d)(3)(ii). An eligible
alien seeking TN classification may be
granted TN status for an initial period
not to exceed 3 years. See 8 CFR
214.6(e). Extensions of stay may be
granted for periods not to exceed 3 years
at a time. See 8 CFR 214.6(h)(1)(iii). TN
is a temporary nonimmigrant
classification, although there is no
specific limit on the total period of time
an alien may remain in the United
States in TN status as long as he or she
continues to be engaged in TN business
activities for a U.S. employer or entity
at a professional level, and otherwise
continues to properly maintain TN
status. See 8 CFR 214.6(h)(1)(iv).
C. ACWIA and AC21
1. The American Competitiveness and
Workforce Improvement Act of 1998
ACWIA was enacted on October 21,
1998. Among other things, ACWIA was
intended to address shortages of
workers in the U.S. high-technology
sector. To increase the number of such
workers in the United States, section
411 of ACWIA increased the annual
numerical cap on H–1B visas from
65,000 to 115,000 in each of fiscal years
(FY) 1999 and 2000, and to 107,500 in
FY 2001.19 See ACWIA section 411
(amending INA section 214(g)(1),
codified at 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(1)). The
congressional statements accompanying
ACWIA recognized that the continued
competitiveness of the U.S. hightechnology sector is ‘‘crucial for [U.S.]
economic well-being as a nation, and for
increased economic opportunity for
American workers.’’ See 144 Cong. Rec.
S12,741, S12,749 (daily ed. Oct. 21,
1998) (statement of Sen. Spencer
Abraham); see also id. (‘‘This issue is
not only about shortages, it is about
opportunities for innovation and
expansion, since people with valuable
skills, whatever their national origin,
will always benefit our nation by
creating more jobs for everyone.’’).20
19 Section 102(a) of AC21 further amended INA
section 214(g)(1) by increasing the annual
numerical cap on H–1B visas to 195,000 for each
of the fiscal years 2001, 2002, 2003.
20 Senator Abraham drafted and sponsored the
original Senate bill for ACWIA, then titled the
American Competitiveness Act, S. 1723, 105th
Cong. (1998), which passed the full Senate by a 78–
20 margin on May 18, 1998. 144 Cong. Rec. as
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ACWIA also included several
measures intended to improve
protections for U.S. and H–1B
nonimmigrant workers. Section 413 of
the act provided enhanced penalties for
employer violations of LCA obligations,
as well as willful misrepresentations by
employers in LCAs. See ACWIA section
413 (creating INA section 212(n)(2)(C),
codified at 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(2)(C)). Such
enhancements included increased
monetary penalties, as well as
temporary prohibitions on the approval
of certain types of petitions, such as H–
1B petitions and employment-based
immigrant visa petitions.21 Id. This
prohibition against petition approval is
often referred to as ‘‘debarment.’’ The
severity of the penalty awarded to an
employer depends upon the seriousness
of the employer’s violation, as
determined by DOL. See INA section
212(n)(2)(C)(i)–(iii), 8 U.S.C.
1182(n)(2)(C)(i)–(iii). DOL is required to
notify USCIS of the entities determined
to be subject to debarment. See 20 CFR
655.855 and 656.31(f)(2).
Section 413 of ACWIA also made it a
violation for an H–1B employer to
retaliate against an employee for
providing information to the employer
or other persons, or for cooperating in
an investigation, related to an
employer’s violation of its LCA
attestations and obligations. Employers
are prohibited from taking retaliatory
action in such situations, including any
action ‘‘to intimidate, threaten, restrain,
coerce, blacklist, discharge, or in any
other manner discriminate’’ against an
employee for ‘‘disclos[ing] information
to the employer, or to any other person,
that the employee reasonably believes
evidences [an LCA] violation, any rule
or regulation pertaining to the statutory
LCA attestation requirements, or for
cooperating, or attempting to cooperate,
in an investigation or proceeding
pertaining to the employer’s LCA
compliance.’’ See INA section
212(n)(2)(C)(iv), 8 U.S.C.
1182(n)(2)(C)(iv). Section 413 further
required the development of a process
to enable H–1B nonimmigrant workers
who file complaints with DOL regarding
such illegal retaliation, and are
otherwise eligible to remain and work in
S12,748–49 (daily ed. Oct. 21, 1998). He negotiated
with the House of Representatives on a compromise
ACWIA bill and was deputized to negotiate in talks
between Congress and the White House to finalize
the bill.
21 Legal Opinion: INS Procedure for Processing
Debarment of Employer Pursuant to Sec.
212(n)(2)(C)(ii) of the INA, Genco Op. No. 94–21,
1994 WL 1753125 (Apr. 12, 1994) (concluding that
the determination of whether a section
212(n)(2)(C)(ii) violation has occurred rests solely
with DOL, and that DHS must accept that
determination).
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the United States, to seek other
appropriate employment in the United
States. See INA section 212(n)(2)(C)(v),
8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(2)(C)(v).
Section 412 of ACWIA created
additional requirements for U.S.
employers deemed to be ‘‘H–1B
dependent,’’ see INA section
212(n)(3)(A), 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(3)(A), and
those that have willfully failed to
comply with their LCA obligations or
who have misrepresented material facts
in an LCA, see INA section 212(n)(1)(E)–
(G), 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(1)(E)–(G). These
U.S. employers are required to attest
that they will not displace U.S. workers
to fill a prospective position with an H–
1B nonimmigrant worker, and that they
took good faith steps to recruit qualified
U.S. workers for the prospective H–1B
position. Id. Employers are not subject
to these additional non-displacement
requirements, however, with regard to
petitions for H–1B nonimmigrant
workers who receive at least $60,000 in
annual wages or have attained a
master’s or higher degree in a specialty
related to the relevant employment. See
ACWIA section 412 (creating INA
section 212(n)(1)(E)(ii) and (n)(3)(B),
codified at 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(1)(E)(ii) and
(n)(3)(B)).
Section 414 of ACWIA imposed a
temporary fee on certain H–1B
employers to fund, among other things,
job training of U.S. workers and
scholarships in the science, technology,
engineering, and mathematics (STEM)
fields. See ACWIA section 414 (creating
INA section 214(c)(9), codified at 8
U.S.C. 1184(c)(9)). The ACWIA fee was
initially scheduled to sunset on
September 30, 2001. Public Law 106–
311, however, increased the fee from
$500 to $1,000 and extended the sunset
provision to September 30, 2003. Public
Law 106–311 also amended section
214(c)(9)(A) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1184(c)(9), by specifying additional
employers that are exempt from the
ACWIA fee (i.e., employers in addition
to the exempt employers described in
section 212(p)(1) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1182(p)(1)). Exempt employers currently
include institutions of higher education,
nonprofit entities related or affiliated
with such institutions, and nonprofit or
governmental research organizations,
among others. See INA section
214(c)(9)(A), 8 U.S.C. 1184(c)(9)(A).
Subsequently, the H–1B Visa Reform
Act of 2004, enacted as part of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2005,
Public Law 108–447, div. J, tit. IV, made
the ACWIA fee permanent and raised it
from $1,000 to $1,500 per qualifying
petition filed with USCIS after
December 8, 2004. This fee was also
reduced to $750 for employers with no
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more than 25 full-time equivalent
employees employed in the United
States (including employees employed
by any affiliate or subsidiary of such
employer).
2. The American Competitiveness in the
Twenty-first Century Act of 2000
AC21 was enacted on October 17,
2000. It made numerous changes to the
INA designed, among other things, to
improve the U.S. economy in both the
short and long term. First, AC21 sought
to positively impact economic growth
and job creation by immediately
increasing the United States’ access to
high-skilled workers. See S. Rep. No.
260, at 10 (‘‘[A]rtificially limiting
companies’ ability to hire skilled foreign
professionals will stymie our country’s
economic growth and thereby partially
atrophy its creation of new jobs. . . .
American workers’ interests are
advanced, rather than impeded, by
raising the H–1B cap’’). Second, AC21
sought to improve the education and
training of U.S. workers in high-skilled
sectors, and thereby produce a U.S.
workforce better equipped to fill the
need in such sectors, through the
funding of scholarships and high-skilled
training programs. See AC21 section
111. As noted by the accompanying
Senate Report, foreign-born high-skilled
individuals have played an important
role in U.S. economic prosperity and the
competitiveness of U.S. companies in
numerous fields. Id. AC21 sought to
provide such benefits by making
improvements to both the employmentbased immigrant visa process and the
H–1B specialty occupation worker
program.
a. AC21 Provisions Relating to
Employment-Based Immigrant Visas
To improve the immigrant visa
process for certain workers, AC21
contained several provisions designed
to improve access to employment-based
immigrant visas. Section 104 of AC21,
for example, sought to ameliorate the
impact on intending immigrants of the
per-country limitations, which, as noted
earlier, generally limit the number of
immigrant visas that may be issued to
the nationals of any one country to no
more than 7 percent of the total number
of such visas. See INA section 202(a)(2),
8 U.S.C. 1152(a)(2). Sections 104(a) and
(b) of AC21 amended the INA to excuse
application of the per country
limitations when such application
would result in immigrant visas going
unused in any quarter of the fiscal year.
Specifically, these sections amended the
INA so that when the number of
employment-based immigrant visas
authorized for issuance in a calendar
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quarter exceeds the number of qualified
immigrants who may otherwise be
issued such visas, the visas may be
issued in the same quarter without
regard to per-country limitations. See
AC21 sections 104(a) and (b) (amending
INA section 202(a)(5), codified at 8
U.S.C. 1152(a)(5)); see also S. Rep. No.
260, 106th Cong., 2nd Sess. at 2. This
provision recognized ‘‘the
discriminatory effects of [the percountry limitations] on nationals from
certain Asian Pacific nations,’’
specifically Chinese and Indian
nationals, which ‘‘prevent[ed] an
employer from hiring or sponsoring
someone permanently simply because
he or she is Chinese or Indian, even
though the individual meets all other
legal criteria.’’ S. Rep. No. 260, at 22.
Section 104(c) of AC21 was designed
to further ameliorate the impact of the
per-country limitations on H–1B
nonimmigrant workers who are the
beneficiaries of approved EB–1, EB–2,
or EB–3 immigrant visa petitions.
Specifically, section 104(c) authorized
the extension of H–1B status beyond the
statutory 6-year maximum for such
individuals if immigrant visa numbers
are not immediately available to them
because the relevant preference category
is already over-subscribed for that
foreign national’s country of birth. See
AC21 section 104(c). In support of this
provision, Congress noted that ‘‘these
immigrants would otherwise be forced
to return home at the conclusion of their
allotted time in H–1B status, disrupting
projects and American workers.’’ See S.
Rep. No. 260, at 22. Section 104(c)
‘‘enables these foreign nationals to
remain in H–1B status until they are
able to receive an immigrant visa and
adjust their status within the United
States, thus limiting the disruption to
American businesses.’’ Id.
AC21 also sought to more generally
ameliorate the impact of the lack of
employment-based immigrant visas on
the high-skilled beneficiaries of
approved immigrant visa petitions.
Sections 106(a) and (b) of AC21, as
amended by section 11030A of the 21st
Century DOJ Appropriations Act, Public
Law 107–273(2002), authorized the
extension of H–1B status beyond the
statutory 6-year maximum for H–1B
nonimmigrant workers who are being
sponsored for LPR status by U.S.
employers and are subject to lengthy
adjudication or processing delays.
Specifically, these provisions exempted
H–1B nonimmigrant workers from the 6year limitation on H–1B status
contained in INA section 214(g)(4), 8
U.S.C. 1184(g)(4), if 365 days or more
have elapsed since the filing of a labor
certification application (if such
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certification is required under INA
section 212(a)(5), 8 U.S.C. 1182(a)(5)), or
an immigrant visa petition under INA
section 203(b), 8 U.S.C. 1153(b). These
provisions were intended to allow such
high-skilled individuals to remain in the
United States as H–1B nonimmigrant
workers, rather than being forced to
leave the country and disrupt their
employers due to a long pending labor
certification application or immigrant
visa petition. See S. Rep. No. 260, at 23.
Finally, to provide stability and
flexibility to beneficiaries of approved
immigrant visa petitions subject to
immigrant visa backlogs and processing
delays, AC21 also provided certain
workers the improved ability to change
jobs or employers without losing their
position in the immigrant visa queue.
Specifically, section 106(c) of AC21
provides that certain immigrant visa
petitions filed under the EB–1, EB–2,
and EB–3 preference categories will
remain valid with respect to a new
qualifying job offer if the beneficiary
changes jobs or employers, provided an
application for adjustment of status has
been filed and such application has
been pending for 180 days or more. See
AC21 section 106(c) (creating INA
section 204(j), codified at 8 U.S.C.
1154(j)). In such cases, the new job offer
must be in the same or a similar
occupational classification as the job for
which the original immigrant visa
petition was filed. Id.
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b. AC21 Provisions Seeking To Improve
the H–1B Nonimmigrant Worker
Classification
As noted above, one of the principle
purposes for the enactment of AC21 was
to improve the country’s access to highskilled workers. As such, AC21 contains
several additional provisions intended
to expand and strengthen the H–1B
program.
i. Exemptions From the H–1B
Numerical Cap
Section 103 of AC21 amended the
INA to create an exemption from the H–
1B numerical cap for those H–1B
nonimmigrant workers who are
employed or offered employment at an
institution of higher education, a
nonprofit entity related or affiliated to
such an institution, or a nonprofit
research or governmental research
organization. See INA section
214(g)(5)(A) and (B); 8 U.S.C.
1184(g)(5)(A) and (B).22 Congress
22 See
USCIS Memorandum from Michael Aytes,
‘‘Guidance Regarding Eligibility for Exemption from
the H–1B Cap Based on § 103 of the American
Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century Act of
2000 (AC21) (Public Law 106–313) 2–4 (June 6,
2006)’’ (‘‘Aytes Memo June 2006’’).
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deemed such employment advantageous
to the United States. Among other
things, Congress recognized a short- and
long-term need to increase the number
of workers in specialty occupation
fields, and it determined that increasing
the number of high-skilled foreign
nationals working in specialty
occupations at U.S. institutions of
higher education would increase the
number of Americans who will be ready
to fill specialty occupation positions
upon completion of their education. See
S. Rep. No. 260, at 21–22. Congress
reasoned that ‘‘by virtue of what they
are doing, people working in
universities are necessarily immediately
contributing to educating Americans.’’
Id. at 21. Congress also recognized that
U.S. institutions of higher education are
on a different hiring cycle from other
U.S. employers, and in years of high H–
1B demand, these institutions would be
unable to hire cap-subject H–1B
nonimmigrant workers. Id. at 22.
For purposes of this H–1B numerical
cap exemption, the term ‘‘institution of
higher education’’ is given the same
meaning as that set forth in section
101(a) of the Higher Education Act of
1965, Public Law 89–329, 79 Stat. 1224
(1965), as amended (codified at 20
U.S.C. 1001(a) (‘‘Higher Education
Act’’).23 See INA section 214(g)(5)(A); 8
U.S.C. 1184(g)(5)(A). The terms ‘‘related
or affiliated nonprofit entity,’’ and
‘‘nonprofit research organization or
governmental research organization’’ are
defined at 8 CFR 214.2(h)(19)(iii)(B) and
8 CFR 214.2(h)(19)(iii)(C), respectively,
and adopted as a matter of
23 Section 101(a) of the Higher Education Act of
1965, as amended, defines ‘‘institution of higher
education’’ as an educational institution in any
State that—
(1) admits as regular students only persons
having a certificate of graduation from a school
providing secondary education, or the recognized
equivalent of such a certificate, or persons who
meet the requirements of [8 U.S.C. 1091(d)];
(2) is legally authorized within such State to
provide a program of education beyond secondary
education;
(3) provides an educational program for which
the institution awards a bachelor’s degree or
provides not less than a 2-year program that is
acceptable for full credit toward such a degree, or
awards a degree that is acceptable for admission to
a graduate or professional degree program, subject
to review and approval by the Secretary [of
Education];
(4) is a public or other nonprofit institution; and
(5) is accredited by a nationally recognized
accrediting agency or association, or if not so
accredited, is an institution that has been granted
preaccreditation status by such an agency or
association that has been recognized by the
Secretary [of Education] for the granting of
preaccreditation status, and the Secretary [of
Education] has determined that there is satisfactory
assurance that the institution will meet the
accreditation standards of such an agency or
association within a reasonable time.
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interpretation in the cap exemption
context.24
ii. Application of the H–1B Numerical
Cap to Persons Previously Counted
Section 103 of AC21 also amended
the INA to ensure that H–1B
nonimmigrant workers can change jobs
or employers without requiring that
they again count against the H–1B cap.
Specifically, section 103 provides that
an individual who has been counted
against the H–1B numerical cap within
the 6 years prior to petition approval
will not be counted against the cap
unless that individual would be eligible
for a new 6-year period of authorized H–
1B admission. See INA section
214(g)(6); 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(6). As noted
above, an individual previously in the
United States on H–1B nonimmigrant
status is eligible for a full 6 years of
authorized admission as an H–1B
nonimmigrant after residing and being
physically present outside the United
States for the immediate prior year. See
8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(A).
Section 103 of AC21 also amended
the INA to address cases in which an H–
1B nonimmigrant worker seeks to
change employment from a cap-exempt
entity to a ‘‘cap-subject’’ entity.
Specifically, section 103 provides that
once employment ceases with respect to
a cap-exempt entity, the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker will be subject to
the cap if not previously counted and no
other exemptions from the cap apply.
See INA section 214(g)(6), 8 U.S.C.
1184(g)(6).
iii. H–1B Portability
Section 105 of AC21 further improved
the H–1B program by increasing job
portability for H–1B nonimmigrant
workers. Specifically, section 105
allows an H–1B nonimmigrant worker
to begin concurrent or new H–1B
employment upon the filing of a timely,
non-frivolous H–1B petition. See INA
section 214(n), 8 U.S.C. 1184(n). The H–
1B nonimmigrant worker must have
been lawfully admitted to the United
States, must not have worked without
authorization subsequent to such lawful
admission, and must be in a period of
stay authorized by the Secretary.25
Employment authorization based on the
pending petition continues until
adjudication. See INA section 214(n)(1),
8 U.S.C. 1184(n)(1). If the H–1B petition
is denied, the employment
24 See
Aytes Memo June 2006, at 4.
USCIS Memorandum from Donald Neufeld,
‘‘Consolidation of Guidance Concerning Unlawful
Presence for Purposes of Sections 212(a)(9)(B)(i)
and 212(a)(9)(C)(i)(I) of the Act’’ (May 6, 2009)
(‘‘Neufeld Memo May 2009’’) (describing various
‘‘periods of authorized stay’’).
25 See
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authorization provided under this
provision ceases. Id. Congress created
such H–1B portability to ‘‘allow an H–
1B visa holder to change employers at
the time a new employer files the initial
paperwork, rather than having to wait
for the new H–1B petition to be
approved. This responds to concerns
raised about the potential for
exploitation of H–1B visa holders as a
result of a specific U.S. employer’s
control over the employee’s legal
status.’’ See S. Rep. No. 260, at 22–23.
D. The Processing of Applications for
Employment Authorization Documents
The Secretary of Homeland Security
has broad authority to extend
employment authorization to
noncitizens in the United States. See,
e.g., section 274A(h)(3)(B) of the INA, 8
U.S.C. 1324a(h)(3)(B). DHS regulations
at 8 CFR 274a.12(a), (b), and (c) describe
three broad categories of foreign
nationals authorized to work in the
United States. Individuals in the first
class, described at 8 CFR 274a.12(a), are
authorized to work in the United States
incident to their immigration status,
without restriction on the location of
their employment or the type of
employment they may accept. Such
individuals who travel to the United
States by air and sea may electronically
access an Arrival-Departure Record
(Form I–94) indicating their
nonimmigrant status and attendant
employment authorization; such
individuals who are admitted at land
border port of entry may receive a paper
Form I–94. Those individuals seeking to
obtain an EAD (Form I–766) containing
both evidence of employment
authorization and a photograph
typically must file a separate
application with USCIS. See 8 CFR
274a.13(a).
Individuals in the second class,
described at 8 CFR 274a.12(b), are also
employment authorized incident to
their nonimmigrant status, but such
employment authorization is valid only
with a specific employer. Individuals in
this second group are not issued an
EAD; instead these individuals obtain
an Arrival-Departure Record (Form I–
94) indicating their nonimmigrant status
and attendant employment
authorization and do not file separate
requests for evidence of employment
authorization.
Individuals in the third class,
described at 8 CFR 274a.12(c), are
required to apply for employment
authorization and may begin working
only if USCIS approves their
application. Such employment
authorization is subject to the
restrictions described in the regulations
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for his or her respective employment
eligibility category. With respect to
individuals described in the first and
third categories, USCIS has the
discretion to establish a specific validity
period for the EAD.
Individuals requesting an EAD must
file an Application for Employment
Authorization (Form I–765) with USCIS
in accordance with the form
instructions. See 8 CFR 274a.13. Under
current regulations, if USCIS does not
adjudicate an Application for
Employment Authorization within 90
days from the date USCIS receives the
application, an applicant will be granted
an interim document evidencing
employment authorization with a
validity period not to exceed 240 days.
See 8 CFR 274a.13(d). Generally, the
approval of an Application for
Employment Authorization by an
individual described in 8 CFR
274a.12(c) is within the discretion of
USCIS.26 And there is no right to appeal
the denial of an Application for
Employment Authorization. See 8 CFR
274a.13(c).
E. The Increasing Damage Caused by
Immigrant Visa Backlogs
This proposed rule is intended, in
part, to address some of the challenges
that flow from the statutory limits on
immigrant visas, consistent with
existing DHS authorities. As noted
above, the number of employment-based
immigrant visas allocated per year has
remained unchanged since the passage
of the Immigration Act of 1990. In the
intervening 25 years, the country’s
economy has expanded dramatically.
The U.S. economy, as measured by U.S.
gross domestic product (GDP), has
increased by 78 percent from $8.955
trillion in 1990 to $15.961 trillion in
2014.27 The per capita share of GDP has
also increased by almost 40 percent
from $35,794 in 1990 to $50,010 in
2014.28 And the number of entities
doing business in the United States
increased at least 24 percent during the
same period.29 Over the same period,
26 Approval of an application for employment
authorization based on a pending asylum
application is not discretionary. See 8 CFR
274a.13(a)(1).
27 U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of
Economic Analysis, Table 1.1.6 Real Gross
Domestic Product, Chained (2009) Dollars, https://
www.bea.gov/iTable/index_nipa.cfm.
28 U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of
Economic Analysis, Table 7.1 Selected Per Capita
Product and Income Series and Chained (2009)
Dollars, https://www.bea.gov/iTable/index_
nipa.cfm.
29 Compare U.S. Census data collected in 1992
identifying over 4.61 million firms doing business
in the United States, available at https://
www.census.gov/prod/www/economic_census.html,
with U.S. Census data collected in 2012 identifying
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employer demand for immigrant visas
has increasingly outpaced supply,
resulting in growing waits for sponsored
employees to obtain their LPR status.
Such delays have resulted in substantial
inequalities and other hardships flowing
from limits on a sponsored worker’s
ability to seek employment to enhance
his or her skills and on the ability of
employers to promote them or otherwise
change their positions.
Since AC21 was enacted in October of
2000, workers seeking LPR status in the
United States—particularly within the
EB–2 and EB–3 preference categories—
have faced increasing challenges as a
consequence of the escalating wait times
for immigrant visas. It often takes many
years before an immigrant visa number
becomes available. For some, the delays
can last more than a decade. The
combination of numerical limitations in
the various employment-based
preference categories with the percountry limitations that further limit
visa availability to certain workers, has
produced significant oversubscription
in the EB–2 and EB–3 categories,
particularly for Indian and Chinese
nationals. For instance, the current
approximate backlog for an EB–3
immigrant visa for workers from most
countries is only a few months. For
nationals of certain countries applying
in the EB–3 category, delays have
extended more than a decade.30
Given the long and growing delays for
many beneficiaries of employmentbased immigrant visa petitions, the
challenges facing such workers and the
U.S. economy, while similar to those
recognized by AC21, are substantially
greater than those that existed at the
time AC21 passed. Although DHS has
worked diligently to improve processing
times during the intervening period,
visa backlogs due to statutory numerical
limits for many individuals seeking EB–
2 and EB–3 classification have grown
significantly.31 DHS recognizes the
over 5.72 million firms doing business, available at
https://www.census.gov/econ/susb/.
30 According to the DOS Visa Bulletin for
November 2015, immigrant visas are currently
issuable to all persons qualifying under the EB–1
preference category. The EB–2 category Application
Final Action date is current for all countries except
for China and India, with cut-off dates for nationals
of those countries currently set between 2006 and
2012 (a wait of 3 to 9 years). The Application Final
Action cut-off dates for nationals of most countries
under the EB–3 preference category are set at
August 15, 2015 (a wait of less than one month).
But for Indian nationals, the Application Final
Action cut-off dates are set at April 1, 2004 (a wait
of over 10 years). See DOS Visa Bulletin for
November 2015, https://www.travel.state.gov/
content/visas/en/law-and-policy/bulletin/2016/
visa-bulletin-for-november-2015.html.
31 According to the DOS Visa Bulletin for October
2000 (the month AC21 was enacted), visa
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resulting realities confronting
individuals seeking employment-based
permanent residence who, due to
immigrant visa unavailability, are
required to wait many years for visa
numbers to become available before
they can file applications for adjustment
of status or seek immigrant visas abroad
and become LPRs. In many instances,
these individuals are in the United
States in a nonimmigrant, employerspecific temporary worker category (e.g.,
H–1B or L–1 visa classification) and
may be unable to accept promotions or
otherwise change jobs or employers
without abandoning their existing
efforts—including great investments of
time and money—to become permanent
residents. Their employment
opportunities may be limited to their
original job duties with the U.S.
employer that sponsored their
temporary admission to the United
States, despite the fact that they may
have gained professional experience
that would otherwise have allowed
them to progress substantially in their
careers.
Indeed, many individuals subject to
the immigrant visa backlogs confront
the choice between remaining employed
in a specific job under the same terms
and conditions originally offered to
them or abandoning either their place in
the immigrant visa queue or the pursuit
of LPR status altogether. When such a
worker changes employers or jobs—
including a change to an identical job
with a different employer or to a related
job for the same employer—the worker
is typically subject to uncertainty as
well as expensive additional
immigration processes, greatly
discouraging any such changes. Indeed,
under current regulations, some changes
in employment could result in the loss
of nonimmigrant status, loss of the
ability to change to another
nonimmigrant status, loss of the ability
to obtain an immigrant visa or adjust to
LPR status, and the need for the affected
worker and his or her family to
immediately depart the United States.
As a result, these employees often suffer
through many years of effective career
stagnation, as they are largely
availability was current for all persons qualifying
under the EB–1 preference category. The EB–2
category was current for all countries except for
China and India. The EB–2 cut-off dates were
March 8, 1999 for persons chargeable to China (a
wait of 19 months) and November 1, 1999 for
persons chargeable to India (a wait of 11 months).
The EB–3 category likewise was current for all
countries except for China and India, with a cut-off
date of March 15, 1998 for individuals charged to
China (a wait of 31 months) and February 8, 1997
for individuals charged to India (a wait of 44
months). See https://dosfan.lib.uic.edu/ERC/visa_
bulletin/2000-10bulletin.html.
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dependent on current employers for
immigration status and are substantially
restricted in their ability to change
employers or even accept promotions
from, or make lateral movements
within, their current employers.
Simply put, many workers in the
immigrant visa process are not free to
consider all available employment and
career development opportunities. This
effectively prevents U.S. employers
from treating them like the highpotential individuals the employer
hired them to be, thus restricting
productivity and the promise they offer
to our nation’s economy and
undermining the very purpose of the
employment-based immigrant visa
system that prioritizes such workers for
LPR status. The lack of predictability
and flexibility for such workers may
also prevent them from otherwise
investing in and contributing to the
local, regional, and national economy or
fully assimilating into American society.
IV. Proposed Regulatory Changes
DHS is proposing to amend its
regulations related to certain
employment-based immigrant and
nonimmigrant visa programs. The
proposed amendments are intended to
benefit U.S. employers and workers
participating in these programs,
including by: Streamlining the
processes for employer sponsorship of
individuals for permanent residence;
ameliorating some of the effects of
immigrant visa backlogs by increasing
job portability and otherwise providing
stability and flexibility for such
workers; and providing additional
transparency and consistency in the
application of agency policies and
procedures related to these programs.
These changes are primarily aimed at
improving the ability of U.S. employers
to employ and retain workers who are
beneficiaries of approved immigrant
visa petitions and are waiting for LPR
status, while increasing the ability of
such workers to further their careers by
accepting promotions, making lateral
changes within current employers,
changing employers, and pursuing other
employment opportunities.
The improvements proposed in this
rulemaking would help DHS fulfill its
responsibility to assist U.S. employers,
U.S. workers, and foreign national
workers, while strengthening and
protecting the U.S. economy. The
immigrant and nonimmigrant visa
programs at issue in this proposed rule
were designed to improve the ability of
U.S. employers to hire and retain
critical foreign workers, while creating
job opportunities for and protecting U.S.
workers. Consistent with these
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provisions, the proposed rule would
enhance the Department’s ability to
administer the INA in a manner that
better accounts for fluctuating economic
conditions and that provides additional
stability and flexibility to regulated
persons and entities.
A. Proposed Implementation of AC21
and ACWIA
DHS proposes to clarify and improve
longstanding agency policies and
procedures established in response to
certain sections of AC21 and ACWIA.
These sections were intended, among
other things, to provide greater
flexibility and job portability to certain
workers, particularly those who have
been sponsored for LPR status by their
employers, while protecting U.S.
workers, enhancing opportunities for
innovation and expansion, and
maintaining U.S. competitiveness. The
proposed rule would further clarify and
improve agency policies and procedures
in this area—policies and procedures
that have long been set through a series
of policy memoranda and a precedent
decision of the USCIS Administrative
Appeals Office. By establishing such
policies in regulation, DHS would
provide greater transparency and
certainty to affected employers and
workers and increase consistency
among agency adjudications. In
addition, the proposed rule would
clarify several interpretive questions
raised by AC21 and ACWIA.
As noted above, except where
improvements on current practices are
noted in the following sections, DHS
intends the following proposals to
effectively capture the longstanding
policies and procedures that have
developed since enactment of AC21 and
ACWIA. The Department welcomes all
comments on these proposals, including
those that identify any such proposals
that commenters believe are
inconsistent with current practices (and
not identified as such in the preamble),
so that any such inconsistencies can be
resolved in the final rule.
1. Extending H–1B Nonimmigrant
Status for Certain Individuals Who Are
Being Sponsored for Lawful Permanent
Residence
DHS proposes to codify in regulation
and improve longstanding agency
policies and practices related to two
provisions in AC21 that allow for
certain individuals who are being
sponsored by employers for permanent
residence to obtain H–1B status beyond
the general 6-year maximum period of
stay. The first provision provides an
exemption to certain beneficiaries of
approved employment-based immigrant
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visa petitions who are subject to percountry limitations on immigrant visas
that prevent the filing and adjudication
of applications for adjustment of status.
The second provision provides an
exemption to certain H–1B
nonimmigrant workers who are being
sponsored for permanent residence by
U.S. employers and are subject to
certain lengthy adjudication delays.
a. H–1B Extensions for Individuals
Affected by the Per-Country Limitations
First, the proposed rule would clarify
and improve DHS’ implementation of
section 104(c) of AC21. See proposed 8
CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(E). This section
authorizes approval of H–1B status
beyond the general 6-year maximum
period for certain beneficiaries of
approved EB–1, EB–2, and EB–3
immigrant visa petitions. See AC21
section 104(c). Specifically, section
104(c) authorizes such an exemption
from the 6-year limit when the H–1B
petitioner can demonstrate that an
immigrant visa is not available to the
beneficiary at the time the H–1B
petition is filed because the immigrant
visa classification sought is already
over-subscribed for that beneficiary’s
country of birth (i.e., is subject to the
per-country limitations on immigrant
visas). Id.
Consistent with current practice, DHS
proposes that such exemptions be
granted in 3-year increments until
USCIS adjudicates the beneficiary’s
adjustment of status application. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(E)(1).
Although the heading for section 104(c)
describes a ‘‘one-time protection,’’ the
statutory text makes clear that the
exemption remains available until the
beneficiary has an EB–1, EB–2, or EB–
3 immigrant visa number immediately
available to him or her. See AC21
section 104(c) (authorizing H–1B
extensions under this exemption ‘‘until
the alien’s application for adjustment of
status has been processed and a
decision made thereon’’). As such, the
proposed rule ‘‘enables these
individuals to remain in H–1B status
until they are able to receive an
immigrant visa and adjust their status
within the United States, thus limiting
the disruption to American businesses.’’
See S. Rep. No. 260, at 22. Moreover,
this proposal would allow DHS to
review the continued eligibility of the
H–1B nonimmigrant worker in 3-year
intervals, which is consistent with the
duration of H–1B status awarded under
general H–1B provisions. See 8 CFR
214.2(h)(9)(iii)(A)(1) and
(h)(15)(ii)(B)(1). An H–1B petition filed
under this provision may include any
time remaining within the normal 6-
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year period of authorized H–1B stay 32
in addition to the exemption request,
but in no case may the approval period
exceed 3 years or the validity period of
the LCA. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(E)(5).
DHS also proposes, consistent with
current policy guidance, to make this
exemption available to individuals who
remain eligible for an additional period
of admission in H–1B status, whether or
not such individuals are physically in
the United States on H–1B status at the
time the H–1B petition is filed.33 See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(E)(3).
Section 104(c) of AC21 does not
specifically limit the granting of H–1B
status under its provisions to only those
individuals currently in H–1B status
within the United States. Rather, as is
stated in current policy guidance, DHS
interprets the provision to require only
that the individual have previously held
H–1B status and be otherwise eligible
for an H–1B approval, including
through an extension of current H–1B
status, a change to H–1B status, or
notification to a U.S. consulate or port
of entry (if visa exempt).34 The
petitioner bears the burden of proving
the individual’s eligibility under this
provision.
Consistent with current practice, DHS
proposes to allow any qualified H–1B
petitioner to file for an exemption under
section 104(c) with respect to any
qualified beneficiary of an approved
EB–1, EB–2, or EB–3 immigrant visa
petition. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(E)(4). There is no
requirement that the H–1B petitioner be
the same employer as that listed on the
qualifying immigrant visa petition,
which by definition contemplates an
offer of future employment upon a grant
of permanent residence.35 Similarly, the
H–1B nonimmigrant worker can rely on
any currently approved and qualifying
immigrant visa petition, even if the H–
1B nonimmigrant worker had
previously been granted an exemption
under section 104(c) based on a
different petition.
As discussed later in this proposed
rule, however, DHS is effectively
proposing to improve access to
32 Where applicable, the time remaining within
the normal 6-year period (‘‘remainder time’’) may
include periods in which the beneficiary was
outside the United States during qualifying H–1B or
L–1 visa petition validity that the petitioner seeks
to recapture for the beneficiary. As noted
previously, USCIS counts any time spent in H–1B
or L–1 status towards the limitation for either
classification. See 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(i)(B) and
214.2(l)(12)(i).
33 Aytes Memo Dec. 2006 supra note 11 at 3–4.
34 Id.
35 See, e.g., Matter of Rajah, 25 I&N Dec. 127,
132–133 (BIA 2009).
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exemptions under section 104(c) by
proposing amendments to DHS
regulations promulgated under section
205 of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1155, that
govern when approvals of immigrant
visa petitions are automatically revoked.
See Section IV.B. Pursuant to these
amendments, employment-based
immigrant visa petitions that have been
approved for 180 days or more would
no longer have such approval
automatically revoked based only on
withdrawal by the petitioner or
termination of the petitioner’s business.
See proposed 8 CFR 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(C)
and (D). As long as such an approval has
not been revoked for fraud, material
misrepresentation, the invalidation or
revocation of a labor certification, or
USCIS error, the petition will generally
continue to be valid with regard to the
beneficiary for various job portability
and status extension purposes under the
immigration laws. Id. As further
described below, this change would
effectively improve the ability of H–1B
nonimmigrants with approved EB–1,
EB–2, or EB–3 immigrant visa petitions
to rely on such petitions for obtaining
exemptions under section 104(c) of
AC21.
Finally, the proposed rule, as per
current practice, would allow
exemptions authorized under section
104(c) of AC21 only with respect to the
principal beneficiaries of employmentbased immigrant visa petitions, and not
any derivative beneficiaries named in
such petitions who may also be in H–
1B status. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(E)(6). Section 104(c)
expressly allows H–1B nonimmigrant
status beyond the six-year general
limitation for ‘‘the beneficiary of a
petition filed under section 204(a) of
[the INA] for a preference status under
paragraph (1), (2), or (3) of section
203(b) [of the INA].’’ AC21 section
104(c). Section 203(b), in turn, applies
to principal beneficiaries of immigrant
visa petitions, but not derivative
beneficiaries who are separately
addressed in section 203(d) of the INA.
Compare INA section 203(b), 8 U.S.C
1153(b), with INA section 203(d), 8
U.S.C 1153(d). The reference to a single
beneficiary (i.e., ‘‘the beneficiary’’) in
section 104(c) of AC21 further supports
the interpretation that the provision
applies only to the principal beneficiary
of the immigrant visa petition. As noted
above, however, the spouse or
dependent children of H–1B
nonimmigrant workers are eligible for
H–4 status and are subject to the same
period of authorized stay as the
principal H–1B nonimmigrant worker.
Therefore, eligible H–4 spouses and
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dependent children may be granted H–
4 status during the period the H–1B
nonimmigrant spouse or parent
maintains H–1B status under this
exemption.
Thus, if both spouses are H–1B
nonimmigrant workers, to extend their
H–1B authorized admission period
under section 104(c) of AC21, each
spouse would individually have to be
the beneficiary of an approved EB–1,
EB–2, or EB–3 immigrant visa petition.
If only one spouse is eligible for the
exemption as an H–1B nonimmigrant,
the spouse who is not eligible could
seek a change of status to H–4 status
and, if otherwise eligible, may remain in
H–4 status, as described above. While
such a spouse may no longer be eligible
to be employed as an H–1B
nonimmigrant, certain H–4 spouses may
be eligible to apply for and obtain work
authorization pursuant to 8 CFR
214.2(h)(9)(iv), including, among others,
those whose H–1B nonimmigrant
spouse is the beneficiary of an approved
EB–1, EB–2, or EB–3 immigrant visa
petition.
DHS invites the public to comment on
all aspects of this proposal.
b. H–1B Extensions for Individuals
Affected by Lengthy Adjudication
Delays
Second, the proposed rule would
clarify and improve DHS’
implementation of sections 106(a) and
(b) of AC21, as amended by the 21st
Century DOJ Appropriations Act. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D).
These provisions authorize approval of
H–1B status beyond the general 6-year
maximum period for certain H–1B
nonimmigrant workers who are being
sponsored by their employers for
permanent residence and are subject to
lengthy adjudication delays. See AC21
section 106(a) and (b). Specifically,
section 106(b) provides extensions of H–
1B status in 1-year increments for H–1B
nonimmigrant workers seeking LPR
status through employment if 365 days
or more have passed since the filing by
a U.S. employer of a labor certification
application or an employment-based
immigrant visa petition on the
nonimmigrant’s behalf. Id. These 1-year
extensions would generally remain
available until a final decision is made
to grant or deny the pertinent labor
certification application or immigrant
visa petition, or to grant or deny the
beneficiary’s application for adjustment
of status or for an immigrant visa. Id.
Consistent with existing policy, DHS
proposes to make H–1B extensions
under section 106(b) available to
workers who remain eligible for
additional periods of H–1B status,
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whether or not such individuals are in
H–1B status or in the United States at
the time the H–1B petition is filed. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(1).
DHS also proposes to allow the H–1B
petitioner to file for an extension under
section 106(b) with respect to any
qualifying labor certification application
or employment-based immigrant visa
petition, pursuant to section 106(a) of
AC21, as amended. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(6).
As with section 104(c), section 106 of
AC21 does not limit its application only
to those individuals currently in H–1B
status within the United States. DHS
interprets the provision to require only
that the individuals have previously
been issued H–1B status, meet the
requirements of section 106(a), and are
otherwise eligible for an H–1B
approval.36 Also like section 104(c),
section 106 contains no requirement
that the H–1B petitioner be the same
employer as that listed on the labor
certification application or immigrant
visa petition in order to seek an
exemption from the six-year period of
authorized admission. The H–1B
nonimmigrant worker can thus rely on
any qualifying labor certification
application or immigrant visa petition,
even if the nonimmigrant had
previously been granted an extension
under section 106(b) based on a
different application or petition. The
petitioner bears the burden of proving
the individual’s eligibility under these
provisions.
DHS also proposes to conform its
regulations with existing policy in this
area by requiring the prospective H–1B
employer to file an H–1B petition
demonstrating that the beneficiary has
previously held H–1B status and that
365 days has elapsed or will have
elapsed between: (1) The filing of an
application for labor certification or an
employment-based immigrant visa
petition on behalf of the individual; and
(2) the date on which the individual
reached or will reach the 6-year
limitation on H–1B admission. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(1)
and (2). DHS further proposes,
consistent with current policy, to grant
H–1B approvals in 1-year increments for
such individuals until either the
application for labor certification
expires or a final decision is made to:
(1) Deny the labor certification
application; (2) revoke or invalidate
approval of the labor certification
application; (3) deny the immigrant visa
petition; (4) revoke approval of the
immigrant visa petition; (5) grant or
deny the individual’s application for
36 Aytes
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adjustment of status or for an immigrant
visa; or (6) administratively close the
application for permanent labor
certification, immigrant visa petition, or
application for adjustment of status. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(2).37
DHS notes that in cases involving
denials, invalidations, or revocations of
labor certification applications and
denials of immigrant visa petitions, the
petitioner may administratively appeal
those determinations with DOL and
USCIS, respectively. Under this
proposed rule, a denial or revocation
would not be considered final by USCIS
during the period authorized to file such
an administrative appeal, or during the
period in which any such appeal is
pending. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(3). During any such
period, as with current practice, the
petition or labor certification
application that is the subject of the
appeal may be used for purposes of
seeking an extension of H–1B status
under this section.38
Also consistent with existing policy,
DHS proposes not to grant an extension
of H–1B status under section 106(b) if,
at the time the extension request is filed,
the labor certification is deemed expired
under DOL regulations. See proposed 8
CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(2). Under
current DOL regulations, ‘‘[a]n approved
permanent labor certification granted on
or after July 16, 2007 expires if not filed
in support of a Form I–140
[employment-based immigrant visa]
petition with [DHS] within 180 calendar
days of the date [DOL] granted the
certification.’’ 20 CFR 656.30(b)(1). DHS
treats a labor certification that has
expired similarly to one that has been
denied or revoked. Indeed, DHS
automatically rejects or denies
immigrant visa petitions related to
expired labor certifications, effectively
barring the granting of extensions under
section 106(b) in such cases.39
DHS also proposes to conform its
regulations with current policy by
37 See
Aytes Memo Dec. 2005, at 6.
Aytes Memo Dec. 2005, at 6.
39 DHS also proposes to conform its regulations to
current policy regarding the substitution of
beneficiaries in labor certification applications. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(4). In 2007,
DOL changed its regulations to effectively prohibit
the substitution of labor certification beneficiaries,
except for substitution requests submitted on or
before July 16, 2007. See 20 CFR 656.11(a). With
respect to substitutions occurring before July 16,
2007, DHS policy now provides that for purposes
of section 106(b) of AC21, the labor certification
application may only be used for the most recently
substituted individual. See Neufeld Memo May
2008, at 5 n.4. DHS proposes to conform its
regulations accordingly, which will prevent
multiple individuals from using the same labor
certification to obtain H–1B extensions under this
proposed rule.
38 See
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allowing petitioners to file H–1B
petitions under sections 106(a) and (b)
as early as 6 months prior to the
requested H–1B start date. See proposed
8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(5). The
petitioner would generally be required
to demonstrate that the individual will
meet the requirements of sections 106(a)
and (b) as of the date he or she will
reach the end of the 6-year period of H–
1B admission. This request may include
any time remaining within the general
6-year period, including, for example,
periods of time spent outside the United
States during H–1B petition validity, for
which ‘‘recapture’’ of H–1B remainder
time is sought, as well as any H–1B
‘‘remainder’’ periods available to the
foreign national.40 But in no case may
the approval period exceed 3 years or
the validity period of the LCA. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(5);
see also 8 CFR 214.2(h)(9)(iii)(A)(1) and
(h)(15)(ii)(B).
Moreover, each approval granted
under sections 106(a) and (b) will
provide the beneficiary with a new date
upon which the limitation on H–1B
admission will be reached. Employers
filing an H–1B petition seeking a second
or subsequent extension of H–1B status
for a beneficiary under sections 106(a)
and (b) must demonstrate that a
qualifying labor certification or
immigrant visa petition was filed at
least 365 days prior to the new H–1B
expiration date authorized under that
section.41 See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(7). However, only
one labor certification application or
immigrant visa petition may be used to
establish eligibility in support of any
single H–1B petition filed under
sections 106(a) and (b). A petitioner may
not aggregate the days on which
multiple labor certification applications
or immigrant visa petitions are on file in
order to satisfy the 365-day requirement.
See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(8).
DHS proposes, consistent with
current practice, to allow applications
for extensions under section 106(b) to be
filed only by principal beneficiaries
seeking to obtain status under section
203(b) of the INA, and not by derivative
40 See Aytes Memo Dec. 2006, at 4. (‘‘The
‘remainder’ period of the initial six-year admission
period refers to the full six-year period of admission
minus the period of time that the individual
previously spent in the United States in valid H–
1B status.’’) USCIS policy relating to such
‘‘recapture’’ is discussed in greater detail below at
section IV.C.(2), ‘‘Calculating the 6-Year H–1B
Authorized Admission Period.’’ The ‘‘remainder’’
period is discussed at IV.C.(2), ‘‘Recapture of H–1B
Remainder Period.’’
41 As noted above, the H–1B petitioner need not
be the same employer that filed the labor
certification or immigrant visa petition.
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beneficiaries described in section 203(d)
of the INA. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(9). Section 106(a)
expressly limits eligibility to
individuals who have been accorded H–
1B status and who have had a labor
certification application or employmentbased immigrant visa petition filed on
their behalf. See AC21 section 106(a), as
amended. H–4 dependents do not meet
these statutory criteria. As noted
previously, however, dependents in H–
4 status are subject to the same period
of authorized stay as the principal H–1B
nonimmigrant worker. Therefore,
eligible H–4 spouses and dependent
children may be granted H–4 status
during the period the H–1B
nonimmigrant spouse or parent
maintains H–1B status under section
106.
Finally, DHS proposes to restrict
extensions of H–1B status under
sections 106(a) and (b) for beneficiaries
who have not taken certain steps in
furtherance of obtaining LPR status. As
noted above, these sections were
intended to allow individuals to remain
in the United States as H–1B
nonimmigrant workers while pursuing
permanent residence. See S. Rep. No.
260, at 23. Accordingly, the proposed
rule would generally require that to
remain eligible for extensions of H–1B
status under sections 106(a) and (b), the
individual must file an application for
adjustment of status or submit an
application for an immigrant visa within
1 year of an immigrant visa becoming
immediately available. See proposed 8
CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(10). This
requirement would be effectively tolled,
however, during any period in which an
application for adjustment of status
could not be filed due to the
unavailability of immigrant visas. Id.
Moreover, if the accrual of the 1-year
period is interrupted by the
retrogression of previously available
immigrant visas, the individual would
be permitted a full new 1-year period to
seek LPR status when immigrant visas
become available again. Id. In addition,
failure to file within such year could be
excused at the discretion of DHS if the
individual establishes that the failure to
apply was due to circumstances beyond
his or her control. Id.
DHS invites the public to comment on
all aspects of this proposal.
2. Job Portability Under AC21 for
Certain Applicants for Adjustment of
Status
DHS is proposing to clarify and
improve policies and procedures related
to the job portability protections
provided by section 106(c) of AC21. See
proposed 8 CFR 245.25. That section
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81915
amended the INA by adding section
204(j), codified at 8 U.S.C. 1154(j), to
enhance the ability of certain workers to
change jobs or employers if they have
been sponsored for permanent residence
by U.S. employers and have pending
applications for adjustment of status.
See AC21 section 106(c). Specifically,
section 204(j) of the INA provides that
an employment-based immigrant visa
petition filed for EB–1 (other than for
‘‘aliens of extraordinary ability’’), EB–2,
or EB–3 classification will remain valid
with respect to a new qualifying job
offer when the worker changes jobs or
employers if an application for
adjustment of status has been filed and
remains pending for 180 days or more.
See INA section 204(j), 8 U.S.C. 1154(j);
see also INA sections 204(a)(1)(F) and
212(a)(5)(A)(iv), 8 U.S.C. 1154(a)(1)(F)
and 1182(a)(5)(A)(iv). Section 204(j)
allows such portability when the new
job offer is for a job which is in the same
or a similar occupational classification
as the job for which the original
immigrant visa petition was filed. Id.
To provide greater clarity to the
regulated community and enhance
consistency across agency
determinations under section 204(j) of
the INA, DHS proposes to update and
conform its regulations governing
adjustment of status consistent with
longstanding agency policy. For
purposes of approving an application
for adjustment of status, the proposed
rule would clarify that an immigrant
visa petition for EB–1 (other than for
‘‘aliens of extraordinary ability’’), EB–2,
or EB–3 classification filed under
section 204(a)(1)(F) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1154(a)(1)(F), remains valid if the
petition is approved and either:
(1) The employment offer from the
petitioning employer is continuing and
remains bona fide; or
(2) pursuant to section 204(j), the
beneficiary has a new offer of
employment in the same or a similar
occupational classification as the
employment offer listed in the approved
petition, the application for adjustment
of status based on this petition has been
pending for 180 days or more, and the
approval of the petition has not been
revoked.
See proposed 8 CFR 245.25(a). Under
the second option, the new offer of
employment may be from the
petitioning employer, from a different
U.S. employer, or based on selfemployment. Id. Under either option,
the individual and his or her U.S.
employer must intend that the
individual will be employed under the
continuing or new employment offer
(including self-employment), as
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applicable, upon the individual’s grant
of LPR status. Id.
Although the individual need not
have been employed at any time by the
employer that filed the immigrant visa
petition—or, in a case involving section
204(j) portability, the employer
presenting the new offer of
employment—DHS will in all cases
determine whether a relevant offer of
employment is bona fide. In cases
involving 204(j) portability, DHS
considers whether the employer that
filed the immigrant visa petition had the
intent, at the time the petition was
approved, to employ the beneficiary
upon approval of the application for
adjustment of status.42 With respect to
the new employer, DHS considers
whether the employer intends to
employ the beneficiary in the offered
position, and whether the beneficiary
intends to work in that position, upon
approval of the application for
adjustment of status.43
As noted above, DHS is proposing to
amend its regulations governing
applications for adjustment of status to
prohibit approval of such an application
when the approval of the immigrant visa
petition on which the application is
based has been revoked. See proposed 8
CFR 245.25(a). DHS is also proposing,
however, as discussed in section IV.B.,
to amend its regulations governing
revocation of petition approval so that
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions that have been approved for
180 days or more would no longer have
such approval automatically revoked
based only on withdrawal by the
petitioner or termination of the
petitioner’s business. See proposed 8
CFR 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(C) and (D). As long
as such an approval has not been
revoked for fraud, material
misrepresentation, the invalidation or
revocation of a labor certification, or
USCIS error, the petition would
generally continue to be valid for
purposes of section 204(j) job portability
and certain status extension purposes
under the immigration laws. Id. Such a
petition, however, cannot on its own
serve as the basis for obtaining an
immigrant visa or adjustment of status
as there is no longer a bona fide
employment offer related to the petition.
Id. In such cases, the beneficiary will
need a new immigrant visa petition
approved on his or her behalf, or a new
offer of employment in section 204(j)
portability cases, in order to obtain an
immigrant visa or adjust status. Id.
42 See USCIS Adjudicator’s Field Manual,
Chapter 20.2(c).
43 See Aytes Memo Dec. 2005, at 4; Matter of
Cardoso, 13 I. & N. Dec. 228, 230–31 (BIA 1969).
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Taken together, these regulatory
changes are generally consistent with
current policy concerning adjustment of
status. The regulatory amendments, for
example, do not change existing policy
with respect to applications for
adjustment of status filed by
beneficiaries of immigrant visa petitions
who seek to adjust status based on a
continuing offer of employment from
the petitioning employer. In such cases,
if the petitioning employer withdraws
or goes out of business, there would be
no continuing offer of employment on
which the beneficiary may rely. Thus,
even in a case where such a petition has
been approved for at least 180 days and
would no longer be subject to automatic
revocation based upon withdrawal of
the petition or termination of the
employer’s business, the beneficiary
would remain ineligible to file for
adjustment of status based solely on that
petition. See proposed 8 CFR
204.5(a)(3)(iii)(C) and (D); see also
proposed 8 CFR 245.25(a). Under this
proposed rule, the beneficiary would
require a new immigrant visa petition
filed on his or her behalf in order to file
for or receive adjustment of status. Id.
With respect to beneficiaries who
have applications for adjustment of
status that have been pending for at
least 180 days and seek to adjust status
pursuant to section 204(j), the proposed
regulations are also consistent with
current policy, except in one respect.
Under current policy, withdrawal by the
petitioner in such cases does not require
the beneficiary to be named in a new
immigrant visa petition; rather, the
beneficiary would only be required to
demonstrate, pursuant to section 204(j)
of the INA, that he or she has a new
offer of employment in a same or similar
occupational classification.44 This
would continue to be the case under
this proposed rule. See proposed 8 CFR
204.5(a)(3)(iii)(C); see also proposed 8
CFR 245.25(a). The proposed rule
would, however, expand such treatment
to cover cases in which the petitioner’s
business terminates after the application
for adjustment of status has been
pending for at least 180 days. Under
current policy, termination of the
employer’s business in such cases
would require the beneficiary to be
named in a new employment-based
immigrant visa petition in order to
adjust status. Under the proposed rule,
the beneficiary would not be required to
have a new immigrant visa petition filed
on his or her behalf, and instead would
be required to demonstrate that he or
she has a new offer of employment in
a same or similar occupational
44 See
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classification, consistent with section
204(j) of the INA. Id. DHS believes that
such an extension of section 204(j)
portability is consistent with
congressional intent to allow longdelayed applicants for adjustment of
status to change employers with
reasonable assurance that they will not
be disadvantaged by so doing.45
DHS is further proposing a new
supplementary form to the application
for adjustment of status to assist the
Department in the adjudicative process.
In general cases, the supplementary
form will assist DHS in confirming that
a job offer described in an employmentbased immigrant visa petition is still
available at the time an individual files
an application for adjustment of status.
In cases involving section 204(j)
portability requests, the form will assist
DHS in determining, among other
things, whether a new offer of
employment is in the same or a similar
occupational classification as the job
offer listed in the immigrant visa
petition. In section 204(j) cases, an
individual may submit the supplement
affirmatively or when required at the
request of USCIS to establish eligibility
under the proposed regulatory
requirements. Currently, DHS is not
proposing an extra fee for submission of
this new supplement, but may consider
implementing a fee in the future.
DHS contemplates that applicants for
adjustment of status seeking approval
based on a new offer of employment
will submit various pieces of evidence,
along with the supplementary form,
demonstrating compliance with section
204(j) and the proposed regulations.
Unless instructed otherwise, including
by the form or form instructions, an
applicant will be able to submit: (1) A
written attestation signed by the
applicant and employer describing the
new employment offer, including a
description of the position and its
requirements; (2) an explanation
demonstrating that the new employment
offer is in the same or a similar
occupational classification as the
original employment offer listed in the
approved petition; and (3) a copy of the
Notice of Action (Form I–797C) issued
by USCIS (or, if unavailable, secondary
evidence) showing that the individual’s
application for adjustment of status has
45 DHS also proposes conforming changes to 8
CFR 204.5 to ensure the retention of priority dates
related to certain employment-based immigrant visa
petitions that are approved for less than 180 days
when a petitioner withdraws the petition or the
petitioner goes out of business. In such cases, the
priority date listed in the petition may still be used
for section 204(j) portability purposes. This
regulatory amendment codifies current agency
policy and practice. See proposed 8 CFR
204.5(e)(5).
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been pending with USCIS for 180 days
or more. See proposed 8 CFR
245.25(b)(2).
Because the statute does not define
the terms ‘‘same’’ or ‘‘similar,’’ DHS
proposes definitions for those terms
based on their common dictionary
definitions, as well as the agency’s
practice and experience in this
context.46 The proposed regulatory
provision accordingly defines ‘‘same
occupational classification’’ as an
occupation that resembles in every
relevant respect 47 the occupation for
which the underlying employmentbased immigrant visa petition was
approved.48 See proposed 8 CFR
245.25(c). The term ‘‘similar
occupational classification’’ is defined
as an occupation that shares essential
qualities or has a marked resemblance
or likeness with the occupation for
which the underlying employmentbased immigrant visa petition was
approved.49 Id.
DHS invites the public to comment on
all aspects of this proposal, including
the new proposed supplementary form
to the application for adjustment of
status (and form instructions) and the
possibility of charging a supplemental
fee in the future related to such form.
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3. Job Portability for H–1B
Nonimmigrant Workers
DHS proposes to conform its
regulations to its policies and practices
under section 105(a) of AC21, which
amended the INA by adding the H–1B
job portability provision at section
214(n), 8 U.S.C. 1184(n). This section
enhances the ability of H–1B
nonimmigrant workers to change jobs or
employers by authorizing them to
accept new or concurrent employment
upon the filing of a non-frivolous H–1B
petition (‘‘H–1B portability petition’’).
See INA section 214(n), 8 U.S.C.
46 See Taniguchi v. Kan Pacific Saipan, Ltd., 132
S. Ct. 1997, 2002–03 (2012) (when a term goes
undefined in a statute, an agency ordinarily should
‘‘give the term its ordinary meaning’’).
47 For these purposes, USCIS adjudicators may
consider, among other factors, the job duties of the
respective jobs, and the skills, experience,
education, training, licenses or certifications
specifically required to perform each of the jobs.
48 See, e.g., Same Definition, MerriamWebster.com, https://www.merriam-webster.com/
dictionary/same (last visited May 20, 2015)
(defining ‘‘same’’ as ‘‘identical’’ or ‘‘resembling in
every relevant respect’’); Same Definition,
OED.com, https://www.oed.com/view/Entry/170362
?redirectedFrom=same#eid (last visited Jan. 2,
2015) (defining ‘‘same’’ as ‘‘identical’’).
49 See, e.g., Similar Definition, MerriamWebster.com, https://www.merriam-webster.com/
dictionary/similar (last visited May 20, 2015)
(defining ‘‘similar’’ as ‘‘alike in substance or
essentials’’); Similar Definition, Oed.com, https://
www.oed.com/view/Entry/179873?redirectedFrom=
similar#eid (last visited May 20, 2015) (defining
‘‘similar’’ as ‘‘having a marked resemblance or
likeness’’).
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1184(n). The H–1B nonimmigrant
worker must have been lawfully
admitted into the United States, must
not have worked without authorization
subsequent to such lawful admission,
and must be in a period of stay
authorized by the Secretary of
Homeland Security.50 Employment
authorization under the pending H–1B
portability petition continues until its
adjudication. Id.
In harmony with the statutory
provision, the proposed rule would
provide that H–1B nonimmigrant
workers who are beneficiaries of new
H–1B petitions seeking an amendment
or extension of their stay in H–1B status
are eligible to commence new or
concurrent employment upon the filing
of a non-frivolous H–1B petition by that
employer. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(2)(i)(H). If the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker meets the
requirements of section 214(n), he or
she is authorized to commence new
employment while adjudication of the
new H–1B petition is pending. Id. If the
petition is approved, the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker’s employment
authorization continues under the
approved petition. Id. If the petition is
denied, employment authorization
under section 214(n) generally ceases
upon the date of denial.51 Id.
DHS proposes, consistent with
current policy, to make the H–1B
portability provision discussed in this
section available only to H–1B
beneficiaries who are in the United
States in H–1B status.52 This
interpretation is consistent with the
language of section 214(n), which
requires in part that the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker have been
lawfully admitted into the United States
at the time the new H–1B petition is
filed. See INA section 214(n), 8 U.S.C.
1184(n). This interpretation is also in
harmony with congressional intent
behind the creation of the provision. As
noted in the Senate Report
accompanying the bill, the H–1B
portability provision was intended to
‘‘respond[ ] to concerns raised about the
potential for exploitation of H–1B visa
holders as a result of a specific
employer’s control over the employee’s
50 Neufeld Memo May 2009 (describing various
‘‘periods of authorized stay’’).
51 If the petition is denied after the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker’s Arrival-Departure Record
(Form I–94) or successor form) has expired, and
while the H–1B nonimmigrant worker is in an
authorized period of stay consistent with 8 CFR
274a.12(b)(20) and proposed revisions to 8 CFR
274a.12(b)(9), DHS intends to interpret section
214(g)(4) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(4), to count
the time spent in the United States based on a
timely filed H–1B extension of stay petition towards
the 6 year H–1B period of authorized admission.
52 Aytes Memo Dec. 2005, at 7.
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legal status.’’ See S. Rep. No. 260, at 22–
23.
DHS also proposes to conform its
regulations to current policy regarding
the ability of H–1B employers to file
successive H–1B portability petitions
(often referred to as ‘‘bridge petitions’’)
on behalf of H–1B nonimmigrant
workers. Under current policy, an H–1B
nonimmigrant worker who has changed
employment based on an H–1B
portability petition filed on his or her
behalf may again change employment
based on the filing of a new H–1B
portability petition, even if the former
H–1B portability petition remains
pending.53 Approval of any subsequent
H–1B portability petition, however,
would effectively be dependent on the
approval of any prior H–1B portability
petition if the individual’s ArrivalDeparture Record (Form I–94) has
expired and the prior portability
petitions remain pending at the time
that the subsequent portability petition
is filed. In such a case, where the
request for an extension of stay was
denied in a preceding H–1B portability
petition, a request for an extension of
stay in any successive H–1B portability
petition(s) must also be denied. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(2)(i)(H)(3).
DHS proposes to maintain this policy in
order to best achieve the ameliorative
purpose of section 212(n) to enhance the
job flexibility of H–1B nonimmigrant
workers and minimize their potential
exploitation by employers.
DHS is also proposing conforming
changes to its employment
authorization regulations to recognize
the employment authorization of H–1B
nonimmigrant workers who are
employed pursuant to an H–1B
portability petition filed under section
214(n) of the INA. See proposed 8 CFR
274a.12(b)(9). Specifically, the proposed
rule would add this class of H–1B
nonimmigrant workers to the
description of H nonimmigrants
authorized for employment incident to
status with a specific employer. Id.
DHS invites the public to comment on
all aspects of this proposal.
4. Calculating the H–1B Admission
Period
DHS proposes to clarify in regulation
its current policy with respect to
calculating and ‘‘recapturing’’ what is
known as ‘‘remainder time’’ for H–1B
nonimmigrant workers. See proposed 8
CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(C). Currently, with
respect to an H–1B nonimmigrant
worker’s maximum period of authorized
admission in H–1B status, DHS does not
count against this period any days he or
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she spent outside of the United States
during the validity period of the H–1B
petition.54 Any such period outside the
United States may still be used, or
‘‘recaptured,’’ by an H–1B petitioner on
behalf of the H–1B nonimmigrant
worker.55 An H–1B petitioner seeking to
recapture such time must establish,
through objective, documentary
evidence—such as passport stamps,
Arrival-Departure Records (Forms I–94),
or airline ticket stubs—that the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker was in fact
physically outside of the United States
during the day(s) for which recapture is
sought.56
DHS proposes to codify this policy
through this rulemaking. Under this
proposed rule, time spent outside the
United States by an individual during
the validity of an H–1B petition that was
approved on his or her behalf could be
added back to or ‘‘recaptured’’ for his or
her maximum period of authorized
admission as an H–1B nonimmigrant
worker. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(C); see also INA section
214(g)(4), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(4) (generally
establishing a 6-year limit on the period
of stay of an H–1B nonimmigrant
worker). Consistent with current
practice, if an H–1B nonimmigrant
worker had counted against the H–1B
numerical cap with respect to the 6-year
maximum period of H–1B admission
from which recapture is sought, then the
H–1B petition seeking recapture of such
time (‘‘H–1B recapture petition’’) would
not subject the H–1B nonimmigrant
worker again to the cap.57 See proposed
8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(C)(2). If the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker had not counted
against the H–1B cap in such a case, the
recapture petition would be cap-subject
(i.e., require that the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker count against the
cap), unless the H–1B nonimmigrant
54 See
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55 Id.
56 To assist in the adjudication process, a
petitioner may also provide complementary
evidence explaining any such time to be recaptured,
such as a chart indicating the dates spent outside
of the United States and referencing the relevant
objective documentary evidence supporting the
chart.
57 This analysis would also be applied to cases in
which the worker has been outside the United
States for a full year and would thus be eligible for
a new period of admission under section 214(g)(4)
of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(4). In such cases, the
H–1B petitioner may file a recapture petition or a
petition seeking a new period of H–1B admission.
If the petitioner does not include a recapture
request in the H–1B petition, DHS generally would
treat the petition as a request for a new 6-year
maximum H–1B admission period under section
214(g)(4) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(4). The
worker in such a case would be subject to the
numerical cap unless an exemption applies.
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worker is eligible for another exemption
from the cap.
In accordance with current policy, the
H–1B petitioner would bear the burden
of demonstrating ‘‘recapture’’ eligibility.
Along with documentary evidence, the
petitioner may provide complementary,
explanatory evidence (as described
above) to assist USCIS adjudicators in
the adjudication process. See proposed
8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(C)(1). Moreover,
as with current practice, an H–1B
petitioner filing a recapture petition
would not need to demonstrate that the
time spent outside the United States by
the H–1B nonimmigrant worker was
meaningfully interruptive of the H–1B
period in which recapture is sought.
The reason for the absence is irrelevant
to the recapture determination, but such
reason may be relevant to the
determination of the individual’s
admissibility. Any trip of at least one
continuous 24-hour period (‘‘day’’)
outside the United States for any
purpose may be recaptured.
DHS invites public comment on all
aspects of this proposal.
5. Exemptions from the H–1B Numerical
Cap Under AC21 and ACWIA
a. Employers Not Subject to H–1B
Numerical Limitations
DHS proposes to clarify and improve
its regulations and policies identifying
which employers are cap-exempt under
the H–1B program. As discussed above
in section III.C.2.b.i., AC21 amended
section 214(g)(5) of the INA to allow
certain employers to employ H–1B
nonimmigrant workers without
application of the numerical cap on H–
1B visas. See AC21 section 103 (adding
paragraphs (5), (6), and (7) to INA
section 214(g), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)). As
amended by AC21, section 214(g)(5) of
the INA specifically exempts from the
H–1B cap those H–1B nonimmigrant
workers who are employed (1) ‘‘at an
institution of higher education . . . , or
a related or affiliated nonprofit entity,’’
or (2) ‘‘at a nonprofit research
organization or a governmental research
organization.’’ INA section 214(g)(5), 8
U.S.C. 1184(g)(5). DHS is now proposing
to codify its long-standing policy
interpretations regarding this exemption
from the cap. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F).
DHS has interpreted this provision to
exempt H–1B nonimmigrant workers in
two types of circumstances. First, H–1B
nonimmigrant workers are currently
exempt from the cap if they are
employed directly by an employer
described in section 214(g)(5) of the
INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(5). Thus, any H–
1B nonimmigrant worker would be
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exempt if employed directly by: (1) An
institution of higher education, (2) a
nonprofit entity related to or affiliated
with such an institution, (3) a nonprofit
research organization, or (4) a
governmental research organization. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(1)–(3).
Second, because section 214(g)(5)
exempts workers who are employed
‘‘at’’ such qualifying institutions,
organizations, or entities, H–1B
nonimmigrant workers may also be
exempt from the cap in certain
circumstances even when they are not
directly employed by them.58 See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(4).
Under current policy, such H–1B
nonimmigrant workers may only be
treated as cap exempt when: (1) The
employment is located at a qualifying
institution, organization, or entity; and
(2) the H–1B nonimmigrant worker will
perform job duties that directly and
predominately further the normal,
primary, or essential purpose, mission,
objectives or function of the qualifying
institution, organization, or entity.59
DHS is now proposing to amend its
regulations, in part, to provide
additional clarity with respect to the
‘‘employed at’’ statutory language. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(4).
Under the proposed rule, an H–1B
petitioner that is not itself a qualifying
institution, organization or entity may
claim an exemption from the cap for an
H–1B nonimmigrant worker employed
at such organization or entity if: (1) The
majority of the worker’s duties will be
performed at a qualifying institution,
organization, or entity; and (2) such job
duties directly and predominately
further the essential purpose, mission,
objectives or functions of the qualifying
institution, organization or entity (e.g.,
higher education, or nonprofit or
governmental research). Id. In such
cases, the burden is on the petitioner to
establish by a preponderance of the
evidence that there is a nexus between
the work performed by the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker and the essential
purpose, mission, objectives or
58 In contrast to the ‘‘employed at’’ terminology
used in section 214(g)(5) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1184(g)(5), other provisions governing the H–1B
program use terminology limited to a direct
employer-employee relationship with a qualifying
employer. Section 212(p)(1) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1182(p)(1), for example, provides for special
prevailing wage computations where an H–1B
nonimmigrant is to be an ‘‘employee of’’ a
qualifying institution, organization, or entity.
Similarly, section 214(c)(9)(A) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1184(c)(9)(A), exempts only qualifying employers
from certain H–1B petition fees enacted under
ACWIA. Unlike section 214(g)(5), these provisions
clearly apply only when the H–1B petitioner is
itself a qualifying employer.
59 Aytes Memo June 2006, at 2–3 and note 2.
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functions of the qualifying institution,
organization, or entity.
DHS also proposes to conform its
regulations to current policy with
respect to the definitions of several
terms in section 214(g)(5) and the
applicability of these terms to both: (1)
ACWIA provisions that require the
payment of fees by certain H–1B
employers; and (2) AC21 provisions that
exempt certain employers from the H–
1B numerical caps. First, the proposed
rule would expressly adopt for the
purpose of cap exemption the definition
of the term ‘‘institution of higher
education’’ provided by section 101(a)
of the Higher Education Act.60 See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(1).
Notably, this definition does not include
for-profit institutions of higher
education, which would continue to be
subject to the H–1B cap. The proposed
rule would also adopt definitions for the
terms ‘‘nonprofit research organization’’
and ‘‘governmental research
organization’’ as currently set forth in
DHS regulations at 8 CFR
214.2(h)(19)(iii). See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(3). The proposed rule
additionally clarifies that an entity
would be considered a ‘‘nonprofit
entity’’ for purpose of proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F) if it meets the
definition of that term at 8 CFR
214.2(h)(19)(iv).
Furthermore, consistent with current
DHS regulations, see 8 CFR
214.2(h)(19)(iii)(B), the term ‘‘related or
affiliated nonprofit entity’’ would be
defined, both for ACWIA fee and cap
exemption purposes, to continue to
include nonprofit entities that are: (1)
Connected or associated with an
institution of higher education through
shared ownership or control by the
same board or federation; (2) operated
by an institution of higher education; or
(3) attached to an institution of higher
education as a member, branch,
cooperative, or subsidiary. See proposed
8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(2). DHS intends
to improve upon current policy,
however, by proposing additional
means by which nonprofit entities may
establish a sufficient relation or
affiliation with an institution of higher
education. This change would better
reflect current operational realities for
institutions of higher education and
how they interact with, and sometimes
rely on, nonprofit entities. See proposed
8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(2)(iv) and
(h)(19)(iii)(B).
In particular, based on its experience
in this area, DHS believes that the
current definition for ‘‘affiliated or
related nonprofit entities’’ does not
60 See
id, note 1.
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sufficiently account for the nature and
scope of common, bona fide affiliations
between nonprofit entities and
institutions of higher education. To
better account for such relationships,
DHS proposes to expand on the current
definition by including nonprofit
entities that have entered into formal
written affiliation agreements with
institutions of higher education and are
able to meet two additional criteria.
First, such entities must establish an
active working relationship with the
institution of higher education for the
purposes of research or education.
Second, they must establish that one of
their primary purposes is to directly
contribute to the research or education
mission of the institution of higher
education. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(2)(iv) and
(h)(19)(iii)(B)(4).
This proposed definition provides
much needed flexibility in this area,
allowing DHS to better account for the
full range of nonprofit entities that are
‘‘related or affiliated’’ with institutions
of higher education and thus better
ensure that such entities are not subject
to the H–1B cap or the ACWIA fee as
Congress intended. For example, under
federal statute, Veterans Affairs (VA)
hospitals are considered affiliated with
a medical school or institution of higher
learning based on ‘‘a contract or
agreement . . . for the training or
education of health personnel.’’ 38
U.S.C. 7423(d)(1). But such agreements
may be inadequate under the current
regulatory definition to establish the
requisite affiliation or relation for
purposes of the H–1B cap or ACWIA fee
exemptions. Such bona fide affiliation
contracts or agreements are common in
the private sector as well. DHS believes
the proposed definition better captures
these and other valid types of
relationships with institutions of higher
education that are contemplated under
AC21 and ACWIA.
DHS welcomes public comment on all
aspects of this proposal.
b. Counting Previously Exempt H–1B
Nonimmigrant Workers
DHS also proposes to conform its
regulations to existing policy for
determining when a change in
employment requires a previously
exempt H–1B nonimmigrant worker to
be counted against the H–1B cap. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(5). As
discussed above, an H–1B
nonimmigrant worker is exempt from
the H–1B cap if he or she is employed
at an institution of higher education, a
nonprofit entity related or affiliated to
such an institution, a nonprofit research
organization, or a governmental research
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81919
organization.61 See INA section
214(g)(5), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(5). Under
section 214(g)(6) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1184(g)(6), once cap-exempt
employment ceases, the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker will be subject to
the cap if he or she was not previously
counted against it and exemptions from
the cap no longer apply. Section
214(g)(6) expressly refers to cap-exempt
H–1B nonimmigrant workers who cease
to be employed by employers described
under subparagraph (A) of section
214(g)(5), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(5)(A), which
lists only institutions of higher
education and related or affiliated
nonprofit entities. DHS, however, has
long maintained the same policy with
regard to cessation of employment with
employers described under
subparagraph (B) of section 214(g)(5), 8
U.S.C. 1184(g)(5)(B), which lists
nonprofit research organizations and
governmental research organizations.62
DHS now proposes to incorporate this
interpretation into its H–1B regulations.
See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(5).
DHS believes this reading is a
reasonable interpretation and best
implements the congressional intent
behind the H–1B cap exemption
provisions, which expressly exempt
workers employed at those entities
described in sections 214(g)(5)(A) and
(B). It reasonably follows that
termination of such employment should
result in the cessation of the capexemption.
Consistent with this interpretation,
the proposed rule would require a
reassessment of an H–1B nonimmigrant
worker’s cap-exempt status when he or
she ceases employment at an institution
of higher education, a nonprofit entity
related to or affiliated with such an
institution, a nonprofit research
organization, or a governmental research
organization. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(5) and (6). If such an
H–1B nonimmigrant worker was not
previously counted against the H–1B
numerical cap within the 6-year period
of authorized admission to which the
cap-exempt employment applied, he or
she would now be subject to the cap if
no other exemptions from the cap apply.
Id. Accordingly, USCIS will deny any
subsequent cap-subject H–1B petition 63
filed for the H–1B nonimmigrant worker
if no cap numbers are available, and
61 Such cap-exempt H–1B nonimmigrant workers
may also undertake concurrent, non-exempt H–1B
employment without being subjected to the cap. See
INA section 214(g)(5), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(5).
62 Neufeld Memo May 2008, at 7–8.
63 The subsequent petition may be, for example,
a cap-subject petition by a new employer or a
petition by the same cap-subject employer for an
extension of the beneficiary’s stay.
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may revoke the approval of a petition
for concurrent employment of the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker at a cap-subject
employer. Id.
DHS welcomes public comment on
this proposal.
6. Whistleblower Protections in the H–
1B Program
DHS proposes to conform its
regulations governing the H–1B program
to certain policies and practices that
have developed since ACWIA amended
the INA to provide additional
protections to H–1B nonimmigrant
workers and other workers. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(20). As noted
previously, section 413 of ACWIA
amended the INA by adding new
section 212(n)(2)(C), which is codified
at 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(2)(C). Among other
things, section 212(n)(2)(C) makes it a
violation for an H–1B employer to
retaliate against an employee for
providing information to the employer
or any other person, or for cooperating
in an investigation, with respect to an
employer’s violation of its LCA
attestations. See INA section
212(n)(2)(C)(iv), 8 U.S.C.
1182(n)(2)(C)(iv). Employers are
prohibited from taking retaliatory action
against such an employee, including
any action to intimidate, threaten,
restrain, coerce, blacklist, discharge, or
in any other manner discriminate
against an employee for disclosing
information to the employer, or to any
other person, that the employee
reasonably believes evidences an LCA
violation, any rule or regulation
pertaining to the statutory LCA
attestation requirements, or for
cooperating, or attempting to cooperate,
in an investigation or proceeding
pertaining to the employer’s LCA
compliance. Id.
Section 212(n)(2)(C) also requires
DHS to establish a process under which
an H–1B nonimmigrant worker who
files a complaint with DOL regarding
such illegal retaliation, and is otherwise
eligible to remain and work in the
United States, ‘‘may be allowed to seek
other appropriate employment in the
United States for a period not to exceed
the maximum period of stay authorized
for such nonimmigrant classification.’’
INA section 212(n)(2)(C)(v), 8 U.S.C.
1182(n)(2)(C)(v). Under current policy,
if credible documentary evidence is
provided in support of an H–1B petition
demonstrating that the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker faced retaliatory
action from his or her employer based
on a report regarding a violation of the
employer’s LCA obligations, DHS may
consider any related loss of H–1B status
by the worker as an ‘‘extraordinary
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circumstance’’ under 8 CFR 214.1(c)(4)
and 248.1(b) justifying an extension of
H–1B status or change of status for the
worker.64 Accordingly, the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker is afforded time
to acquire new H–1B employment or
employment under another
nonimmigrant classification
notwithstanding a termination of
employment or other retaliatory action
by his or her employer. Credible
documentary evidence may include a
copy of the complaint filed by the
individual, along with corroborative
documentation that such a complaint
has resulted in retaliatory action against
the individual as described in 20 CFR
655.801.65
The proposed rule would codify in
regulation DHS’ current policy
regarding these protections. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(20). Under the
proposed rule, a qualifying employer
seeking an extension of stay for an H–
1B nonimmigrant worker, or a change of
status from H–1B status to another
nonimmigrant classification, would be
able to submit documentary evidence
indicating that the beneficiary faced
retaliatory action from his or her
employer (or former employer) based on
a report regarding a violation of the
employer’s LCA obligations. Id. If DHS
determines such documentary evidence
to be credible, DHS may consider any
loss or failure to maintain H–1B status
by the beneficiary related to such
violation as an ‘‘extraordinary
circumstance’’ under 8 CFR 214.1(c)(4)
and 248.1(b). Those regulations, in turn,
authorize DHS to grant a discretionary
extension of H–1B stay or a change of
status to another nonimmigrant
classification. See 8 CFR 214.1(c)(4) and
248.1(b). As with current policy,
credible documentary evidence should
include a copy of the complaint filed by
the individual, along with corroborative
documentation that such a complaint
has resulted in the retaliatory action
against the individual as described in 20
CFR 655.801. All evidence submitted
will be considered to determine whether
‘‘extraordinary circumstances’’ have
been met.
DHS invites the public to comment on
all aspects of this proposal.
B. Additional Changes To Further
Improve Stability and Job Flexibility for
Certain Workers
DHS further proposes to amend its
regulations, consistent with AC21 and
DHS authorities, related to certain
employment-based immigrant and
nonimmigrant visa programs to provide
64 See
Neufeld Memo May 2008, at 8.
65 Id.
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additional stability and flexibility to
employers and workers in those
programs. The proposals are primarily
intended to improve job portability for
certain beneficiaries of approved
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions, including by limiting the
grounds for automatic revocation of
petition approval and increasing the
ability of such workers to retain their
priority dates for use with subsequently
approved employment-based immigrant
visa petitions.
The proposed rule would also:
Improve or establish grace periods for
certain nonimmigrant workers so that
they may more easily seek and accept
new employment opportunities; further
assist applicants for adjustment of status
and certain other employment-eligible
individuals by automatically extending
EADs for an interim period upon the
timely filing of a renewal application;
and provide additional stability and
flexibility to high-skilled workers in
certain nonimmigrant statuses to apply
for employment authorization for a
limited period if they meet certain
criteria, including demonstrating that
they are beneficiaries of approved
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions, are subject to immigrant visa
backlogs, and demonstrate compelling
circumstances. These and other
proposed changes would provide much
needed flexibility to a limited group of
beneficiaries of employment-based
immigrant visa petitions, as well as the
U.S. employers who employ and
sponsor them for permanent residence.
1. Revocation of Approved
Employment-Based Immigrant Visa
Petitions
As referenced above, DHS is
proposing to amend its regulations
governing revocation of petition
approval to provide greater stability and
flexibility to certain workers who have
approved EB–1, EB–2, or EB–3
immigrant visa petitions and are on the
path to obtaining LPR status in the
United States. The INA provides that
any immigrant visa petition, once
approved, may have such approval
revoked by the Secretary of Homeland
Security ‘‘for what he deems to be good
and sufficient cause.’’ INA section 205,
8 U.S.C. 1155. Pursuant to this statutory
authority, current DHS regulations
provide grounds for automatic
revocation and revocation on notice to
the petitioner. See 8 CFR 205.1 and
205.2.66 With respect to employment66 The Department of Justice (DOJ) Executive
Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) has
corresponding revocation regulations. See 8 CFR
part 1205. DHS and DOJ, however, are not
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based immigrant visa petitions, the
current regulatory grounds for automatic
revocation include: (1) Invalidation of
the labor certification supporting the
petition; (2) death of the petitioner or
beneficiary; (3) withdrawal by the
petitioning employer; and (4)
termination of the petitioning
employer’s business. See 8 CFR 205.1.
The regulatory provisions governing
revocation on notice to the petitioner
allow for revocation to be pursued on
any other ground ‘‘when the necessity
for the revocation comes to the attention
of [DHS].’’ 8 CFR 205.2(a). Such
revocation may be used, for example, for
petitions involving fraud, material
misrepresentation, or erroneous
approval.67
The proposed rule would amend
these regulations so that EB–1, EB–2,
and EB–3 immigrant visa petitions that
have been approved for 180 days or
more would no longer have such
approval automatically revoked based
only on withdrawal by the petitioner or
termination of the petitioner’s business.
See proposed 8 CFR 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(C)
and (D). As long as such an approval has
not been revoked for fraud, material
misrepresentation, the invalidation or
revocation of a labor certification, or
USCIS error, the petition will generally
proposing to amend those regulations. The EOIR
regulations do not permit EOIR to revoke under
section 205 of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1155, employmentbased immigrant visa petitions approved under
section 204 of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1154. Subsequent
to enactment of the Homeland Security Act, DOJ
promulgated regulations transferring or duplicating
certain parts of regulations codified in 8 CFR
chapter I, including the automatic revocation
regulations, to a new chapter pertaining to EOIR at
8 CFR chapter V. See Aliens and Nationality;
Homeland Security; Reorganization of Regulations,
68 FR 9824 (Feb. 28, 2003). Thereafter, on
December 17, 2004, Congress vested authority for
revocations under section 205 of the INA solely in
the Secretary of Homeland Security, rather than the
Attorney General. See Intelligence Reform and
Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004, Public Law 108–
458, sec. 5304(c), 118 Stat. 3638 (striking ‘‘Attorney
General’’ and inserting ‘‘Secretary of Homeland
Security’’). Moreover, EOIR’s Board of Immigration
Appeals has held that immigration judges are not
authorized to revoke employment-based immigrant
visa petitions approved under section 204 of the
INA, and that the Board lacks jurisdiction to review
DHS decisions to revoke such petitions. See, e.g.,
Matter of Marcal-Neto, 25 I&N Dec. 169, 174 (BIA
2010) (immigration judges lack authority to decide
whether visa petitions should be revoked); Matter
of Aurelio, 19 I&N Dec. 458, 460 (BIA 1987) (the
Board lacks jurisdiction over matters involving the
automatic revocation of a visa petition) (citing
Matter of Zaidan, 19 I&N Dec. 297 (BIA 1985)).
Accordingly, EOIR regulations at 8 CFR part 1205
need not be revised to conform with the proposed
revisions in this rule.
67 See Adjudicator’s Field Manual, Chapter 22:
Employment-Based Petitions, Entrepreneurs, and
Special Immigrants § 22.2(d)(1) Employment-based
Immigrant Visa Petitions (Form I–140); Determining
the Priority Date, available at https://www.uscis.gov/
iframe/ilink/docView/AFM/HTML/AFM/0-0-01.html.
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continue to be valid for various
purposes under the immigration laws.
Id. Such purposes include: (1) The
retention of priority dates; (2) job
portability under section 204(j) of the
INA, 8 U.S.C. 1154(j); and (3) extensions
of status for certain H–1B nonimmigrant
workers under sections 104(c) and
106(a) and (b) of AC21. Id. An
employment-based immigrant visa
petition that is subject to withdrawal or
business termination, however, cannot
on its own serve as the basis for
obtaining an immigrant visa or applying
for adjustment of status as there is no
longer a bona fide employment offer
related to the petition. See id. In such
cases, the beneficiary will need a new
immigrant visa petition filed on his or
her behalf, or a new offer of
employment in section 204(j) portability
cases, in order to obtain an immigrant
visa or adjust status. Id.
DHS believes these regulatory changes
are critical to fully implementing the job
portability provisions of AC21. The
current regulations concerning
revocation of employment-based
petition approval were last amended in
1996,68 when wait times for
employment-based immigrant visas
were relatively short and the
immigration laws seemed to
contemplate that sponsored employees
would remain with their petitioning
employers during the short time it took
to obtain LPR status. The passage of
time, and AC21, changed this
landscape. In the intervening period,
wait times for immigrant visas increased
substantially, particularly for workers
from India and China. See section III.D.
And in recognition of these and other
delays, Congress enacted AC21 in 2000
to provide additional flexibility to
workers who were subject to lengthy
delays in the immigrant visa process.
Since AC21, wait times for immigrant
visas have grown dramatically, so that
for many workers the period between
the approval of an employment-based
immigrant visa petition 69 and the
worker’s ability to obtain permanent
residence is now counted in years, if not
decades. Id. This has placed increased
68 See 61 FR 13061 (1996). In 2006, the
Department of Homeland Security and the
Department of Justice amended the revocation
regulations pertaining to immediate relatives and
family-sponsored beneficiaries. See 71 FR 35749.
69 The period of time necessary for USCIS to
approve an employment-based immigrant visa
petition requiring a labor certification from DOL
does not account for the time that is required for
DOL adjudication of the labor certification
application. A worker’s priority date in such cases,
which is established as of the date DOL accepts the
labor certification application for processing, see 8
CFR 204.5(e), typically will be more than one year
before the date of petition approval under current
processing times.
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81921
emphasis on and further necessitates the
benefits Congress sought to provide
through AC21.
Importantly, Congress enacted AC21
with the specific purpose of providing
increased job flexibility to certain
workers who are being sponsored for
permanent residence by a particular
employer, but who as a result of long
delays are forced to wait inordinate
periods of time for such permanent
residence. Section 106(c) of AC21, for
example, created section 204(j) of the
INA to allow certain workers with
approved immigrant visa petitions and
pending applications for adjustment of
status to change jobs or employers
without invalidating their approved
immigrant visa petitions. See Section
III.A. This statutory change supports the
regulatory change proposed in this
section. In cases involving section 204(j)
portability, allowing a withdrawal by
the petitioning employer, or termination
of its business, to automatically cause
revocation of the immigrant visa
petition’s approval would substantially
undermine the protections Congress
intended to provide the beneficiaries of
such petitions through section 204(j).
The same is true with respect to the
various provisions of AC21 that were
intended to provide certainty and
flexibility to H–1B nonimmigrant
workers. AC21 provided various ways
in which such workers could extend
their H–1B status beyond the general 6year limitation if they had been
sponsored for permanent residence by
an employer. See Section III.C.
(discussing AC21 sections 104(c) and
106(a) and (b)). At the same time, AC21
enhanced the ability of H–1B
nonimmigrant workers to change jobs or
employers, including by authorizing
such workers to immediately commence
new employment upon the filing of a
non-frivolous H–1B petition. Id.
(discussing AC21 section 105(a)). These
extension and portability provisions are
far less meaningful if, after the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker changes jobs, the
approval of his or her qualifying
immigrant visa petition can be
automatically revoked solely due to
withdrawal by the petitioning employer
or termination of its business.
Accordingly, this proposed rule
would amend DHS regulations
governing revocation with respect to
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions to better reflect and enhance
the job portability eligibility authorized
by AC21. As noted above, DHS proposes
that an employment-based immigrant
visa petition that has been approved for
180 days or more would no longer have
such approval automatically revoked
based only on withdrawal by the
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petitioner or termination of the
petitioner’s business. See proposed 8
CFR 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(C) and (D). This
change would effectively improve the
ability of certain workers with approved
EB–1, EB–2, or EB–3 immigrant visa
petitions to rely on such petitions for
various job portability and status
extension provisions in the immigration
laws. Among other things, qualifying
workers would be able to take advantage
of these provisions without fear that
certain circumstances outside of their
control will automatically cause the
revocation of the approval of their
immigrant visa petitions, eliminate
access to status extension and
portability provisions intended to assist
them, and potentially force them to
leave their homes in the United States
at a moment’s notice.
While enhancing these protections,
the regulatory changes in this proposed
rule would remain consistent with
current policy concerning these
workers’ ability to obtain adjustment of
status or an immigrant visa. The
proposed rule, for example, would
continue to require a valid and
qualifying offer of employment (unless
the requirement for such an offer is
exempted by law) at the time a worker
seeks to apply for or receive adjustment
of status. As discussed in Section
IV.B.1. of this proposed rule,
beneficiaries of employment-based
immigrant visa petitions who seek to
adjust status based on continuing offers
of employment from petitioning
employers would be unaffected by this
rule. If the petitioning employer of such
a beneficiary withdraws or goes out of
business, the beneficiary must have a
new offer of employment and a new
immigrant visa petition filed on his or
her behalf in order to file for or obtain
adjustment of status, consistent with
current policy. See proposed 8 CFR
245.25(a)(2) and 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(C).
The analysis is similar for
beneficiaries of immigrant visa petitions
who seek to adjust status based in part
on the portability protection of section
204(j) of the INA. Where the petitioner
withdraws or goes out of business 180
days or more after the adjustment of
status application is filed, the
beneficiary would continue to be
required to demonstrate that he or she
has a new and valid offer of
employment in a same or similar
occupational classification, consistent
with section 204(j). See proposed 8 CFR
245.25(b)(2) and 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(D).
Thus, in all instances of petition
withdrawal or business termination
where an offer of employment is
necessary, the beneficiary either will
need a new immigrant visa petition filed
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on his or her behalf, or a new offer of
employment consistent with section
204(j), in order to file for or obtain
adjustment of status. Id.
Accordingly, DHS believes that the
proposed changes provide important
stability and flexibility to workers who
have been sponsored for permanent
residence while also protecting against
fraud and misuse. First, as just
discussed, beneficiaries of approved
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions will continue to be unable to
rely on such petitions for the purposes
of adjusting status or obtaining an
immigrant visa in cases where the
petitioning employer has withdrawn or
gone out of business, unless eligible for
section 204(j) portability. Second, DHS
is proposing to restrict revocation based
on petitioner withdrawal or business
termination only for petitions that have
been approved for 180 days or more. See
proposed 8 CFR 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(C) and
(D). In addition to the period that it
typically takes for a petitioning
employer to obtain a labor certification
from DOL and approval of an immigrant
visa petition from DHS, the 180-day
requirement would provide additional
assurance that the petition was bona
fide when filed. Finally, the proposed
amendments do not in any way restrict
DHS’ current ability to revoke the
approval of any immigrant visa petition
for fraud, material misrepresentation,
the invalidation or revocation of a labor
certification, error, or any other
circumstance that DHS believes is good
cause for revocation. See 8 CFR
205.1(a)(3)(iii)(A) and 205.2; see also 8
CFR 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(C) and (D).
DHS welcomes public comment on all
aspects of this proposed change.
2. Retention of Priority Dates
DHS also proposes to amend its
regulations to enhance the ability of
beneficiaries with approved EB–1, EB–
2 or EB–3 immigrant visa petitions to
retain the priority dates associated with
those petitions and rely on them when
seeking to obtain an immigrant visa or
adjust status.
First, the proposed rule would update
DHS regulations to provide clarity to all
beneficiaries of employment-based
immigrant visa petitions regarding the
establishment of priority dates and to
eliminate obsolete references in this
area. See proposed 8 CFR 204.5(d). DHS
regulations currently provide how
priority dates are determined for
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions that: (1) Are accompanied by
labor certifications; (2) are accompanied
by applications for Schedule A
designation; or (3) are filed on behalf of
special immigrants described in section
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203(b)(4) of the INA. See 8 CFR
204.5(d). The regulations, however, do
not specify how priority dates are
established for other employment-based
immigrant visa petitions that do not
require labor certifications—such as
petitions filed under the EB–1 or EB–5
preference categories. DHS thus
proposes to revise its regulations to
clarify that the priority date of any
properly filed employment-based
immigrant visa petition that does not
require a labor certification (including
EB–1 petitions, EB–2 petitions involving
national interest waivers, EB–5
petitions, and petitions filed on or after
October 1, 1991 on behalf of special
immigrants) will be the date the
completed, signed petition is properly
filed with DHS. See proposed 8 CFR
204.5(d). The proposed rule would also
delete a reference to ‘‘evidence that the
alien’s occupation is a shortage
occupation within the Department of
Labor’s Labor Market Information Pilot
Program,’’ as that reference is now
obsolete. Id.
Second, the proposed rule would
clarify and expand the ability of
beneficiaries of approved EB–1, EB–2,
and EB–3 immigrant visa petitions to
retain their priority dates for use with
subsequently filed EB–1, EB–2, and EB–
3 petitions. See proposed 8 CFR
204.5(e). Current regulations generally
allow such retention, but not where
DHS denies the petition or revokes its
approval under section 204(e) or 205 of
the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1154(e) or 1155. See
8 CFR 204.5(e). DHS proposes to revise
these regulations so that the priority
dates of EB–1, EB–2, and EB–3 petitions
may be used for subsequently filed EB–
1, EB–2 and EB–3 petitions, unless
USCIS denies the petition (or otherwise
fails to approve it) or revokes the
petition’s approval due to: (1) Fraud or
a willful misrepresentation of a material
fact; (2) a determination that the petition
was approved in error; or (3) revocation
or invalidation of the labor certification
associated with the petition. See
proposed 8 CFR 204.5(e). The priority
date of a petition that has its approval
revoked on these grounds would not be
retained, regardless of whether the
petition’s approval was previously
revoked on other grounds.
This change, in combination with the
proposed changes to the automatic
revocation provisions discussed above,
would effectively expand beneficiaries’
ability to retain the priority dates of
their approved EB–1, EB–2, and EB–3
petitions, particularly those that are
later withdrawn or that involve
petitioning employers that go out of
business. Notably, the ability to retain
priority dates under this amendment
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would begin immediately upon petition
approval even if the petition’s approval
is thereafter revoked based on petition
withdrawal or business termination less
than 180 days after approval. This
change would provide greater certainty
and stability for beneficiaries in their
pursuit of permanent residence in the
United States. The change would also
continue to allow DHS to restrict
retention of priority dates in cases that
merit such restriction, including in
cases where the petition does not satisfy
the pertinent legal requirements, cases
where the underlying labor certification
has been invalidated or revoked, cases
involving fraud or willful
misrepresentation, and cases involving
DHS error.
DHS welcomes public comment on all
aspects of this proposed change.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
3. Nonimmigrant Grace Periods
To further improve stability and
flexibility for high-skilled nonimmigrant
workers, DHS proposes to authorize and
improve grace periods in certain
nonimmigrant visa classifications. As
further described below, DHS is
effectively proposing to extend the
current grace periods for H–1B
nonimmigrant workers—which
authorize admission up to 10 days
before and after the relevant validity
period—to certain other high-skilled
nonimmigrant classifications (E–1, E–2,
E–3, L–1, and TN classifications). DHS
further proposes to make a grace period
available in these classifications, as well
as the H–1B and H–1B1 nonimmigrant
classifications, for up to 60 days during
the period of petition validity (or other
authorized validity period).
a. Extending 10-Day Grace Periods to
Certain Nonimmigrant Classifications
First, DHS proposes to provide grace
periods similar to those currently
available to H–1B nonimmigrant
workers to other high-skilled
nonimmigrant workers. See proposed 8
CFR 214.1(l)(i). DHS regulations
currently allow H–1B nonimmigrant
workers to receive grace periods of up
to 10 days before the validity periods of
their H–1B petitions begin and 10 days
after such validity periods end. See 8
CFR 214.2(h)(13)(i)(A). During any such
grace period, an H–1B nonimmigrant
worker is considered ‘‘admitted to the
United States’’ but not authorized to
work. See 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(i)(A). The
initial 10-day grace period allows H–1B
nonimmigrant workers to make
necessary preparations for their
employment in the United States. The
10-day grace period at the end of the
validity period provides a short window
in which H–1B nonimmigrant workers
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may either (1) find new qualifying H–1B
employment and extend their H–1B
status or (2) get their affairs in order
before departing the United States. See
id.
The proposed rule would extend
similar 10-day grace periods to
individuals in certain other
employment-authorized nonimmigrant
visa classifications, namely the E–1, E–
2, E–3, L–1, and TN classifications.
Providing grace periods in such
classifications—which, like the H–1B
classification, are generally available to
high-skilled individuals and authorize
stays of multiple years—reflects goals
similar to those underlying AC21 and
serves the national interest by
promoting stability and flexibility for
such workers. A 10-day grace period
before the petition or authorized
validity period begins allows these
nonimmigrants a reasonable amount of
time to enter the United States and
prepare for their employment in the
country. A 10-day grace period after
their petition or authorized validity
period ends provides a reasonable
amount of time to depart the United
States or take other actions to extend,
change, or otherwise maintain lawful
status after their period of authorized
employment ends.
Consistent with the current grace
periods in the H–1B classification, the
proposed rule would not allow eligible
nonimmigrants to be employed during
either of the 10-day grace periods. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.1(l). Such periods
are provided merely for eligible
nonimmigrants to prepare for
employment, seek new employment in
order to extend or change status, or
prepare for departure from the United
States. Further, the proposed rule would
extend grace periods to dependents of
eligible principal nonimmigrant
workers. Id. If a principal nonimmigrant
worker is eligible to extend his or her
stay under a grace period provided by
this proposed rule, his or her dependent
would also be eligible. Id. Finally, DHS
also proposes to amend the existing
grace period provision in current
regulation with respect to the H–1B
classification to align such provisions
with the proposed cross-classification
provision described above. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(i)(A).
DHS welcomes public comment on all
aspects of this proposed change.
b. Providing a 60-Day Grace Period to
Certain Nonimmigrant Classifications
Second, the proposed rule would
authorize a grace period in the E–1, E–
2, E–3, H–1B1, L–1, and TN
classifications, as well as the H–1B
classification, during the period of
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81923
petition validity (or other authorized
validity period). To enhance job
portability for these high-skilled
nonimmigrants, DHS proposes to
generally establish a one-time grace
period during an authorized
nonimmigrant validity period of up to
60 days or until the existing validity
period ends, whichever is shorter,
whenever employment ends for these
individuals. See proposed 8 CFR
214.1(l)(ii). DHS currently provides
flexibility in other nonimmigrant
classifications, such as those for F–1
nonimmigrant students and J–1
nonimmigrant exchange visitors.70 DHS
believes that adding this one-time
interim grace period of up to 60 days
upon cessation of employment for
additional classifications of
nonimmigrants would allow
nonimmigrants in the affected
classifications sufficient time to respond
to sudden or unexpected changes
related to their employment. Such time
may be used to seek new employment,
seek a change of status to a different
nonimmigrant classification, or make
preparations for departure from the
United States.
Under current policy, for example, an
H–1B nonimmigrant worker whose
employment ends—whether voluntarily
or upon being laid off or terminated by
the H–1B employer—is generally
considered to be in violation of his or
her status and must depart the United
States immediately. Under the proposed
rule, however, H–1B nonimmigrant
workers would be afforded up to 60
days upon the end of employment to
seek new H–1B employment and thus
extend their H–1B status without having
to immediately depart the country.
Accordingly, this interim grace period
would further support the enhanced job
portability protections provided to H–
1B nonimmigrant workers by AC21,
which authorizes them to change jobs or
employers upon the filing of a nonfrivolous H–1B petition, if otherwise
eligible. The proposed change described
in this section would provide H–1B and
certain other nonimmigrant workers a
small degree of stability and flexibility
70 DHS regulations currently provide 60- and 30day grace periods to F–1 nonimmigrant students
and J–1 nonimmigrant exchange visitors,
respectively. See 8 CFR 214.2(f)(5)(iv) and (j)(1)(ii).
F–1 students who have completed their course of
study and any subsequently authorized practical
training are granted an additional 60-day period to
prepare for departure or transfer to another school.
See 8 CFR 214.2(f)(5)(iv). The 30-day grace period
for J–1 nonimmigrant exchange visitors is available
to them during the validity period of their J–1
duration of status, which includes the duration of
their J–1 exchange program and a 30-day departure
preparation period. See 8 CFR 214.2(j)(1)(ii).
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when faced with sudden changes to
their employment.
As with the 10-day grace periods
discussed in the preceding section,
eligible nonimmigrants would not be
authorized for employment during an
interim grace period of up to 60 days
proposed by this rule.71 See proposed 8
CFR 214.1(l). Also consistent with the
10-day grace periods, the proposed rule
would extend the interim grace periods
to dependents of eligible principal
nonimmigrant workers. Id. During any
interim period in which a principal
nonimmigrant worker is eligible to
extend his or her stay under this
proposed change, his or her dependent
would also be eligible.
DHS welcomes public comment on all
aspects of this proposal, including on
the appropriate length of the grace
period and on the nonimmigrant
classifications that should be afforded
eligibility for such grace periods.
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4. Eligibility for Employment
Authorization in Compelling
Circumstances
DHS proposes to further enhance
stability and flexibility for high-skilled
nonimmigrant workers who are the
beneficiaries of approved immigrant
visa petitions filed by sponsoring U.S.
employers and who face compelling
circumstances while they wait for their
immigrant visas to become available. As
discussed in Section III.E., the
continually expanding backlogs for
employment-based immigrant visas can
place sponsored workers and their
sponsoring employers in untenable
positions.
Currently, sponsoring employers and
sponsored workers cannot deviate from
the specific job offer described in a labor
certification and approved employmentbased immigrant visa petition until the
worker: (1) Has an immigrant visa
immediately available to him or her; (2)
has filed an application for adjustment
of status; and (3) has such application
pending for at least 180 days.72 See INA
section 204(j), 8 U.S.C. 1154(j). Before
all three of these conditions are met, an
71 If a qualifying H–1B petition is properly filed
on the H–1B nonimmigrant worker’s behalf during
this 60-day grace period, DHS would consider the
individual to no longer be in the 60-day grace
period as they would be employment authorized
under section 214(n) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(n).
72 Over 75 percent of principal beneficiaries of
employment-based immigrant visa petitions,
sponsored for LPR status by employers based on
their skills and contributions to the U.S. economy,
are seeking classification as EB–2 and EB–3
immigrants and thus, with limited exception, are
subject to a labor market test requiring a labor
certification from the Department of Labor. See DHS
Yearbook of Immigration Statistics, Table 7 https://
www.dhs.gov/yearbook-immigration-statistics-2013lawful-permanent-residents.
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employer generally cannot promote the
sponsored worker, move the worker to
another position, or transfer the worker
to the same or a similar position in a
different geographic area without
jeopardizing the immigrant visa petition
approved on the worker’s behalf,
regardless of the circumstances. Neither
can a sponsored worker accept
employment with an employer other
than the sponsoring employer without
creating the same risk. Whether the
worker and his or her family are facing
a medical or other emergency is
currently immaterial. Neither is it
relevant that the worker may have faced
retaliation from the employer for
engaging in protected conduct, or that
the lack of flexibility may result in
significant business or economic harm
to the employer or worker.
To provide flexibility in the face of
such compelling circumstances, DHS
proposes to extend employment
authorization to a discrete subset of
high-skilled workers who are the
beneficiaries of approved employmentbased immigrant visa petitions and are
in the United States in certain
nonimmigrant statuses. Specifically, the
proposed rule would provide the ability
for individuals to apply for employment
authorization for 1 year when they meet
all of the following criteria: (1) The
individual is currently in the United
States and maintaining E–3, H–1B, H–
1B1, O–1 or L–1 nonimmigrant status;
(2) the individual is the beneficiary of
an approved immigrant visa petition
under the EB–1, EB–2 or EB–3
classification; (3) the individual does
not have an immigrant visa immediately
available; and (4) the individual can
demonstrate to the satisfaction of DHS
compelling circumstances that justify an
independent grant of employment
authorization. See proposed 8 CFR
204.5(p)(1). DHS is proposing this
change to provide qualified
nonimmigrants who are beneficiaries of
approved employment-based immigrant
visa petitions, but are awaiting an
immigrant visa, a stopgap measure for
retaining employment authorization for
a limited period when compelling
circumstances arise.
DHS anticipates that use of this
proposal, if finalized, would be limited
for various reasons. First, DHS believes
that the other changes proposed in this
rule to enhance flexibility for employers
and nonimmigrant workers, if finalized,
would significantly decrease instances
where this proposal will be needed.
Second, nonimmigrant workers will
have significant incentive to choose
other options, as the proposal discussed
in this section would require the worker
to relinquish his or her nonimmigrant
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status, thus restricting his or her ability
to change nonimmigrant status or adjust
status to that of a lawful permanent
resident. Accepting the employment
authorization under this proposal, for
example, would generally require the
worker to forego adjusting status in the
United States and instead seek an
immigrant visa abroad through consular
processing. Finally, DHS anticipates
that a limited number of nonimmigrant
workers with approved EB–1, EB–2, or
EB–3 immigrant visa petitions will be
able to demonstrate compelling
circumstances justifying an independent
grant of employment authorization.
Employment authorization based on
compelling circumstances will not be
available to a nonimmigrant worker
solely because his or her statutory
maximum time period for nonimmigrant
status is approaching or has been
reached. Likewise, employment
authorization generally would not be
available to a nonimmigrant if the
tendered compelling circumstance is
within his or her control.
DHS is not proposing to define the
term ‘‘compelling circumstances’’ at this
time, as the Department seeks to retain
flexibility as to the types of compelling
circumstances that clearly warrant the
Secretary’s exercise of discretion in
granting employment authorization.
DHS, however, has currently identified
four circumstances in which it may
consider granting employment
authorization under the proposed
change:
• Serious Illnesses and Disabilities.
The nonimmigrant worker can
demonstrate that he or she, or his or her
dependent, is facing a serious illness or
disability that entails the worker moving
to a different geographic area for
treatment or otherwise substantially
changing his or her employment
circumstances.
• Employer Retaliation. The
nonimmigrant worker can demonstrate
that he or she is involved in a dispute
regarding the employer’s illegal or
dishonest activity as evidenced by, for
example, a complaint filed with a
relevant government agency or court,
and the employer has taken retaliatory
action that justifies granting separate
employment authorization to the worker
on a discretionary basis.
• Other Substantial Harm to the
Applicant. The nonimmigrant worker
can demonstrate that due to compelling
circumstances, he or she will be unable
to timely extend or otherwise maintain
status, or obtain another nonimmigrant
status, and absent continued
employment authorization under this
proposal the applicant and his or her
family would suffer substantial harm.
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Such circumstances, for example, may
involve an H–1B nonimmigrant worker
who has been applying an industryspecific skillset in a high-technology
sector for years with a U.S. entity that
is unexpectedly terminating its
business, where the worker is able to
establish: (1) That the same or a similar
industry (e.g., nuclear energy,
aeronautics, or artificial intelligence)
does not materially exist in the home
country, and (2) that the resulting
inability to find productive employment
would cause significant hardship to the
worker and his or her family if required
to return home. In such circumstances,
the employment authorization proposal
would provide the individual with an
opportunity to find another employer to
sponsor him or her for immigrant or
nonimmigrant status and thereby
protect the worker and his or her family
members from the substantial harm they
would suffer if required to depart the
United States.
• Significant Disruption to the
Employer. The nonimmigrant worker
can show that due to compelling
circumstances, he or she is
unexpectedly unable to timely extend or
change status, there are no other
possible avenues for the immediate
employment of such worker with that
employer, and the worker’s departure
would cause the petitioning employer
substantial disruption to a project for
which the worker is a critical employee.
Such circumstances, for example, may
include the following:
Æ An L–1B nonimmigrant worker is
sponsored for permanent residence by
an employer that subsequently
undergoes corporate restructuring (e.g.,
a sale, split, or spin off) such that the
worker’s new employer is no longer a
multinational company eligible to
employ L–1B workers, there are no
available avenues to promptly obtain
another work-authorized nonimmigrant
status for the worker, and the employer
would suffer substantial disruption due
to the critical nature of the worker’s
services. In such cases, the employment
authorization proposal would provide
the employer and worker a temporary
bridge allowing for continued
employment while they continue in
their efforts to obtain a new
nonimmigrant or immigrant status.
Æ An H–1B nonimmigrant worker is
providing critical work on biomedical
research for an entity affiliated with an
institution of higher education, thus
making the entity exempt from the H–
1B cap, when the funding for the
research unexpectedly changes and now
comes through a for-profit entity, thus
causing the entity to lose its cap-exempt
status. In cases where the worker is
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unable to quickly obtain H–1B status
based on a cap-subject H–1B petition or
another work-authorized nonimmigrant
status, the employment authorization
proposal would provide a temporary
bridge for continued employment of the
worker when his or her departure would
create substantial disruption to the
employer’s biomedical research.
In each of these examples of
situations where USCIS may find
compelling circumstances, the proposed
provision would provide individuals
with the ability to retain employment
authorization and the opportunity to
find a new sponsoring employer or
explore options with the current
sponsoring employer. DHS invites
public comment on these examples of
compelling circumstances or other types
of compelling circumstances that may
warrant a discretionary grant of separate
employment authorization. DHS also
welcomes public comment on the
manner in which applicants should be
expected to document such compelling
circumstances.
As noted above, DHS is proposing this
employment authorization only for
certain workers who are the
beneficiaries of approved employmentbased immigrant visa petitions and who
are in the United States in E–3, H–1B,
H–1B1, O–1, or L–1 nonimmigrant
status. See proposed 8 CFR
204.5(p)(1)(i). The requirement that the
individual must be the beneficiary of an
approved employment-based immigrant
visa petition is intended to limit
employment authorization to those
workers who are seeking employmentbased permanent residence in the
United States and are merely awaiting
an immigrant visa and either: (1) Are the
subject of an approved labor
certification indicating that their
employment would not harm U.S.
workers or (2) are in a classification that
Congress has chosen to prioritize by
exempting them from the labor
certification requirement. DHS is further
limiting eligibility to the listed
nonimmigrant classifications as they
represent the vast majority of highskilled nonimmigrant workers who are
sponsored for permanent residence by
U.S. employers.73 DHS invites public
comment on the listed nonimmigrant
classifications and whether other
nonimmigrant classifications should be
considered. DHS also invites public
73 Based on USCIS analysis of approved
employment-based immigrant visa petitions with
the ‘‘beneficiary’s current nonimmigrant status’’
field completed, approximately 97 percent held H–
1B or H–1B1 status, and approximately 2.9 percent
held L–1 nonimmigrant status. Approximately 10.5
percent of approved petitions had missing
information for that field.
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comment on the requirement that
applicants be the beneficiaries of
approved EB–1, EB–2, or EB–3
immigrant visa petitions.
DHS is further proposing that workers
who have been granted 1 year of
employment authorization under the
proposed rule would not be able to
extend such employment authorization
at the end of the 1-year period unless
certain criteria are met. DHS is
proposing to limit renewal of such
employment authorization to those
workers who can show that they
continue to be the principal beneficiary
of an approved EB–1, EB–2 or EB–3
immigrant visa petition and either: (1)
The worker continues to face
compelling circumstances; or (2) the
worker has a priority date that is less
than 1 year from the current cut-off date
for the relevant employment-based
category and country of nationality in
the most recent visa bulletin published
by the Department of State. See
proposed 8 CFR 204.5(p)(3)(i).
DHS further proposes that individuals
would be ineligible to obtain
employment authorization under this
rule, whether initial or renewal, if at the
time of the filing of the EAD application
the alien’s priority date is more than 1
year beyond the date on which
immigrant visa numbers were
authorized to be issued to individuals
with the same priority date for the
relevant employment-based category
and country of nationality. DHS believes
this outer limit would discourage
individuals from relying on the
proposed employment authorization in
lieu of completing the employmentbased immigrant visa process. See
proposed 8 CFR 204.5(p)(5).
DHS also proposes to generally
require these applicants to appear in
person at a USCIS Application Support
Center (ASC) to submit biometric
information and pay a biometric fee as
prescribed in 8 CFR 103.7(b)(1)(i)(C).
See proposed 8 CFR 204.5(p)(4). This
requirement would allow DHS to better
assess the applicant’s potential risk to
public safety and national security, and
to enable DHS to make a more informed
decision when exercising discretion to
approve or deny such application for
employment authorization. See 8 CFR
274a.13(a)(1). DHS also is proposing
that, in all cases, an individual would
be ineligible for employment
authorization under this provision if
convicted of any felony or two or more
misdemeanors. See proposed 8 CFR
204.5(p)(5)(i). DHS welcomes public
comment on these additional
requirements.
With regard to dependents of
qualifying principal nonimmigrants,
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DHS proposes to extend employment
authorization eligibility to those
dependent spouses and children who
are also present in the United States in
nonimmigrant status, but only if the
principal spouse or parent is granted
employment authorization under this
rule and such authorization has not
been terminated or revoked. See
proposed 8 CFR 204.5(p)(2). The
validity period of the family member’s
employment authorization may not
extend beyond the period authorized for
the principal spouse or parent. Id.
Dependent family members seeking
renewals of employment authorization
would be subject to these same
limitations. See proposed 8 CFR
204.5(p)(3)(ii).
DHS further proposes conforming
amendments to 8 CFR 274a.12(c), which
lists classes of individuals who must
apply for employment authorization.
These amendments would add two new
categories of individuals eligible for
employment authorization, one for the
principal beneficiaries described above
and one for their dependent spouses
and children. See proposed 8 CFR
274a.12(c)(35) and (36). Under these
regulations, qualifying individuals
would not be permitted to engage in
employment until USCIS approves, as a
matter of discretion, the employment
authorization application and issues an
EAD (Form I–766, or successor form).
See 8 CFR 274a.12(c) and 8 CFR
274a.13(a)(1).
DHS welcomes public comment on all
aspects of this proposal, including the
appropriate validity period for grants of
employment authorization and the
nonimmigrant visa classifications that
should be eligible to request such
employment authorization.
5. H–1B Licensing Requirements
DHS proposes to amend its
regulations consistent with current
policy for determining when H–1B
status may be granted notwithstanding
the H–1B beneficiary’s inability to
obtain a required license. See proposed
8 CFR 214.2(h)(4)(v)(C)(2). Generally, if
the beneficiary of an H–1B petition
requires a state or local license to fully
perform the duties of the occupation
described in the petition, the petition
may not be approved unless the
beneficiary possesses the license. See 8
CFR 214.2(h)(4)(v)(A). However, this
sometimes results in a ‘‘Catch-22’’
situation, as the state or local licensing
authority may not issue licenses to
individuals who do not have social
security numbers or cannot otherwise
prove employment authorization (such
as with an approved H–1B petition).
Under current policy, DHS may approve
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an H–1B petition in such cases for a 1year period, provided that the only
obstacle to obtaining licensure is the
lack of a social security number or
employment authorization.74
DHS is now proposing to formalize
this policy in its H–1B regulations.
Under the proposed rule, DHS may
approve an H–1B petition for a 1-year
validity period if a state or local license
to engage in the relevant occupation is
required and the appropriate licensing
authority will not grant such license
absent evidence that the beneficiary has
been issued a social security number or
granted employment authorization. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(4)(v)(C)(2)(i).
Petitioners filing H–1B petitions on
behalf of such beneficiaries would be
required to submit evidence from the
relevant licensing board indicating that
the only obstacle to the beneficiary’s
licensure is the lack of a social security
number or employment authorization.
Id. In addition, the petitioner must
establish that the beneficiary satisfies all
other regulatory and statutory
requirements for engaging in the
occupation. In other words, the
petitioner would need to demonstrate
that at the time of the petition’s filing,
the beneficiary meets the educational,
training, experience, or other
substantive requirements for obtaining
the relevant license (other than
acquiring a social security number or
being employment authorized).
Moreover, the petitioner would
generally be required to demonstrate
that at the time of the petition’s filing,
the beneficiary has already filed an
application for the relevant license in
accordance with state or local licensing
procedures. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(4)(v)(C)(2)(ii). In the
alternative, the petitioner would be
required to demonstrate that the
beneficiary cannot file such an
application due to the lack of a social
security number or employment
authorization.75 Id. The proposed rule
74 USCIS Memorandum from Donald Neufeld,
‘‘Adjudicator’s Field Manual Update: Chapter 31:
Accepting and Adjudicating H–1B Petitions When
a Required License is not Available due to State
Licensing Requirements Mandating Possession of a
Valid Immigration Document as Evidence of
Employment Authorization.’’ (March 21, 2008)
(‘‘Neufeld Memo March 2008’’), INS Memorandum
from Thomas Cook, ‘‘Social Security Cards and the
Adjudication of H–1B Petitions’’ (Nov. 20, 2001)
(‘‘Cook Memo Nov. 2001’’).
75 For example, as of 2014, the State of California
requires provision of a social security account
number when applying for an acupuncture license.
According to its Web site, California will not
process an application on which the applicant does
not provide a social security account number. See
www.acupuncture.ca.gov/pubs_forms/license_
app.pdf. In such cases under the proposed rule, the
petitioner would be allowed to obtain a 1-year
approval for the unlicensed H–1B beneficiary.
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would also make clear that a beneficiary
who has been approved for a 1-year
validity period may not obtain an
extension of H–1B status without proof
of licensure. Any subsequent H–1B
petition filed on behalf of such a
beneficiary with respect to the same
occupation must contain proof that the
beneficiary has obtained the required
license. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(4)(v)(C)(3).
The proposed rule would also clarify
that an individual without an
occupational license may obtain H–1B
status if he or she will be employed in
a state that allows such an unlicensed
individual to fully practice the
occupation under the supervision of
licensed senior or supervisory
personnel. In such cases, DHS will
examine the nature of the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker’s proposed duties
and the level at which they will be
performed, as well as evidence provided
by the petitioner as to the identity,
physical location, and credentials of the
individual(s) who will supervise the H–
1B nonimmigrant worker. See proposed
8 CFR 214.2(h)(4)(v)(C)(1). If the facts
demonstrate that the H–1B
nonimmigrant worker will fully perform
the duties of the occupation under the
supervision of licensed senior or
supervisory personnel in that
occupation, H–1B classification may be
granted. Id.
DHS invites public comment on all
aspects of this proposal.
C. Processing of Applications for
Employment Authorization Documents
DHS is also proposing to update its
regulations governing the processing of
Applications for Employment
Authorization (Forms I–765). First, to
help prevent gaps in employment
authorization, DHS proposes to
automatically extend the validity of
expiring EADs for up to 180 days from
such document’s and such employment
authorization’s expiration date in
certain circumstances upon the timely
filing of an application to renew such
documents. Such automatic renewal
would be available to individuals with
pending applications for adjustment of
status and other employment-authorized
individuals who: (1) Are seeking
renewal of an EAD (and, if applicable,
employment authorization) based on the
same employment authorization
category under which it was granted (or
the renewal application is for an
individual approved for Temporary
Protected Status (TPS) whose EAD was
issued pursuant to 8 CFR
274a.12(c)(19)); and (2) either continue
to be employment authorized incident
to status beyond the expiration of the
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EAD or are applying for renewal under
a category that does not first require
adjudication of an underlying
application, petition, or request.
Second, to address national security and
fraud concerns, DHS is proposing to
eliminate the current regulatory
provisions that require adjudication of
EAD applications within 90 days of
filing and that authorize interim EADs
in cases where such adjudications are
not conducted within the 90-day
timeframe. Taken together, these
updates would provide additional
stability and certainty to employmentauthorized individuals and their U.S.
employers, while reducing
opportunities for fraud and better
accommodating increased security
measures, including technological
advances that utilize centralized
production of tamper-free documents.
1. Automatic Extensions of EADs in
Certain Circumstances
First, DHS proposes to amend its
regulations to help prevent gaps in
employment authorization for certain
employment-authorized individuals
who are seeking to renew expiring
EADs. Under the proposed rule, such
individuals who fall within certain
classes of individuals eligible for
employment authorization may have the
validity of their EADs (and, if necessary,
their employment authorization as well)
extended for up to 180 days from such
document’s and such employment
authorization’s expiration date upon the
timely filing of an application to renew
such EAD (or the renewal application is
for an individual approved for TPS
whose EAD was issued pursuant to 8
CFR 274a.12(c)(19)). See proposed 8
CFR 274a.13(d)(1). Specifically, the rule
would authorize automatic extensions
of their EADs—and, for those qualifying
individuals who are not employment
authorized incident to status, extensions
of their employment authorization 76—
so long as all of the following conditions
are met:
(1) The individual files a request for
renewal of his or her EAD (currently
through an Application for Employment
Authorization, Form I–765) prior to its
expiration date.
(2) The individual is requesting
renewal based on the same employment
authorization category under which the
expiring EAD was granted (as indicated
76 For classes of employment-eligible individuals
listed at 8 CFR 274a.12(c), employment
authorization is based on the adjudication of the
Application for Employment Authorization and is
not incident to their underlying immigration status.
For such individuals who are covered by this rule,
DHS is proposing to extend both their underlying
employment authorization as well as their EADs.
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on the face of the EAD), or the
individual has been approved for TPS
and his or her EAD was issued pursuant
to 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(19).
(3) The individual either continues to
be employment authorized incident to
status beyond the expiration of the EAD
or is applying for renewal under a
category that does not first require
adjudication of an underlying
application, petition, or request.
Id. An expiring EAD that has its
validity automatically extended under
this proposal would continue to be
subject to any limitations and
conditions that applied before the
extension. See proposed 8 CFR
274a.13(d)(2). Moreover, although the
validity of such an EAD would be
extended for up to 180 days, such
validity is automatically terminated
upon issuance of notification of a
decision denying the individual’s
renewal application. See proposed 8
CFR 274a.13(d)(3). The automatic
extension could also be terminated
before a decision is made on the
renewal application through written
notice to the applicant, notice published
in the Federal Register, or any other
applicable authority.
Moreover, DHS is proposing that the
expired EAD, in combination with a
Notice of Action (Form I–797C)
indicating timely filing of the
application to renew the EAD (provided
it lists the same employment
authorization category as that listed on
the expiring or expired EAD), would be
considered an unexpired EAD for
purposes of complying with
Employment Eligibility Verification
(Form I–9) requirements. See proposed
8 CFR 274a.13(d)(4). Thus, when the
expiration date on the face of the EAD
is reached, an individual who is
continuing in his or her employment
with the same employer may, along
with the employer, update the
previously completed Form I–9 to
reflect the extended expiration date
based on the automatic extension while
the renewal is pending. Reverification of
employment authorization, however,
would not be triggered until after the
expiration of the additional period of
validity granted through the automatic
extension provisions discussed above.
See proposed 8 CFR 274a.2(b)(1)(vii).
These provisions would significantly
mitigate the risk of gaps in employment
authorization and required
documentation for eligible individuals,
thereby benefitting them and their
employers. For compliance with Form
I–9 documentation requirements,
however, individuals would need to file
their renewal applications far enough in
advance to receive the Notice of Action
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81927
(Form I–797C), which is necessary to
document that filing for their
employers, prior to the expiration of
their EADs. The Form I–797C generation
and issuance process is currently
automated such that it is able to issue
forms within a few days after receiving
an Application for Employment
Authorization. DHS expects that
applicants would generally receive the
Form I–797C within 2 weeks of the date
of filing.77
As discussed, DHS is proposing an
automatic extension period of up to 180
days past the expiration date noted on
the face of the EAD for qualifying
individuals. DHS believes that this time
period is reasonable and provides more
than ample time for USCIS to complete
the adjudication process based on
USCIS’s current 3-month average
processing time for Applications for
Employment Authorization.78
Additionally, this 180-day automatic
extension period is similar to that used
in other contexts and would thus
provide consistency for employers that
are responsible for verifying
employment authorization. For
example, DHS has a long-standing
policy of providing 180-day automatic
extensions of EADs to re-registering
beneficiaries of Temporary Protected
Status (TPS) when the re-registration
period does not provide sufficient time
to renew EADs.79 DHS regulations also
provide certain F–1 nonimmigrants
seeking extensions of Optional Practical
Training (OPT) with automatic
extensions of their employment
authorization for up to 180 days. See 8
CFR 274a.12(b)(6)(iv).
As noted above, DHS is proposing two
conditions to ensure that only eligible
aliens receive automatic extensions of
their EADs and thus to protect the
employment authorization program
from abuse. First, DHS is proposing to
require that the renewal application be
based on the same employment
authorization category as that indicated
on the expiring EAD, including renewal
applications based on TPS reregistration filed by applicants who still
hold EADs that were initially issued
under 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(19). See
proposed 8 CFR 274a.13(d)(1)(ii).
Because the resulting Notice of Action
(Form I–797C) would indicate the
77 Depending on any significant surges in filings,
however, there may be periods in which USCIS
takes longer than 2 weeks to issue Notices of Action
(Forms I–797C).
78 See current USCIS processing timeframes at
https://egov.uscis.gov/cris/processTimes
DisplayInit.do.
79 See, e.g., 80 FR 51582 (Aug. 25, 2015) (Notice
auto-extending EADs of Haitian TPS beneficiaries
for 6 months).
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employment authorization category
cited in the application,80 this
requirement would help to ensure, both
to DHS and to employers, that such a
notice was issued in response to a
timely filed renewal application.
Second, DHS is proposing to limit
eligibility for automatic extensions to
individuals who continue to be
employment authorized incident to
status beyond the expiration of the EAD
or who are seeking to renew
employment authorization in a category
in which eligibility for such renewal is
not contingent on a USCIS adjudication
of a separate, underlying application,
petition, or request. See proposed 8 CFR
274a.13(d)(1)(iii). This limitation would
similarly help to ensure that only
individuals eligible for employment
authorization are able to extend their
employment authorization under this
proposal.
Based on the above parameters, DHS
has identified 15 employment
authorization categories where renewal
applicants would be able to receive
automatic extensions under this
proposed rule. Among these are
applicants for adjustment of status. So
long as their applications for adjustment
of status remain pending or USCIS
determines, upon written notice to the
applicant or notice published in the
Federal Register, that it must terminate
the auto-extension by category, these
applicants are eligible for employment
authorization under current regulation.
See 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(9). Because such
eligibility is not contingent on the
adjudication of a separate application,
petition, or request, DHS believes it is
reasonable to make automatic
extensions available to such
individuals. The 15 categories of
employment authorization that would
allow for automatic extensions under
this rule are:
• Aliens admitted as refugees. See 8
CFR 274a.12(a)(3).
• Aliens granted asylum. See 8 CFR
274a.12(a)(5).
• Aliens admitted as parents or
dependent children of aliens granted
permanent residence under section
101(a)(27)(I) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(27)(I). See 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(7).
• Aliens admitted to the United
States as citizens of the Federated States
of Micronesia or the Marshall Islands
80 The Notice of Action that TPS beneficiaries
will receive may not necessarily be based on the
filing of a Form I–765, but instead on their TPS reregistration application filed on Form I–821,
Application for Temporary Protected Status. In
such cases, the employment authorization category
would not be listed. USCIS intends to revise the
Notices of Action issued to TPS beneficiaries to
indicate the auto-extension provided by this rule.
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pursuant to agreements between the
United States and the former trust
territories. See 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(8).
• Aliens granted withholding of
deportation or removal. See 8 CFR
274a.12(a)(10).
• Aliens granted Temporary Protected
Status (TPS) (regardless of the
employment authorization category on
their current EADs).81 See 8 CFR
274a.12(a)(12) and (c)(19).
• Aliens who have properly filed
applications for TPS and who have been
deemed prima facie eligible for TPS
under 8 CFR 244.10(a) and have
received an EAD as a ‘‘temporary
treatment benefit’’ under 8 CFR
244.10(e) and 274a.12(c)(19).
• Aliens who have properly filed
applications for asylum or withholding
of deportation or removal. See 8 CFR
274a.12(c)(8).
• Aliens who have filed applications
for adjustment of status under section
245 of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1255. See 8
CFR 274a.12(c)(9).
• Aliens who have filed applications
for suspension of deportation under
section 244 of the INA (as it existed
prior to April 1, 1997), cancellation of
removal pursuant to section 240A of the
INA, or special rule cancellation of
removal under section 309(f)(1) of the
Illegal Immigration Reform and
Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996.
See 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(10).
• Aliens who have filed applications
for creation of record of lawful
admission for permanent residence. See
8 CFR 274a.12(c)(16).
• Aliens who have properly filed
legalization applications pursuant to
section 210 of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1160.
See 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(20).
• Aliens who have properly filed
legalization applications pursuant to
section 245A of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1255a.
See 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(22).
• Aliens who have filed applications
for adjustment pursuant to section 1104
of the LIFE Act. See 8 CFR
274a.12(c)(24).
• Aliens who are the principal
beneficiaries or qualified children of
approved VAWA self-petitioners, under
the employment authorization category
‘‘(c)(31)’’ in the form instructions to the
Application for Employment
Authorization (Form I–765).
As noted above, each of these
categories describes individuals who are
eligible to apply for employment
authorization after their EADs have
81 DHS is further proposing to specifically
identify TPS beneficiaries as eligible for automatic
extensions under this proposed rule. See proposed
8 CFR 274a.13(d)(1)(iii). This will include TPS
beneficiaries who have existing EADs issued
originally under 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(12) or (c)(19).
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expired and are thus candidates for
automatic extensions of EADs under
this proposed rule. To provide
maximum clarity to the regulated
public, DHS proposes to list these
categories as eligible for automatic
extensions on USCIS’ Web site.
DHS is not currently proposing to
make automatic extensions of EADs (or
attendant employment authorization)
available to other classes of
employment-authorized individuals.
For example, DHS considered making
automatic extensions available to
certain H–4 nonimmigrants (i.e.,
spouses of H–1B nonimmigrant
workers) who are eligible for
employment authorization and EADs.
See 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(26). Such H–4
nonimmigrants are generally eligible to
renew their EADs, but only so long as
they can extend their H–4 status, which
is itself dependent on their spouses
remaining in H–1B status. Thus,
whether an H–4 nonimmigrant’s
eligibility for employment authorization
continues beyond the expiration date of
his or her EAD is typically contingent
upon adjudication of an underlying
application to extend his or her stay in
H–4 status and, in most instances, an
underlying petition to extend the stay of
the H–1B nonimmigrant worker. In such
cases, DHS cannot be reasonably
assured that the individual will
continue to be eligible to apply for
employment authorization without first
reviewing the underlying application,
petition, or request. DHS thus does not
propose to make automatic extensions
of employment authorization available
to this category, or to other categories in
which employment authorization is
contingent on adjudication of another
application, petition, or request.
DHS welcomes public comment on all
aspects of this proposal.
2. Elimination of 90-Day Processing
Timeframe and Interim EADs
Second, due to fraud and national
security concerns, and in light of
technological and process advances
with respect to document production,
DHS is proposing to eliminate certain
existing regulations concerning the
processing of Applications for
Employment Authorization (Forms I–
765). Specifically, DHS would eliminate
the provision at 8 CFR 247a.13(d) that
currently requires, with certain limited
exceptions, the adjudication of
Applications for Employment
Authorization within 90 days of
receipt.82 DHS would also eliminate the
82 Excepted from the 90-day processing
requirement are the following classes of aliens:
Applicants for asylum described in 8 CFR
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provision in that regulation that requires
the issuance of interim EADs with
validity periods of up to 240 days when
such an application is not adjudicated
within the 90-day period. In addition to
the automatic extension provisions for
renewal applications proposed in this
rule, DHS would instead address
processing timeframes through
operational policy guidance that
reinforces the Department’s continued
commitment to a 90-day processing
timeframe and provides recourse to
individuals whose case is nearing the
90-day mark, including the ability to
contact USCIS to request prioritized
processing.
DHS believes that the 90-day
timeframe and interim EAD provisions
are outdated and no longer reflect the
operational realities of the Department,
including its adoption of improved
processes and technological advances in
document production to reduce fraud
and address threats to national security.
The 90-day timeframe at 8 CFR
274a.13(d), for example, was established
more than 20 years ago when
Applications for Employment
Authorization were adjudicated at local
offices of legacy INS and corresponding
documents were also produced by such
offices. See 52 FR 16216, 16228 (May 1,
1987) (setting adjudication timeframe at
60 days); see also 56 FR 41767, 41787
(Aug. 23. 1991) (increasing adjudication
timeframe to 90 days). At the time,
EADs (then known as Forms I–688B)
were produced by local offices that were
equipped with stand-alone machines for
such purposes. While decentralized
card production resulted in immediate
and customized customer service for the
public, the cards that were produced
did not contain state-of-the art security
features and were thus susceptible to
tampering and counterfeiting. Such
deficiencies became increasingly
274a.12(c)(8); certain H–4 spouses of H–1B
nonimmigrants; and applicants for adjustment
applying under the Haitian Refugee Immigrant
Fairness Act of 1998 (HRIFA). Application
processing for asylum applicants are governed by
current 8 CFR 274a.13(a)(2) and do not include
provisions for interim employment authorization
documentation. The provision at 8 CFR 274a.13(d)
also exempts adjustment applicants described in 8
CFR 245.13(j). In 2011, 8 CFR 245.13 was removed
from DHS regulations. See 76 FR 53764, 53793
(Aug. 29, 2011). However, the cross-reference to 8
CFR 245.13(j) in current 8 CFR 274a.13(d) was
inadvertently retained. Prior to its removal in 2011,
8 CFR 245.13 provided for adjustment of status for
certain nationals of Nicaragua and Cuba pursuant
to section 202 of the Nicaragua Adjustment and
Central American Relief Act, Public Law 105–100,
111 Stat. 2160, 2193 (Nov. 19, 1997). The
application period for benefits under this provision
ended April 1, 2000. USCIS removed 8 CFR 245.13
from DHS regulations in 2011 as it no longer has
pending applications pursuant to this provision.
See 76 FR at 53793.
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apparent as the United States faced new
and increasing threats to national
security and public safety that did not
exist when the current regulations were
promulgated.
In response to these concerns, the
former INS and DHS made considerable
efforts to upgrade application
procedures and leverage technology to
enhance integrity, security, and
efficiency in all aspects of the
immigration process. For example, to
combat the document security problem
discussed above, the former INS took
steps to centralize application filing
locations and card production. By 2006,
DHS fully implemented these
centralization efforts.83 DHS now
requires that Applications for
Employment Authorization be filed at
remote processing centers.84 Some
classes of employment-eligible aliens
are also required to appear at an
Application Support Center (ASC) for
collection of their biometric information
before DHS can complete adjudication
of such applications.85 If DHS
ultimately approves such an
application, a card order is sent to a
card production facility. The card
facility produces a tamper-proof card
reflecting the specific employment
authorized category and mails that card
to the applicant.
While the 90-day timeframe and
interim EAD provisions at 8 CFR
274a.13(d) may have made sense when
applications were processed and cards
were produced at the local level, DHS
believes that the intervening changes
discussed above now require that such
provisions be eliminated. DHS, for
example, may be unable to meet the 90day processing timeframe for applicants
who are required to submit biometric
information at an ASC but who do not
provide such information in a timely
83 See USCIS Memorandum from Michael Aytes,
‘‘Elimination of Form I–688B, Employment
Authorization Card’’ (Aug. 18, 2006). In January
1997, the former INS began issuing new, more
secure EADs from a centralized location and gave
it a new form number (I–766) to distinguish it from
the less secure, locally produced EADs (Forms I–
688B). DHS stopped issuing Form I–688B EADs
from local offices altogether in 2006.
84 Asylum applicants, however, make their
request for employment authorization directly on
the Application for Asylum and Withholding of
Removal, Form I–589, and need not file a separate
Application for Employment Authorization (Form
I–765) following a grant of asylum. If they are
requesting employment authorization based on
their pending asylum application, they must file a
separate request for employment authorization on
Form I–765.
85 For example, many individuals who
concurrently file their Application for Employment
Authorization with another application or petition,
such as TPS applicants, must appear at an ASC for
submission of their biometric information before
DHS completes adjudication of their applications.
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81929
manner. DHS may also be unable to
meet the 90-day timeframe in a given
case where security checks remain
pending. Given the fraud and national
security concerns discussed above, DHS
believes it is not prudent to issue
interim EADs in such cases. Moreover,
the 90-day timeframe constrains DHS’
ability to maintain necessary levels of
security when application receipt
volumes suddenly increase, as well as
the ability to implement security
improvements if those improvements
may further extend the adjudication of
applications in certain cases.
Given these considerations, DHS
believes that the 90-day timeframe and
interim EAD provisions at 8 CFR
274a.13(d) do not provide sufficient
flexibility to reconcile with DHS’ core
missions to enforce and administer our
immigration laws and enhance security.
Moreover, DHS notes that under current
processing timelines, elimination of
these provisions would not have any
noticeable effect on the vast majority of
applicants.86 DHS remains committed to
the current 90-day processing goal, as
well as the current policy of prioritizing
application processing where
applications are pending for at least 75
days. Consistent with current protocols,
applicants whose initial or renewal EAD
applications have been pending for 75
days or more may continue calling the
National Customer Service Center
(NCSC) to request priority processing. In
practice, as noted above, these policies
result in the adjudication of the vast
majority of Applications for
Employment Authorization within 90
days of filing. DHS anticipates that it
will be unable to adjudicate
applications within 90 days in only a
small percentage of cases, including
those involving delays in security
processes.
DHS welcomes public comment on all
aspects of this proposal, including
alternate suggestions for regulatory
amendments to the 90-day processing
timeframe and interim employment
authorization provisions not already
discussed that address customer service,
national security, and identity
verification considerations that USCIS
must fulfill as part of its core mission
within DHS.
3. Conforming and Technical
Amendments
Finally, DHS proposes to make
conforming and technical amendments
to its regulations in light of the changes
described above. The proposed rule first
86 See USCIS current processing times at
https://egov.uscis.gov/cris/
processTimesDisplayInit.do.
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would amend DHS regulations
concerning individuals applying for
adjustment of status under the Haitian
Refugee Immigrant Fairness Act of 1998
(HRIFA), Public Law 105–277, div. A,
title IX, sections 901–904, 112 Stat.
2681–538 to 542 (codified as amended
at 8 U.S.C. 1255 note (2006)). These
regulations currently provide that
interim employment authorization is
accorded upon expiration of a 180-day
waiting period or 90 days from the date
the Application for Employment
Authorization is filed, whichever comes
later. See 8 CFR 245.15(n)(2). Consistent
with the proposed changes to 8 CFR
274a.13(d) discussed above, DHS is
proposing to delete from the regulatory
text at 8 CFR 245.15(n)(2) both: (1) The
cross-reference to 8 CFR 274a.13(d), and
(2) the term ‘‘interim’’ modifying
employment authorization. See
proposed 8 CFR 245.15(n)(2). Pursuant
to these changes, DHS would be
required to issue an EAD, rather than an
interim EAD, within the timeframes
currently provided in 8 CFR
245.15(n)(2). DHS also proposes making
technical amendments to 8 CFR
245.15(n)(2) by replacing specific
references to the ‘‘Director of the
Nebraska Service Center’’ and ‘‘Service’’
with broader references to USCIS and
DHS. DHS believes these changes would
not have wide impact, as the
Department receives very few
applications for adjustment of status
based on HRIFA.87 Additionally,
HRIFA-based applicants for adjustment
of status would be eligible for the
automatic 180-day extension of expiring
EADs proposed in this rule, provided
they file a timely request for renewal.
Similarly, the proposed rule would
amend DHS regulations at 8 CFR
214.2(h)(9)(iv) concerning H–4
nonimmigrant spouses of H–1B
nonimmigrant workers. This regulation
currently allows H–4 spouses to file
their applications for employment
authorization concurrently with their
underlying requests for nonimmigrant
status, but tolls the 90-day processing
timeframe at 8 CFR 274a.13(d) until the
underlying benefit requests are
approved. See 8 CFR 214.2(h)(9)(iv); see
also 80 FR 10284, 10297 (Feb. 25, 2015).
Consistent with the changes described
above, DHS is proposing to delete the
sentence in 8 CFR 214.2(h)(9)(iv)
containing the cross-reference to 8 CFR
274a.13(d), regarding the applicability
of the 90-day period to the processing of
87 See
2013 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics at
p 18 (available at https://www.dhs.gov/publication/
yearbook-2013) showing a decrease in HRIFA
adjustments from 2,451 in 2004 to 62 in 2013.
During fiscal year 2015, USCIS adjudicated 8
HRIFA adjustment applications.
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EADs for certain H–4 dependent
spouses. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(9)(iv). DHS is also proposing to
move the regulatory text authorizing the
concurrent filing of applications for
employment authorization to 8 CFR
274a.13(a), and to apply that language to
any class of employment-eligible aliens
to the extent permitted by the
application form instructions. This
amendment to the regulations would
codify current DHS policy applicable to
several classes of foreign nationals, and
provide clear authority to expand it to
additional classes of foreign nationals.
This rule also proposes a technical
amendment that would merge the
current text at paragraph (a) of 8 CFR
274a.13, with similar, repetitive text at
paragraph (a)(1) of that section. The text
at paragraph (a) currently describes the
application requirement with respect to
individuals authorized for employment
incident to status listed in 8 CFR
274a.12(a)(3), (4), (6) through (8), (10)
through (15), and (20). Text describing
the application requirement is
essentially repeated at paragraph (a)(1),
but with respect to aliens listed in 8
CFR 274a.12(c) (except asylum
applicants at 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(8), which
are covered by 8 CFR 274a.13(a)(2)).
DHS has determined that listing the
application requirements at both 8 CFR
274a.13(a) and (a)(1) is unnecessarily
repetitive and potentially confusing.
DHS proposes to describe the
application requirement once in the
introductory text at 8 CFR 274a.13(a),
which would apply to classes of
individuals described at both 8 CFR
274a.12(a) and (c). The proposed text
also would clarify that the same
application requirement would apply to
both individuals requesting only an
EAD 88 and those requesting both
employment authorization and an
EAD.89 Additionally, the proposed text
would identify the employment
authorization document that USCIS will
issue based on a grant of such
application, which is Form I–766.
V. Statutory and Regulatory
Requirements.
A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
(Regulatory Planning and Review)
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess the costs and
benefits of available alternatives, and if
regulation is necessary, to select
88 Individuals who would file an application for
an EAD alone are those aliens in 8 CFR 274a.12(a)
who are authorized for employment incident to
status.
89 Individuals who would file an application for
both employment authorization and an EAD are
those aliens listed in 8 CFR 274a.12(c).
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regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health
and safety effects, distributive impacts,
and equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility. This rule
has been designated a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ that is economically
significant, under section 3(f)(1) of
Executive Order 12866. Accordingly,
the rule has been reviewed by the Office
of Management and Budget.
DHS is proposing to amend its
regulations relating to certain
employment-based immigrant and
nonimmigrant visa programs. The
proposed amendments interpret existing
law as well as propose regulatory
changes in order to provide various
benefits to participants in those
programs, including: Improved
processes for U.S. employers seeking to
sponsor and retain immigrant and
nonimmigrant workers, greater stability
and job flexibility for such workers, and
increased transparency and consistency
in the application of agency policy
related to affected classifications. Many
of these changes are primarily aimed at
improving the ability of U.S. employers
to retain high-skilled workers who are
beneficiaries of approved employmentbased immigrant visa petitions and are
waiting to become lawful permanent
residents (LPRs), while increasing the
ability of such workers to seek
promotions, accept lateral positions
with current employers, change
employers, or pursue other employment
options.
First, DHS proposes to amend its
regulations consistent with certain
worker portability and other provisions
in the American Competitiveness in the
Twenty-first Century Act of 2000
(AC21), as amended, as well as the
American Competitiveness and
Workforce Improvement Act of 1998
(ACWIA). These proposed amendments
would clarify and improve longstanding
agency policies and procedures,
previously articulated in agency
memoranda and precedent decisions.
These proposed amendments would
also implement sections of AC21 and
ACWIA relating to certain foreign
workers, specifically sections on
workers who have been sponsored for
LPR status by their employers. In so
doing, the proposed rule would provide
a primary repository of governing rules
for the regulated community and
enhance consistency among agency
adjudicators. In addition, the proposed
rule would clarify several interpretive
questions raised by AC21 and ACWIA.
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Second, and consistent with existing
DHS authorities and the goals of AC21
and ACWIA, DHS proposes to amend its
regulations governing certain
employment-based immigrant and
nonimmigrant visa programs to provide
additional stability and flexibility to
employers and workers in those
programs. The proposed rule would,
among other things: Improve portability
for certain beneficiaries of approved
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions by limiting the grounds for
automatic revocation of petition
approval; enhance job portability for
such beneficiaries by improving their
ability to retain their priority dates for
use with subsequently approved
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions; establish or extend grace
periods for certain high-skilled
nonimmigrant workers so that they may
more easily maintain their
nonimmigrant status when changing
employment opportunities or preparing
for departure; and provide additional
stability and flexibility to certain highskilled workers by allowing those who
are working in the United States in
certain nonimmigrant statuses, are the
beneficiaries of approved employmentbased immigrant visa petitions, are
subject to immigrant visa backlogs, and
demonstrate compelling circumstances
to effectively apply for independent
employment authorization for a limited
period. These and other proposed
changes would provide much needed
flexibility to the beneficiaries of
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions, as well as the U.S. employers
who employ and sponsor them for
permanent residence. In addition, these
changes will provide greater stability
and predictability for U.S. employers
and avoid potential disruptions to
ongoing business operations in the
United States.
Finally, consistent with providing
additional certainty and stability to
81931
certain employment-authorized
individuals and their U.S. employers,
DHS is also proposing changes to its
regulations governing the processing of
applications for employment
authorization to minimize the risk of
any gaps in such authorization. These
changes would provide for the
automatic extension of the validity of
certain Employment Authorization
Documents (EADs or Form I–766) for an
interim period upon the timely filing of
an application to renew such
documents. At the same time, in light of
national security and fraud concerns,
DHS is proposing to remove regulations
that provide a 90-day processing
timeline for EAD applications and that
require the issuance of interim EADs if
processing extends beyond the 90-day
mark.
Table 1, below, provides a more
detailed summary of the proposed
provisions and their impacts.
TABLE 1—SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS AND IMPACTS
Provisions
Purpose
Expected impact of proposed rule
Priority Date .........................
Clarifies priority date when a labor certification is not
required by INA 203(b).
Priority Date Retention .........
Revises regulation so that the priority date attached to
an employment-based immigrant visa petition is only
lost when: USCIS revokes approval of the petition for
error, fraud or willful misrepresentation of a material
fact, or upon revocation or invalidation of the labor
certification accompanying the petition.
Quantitative:
• None.
Qualitative:
• Removes ambiguity and sets consistent priority dates
for affected petitioners and beneficiaries.
Quantitative:
• None.
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Employment-Based Immigrant Visa Petition Portability Under 204(j).
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Incorporates statutory portability provisions into regulation.
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Qualitative:
• Results in administrative efficiency and predictability
by explicitly listing when priority dates are lost as
these revoked petition approvals cannot be used as
a basis for an immigrant visa.
Quantitative:
Petitioners—
• Opportunity costs to petitioners for 1 year range from
$128,126 to $4,678,956.
DHS/USCIS—
• Neutral because the proposed supplementary form to
the application for adjustment of status to permanent
residence will formalize the process for USCIS requests for evidence of compliance with section 204(j)
porting.
Qualitative:
Applicants/Petitioners—
• Provides stability and job flexibility to certain individuals with approved employment-based immigrant
visas;
• Clarifies the definition of ‘‘same or similar occupational classifications‘‘;
• Allows certain foreign workers to advance and
progress in their careers;
• Potential increased employee replacement costs for
employers.
DHS/USCIS—
• Administrative efficiency;
• Standardized and streamlined process.
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TABLE 1—SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS AND IMPACTS—Continued
Provisions
Purpose
Expected impact of proposed rule
Employment Authorization
for Certain Nonimmigrants
Based on Compelling Circumstances.
Proposes provisions allowing certain nonimmigrant principal beneficiaries, and their dependent spouses and
children, to apply for unrestricted employment authorization if the principal beneficiary has an approved
EB–1, EB–2, or EB–3 immigrant visa petition while
waiting for his/her immigrant visa to become available. Applicants must demonstrate compelling circumstances justifying an independent grant of employment authorization.
Quantitative: Total costs over 10-year period to applicants are:
• $553.2 million for undiscounted costs.
• $489.5 million at a 3% discounted rate.
• $423.2 million at a 7% discounted rate.
90-Day Processing Time for
Employment Authorization
Applications.
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Automatic Revocation With
Respect to Approved Employment-Based Immigrant
Visa Petitions.
Period of Admission for Certain Nonimmigrant Classifications.
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Eliminates regulatory requirement for 90-day adjudication timeframe and issuance of interim-EADs. Proposes an automatic extension of EADs for up to 180
days for certain workers filing renewal requests.
Revises regulations so that a petition may continue to
remain valid, despite withdrawal by the employer or
termination of the employer’s business after 180 days
or more of approval.
Nonimmigrants in certain high-skilled, nonimmigrant
classifications would be granted a grace period of up
to 10 days before and after their validity period and a
one-time grace period, upon cessation of employment, of up to 60 days or until the end of their authorized validity period, whichever is shorter.
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Qualitative:
Applicants—
• Provides ability for nonimmigrants who have been
sponsored for LPR status to change jobs or employers when compelling circumstances arise;
• Incentivizes such skilled nonimmigrant workers contributing to the economy to continue seeking LPR
status;
• Nonimmigrant principal workers who take advantage
of the unrestricted EAD would abandon their current
nonimmigrant status and not be able to adjust to LPR
status in the United States. Consular processing imposes potentially significant costs, risk and uncertainty for individuals and their families as well.
Dependents—
• Allows them to enter labor market earlier and can
contribute to household income.
Quantitative:
• None.
Qualitative:
Applicants—
• Removing a regulatory timeframe and moving to one
governed by processing goals could potentially lead
to longer processing times whenever the agency is
faced with higher than expected filing volumes. If
such a situation were to occur, this could lead to potential delays in work employment start dates for firsttime EAD applicants until approval is obtained. However, USCIS believes such scenarios would be rare
and mitigated by the auto extension provision for renewal applications which would allow the movement
of resources in such situations;
• Providing the automatic continuing authorization for
up to 180 days for certain renewal applicants could
lead to less turnover costs for U.S. employers.
DHS/USCIS—
• Streamlines the application and card issuance processes;
• Enhances the ability to ensure all national security
verification checks are completed;
• Reduces agency duplication efforts;
• Reduces opportunities for fraud and better accommodates increased security measures.
Quantitative:
• None.
Qualitative:
• Beneficiary retains priority date, has porting ability
under INA 204(j), or AC21 sections 104 (c) and (b),
and may be eligible for the new unrestricted compelling circumstances EAD.
Quantitative:
• None.
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81933
TABLE 1—SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS AND IMPACTS—Continued
Provisions
Portability of H–1B Status
H–1B Licensing Requirements Calculating the H–
1B Admission Period Exemptions Due to Lengthy
Adjudication Delays Per
Country Limitation Exemptions Employer Debarment
and H–1B Whistleblower
Provisions.
Purpose
Expected impact of proposed rule
Updates, improves, and clarifies DHS regulations consistent with policy guidance.
Qualitative: Nonimmigrant Visa Holders—
• Assists the beneficiary in getting sufficiently settled
such that they are immediately able to begin working
upon the start of their petition validity period;
• Provides time necessary to wrap up affairs to depart
the country;
• Would not have to enter into non-status period or
take other actions to extend, change, or otherwise
maintain lawful status after the period of authorized
employment ends in order to wrap up affairs to respond to sudden or unexpected changes related to
their employment, or to seek a change of status to
different nonimmigrant classification.
Quantitative:
• None.
Exemptions to the H–1B Nu- Codifies definition of institution of higher education and
merical Cap and Revised
adds a broader definition of related or affiliated nonDefinition of ‘‘Related and
profit entity. Also, revises the definition of related or
Affiliated Nonprofit Entity’’
affiliated nonprofit entity for purposes of the ACWIA
in the ACWIA Fee Context.
fee to conform to the new proposed definition of the
same term for H–1B numerical cap exemption.
Qualitative:
• Formalizes existing DHS policy in the regulations,
which will give the public access to existing policy in
one location.
Quantitative:
• None.
Qualitative:
• Expands the numbers of petitioners that are cap exempt and thus allows greater access by certain employers to H–1B workers.
As required by OMB Circular A–4,90
Table 2 also presents the prepared
accounting statement showing the
expenditures associated with the
provisions of these regulations. The
main benefits of this proposed
regulation are to improve processes for
U.S. employers seeking to sponsor and
retain immigrant and nonimmigrant
workers, provide greater stability and
job flexibility for such workers, and
increase transparency and consistency
in the application of agency policy
related to affected classifications.
TABLE 2—OMB A–4 ACCOUNTING STATEMENT
[$ millions, 2015]
Category
Primary estimate
Minimum estimate
Maximum estimate
Source citation
(RIA, preamble, etc.)
Benefits
Not estimated ................
0 ....................................
Not estimated ................
0 ....................................
RIA.
RIA.
Unquantified Benefits ........................
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Monetized Benefits ............................
Annualized
quantified,
but
unmonetized, benefits.
Not estimated ................
0 ....................................
Improves processes for U.S. employers seeking to sponsor and retain immigrant and nonimmigrant workers, provides greater stability and job flexibility
for such workers, and increases transparency and consistency in the application of agency policy related to affected classifications.
RIA.
90 OMB Circular A–4 is available at
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/
omb/circulars/a004/a-4.pdf.
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TABLE 2—OMB A–4 ACCOUNTING STATEMENT—Continued
[$ millions, 2015]
Category
Primary estimate
Minimum estimate
Maximum estimate
Source citation
(RIA, preamble, etc.)
Costs
Annualized monetized costs for 10 (7%) $62.2 ....................
year period starting in 2016 to
2025 (discount rate in parenthesis).
(3%) $59.7 ....................
Annualized
quantified,
but N/A ................................
unmonetized, costs.
Qualitative (unquantified) costs .........
$60.7 .............................
$64.9 .............................
RIA.
$57.9 .............................
N/A ................................
$62.1 .............................
N/A ................................
RIA.
RIA.
Potential turnover cost due to enhanced job mobility of beneficiaries of nonimmigrant and immigrant petitions.
RIA.
Transfers
Annualized monetized transfers: ‘‘on
budget’’.
From whom to whom? .......................
N/A ................................
0 ....................................
0 ....................................
RIA.
N/A ................................
N/A ................................
N/A ................................
N/A.
Annualized monetized transfers: ‘‘offbudget’’.
From whom to whom? .......................
N/A ................................
0 ....................................
0 ....................................
RIA.
N/A ................................
N/A ................................
N/A ................................
N/A.
Miscellaneous Analyses/Category .....
Effects
Effects on state, local, and/or tribal
governments.
Effects on small businesses ..............
Effects on wages ...............................
Effects on growth ...............................
None
No direct costs. Indirect effects only.
None
None
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
DHS has prepared a full analysis
according to Executive Orders 12866
and 13563 which can be found by
searching for RIN 1615–AC05 on
regulations.gov.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601–612, as amended by
the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996,
Public Law 104–121 (March 29, 1996),
requires Federal agencies to consider
the potential impact of regulations on
small entities during the development of
their rules. The term ‘‘small entities’’
comprises small businesses, not-forprofit organizations that are not
dominant in their fields, and
governmental jurisdictions with
populations of less than 50,000. An
‘‘individual’’ is not defined by the RFA
as a small entity, and costs to an
individual from a rule are not
considered for RFA purposes. In
addition, the courts have held that the
RFA requires an agency to perform a
regulatory flexibility analysis of small
entity impacts only when a rule directly
regulates small entities.91 Consequently,
91 A Guide for Government Agencies How to
Comply with the Regulatory Flexibility Act, May
2012 page 22. See Direct versus indirect impact
discussion, https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/
advocacy/rfaguide_0512_0.pdf.
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Source Citation (RIA,
preamble, etc.).
RIA.
any indirect impacts from a rule to a
small entity are not costs for RFA
purposes.
The changes proposed by DHS have
direct impacts to individual
beneficiaries of employment-based
nonimmigrant and immigrant visa
petitions. As individual beneficiaries of
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions are not defined as small
entities, costs to these individuals are
not considered as RFA costs. However,
due to the fact that the petitions are
filed by a sponsoring employer, this rule
has indirect effects on employers. The
original sponsoring employer that files
the petition on behalf of an employee
will incur employee turnover related
costs as those employees port to the
same or a similar occupation with
another employer. Therefore, DHS has
chosen to examine the indirect impact
of this proposed rule on small entities
as well. The analysis of the indirect
impacts of these proposed changes on
small entities follows.
1. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
Small entities primarily affected by
this rule that could incur additional
indirect costs are those that file and pay
fees for certain immigration benefit
petitions, including Form I–140,
Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker.
DHS conducted a statistically valid
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RIA.
None.
None.
sample analysis of these petition types
to determine the number of small
entities indirectly impacted by this rule.
While DHS acknowledges that the
changes engendered by these proposed
rules would directly impact individuals
who are beneficiaries of employmentbased immigrant visa petitions, which
are not small entities as defined by the
RFA, DHS believes that the actions
taken by such individuals as a result of
these proposals will have immediate
indirect impacts on U.S. employers.
Employers will be indirectly impacted
by employee turnover-related costs as
beneficiaries of employment-based
immigrant visa petitions take advantage
of these proposals. Therefore, DHS is
choosing to discuss these indirect
impacts in this initial regulatory
flexibility analysis to aid the public in
commenting on the impact of the
proposed requirements.
• In particular, DHS requests
information and data to gain a better
understanding of the potential impact of
this rule on small entities. Specifically,
DHS requests information on: The
numbers of small entities that have filed
immigrant visa petitions for high-skilled
workers who are waiting to adjust
status, and the potential costs to such
small entities associated with employee
turnover resulting from employees who
port;
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• the potential costs to employers that
are small entities associated with
employee turnover if a sponsored
nonimmigrant worker pursues the
option for unrestricted employment
authorization based on compelling
circumstances; and
• the number of small entities that
would qualify for the proposed
exemptions of the ACWIA fee when
petitioning for H–1B nonimmigrant
workers.
a. A description of the reasons why
the action by the agency is being
considered.
The purpose of this action, in part, is
to amend regulations affecting certain
employment-based immigrant and
nonimmigrant classifications in order
for DHS regulations to conform to
provisions of AC21 and ACWIA. The
proposed rule also seeks to permit
greater job flexibility, mobility and
stability to beneficiaries of employmentbased nonimmigrant and immigrant visa
petitions, especially when faced with
long waits for immigrant visas. In many
instances, the need for these
individuals’ employment has been
demonstrated through the labor
certification process. In most cases,
before an employment-based immigrant
visa petition can be approved, the DOL
has certified that there are no U.S.
workers who are ready, willing and
available to fill those positions in the
area of intended employment. By
increasing flexibility and mobility, the
worker is more likely to remain in the
United States and help fill the
demonstrated need for his or her
services.
b. A succinct statement of the
objectives of, and legal basis for, the
proposed rule.
DHS objectives and legal authority for
this proposed rule are discussed in the
preamble.
c. A description and, where feasible,
an estimate of the number of small
entities to which the proposed changes
would apply.
DHS conducted a statistically valid
sample analysis of employment-based
immigrant visa petitions to determine
the maximum potential number of small
entities indirectly impacted by this rule
when a high-skilled worker who has an
approved employment-based immigrant
visa petition and a pending adjustment
of status application for 180 days or
more ports to another employer. DHS
utilized a subscription-based online
database of U.S. entities, Hoovers
Online, as well as two other openaccess, free databases of public and
private entities, Manta and Cortera, to
determine the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS) code,
revenue, and employee count for each
entity.92 In order to determine a
business’ size, DHS first classified each
entity by its NAICS code, and then used
SBA guidelines to note the requisite
revenue or employee count threshold
for each entity. Some entities were
classified as small based on their annual
revenue and some by number of
employees.
Using FY 2013 data on actual filings
of employment-based immigrant visa
petitions, DHS collected internal data
for each filing organization. Each entity
may make multiple filings. For instance,
there were 63,953 employment-based
immigrant visa petitions filed, but only
24,912 unique entities that filed
petitions. DHS devised a methodology
to conduct the small entity analysis
based on a representative, random
sample of the potentially impacted
population. To achieve a 95 percent
confidence level and a 5 percent
confidence interval on a population of
24,912 entities, DHS used the standard
statistical formula to determine that a
minimum sample size of 385 entities
was necessary.93 DHS created a sample
size 15 percent greater than the 385
minimum necessary in order to increase
the likelihood that our matches would
meet or exceed the minimum required
sample. Of the 443 entities sampled, 344
instances resulted in entities defined as
small. Of the 344 small entities, 185
entities were classified as small by
revenue or number of employees. The
remaining 159 entities were classified as
small because information was not
found (either no petitioner name was
found or no information was found in
the databases).
TABLE 1—SUMMARY STATISTICS AND RESULTS OF SMALL ENTITY ANALYSIS OF FORM I–140 PETITIONS
Parameter
Proportion of
sample
(percent)
Quantity
Population—petitions ...............................................................................................................................................
Population—unique entities .....................................................................................................................................
Minimum Required Sample .....................................................................................................................................
Selected Sample ......................................................................................................................................................
Entities Classified as ‘‘Not Small’’
by revenue ........................................................................................................................................................
by number of employees ..................................................................................................................................
Entities Classified as ‘‘Small’’
by revenue ........................................................................................................................................................
by number of employees ..................................................................................................................................
because no petitioner name found ...................................................................................................................
because no information found in databases ....................................................................................................
63,953
24,912
385
443
........................
........................
........................
100.0
73
26
16.5
5.9
145
40
109
50
32.7
9.0
24.6
11.3
Total Number of Small Entities .................................................................................................................
344
77.7
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Source: USCIS analysis.
d. A description of the projected
reporting, recordkeeping, and other
compliance requirements of the
proposed rule, including an estimate of
the classes of small entities that will be
subject to the requirement and the types
of professional skills.
The proposed amendments in this
rule do not place direct requirements on
small entities that petition for workers.
However, if the principal beneficiaries
of employment-based immigrant visa
petitions take advantage of the
flexibility provisions proposed herein
(including porting to a new sponsoring
92 The Hoovers Web site can be found at https://
www.hoovers.com/; The Manta Web site can be
found at https://www.manta.com/; and the Cortera
Web site can be found at https://
www.cortera.com/.
93 See https://www.qualtrics.com/blog/
determining-sample-size/.
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employer or pursuing the unrestricted
employment authorization in cases
involving compelling circumstances),
there could be increased turnover costs
(employee replacement costs) for U.S.
entities sponsoring the employment of
those beneficiaries, including costs of
petitioning for new employees. While
DHS has estimated 29,166 individuals
who are eligible to port to a new
employer under section 204(j) of the
INA, the Department was unable to
predict how many will actually do so.
As mentioned earlier in the Executive
Orders 12866 and 13563 analysis, a
range of opportunity costs of time to
petitioners who prepare Supplement J
($43.93 for a human resources
specialist, $93.69 for an in-house
lawyer, or $160.43 for an outsourced
lawyer) are anticipated depending on
the total numbers of individuals who
port. However, DHS is currently unable
to determine the numbers of small
entities who take on immigrant
sponsorship of high-skilled workers
who are waiting to adjust status from
the original sponsoring employer. The
estimates presented also do not
represent employee turnover costs to the
original sponsoring employer, but only
represent paperwork costs. Similarly,
DHS is unable to predict the volume of
principal beneficiaries of employmentbased immigrant visa petitions who will
pursue the option for unrestricted
employment authorization based on
compelling circumstances.
The proposed amendments relating to
the H–1B numerical cap exemptions
may impact some small entities by
allowing them to qualify for exemptions
of the ACWIA fee when petitioning for
H–1B nonimmigrant workers. As DHS
cannot predict the numbers of entities
these proposed amendments would
impact at this time, the exact impact on
small entities is not clear, though some
positive impact should be anticipated.
e. An identification of all relevant
Federal rules, to the extent practical,
that may duplicate, overlap, or conflict
with the proposed rule.
DHS is unaware of any duplicative,
overlapping, or conflicting Federal
rules, but invites any comment and
information regarding any such rules.
f. Description of any significant
alternatives to the proposed rule that
accomplish the stated objectives of
applicable statutes and that minimize
any significant economic impact of the
proposed rule on small entities.
This rule does not impose direct costs
on small entities. Rather, this rule
imposes indirect cost on small entities
because the proposed provisions would
affect beneficiaries of employmentbased immigrant visa petitions. If those
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beneficiaries take actions or steps in line
with the proposals that provide greater
flexibility and job mobility, then there
would be an immediate indirect
impact—an externality—to the current
sponsoring U.S. employers. DHS
considered whether to exclude from the
flexibility and job mobility provisions
those beneficiaries who were sponsored
by U.S. employers that were considered
small. However, because DHS so limited
the eligibility for unrestricted
employment authorization to
beneficiaries who are able to
demonstrate compelling circumstances,
and restricted the portability provisions
to those seeking employment within the
same or similar occupational
classification(s), DHS did not feel it was
necessary to pursue this proposal. There
are no other alternatives that DHS
considered that would further limit or
shield small entities from the potential
of negative externalities and that would
still accomplish the goals of this
regulation. To reiterate, the goals of this
regulation include providing increased
flexibility and normal job progression
for beneficiaries of approved
employment-based immigrant visa
petitions. To incorporate alternatives
that would limit such mobility for
beneficiaries that are employed or
sponsored by small entities would be
counterproductive to the goals of this
rule. DHS welcomes public comments
on significant alternatives to the
proposed rule that would minimize
significant economic impact to small
entities.
C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
The Unfunded Mandate Reform Act of
1995 (UMRA) is intended, among other
things, to curb the practice of imposing
unfunded Federal mandates on State,
local, and tribal governments. Title II of
UMRA requires each Federal agency to
prepare a written statement assessing
the effects of any Federal mandate in a
proposed or final agency rule that may
result in a $100 million or more
expenditure (adjusted annually for
inflation) in any one year by State, local,
and tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or by the private sector. The value
equivalent of $100,000,000 in 1995
adjusted for inflation to 2014 levels by
the Consumer Price Index for All Urban
Consumers is $155,000,000.
Although this rule does exceed the
$100 million expenditure threshold in
the first year of implementation
(adjusted for inflation), this rulemaking
does not contain such a mandate.
Providing job flexibility through
unrestricted employment authorization
to a limited number of employment-
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authorized nonimmigrants in
compelling circumstances is not a
required immigration benefit, nor will
use of the proposed flexibilities result in
any expenditures by State, local, and
tribal governments. The requirements of
Title II of UMRA, therefore, do not
apply, and DHS has not prepared a
statement under UMRA.
D. Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
This proposed rule is a major rule as
defined by section 804 of the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement Act of
1996. This rule will result in an annual
effect on the economy of more than
$100 million in the first year only. For
each subsequent year, the annual effect
on the economy will remain under $100
million. As small businesses may be
impacted under this proposed
regulation, DHS has prepared a
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
analysis. The RFA analysis can be found
with the analysis prepared under
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 on
regulations.gov.
E. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
This rule will not have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the
relationship between the National
Government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Therefore, in
accordance with section 6 of Executive
Order 13132, it is determined that this
rule does not have sufficient federalism
implications to warrant the preparation
of a federalism summary impact
statement.
F. Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice
Reform)
This rule meets the applicable
standards set forth in sections 3(a) and
3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988.
G. Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA) of 1995, Public Law 104–13,
Departments are required to submit to
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB), for review and approval, any
reporting requirements inherent in a
rule. This rule proposes revisions to the
following information collections:
1. The Application for Employment
Authorization, Form I–765; and Form I–
765 Work Sheet, Form I–765WS, OMB
Control Number 1615–0040.
Specifically, USCIS is revising this
collection by revising the instructions to
Form I–765 to include information for
the newly proposed group of applicants
(beneficiaries of an approved Form I–
140 who are in the United States in E–
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3, H–1B, H–1B1, O–1, or L–1
nonimmigrant status, who are the
beneficiaries of an approved
employment-based immigrant visa
petition, who do not have immigrant
visas immediately available to them,
and who demonstrate compelling
circumstances justifying a grant of
employment authorization) eligible to
apply for employment authorization
under proposed section 8 CFR
274a.12(c)(35). Their dependent spouses
and children who are present in the
United States in nonimmigrant status
will also be eligible to obtain
employment authorization under
proposed section 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(36),
provided that the principal alien has
been granted employment authorization.
USCIS is also proposing to amend Form
I–765 to include Yes/No questions
requiring these applicants to disclose
certain criminal convictions. USCIS
estimates an upper-bound average of
155,067 respondents will request
employment authorization as a result of
the changes proposed by this rule in the
first 2 years. This average estimate is
derived from a maximum estimate of
257,039 new respondents who may file
applications for employment
authorization documents in year 1 and
a maximum estimate of 53,095
respondents in year 2. USCIS averaged
this estimate for new I–765 respondents
over a 2-year period of time based on its
request seeking a 2-year approval of the
form and its instructions from OMB.
2. USCIS is revising the form and its
instructions and the estimate of total
burden hours has increased due to the
addition of this new population of Form
I–765 filers, and the increase of burden
hours associated with the collection of
biometrics from these applicants.
3. The Immigrant Petition for Alien
Worker, Form I–140; OMB Control
Number 1615–0015. Specifically, USCIS
is revising this information collection to
remove ambiguity regarding whether
information about the principal
beneficiary’s dependent family members
should be entered on Form I–140, by
revising the word ‘‘requests’’ to
‘‘requires’’ for clarification in the form
instructions. USCIS is also revising the
instructions to remove the terms ‘‘in
duplicate’’ in the second paragraph
under the labor certification section of
the instructions because USCIS no
longer requires uncertified Employment
and Training Administration (ETA)
Forms 9089 to be submitted in
duplicate. There is no change in the
data being captured on the information
collection instrument, but there is a
change to the estimated annual burden
hours as a result of USCIS’ revised
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estimate of the number of respondents
for this collection of information.
4. The Petition for Nonimmigrant
Worker, Form I–129, OMB Control
Number 1615–0009. USCIS is making
revisions to Form I–129, specifically the
H–1B Data Collection and Filing Fee
Exemption Supplement and the
accompanying instructions, to
correspond with revisions to the
regulatory definition of ‘‘related or
affiliated nonprofit entities’’ for the
purposes of determining whether the
petitioner is exempt from: (1) Payment
of the $750/$1,500 fee associated with
the American Competitiveness and
Workforce Improvement Act (ACWIA)
and (2) the statutory numerical
limitation on H–1B visas (also known as
the H–1B cap). USCIS does not estimate
that new respondents would file
petitions for alien workers as a result of
the changes proposed by this rule.
5. The Application to Register
Permanent Residence or Adjust Status,
Form I–485, including new Supplement
J, ‘‘Confirmation of Bona Fide Job Offer
or Request for Job Portability under INA
Section 204(J),’’ OMB Control Number
1615–0023. Specifically, USCIS is
creating a new Supplement J to Form I–
485 to allow the adjustment applicant
requesting portability under section
204(j) of the INA, and the U.S. employer
offering the applicant a new permanent
job offer, to provide formal attestations
regarding important aspects of the job
offer. Providing such attestations is an
essential step to establish eligibility for
adjustment of status in any
employment-based immigrant visa
classification requiring a job offer,
regardless of whether the applicant is
making a portability request under
section 204(j) or is seeking to adjust
status based upon the same job that was
offered in the underlying immigrant visa
petition. Through this new supplement,
USCIS will collect required information
from U.S. employers offering a new
permanent job offer to a specific worker
under section 204(j). Moreover,
Supplement J will also be used by
applicants who are not porting pursuant
to section 204(j) to confirm that the
original job offer described in the Form
I–140 petition is still bona fide and
available to the applicant at the time the
applicant files Form I–485. Supplement
J will replace the current Form I–485
initial evidence requirement that an
applicant must submit a letter on the
letterhead of the petitioning U.S.
employer that confirms that the job offer
on which the Form I–140 petition is
based is still available to the applicant.
This supplement will also serve as an
important anti-fraud measure, and it
will allow USCIS to validate employers
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81937
extending new permanent job offers to
individuals under section 204(j). USCIS
estimates that approximately 29,166
new respondents would file
Supplement J as a result of the changes
proposed by the rule.
Additionally, USCIS is revising the
instructions to Form I–485 to reflect the
implementation of Supplement J. The
Form I–485 instructions are also being
revised to clarify that eligible applicants
will need to file Supplement J to request
job portability under section 204(j) of
the INA. There is no change to the
estimated annual burden hours as a
result of this revision as a result of the
changes proposed in this rule.
DHS is requesting comments on the
proposed revisions to these information
collections until February 29, 2016.
In accordance with the PRA,
information collection notices are
published in the Federal Register to
obtain comments regarding the nature of
the information collection, the
categories of respondents, the estimated
burden (i.e., the time, effort, and
resources used by the respondents to
respond), the estimated cost to the
respondent, and the actual information
collection instruments. When
submitting comments on this
information collection, your comments
should address one or more of the
following four points:
(1) Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility;
(2) Evaluate the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
(3) Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
(4) Minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
e.g., permitting electronic submission of
responses.
Overview of this information
collection:
(1) Type of Information Collection:
Revision of a Currently Approved
Collection.
(2) Title of the Forms/Collections:
• Application for Employment
Authorization Document;
• Form I–765 Work Sheet;
• Immigrant Petition for Alien
Worker;
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• Petition for Nonimmigrant Worker;
• Application to Register Permanent
Residence or Adjust Status.
(3) Agency form number, if any, and
the applicable component of the DHS
sponsoring the collection: Forms I–765/
I–765WS, I–140, I–129 and I–485;
USCIS.
(4) Affected public who will be asked
or required to respond, as well as a brief
abstract:
Form I–765: Primary: Individuals or
households: This form was developed
for individuals to request employment
authorization and evidence of that
employment authorization. USCIS is
revising this form to add a new class of
workers eligible to apply for
employment authorization as the
beneficiary of a valid immigrant petition
for classification under sections
203(b)(1), 203(b)(2) or 203(b)(3) of the
INA. Eligible applicants must be
physically present in the United States
in E–3, H–1B, H–1B1, O–1, or L–1
nonimmigrant status, and must
demonstrate that they face compelling
circumstances while they wait for their
immigrant visas to become available.
Dependent spouses and children who
are present in the United States in
nonimmigrant status are also eligible to
apply provided that the principal has
been granted employment authorization.
Supporting documentation
demonstrating eligibility must be filed
with the application. The form
instructions list examples of relevant
documentation.
Form I–140: Primary: Business or
other for-profit organizations, as well as
not-for profit organizations. USCIS will
use the information furnished on this
information collection to classify
individuals under sections 203(b)(1),
203(b)(2) or 203(b)(3) of the INA.
Form I–129: Primary: Business: This
form is used by an employer to petition
for workers to come to the U.S.
temporarily to perform services, labor,
and training or to request extensions of
stay or changes in nonimmigrant status
for nonimmigrant workers. USCIS is
revising Form I–129, specifically the H–
1B Data Collection and Filing Fee
Exemption Supplement, and the
accompanying instructions, to
correspond with revisions to the
regulatory definition of ‘‘related or
affiliated nonprofit entities’’ for the
purposes of determining whether the
petitioner is exempt from: (1) Payment
of the $750/$1,500 fee associated with
the American Competitiveness and
Workforce Improvement Act (ACWIA),
and (2) the statutory numerical
limitation on H–1B visas (also known as
the cap).
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Form I–485: Primary: Individuals or
households: The information collected
is used to determine eligibility to adjust
status under section 245 of the INA. The
instructions to Form I–485, Application
to Register Permanent Residence or
Adjust Status, are being revised to
reflect the implementation of Form I–
485 Supplement J, Confirmation of Bona
Fide Job Offer or Request for Job
Portability under INA Section 204(j)
(Supplement J). Supplement J will be
used by individuals applying for
adjustment of status to lawful
permanent resident on the basis of being
the principal beneficiary of an approved
Form I–140, Immigrant Petition for
Alien Worker. Applicants will use
Supplement J to confirm that the job
offer described in the Form I–140
petition is still bona fide and available
to the applicant at the time the
applicant files Form I–485. Supplement
J is replacing the current Form I–485
initial evidence requirement that an
applicant must submit a letter on the
letterhead of the petitioning employer
which confirms that the job offer on
which the Form I–140 petition is based
is still available to the applicant.
Applicants will also use Supplement J
when requesting job portability
pursuant to section 204(j) of the INA.
Supplement J will provide a
standardized procedure along with
specific evidentiary requirements for all
job portability requests submitted to
USCIS.
(5) An estimate of the total annual
number of respondents and the amount
of time estimated for an average
respondent to respond:
• Form I–765/I–765WS:
Æ 4,618,099 responses related to Form
I–765 at 3.42 hours per response;
Æ 437,070 responses related to Form
I–765WS at .50 hours per response;
Æ 592,137 responses related to
Biometrics services at 1.17 hours; and
Æ 4,618,099 responses related to
Passport-Style Photographs at .50 hours
per response.
• Form I–140:
Æ 101,719 respondents at 1.5 hours
per response.
• Form I–129:
Æ Form I–129—333,891 respondents
at 2.34 hours;
Æ E–1/E–2 Classification to Form I–
129—4,760 respondents at .67 hours;
Æ Trade Agreement Supplement to
Form I–129—3,057 respondents at .67
hours;
Æ H Classification Supplement to
Form I–129—255,872 respondents at 2
hours;
Æ H–1B and H–1B1 Data Collection
and Filing Fee Exemption
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Supplement—243,965 respondents at 1
hour;
Æ L Classification Supplement to
Form I–129—37,831 respondents at 1.34
hours;
Æ O and P Classifications Supplement
to Form I–129—22,710 respondents at 1
hour;
Æ Q–1 Classification Supplement to
Form I–129—155 respondents at .34
hours; and
Æ R–1 Classification Supplement to
Form I–129—6,635 respondents at 2.34
hours.
• Form I–485:
Æ 697,811 respondents at 6.25 hours
per response;
Æ 697,811 respondents related to
Biometrics services at 1.17 hours.
(6) An estimate of the total annual
public burden (in hours) associated with
these collections:
• Form I–765/I–765WS:
19,014,283.37 hours.
• Form I–140: 152,579 hours.
• Form I–129: 1,631,234 hours.
• Form I–485: 5,238,957 hours.
(7) An estimate of the annual public
burden (monetized) associated with
these collections:
• Form I–765/I–765WS:
$1,357,721,106
• Form I–140: $42,365,964.
• Form I–129: $73,751,280.
• Form I–485: $239,349,173.
List of Subjects
8 CFR Part 204
Administrative practice and
procedure, Adoption and foster care,
Immigration, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
8 CFR Part 205
Administrative practice and
procedure, Immigration.
8 CFR Part 214
Administrative practice and
procedure, Aliens, Cultural exchange
programs, Employment, Foreign
officials, Health professions, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements,
Students.
8 CFR Part 245
Aliens, Immigration, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
8 CFR Part 274a
Administrative practice and
procedure, Aliens, Employment,
Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Accordingly, DHS proposes to amend
chapter I of title 8 of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
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PART 204—IMMIGRANT PETITIONS
1. The authority citation for part 204
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101, 1103, 1151, 1153,
1154, 1182, 1184, 1186a, 1255, 1324a, 1641;
8 CFR part 2.
2. Section 204.5 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraph (d);
b. Revising paragraph (e);
c. Revising paragraph (n)(3);
d. Adding paragraph (p).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
■
■
■
■
■
§ 204.5 Petitions for employment-based
immigrants.
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*
*
*
*
(d) Priority date. The priority date of
any petition filed for classification
under section 203(b) of the Act which
is accompanied by an individual labor
certification from the Department of
Labor shall be the date the labor
certification application was accepted
for processing by any office of the
Department of Labor. The priority date
of any petition filed for a classification
under section 203(b) of the Act which
does not require a labor certification
from the Department of Labor shall be
the date the completed, signed petition
(including all initial evidence and the
correct fee) is properly filed with
USCIS. The priority date of any petition
filed for classification under section
203(b) of the Act which is accompanied
by an application for Schedule A
designation shall be the date the
completed, signed petition (including
all initial evidence and the correct fee)
is properly filed with USCIS. The
priority date of an alien who filed for
classification as a special immigrant
under section 203(b)(4) of the Act prior
to October 1, 1991, and who is the
beneficiary of an approved petition for
special immigrant status after October 1,
1991, shall be the date the alien applied
for an immigrant visa or adjustment of
status.
(e) Retention of section 203(b)(1), (2),
or (3) priority date. (1) A petition
approved on behalf of an alien under
sections 203(b)(1), (2), or (3) of the Act
accords the alien the priority date of the
approved petition for any subsequently
filed petition for any classification
under sections 203(b)(1), (2), or (3) of
the Act for which the alien may qualify.
In the event that the alien is the
beneficiary of multiple approved
petitions under sections 203(b)(1), (2),
or (3) of the Act, the alien shall be
entitled to the earliest priority date.
(2) The priority date of a petition may
not be retained under paragraph (e)(1) of
this section if at any time USCIS revokes
the approval of the petition because of:
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(i) Fraud, or a willful
misrepresentation of a material fact;
(ii) Revocation by the Department of
Labor of the approved permanent labor
certification that accompanied the
petition;
(iii) Invalidation by USCIS or the
Department of State of the permanent
labor certification that accompanied the
petition; or
(iv) A determination by USCIS that
petition approval was in error.
(3) A denied petition will not
establish a priority date.
(4) A priority date is not transferable
to another alien.
(5) A petition filed under section
204(a)(1)(F) of the Act for an alien shall
remain valid with respect to a new
employment offer as determined by
USCIS under section 204(j) of the Act
and 8 CFR 245.25. An alien will
continue to be afforded the priority date
of such petition, if the requirements of
paragraph (e) of this section are met.
*
*
*
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*
(n) * * *
(3) Validity of approved petitions.
Unless approval is revoked under
section 203(g) or 205 of the Act, an
employment-based petition is valid
indefinitely.
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*
*
(p) Eligibility for employment
authorization in compelling
circumstances—(1) Eligibility of
principal alien. An individual who is
the principal beneficiary of an approved
immigrant petition for classification
under sections 203(b)(1), 203(b)(2) or
203(b)(3) of the Act may be eligible to
receive employment authorization,
upon application, if:
(i) In the case of an initial request for
employment authorization, the
individual is in E–3, H–1B, H–1B1, O–
1, or L–1 nonimmigrant status at the
time the application for employment
authorization is filed;
(ii) An immigrant visa is not
immediately available to the principal
beneficiary based on his or her priority
date at the time the application for
employment authorization is filed; and
(iii) USCIS determines, as a matter of
discretion, that the principal beneficiary
demonstrates compelling circumstances
that justify the issuance of employment
authorization.
(2) Eligibility of spouses and children.
The family members, as described in
section 203(d) of the Act, of a principal
beneficiary, who are in nonimmigrant
status at the time the principal
beneficiary applies for employment
authorization under paragraph (p)(1) of
this section, are eligible to apply for
employment authorization provided
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that the principal beneficiary has been
granted employment authorization
under paragraph (p) of this section and
such employment authorization has not
been terminated or revoked. Such
family members may apply for
employment authorization concurrently
with the principal beneficiary, but
cannot be granted employment
authorization until the principal
beneficiary is so authorized. The
validity period of employment
authorization granted to family
members may not extend beyond the
validity period of employment
authorization granted to the principal
beneficiary.
(3) Subject to paragraph (p)(5) of this
section, an alien may be eligible to
receive renewal of employment
authorization under paragraph (p) of
this section, upon application, if:
(i) He or she is the principal
beneficiary of an approved immigrant
petition for classification under sections
203(b)(1), 203(b)(2) or 203(b)(3) of the
Act and either:
(A) USCIS determines, as a matter of
discretion, that the principal beneficiary
continues to demonstrate compelling
circumstances that justify the issuance
of employment authorization, or
(B) The difference between the
principal beneficiary’s priority date and
the date upon which immigrant visas
are authorized for issuance for the
principal beneficiary’s preference
category and country of chargeability is
1 year or less according to the current
Department of State Visa Bulletin; or
(ii) Is a family member, as described
under paragraph (p)(2) of this section, of
a principal beneficiary satisfying the
requirements under paragraph (p)(3)(i)
of this section, except that the family
member need not be maintaining
nonimmigrant status at the time the
principal beneficiary applies for
renewal employment authorization
under paragraph (p) of this section.
(4) Application for employment
authorization. To request employment
authorization, an eligible applicant
described in paragraphs (p)(1) or (2) of
this section must file an application for
employment authorization, or a
successor form, with USCIS, in
accordance with 8 CFR 274a.13(a) and
the form instructions, including
evidence of compelling circumstances.
Such applicant is subject to the
collection of his or her biometric
information and the payment of any
biometric services fee as provided in the
form instructions. Employment
authorization under this paragraph may
be granted solely in 1-year increments.
(5) Ineligibility for employment
authorization. An alien is not eligible
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for employment authorization,
including renewal of employment
authorization, under this paragraph in
the following circumstances:
(i) The individual has been convicted
of any felony or two or more
misdemeanors; or
(ii) The principal beneficiary’s
priority date is more than 1 year beyond
the date immigrant visas were
authorized for issuance for the principal
beneficiary’s preference category and
country of chargeability according to the
Department of State Visa Bulletin
current at the time the application for
employment authorization, or successor
form, is filed.
PART 205—REVOCATION OF
APPROVAL OF PETITIONS
3. The authority citation for part 205
is revised to read as follows:
■
will not, by itself, impact a beneficiary’s
ability to retain his or her priority date
under 8 CFR 204.5(e). If a petitioning
employer’s business terminates 180
days or more after approval, the petition
remains approved unless its approval is
revoked on other grounds. If a
petitioning employer’s business
terminates, the job offer of the
petitioning employer is rescinded and
the beneficiary must obtain a new
employment-based preference petition
on his or her behalf in order to seek
adjustment of status or issuance of an
immigrant visa as an employment-based
immigrant, unless eligible for
adjustment of status under section 204(j)
of the Act and in accordance with 8 CFR
245.25.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 214—NONIMMIGRANT CLASSES
5. The authority citation for part 214
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101, 1103, 1151, 1153,
1154, 1155, 1182, 1324a, and 1186a.
■
4. Section 205.1 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a)(3)(iii)(C) and (D)
to read as follows:
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101, 1102, 1103, 1182,
1184, 1186a, 1187, 1221, 1281, 1282, 1301–
1305 and 1372; sec. 643, Pub. L. 104–208,
110 Stat. 3009–708; Pub. L. 105–277, 112
Stat. 2681–641; Pub. L. 106–313, 114 Stat.
1251–1255; Pub. L. 106–386, 114 Stat. 1477–
1480; section 141 of the Compacts of Free
Association with the Federated States of
Micronesia and the Republic of the Marshall
Islands, and with the Government of Palau,
48 U.S.C. 1901 note, and 1931 note,
respectively; 48 U.S.C. 1806; 8 CFR part 2.
■
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§ 205.1
Automatic revocation.
(a) * * *
(3) * * *
(iii) * * *
(C) In employment-based preference
cases, upon written notice of
withdrawal filed by the petitioner to any
officer of USCIS who is authorized to
grant or deny petitions, where the
withdrawal is filed less than 180 days
after approval of the employment-based
preference petition, provided that the
revocation of a petition’s approval
under this clause will not, by itself,
impact a beneficiary’s ability to retain
his or her priority date under 8 CFR
204.5(e). A petition that is withdrawn
180 days or more after approval remains
approved unless its approval is revoked
on other grounds. If an employmentbased petition on behalf of an alien is
withdrawn, the job offer of the
petitioning employer is rescinded and
the alien must obtain a new
employment-based preference petition
on his or her behalf in order to seek
adjustment of status or issuance of an
immigrant visa as an employment-based
immigrant, unless eligible for
adjustment of status under section 204(j)
of the Act and in accordance with 8 CFR
245.25.
(D) Upon termination of the
petitioning employer’s business less
than 180 days after petition approval in
an employment-based preference case
under section 203(b)(1)(B), 203(b)(1)(C),
203(b)(2), or 203(b)(3) of the Act,
provided that the revocation of a
petition’s approval under this clause
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6. Section 214.1 is amended by adding
a new paragraph (l) to read as follows:
■
§ 214.1 Requirements for admission,
extension, and maintenance of status.
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*
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*
(l) Period of stay. (1) An alien
admissible in E–1, E–2, E–3, H–1B, L–
1, or TN classification and his or her
dependents may be admitted to the
United States for the validity period of
the petition, or for a validity period
otherwise authorized for the E–1, E–2,
E–3, and TN classifications, plus an
additional period of up to 10 days
before the validity period begins and a
10-day period following the expiration
of the validity period to prepare for
departure from the United States or to
seek an extension or change of status
based on a subsequent offer of
employment. Unless authorized under 8
CFR 274a.12, the alien may not work
except during the validity period.
(2) An alien admitted or otherwise
provided status in E–1, E–2, E–3, H–1B,
H–1B1, L–1, or TN classification and his
or her dependents shall not be
considered to have failed to maintain
nonimmigrant status solely on the basis
of the cessation of the employment on
which the alien’s classification was
based for a one-time period during any
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authorized validity period. Such onetime period shall last up to 60 days or
until the end of the authorized validity
period, whichever is shorter.
(3) An alien in any authorized period
described in paragraph (l) of this section
may apply for and be granted an
extension of stay under paragraph (c)(4)
of this section or change of status under
8 CFR 248.1, if otherwise eligible. DHS
may eliminate or shorten the 60-day
period described in paragraph (l)(2) of
this section as a matter of discretion
and, unless otherwise authorized under
8 CFR 274a.12, the alien may not work
during such period.
■ 7. Section 214.2 is amended by:
■ a. Adding new paragraphs (h)(2)(i)(H),
(h)(8)(ii)(F), (h)(13)(iii)(C) through (E)
and (h)(20);
■ b. Revising paragraphs (h)(4)(v)(C),
(h)(13)(i)(A), and (h)(19)(iii)(B); and
■ c. Removing the fifth sentence from
paragraph (h)(9)(iv).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 214.2 Special requirements for
admission, extension, and maintenance of
status.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) * * *
(H) H–1B portability. An eligible H–
1B nonimmigrant is authorized to start
concurrent or new employment under
section 214(n) of the Act upon the filing,
in accordance with 8 CFR 103.2(a), of a
non-frivolous H–1B petition on behalf of
such alien, or as of the requested start
date, whichever is later.
(1) Eligible H–1B nonimmigrant. For
H–1B portability purposes, an eligible
H–1B nonimmigrant is defined as an
alien:
(i) Who has been lawfully admitted
into the United States;
(ii) On whose behalf a non-frivolous
H–1B petition for new employment has
been filed, including a petition for new
employment with the same employer,
with a request to amend or extend the
H–1B nonimmigrant’s stay, before the
H–1B nonimmigrant’s period of stay
authorized by the Secretary of
Homeland Security expires; and
(iii) Who has not been employed
without authorization in the United
States from the time of last admission
through the filing of the petition for new
employment.
(2) Length of employment.
Employment authorized under
paragraph (h)(2)(i)(H) of this section
automatically ceases upon the
adjudication of the H–1B petition
described in paragraph (h)(2)(i)(H)(1)(ii)
of this section.
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(3) Successive H–1B portability
petitions. (i) An alien maintaining
authorization for employment under
paragraph (h)(2)(i)(H) of this section,
whose status, as indicated on the
Arrival-Departure Record (Form I–94),
has expired, shall be considered to be in
a period of stay authorized by the
Secretary of Homeland Security for
purposes of paragraph (h)(2)(i)(H)(ii) of
this section. If otherwise eligible under
paragraph (h)(2)(i)(H) of this section,
such alien may begin working in a
subsequent position upon the filing of
another non-frivolous H–1B petition or
from the requested start date, whichever
is later, notwithstanding that the
previous H–1B petition upon which
employment is authorized under
paragraph (h)(2)(i)(H) of this section
remains pending and regardless of
whether the validity period of an
approved H–1B petition filed on the
alien’s behalf expired during such
pendency.
(ii) A request to amend the petition or
for an extension of stay in any
successive H–1B portability petition
cannot be approved if a request to
amend the petition or for an extension
of stay in any preceding H–1B
portability petition in the succession is
denied, unless the beneficiary’s
previously approved period of H–1B
status remains valid.
(iii) Denial of a successive portability
petition does not affect the ability of the
H–1B beneficiary to continue or resume
working in accordance with the terms of
an H–1B petition previously approved
on behalf of the beneficiary if that
petition approval remains valid and the
beneficiary has maintained H–1B status
or been in a period of authorized stay
and has not been employed in the
United States without authorization.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) * * *
(v) * * *
(C) Duties without licensure. (1) In
certain occupations which generally
require licensure, a State may allow an
individual without licensure to fully
practice the occupation under the
supervision of licensed senior or
supervisory personnel in that
occupation. In such cases, USCIS shall
examine the nature of the duties and the
level at which they are performed, as
well as evidence provided by the
petitioner as to the identity, physical
location, and credentials of the
individual(s) who will supervise the
alien. If the facts demonstrate that the
alien under supervision will fully
perform the duties of the occupation, H
classification may be granted.
(2) An H–1B petition filed on behalf
of an alien who does not have a valid
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State or local license, where a license is
otherwise required to fully perform the
duties in that occupation, may be
approved for a period of up to 1 year if:
(i) The license would otherwise be
issued provided the alien was in
possession of a valid social security
number or was authorized for
employment in the United States, and
(ii) The petitioner demonstrates,
through evidence from the State or local
licensing authority, that the only
obstacle to the issuance of licensure is
the lack of a social security number, a
lack of employment authorization, or
both. The petitioner must demonstrate
that the alien is fully qualified to receive
the State or local license in all other
respects, meaning that all educational,
training, experience, and other
requirements have been met. The alien
must have filed an application for the
license in accordance with applicable
State or local rules and/or procedures,
provided that State or local rules and/
or procedures do not prohibit the alien
from filing the license application
without provision of a social security
number or proof of employment
authorization.
(3) An H–1B petition on behalf of an
alien who has been previously accorded
H–1B classification under paragraph
(h)(4)(v)(C)(2) of this section may not be
approved unless the petitioner
demonstrates that the alien has obtained
the required license, is seeking to
employ the alien in a position requiring
a different license, or the alien will be
employed in that occupation in a
different location which does not
require a state or local license to fully
perform the duties of the occupation.
*
*
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(8) * * *
(ii) * * *
(F) Cap-exemptions under sections
214(g)(5)(A) and (B) of the Act. An alien
is not subject to the numerical
limitations identified in section
214(g)(1)(A) of the Act if the alien
qualifies for an exemption under section
214(g)(5) of the Act. For purposes of
section 214(g)(5)(A) and (B) of the Act:
(1) ‘‘Institution of higher education’’
has the same definition as described at
section 101(a) of the Higher Education
Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1001(a)).
(2) A nonprofit entity shall be
considered to be related to or affiliated
with an institution of higher education
if:
(i) The nonprofit entity is connected
to or associated with an institution of
higher education through shared
ownership or control by the same board
or federation;
(ii) The nonprofit entity is operated by
an institution of higher education;
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(iii) The nonprofit entity is attached to
an institution of higher education as a
member, branch, cooperative, or
subsidiary; or
(iv) The nonprofit entity has, absent
shared ownership or control, entered
into a formal written affiliation
agreement with an institution of higher
education that establishes an active
working relationship between the
nonprofit entity and the institution of
higher education for the purposes of
research and/or education, and a
primary purpose of the nonprofit entity
is to directly contribute to the research
or education mission of the institution
of higher education.
(3) An entity is considered a
‘‘nonprofit entity’’ if it meets the
definition described at paragraph
(h)(19)(iv) of this section. ‘‘Nonprofit
research organization’’ and
‘‘governmental research organization’’
have the same definitions as described
at paragraph (h)(19)(iii)(C) of this
section.
(4) An H–1B beneficiary who is not
directly employed by a qualifying
institution, organization or entity
identified in sections 214(g)(5)(A) or (B)
of the Act shall qualify for an exemption
under such section if the H–1B
beneficiary will spend the majority of
his or her work time performing job
duties at a qualifying institution,
organization or entity and those job
duties directly and predominately
further the essential purpose, mission,
objectives or functions of the qualifying
institution, organization or entity,
namely, either higher education,
nonprofit research or government
research. The burden is on the H–1B
petitioner to establish that there is a
nexus between the duties to be
performed by the H–1B beneficiary and
the essential purpose, mission,
objectives or functions of the qualifying
institution, organization or entity.
(5) If cap-exempt employment ceases,
and if the alien is not the beneficiary of
a new cap-exempt petition, then the
alien will be subject to the cap if not
previously counted within the 6-year
period of authorized admission to
which the cap-exempt employment
applied. If cap-exempt employment
converts to cap-subject employment
subject to the numerical limitations in
section 214(g)(1)(A) of the Act, USCIS
may revoke the petition authorizing
such employment consistent with
paragraph (h)(11)(iii) of this section.
(6) Concurrent H–1B employment in a
cap-subject position of an alien that
qualifies for an exemption under section
214(g)(5)(A) or (B) of the Act shall not
subject the alien to the numerical
limitations in section 214(g)(1)(A) of the
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Act. When petitioning for concurrent
cap-subject H–1B employment, the
petitioner must demonstrate that the H–
1B beneficiary is employed in valid H–
1B status under a cap exemption under
section 214(g)(5)(A) or (B) of the Act, the
beneficiary’s employment with the cap
exempt employer is expected to
continue after the new cap-subject
petition is approved, and the beneficiary
can reasonably and concurrently
perform the work described in each
employer’s respective positions.
(i) Validity of a petition for concurrent
cap-subject H–1B employment approved
under paragraph (h)(8)(ii)(F)(6) of this
section cannot extend beyond the
period of validity specified for the capexempt H–1B employment.
(ii) If H–1B employment subject to a
cap exemption under section
214(g)(5)(A) or (B) of the Act is
terminated by a petitioner, or otherwise
ends before the end of the validity
period listed on the approved petition
filed on the alien’s behalf, the alien who
is concurrently employed in a capsubject position becomes subject to the
numerical limitations in section
214(g)(1)(A) of the Act, unless the alien
was previously counted with respect to
the 6-year period of authorized H–1B
admission to which the petition applies
or another exemption applies. If such an
alien becomes subject to the numerical
limitations in section 214(g)(1)(A) of the
Act, USCIS may revoke the cap-subject
petition described in paragraph
(h)(8)(ii)(F)(6) of this section consistent
with paragraph (h)(11)(iii) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
(13) * * *
(i) * * *
(A) Except as set forth in 8 CFR
214.1(l) with respect to H–1B
beneficiaries and their dependents and
paragraph (h)(5)(viii)(B) of this section
with respect to H–2A beneficiaries, a
beneficiary shall be admitted to the
United States for the validity period of
the petition, plus a period of up to 10
days before the validity period begins
and 10 days after the validity period
ends. The beneficiary may not work
except during the validity period of the
petition.
*
*
*
*
*
(iii) * * *
(C) Calculating the maximum H–1B
Admission Period. Time spent
physically outside the United States
exceeding 24 hours by an alien during
the validity of an H–1B petition that was
approved on the alien’s behalf shall not
be considered for purposes of
calculating the alien’s total period of
authorized admission under section
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214(g)(4) of the Act, regardless of
whether such time is meaningfully
interruptive of the alien’s stay in H–1B
status and the reason for the alien’s
absence. Accordingly, such time may be
recaptured in a subsequent H–1B
petition on behalf of the alien, subject
to the maximum period of authorized
H–1B admission described in section
214(g)(4) of the Act.
(1) It is the H–1B petitioner’s burden
to request and demonstrate the specific
amount of time for recapture on behalf
of the beneficiary. The beneficiary may
provide appropriate evidence, such as
copies of passport stamps, ArrivalDeparture Records (Form I–94), and/or
airline tickets, together with a chart,
indicating the dates spent outside of the
United States, and referencing the
relevant independent documentary
evidence, when seeking to recapture the
alien’s time spent outside the United
States. Based on the evidence provided,
USCIS may grant all, part, or none of the
recapture period requested.
(2) If the beneficiary was previously
counted toward the H–1B numerical cap
under section 214(g)(1) of the Act with
respect to the 6-year maximum period of
H–1B admission from which recapture
is sought, the H–1B petition seeking to
recapture a period of stay as an H–1B
nonimmigrant will not subject the
beneficiary to the H–1B numerical cap,
notwithstanding whether the alien has
been physically outside the United
States for 1 year or more and would be
otherwise eligible for a new period of
admission under such section of the
Act. An H–1B petitioner may either seek
such recapture on behalf of the alien or,
consistent with paragraph (h)(13)(iii) of
this section, seek a new period of
admission on behalf of the alien under
section 214(g)(1) of the Act.
(D) Lengthy adjudication delay
exemption from 214(g)(4) of the Act. (1)
An alien who is in H–1B status or has
previously held H–1B status is eligible
for H–1B status beyond the 6-year
limitation under section 214(g)(4) of the
Act, if, prior to the 6-year limitation
being reached, at least 365 days have
elapsed since:
(i) The filing of a labor certification
with the Department of Labor on the
alien’s behalf, if such certification is
required for the alien to obtain status
under section 203(b) of the Act; or
(ii) The filing of an immigrant visa
petition with USCIS on the alien’s
behalf to accord classification under
section 203(b) of the Act.
(2) H–1B approvals under paragraph
(h)(13)(iii)(D) of this section may be
granted in up to 1-year increments until
either the approved permanent labor
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certification expires or a final decision
has been made to:
(i) Deny the application for permanent
labor certification, or, if approved, to
revoke or invalidate such approval;
(ii) Deny the immigrant visa petition,
or, if approved, revoke such approval;
(iii) Deny or approve the alien’s
application for an immigrant visa or
application to adjust status to lawful
permanent residence; or
(iv) Administratively or otherwise
close the application for permanent
labor certification, immigrant visa
petition, or application to adjust status.
(3) No final decision while appeal
available or pending. A decision to deny
or revoke an application for labor
certification, or to deny or revoke the
approval of an immigrant visa petition,
will not be considered final under
paragraphs (h)(13)(iii)(D)(2)(i) or (ii) of
this section during the period
authorized for filing an appeal of the
decision, or while an appeal is pending.
(4) Substitution of beneficiaries. An
alien who has been replaced by another
alien, on or before July 16, 2007, as the
beneficiary of an approved permanent
labor certification may not rely on that
permanent labor certification to
establish eligibility for H–1B status
based on this lengthy adjudication delay
exemption. Except for a substitution of
a beneficiary that occurred on or before
July 16, 2007, an alien establishing
eligibility for this lengthy adjudication
delay exemption based on a pending or
approved labor certification must be the
named beneficiary listed on the
permanent labor certification.
(5) Advance filing. A petitioner may
file an H–1B petition seeking a lengthy
adjudication delay exemption under
paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(D) of this section
within 6 months of the requested H–1B
start date. The petition may be filed
before 365 days have elapsed since the
labor certification application or
immigrant visa petition was filed with
the Department of Labor or USCIS,
respectively, provided that the
application for labor certification or
immigrant visa petition must have been
filed at least 365 days prior to the last
day of the alien’s authorized 6-year
period of H–1B admission under section
214(g)(4) of the Act. Such authorized 6year period of H–1B status includes any
prior or concurrent request to recapture
unused H–1B, L–1A, or L–1B time spent
outside of the United States. The
petitioner may request any time
remaining to the beneficiary under the
maximum period of admission
described at section 214(g)(4) of the Act
along with the exemption request, but in
no case may the approved H–1B period
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of validity exceed the limits specified by
paragraph (h)(9)(iii) of this section.
(6) Petitioners seeking exemption. The
H–1B petitioner need not be the
employer that filed the application for
labor certification or immigrant visa
petition that is used to qualify for this
exemption. Separate requests for
lengthy adjudication delay exemptions
under paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(D) of this
section may be based on separate,
eligible labor certification applications
or immigrant visa petitions on behalf of
the same alien.
(7) Subsequent exemption approvals
after the 7th year. Each exemption
granted under paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(D)
of this section affords the alien a new
date at which the alien’s maximum
period of admission expires. A petition
for any subsequent extension under
paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(D) of this section
must include evidence that a qualifying
labor certification or immigrant visa
petition was filed at least 365 days prior
to the last day of the alien’s authorized
period of H–1B admission. Such labor
certification or immigrant visa petition
need not be the same as that used to
qualify for the initial exemption under
paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(D) of this section.
(8) Aggregation of time not permitted.
A petitioner may not aggregate the
number of days that have elapsed since
the filing of one labor certification or
immigrant visa petition with the
number of days that have elapsed since
the filing of another such application or
petition to meet the 365-day
requirement.
(9) Exemption eligibility. Only a
principal beneficiary of a non-frivolous
labor certification application or
immigrant visa petition filed on his or
her behalf may be eligible under
paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(D) of this section
for an exemption to the maximum
period of admission under section
214(g)(4) of the Act.
(10) Limits on future exemptions from
the lengthy adjudication delay. An
immigrant visa petition under section
203(b) of the Act cannot support a
request for the lengthy adjudication
delay exemption under paragraph
(h)(13)(iii)(D) of this section if the alien
fails to file an adjustment of status
application or make an application for
an immigrant visa within 1 year of an
immigrant visa becoming immediately
available. If the accrual of such 1-year
period is interrupted by the
unavailability of an immigrant visa, a
new 1-year period shall be afforded
when an immigrant visa again becomes
immediately available. USCIS may
excuse a failure to file in its discretion
if the alien establishes that the failure to
apply was due to circumstances beyond
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his or her control. The limitations
described in this paragraph apply to any
approved immigrant visa petition under
section 203(b) of the Act, including
petitions withdrawn by the petitioner or
those filed by a petitioner whose
business terminates 180 days after
approval.
(E) Per-country limitation exemption
from 214(g)(4) of the Act. An alien who
currently maintains or previously held
H–1B status, who is the beneficiary of
an approved immigrant visa petition for
classification under sections 203(b)(1),
(2), or (3) of the Act, and who is eligible
to be granted that immigrant status but
for application of the per country
limitation, is eligible for H–1B status
beyond the 6-year limitation under
214(g)(4) of the Act. The petitioner must
demonstrate such visa unavailability as
of the date the H–1B petition is filed
with USCIS and the unavailability must
exist at time of the petition’s
adjudication.
(1) Validity periods. USCIS may grant
validity periods of petitions approved
under this paragraph in increments of
up to 3 years for as long as the alien
remains eligible for this exemption.
(2) H–1B approvals under
(h)(13)(iii)(E) of this section may be
granted until a final decision has been
made to:
(i) Revoke the approval of the
immigrant visa petition; or
(ii) Approve or deny the alien’s
application for an immigrant visa or
application to adjust status to lawful
permanent residence.
(3) Current H–1B status not required.
An alien who is not in H–1B status at
the time the H–1B petition on his or her
behalf is filed, including an alien who
is not in the United States, may seek an
exemption of the 6-year limitation
under 214(g)(4) of the Act under this
clause, if otherwise eligible.
(4) Subsequent petitioners may seek
exemptions. The H–1B petitioner need
not be the employer that filed the
immigrant visa petition that is used to
qualify for this exemption. An H–1B
petition may be approved under
paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(E) of this section
with respect to any approved immigrant
visa petition, and a subsequent H–1B
petition may be approved with respect
to a different approved immigrant visa
petition on behalf of the same alien.
(5) Advance filing. A petitioner may
file an H–1B petition seeking a percountry limitation exemption under
paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(E) of this section
within 6 months of the requested H–1B
start date. The petitioner may request
any time remaining to the beneficiary
under the maximum period of
admission described at section 214(g)(4)
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81943
of the Act along with the exemption
request, but in no case may the H–1B
approval period exceed the limits
specified by paragraph (h)(9)(iii) of this
section.
(6) Exemption eligibility. Only the
principal beneficiary of an approved
immigrant visa petition for classification
under sections 203(b)(1), (2), or (3) of
the Act may be eligible under paragraph
(h)(13)(iii)(E) of this section for an
exemption to the maximum period of
admission under section 214(g)(4) of the
Act.
*
*
*
*
*
(19) * * *
(iii) * * *
(B) An affiliated or related nonprofit
entity. A nonprofit entity shall be
considered to be related to or affiliated
with an institution of higher education
if:
(1) The nonprofit entity is connected
to or associated with an institution of
higher education through shared
ownership or control by the same board
or federation;
(2) The nonprofit entity is operated by
an institution of higher education; or
(3) The nonprofit entity is attached to
an institution of higher education as a
member, branch, cooperative, or
subsidiary.
(4) The nonprofit entity has, absent
shared ownership or control, entered
into a formal written affiliation
agreement with an institution of higher
education that establishes an active
working relationship between the
nonprofit entity and the institution of
higher education for the purposes of
research and/or education, and a
primary purpose of the nonprofit entity
is to directly contribute to the research
or education mission of the institution
of higher education.
*
*
*
*
*
(20) Retaliatory action claims. If
credible documentary evidence is
provided in support of a petition
seeking an extension of H–1B stay in or
change of status to another classification
indicating that the beneficiary faced
retaliatory action from his or her
employer based on a report regarding a
violation of the employer’s labor
certification application obligations
under section 212(n)(2)(C)(iv) of the Act,
USCIS may consider a loss or failure to
maintain H–1B status by the beneficiary
related to such violation as due to, and
commensurate with, ‘‘extraordinary
circumstances’’ as defined by 8 CFR
214.1(c)(4) and 8 CFR 248.1(b).
*
*
*
*
*
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PART 245—ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS
TO THAT OF PERSON ADMITTED FOR
PERMANENT RESIDENCE
8. The authority citation for part 245
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101, 1103, 1182, 1255;
Pub. L. 105–100, section 202, 111 Stat. 2160,
2193; Pub. L. 105–277, section 902, 112 Stat.
2681; Pub. L. 110–229, tit. VII, 122 Stat. 754;
8 CFR part 2.
9. Revise § 245.15(n)(2) to read as
follows:
■
§ 245.15 Adjustment of status of certain
Haitian Nationals under the Haitian Refugee
Immigrant Fairness Act of 1998 (HRIFA)
*
*
*
*
*
(n) * * *
(2) Adjudication and issuance.
Employment authorization may not be
issued to an applicant for adjustment of
status under section 902 of HRIFA until
the adjustment application has been
pending for 180 days, unless USCIS
verifies that DHS records contain
evidence that the applicant meets the
criteria set forth in section 902(b) or
902(d) of HRIFA, and determines that
there is no indication that the applicant
is clearly ineligible for adjustment of
status under section 902 of HRIFA, in
which case USCIS may approve the
application for employment
authorization, and issue the resulting
document, immediately upon such
verification. If USCIS fails to adjudicate
the application for employment
authorization upon the expiration of the
180-day waiting period, or within 90
days of the filing of application for
employment authorization, whichever
comes later, the applicant shall be
eligible for an employment
authorization document. Nothing in this
section shall preclude an applicant for
adjustment of status under HRIFA from
being granted an initial employment
authorization or an extension of
employment authorization under any
other provision of law or regulation for
which the applicant may be eligible.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. Add § 245.25 to read as follows:
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§ 245.25 Adjustment of status of aliens
with approved employment-based
immigrant visa petitions; validity of petition
and offer of employment.
(a) Validity of petition for continued
eligibility for adjustment of status. An
alien who has a pending application to
adjust status to that of a lawful
permanent resident based on an
approved employment-based immigrant
visa petition filed under section
204(a)(1)(F) of the Act on the applicant’s
behalf must have a valid offer of
employment based on a valid petition at
the time the application to adjust status
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is filed and at the time the alien’s
application to adjust status is
adjudicated, and the applicant must
intend to accept such offer of
employment. Prior to a final
administrative decision on an
application to adjust status, USCIS may
require that the applicant demonstrate,
or the applicant may affirmatively
demonstrate to USCIS, on a designated
form in accordance with the form
instructions, or as otherwise determined
by USCIS, with any required supporting
documentary evidence, that:
(1) The employment offer by the
petitioning employer is continuing; or
(2) Under section 204(j) of the Act, the
applicant has a new offer of
employment from the petitioning
employer or a different U.S. employer,
or a new offer based on selfemployment, in the same or a similar
occupational classification as the
employment offer under the qualifying
petition, provided that:
(i) The alien’s application to adjust
status based on a qualifying petition has
been pending for 180 days or more; and
(ii) The approval of the qualifying
petition has not been revoked.
In all cases, the applicant and his or her
intended employer must demonstrate
the intention for the applicant to be
employed under the continuing or new
employment offer (including selfemployment) described in paragraphs
(a)(1) and (2) of this section, as
applicable, within a reasonable period
upon the applicant’s grant of lawful
permanent resident status.
(b) Evidence—(1) Continuing
employment offer. Unless otherwise
specified on the form or form
instructions, for purposes of paragraph
(a)(1) of this section, evidence of a
continuing employment offer shall be
provided in the form of a written
attestation, signed by such employer,
attesting that the employer continues to
extend the original offer of employment
and intends that the applicant will
commence the employment described in
the offer of employment within a
reasonable period upon adjustment of
status.
(2) New employment offer. Unless
otherwise specified by a form or form
instructions, for purposes of paragraph
(a)(2) of this section, evidence of a new
offer of employment that is in the same
or a similar occupational classification
as the employment offer under the
approved petition as required by section
204(j) of the Act must include:
(i) A written attestation signed by the
new employer describing the new
employment offer, including its
requirements and a description of the
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duties in the new position, and stating
that the employer intends that the
applicant will commence the
employment described in the new
employment offer within a reasonable
period upon adjustment of status;
(ii) An explanation from the new
employer establishing that the new
employment offer and the employment
offer under the approved petition are in
the same or similar occupational
classification, which may include
material and credible information
provided by another Federal
government agency, such as information
from the Standard Occupational
Classification (SOC) system, or similar
or successor system, administered by
the Department of Labor; and
(iii) A copy of the receipt notice
issued by USCIS, or if unavailable,
secondary evidence showing that the
alien’s application to adjust status based
on such petition has been pending with
USCIS for 180 days or more.
(3) Intention after grant of adjustment
of status application. Evidence that the
applicant intends to commence the
employment described either in the
continuing employment offer or, if
pursuing an offer of new employment in
accordance with section 204(j) of the
Act, the new employment offer, within
a reasonable period upon adjustment of
status, including a written attestation
signed by the applicant.
(c) Definition of same or similar
occupational classification. The term
‘‘same occupational classification’’
means an occupation that resembles in
every relevant respect the occupation
for which the underlying employmentbased immigrant visa petition was
approved. The term ‘‘similar
occupational classification’’ means an
occupation that shares essential
qualities or has a marked resemblance
or likeness with the occupation for
which the underlying employmentbased immigrant visa petition was
approved.
PART 274a—CONTROL OF
EMPLOYMENT OF ALIENS
11. The authority citation for part
274a continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101, 1103, 1324a; 48
U.S.C. 1806; 8 CFR part 2.
12. Amend § 274a.2 by revising
paragraph (b)(1)(vii) to read as follows:
■
§ 274a.2 Verification of identity and
employment authorization.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(vii) If an individual’s employment
authorization expires, the employer,
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recruiter or referrer for a fee must
reverify on the Form I–9 to reflect that
the individual is still authorized to work
in the United States; otherwise, the
individual may no longer be employed,
recruited, or referred. Reverification on
the Form I–9 must occur not later than
the date work authorization expires. If
an Employment Authorization
Document (Form I–766 or successor
form) as described in § 274a.13(d) was
presented for completion of the Form I–
9 in combination with a Notice of
Action (Form I–797C), or successor
form, stating that the original
Employment Authorization Document
has been automatically extended for up
to 180 days, reverification applies upon
the expiration of the automatically
extended validity period under
§ 274a.13(d) and not upon the
expiration date indicated on the face of
the alien’s Employment Authorization
Document. In order to reverify on the
Form I–9, the employee or referred
individual must present a document
that either shows continuing
employment eligibility or is a new grant
of work authorization. The employer or
the recruiter or referrer for a fee must
review this document, and if it appears
to be genuine and relate to the
individual, reverify by noting the
document’s identification number and
expiration date, if any, on the Form I–
9 and signing the attestation by a
handwritten signature or electronic
signature in accordance with paragraph
(i) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 13. Amend § 274a.12 by:
■ a. In paragraph (b)(9), removing ‘‘;’’ at
the end and adding in its place ‘‘.’’, and
adding a new sentence to the end of the
paragraph;
■ b. Adding and reserving new
paragraphs (c)(27) to (c)(34); and
■ c. Adding new paragraphs (c)(35) and
(c)(36).
The additions read as follows:
§ 274a.12 Classes of aliens authorized to
accept employment.
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*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(9) * * * In the case of a
nonimmigrant with H–1B status,
employment authorization will
automatically continue upon the filing
of a qualifying petition under 8 CFR
214.2(h)(2)(i)(H) until such petition is
adjudicated, in accordance with section
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214(n) of the Act and 8 CFR
214.2(h)(2)(i)(H);
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(35) An alien who is the principal
beneficiary of a valid immigrant petition
under section 203(b)(1), 203(b)(2) or
203(b)(3) of the Act described as eligible
for employment authorization in 8 CFR
204.5(p).
(36) A spouse or child of a principal
beneficiary of a valid immigrant petition
under section 203(b)(1), 203(b)(2) or
203(b)(3) of the Act described as eligible
for employment authorization in 8 CFR
204.5(p).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 14. Amend § 274a.13 by:
■ a. Revising the paragraph (a)
introductory text;
■ b. Removing the first sentence of
paragraph (a)(1); and
■ c. Revising paragraph (d).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 274a.13 Application for employment
authorization.
(a) Application. An alien requesting
employment authorization or an
Employment Authorization Document
(Form I–766 or successor form), or both,
may be required to apply on a form
designated by USCIS with any
prescribed fee(s) in accordance with the
form instructions. An alien may file
such request concurrently with a related
benefit request that, if granted, would
form the basis for eligibility for
employment authorization, only to the
extent permitted by the form
instructions.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Renewal application—(1)
Automatic extension of Employment
Authorization Documents. Except as
otherwise provided in this chapter or by
law, notwithstanding 8 CFR
274a.14(a)(1)(i), the validity period of an
expiring Employment Authorization
Document (Form I–766 or successor
form) and, for aliens who are not
employment authorized incident to
status, also the attendant employment
authorization, will be automatically
extended for an additional period not to
exceed 180 days from the date of such
document’s and such employment
authorization’s expiration if a request
for renewal on a form designated by
USCIS is:
(i) Properly filed as provided by form
instructions before the expiration date
shown on the face of the Employment
Authorization Document;
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81945
(ii) Based on the same employment
authorization category as shown on the
face of the expiring Employment
Authorization Document or is for an
individual approved for Temporary
Protected Status whose EAD was issued
pursuant to 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(19); and
(iii) Based on a class of aliens whose
eligibility to apply for employment
authorization continues
notwithstanding expiration of the
Employment Authorization Document
and is based on an employment
authorization category that does not
require adjudication of an underlying
application or petition before
adjudication of the renewal application,
including aliens described in 8 CFR
274a.12(a)(12) granted Temporary
Protected Status and pending applicants
for Temporary Protected Status who are
issued an EAD under 8 CFR
274a.12(c)(19), as may be announced on
the USCIS Web site.
(2) Terms and conditions. Any
extension authorized under this
paragraph shall be subject to any
conditions and limitations noted in the
immediately preceding employment
authorization.
(3) Termination. The period
authorized by paragraph (d)(1) of this
section shall automatically terminate
the earlier of up to 180 days after the
expiration date of the Employment
Authorization Document (Form I–766,
or successor form), or upon issuance of
notification of a decision denying the
renewal request. Nothing in paragraph
(d) of this section shall affect DHS’s
ability to otherwise terminate any
Employment Authorization Document
or extension period for such document
and, as applicable, employment
authorization, in accordance with 8 CFR
274a.14 or otherwise in this chapter, by
written notice to the applicant, or by
notice to a class of aliens published in
the Federal Register.
(4) Unexpired Employment
Authorization Documents. An
Employment Authorization Document
(Form I–766, or successor form) that has
expired on its face is considered
unexpired when combined with a
Notice of Action (Form I–797C), or
successor form which demonstrates that
the requirements of paragraph (d)(1) of
this section have been met.
Jeh Charles Johnson,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015–32666 Filed 12–30–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111–97–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 251 (Thursday, December 31, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 81899-81945]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-32666]
[[Page 81899]]
Vol. 80
Thursday,
No. 251
December 31, 2015
Part III
Department of Homeland Security
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8 CFR Parts 204, 205, 214, et al.
Retention of EB-1, EB-2, and EB-3 Immigrant Workers and Program
Improvements Affecting High-Skilled Nonimmigrant Workers; Proposed
Rules
Federal Register / Vol. 80 , No. 251 / Thursday, December 31, 2015 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 81900]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
8 CFR Parts 204, 205, 214, 245 and 274a
[CIS No. 2571-15; DHS Docket No. USCIS-2015-0008]
RIN 1615-AC05
Retention of EB-1, EB-2, and EB-3 Immigrant Workers and Program
Improvements Affecting High-Skilled Nonimmigrant Workers
AGENCY: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, DHS.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is proposing to
amend its regulations related to certain employment-based immigrant and
nonimmigrant visa programs. The proposed amendments would provide
various benefits to participants in those programs, including: Improved
processes for U.S. employers seeking to sponsor and retain immigrant
and nonimmigrant workers, greater stability and job flexibility for
such workers, and increased transparency and consistency in the
application of agency policy related to affected classifications. Many
of these changes are primarily aimed at improving the ability of U.S.
employers to hire and retain high-skilled workers who are beneficiaries
of approved employment-based immigrant visa petitions and are waiting
to become lawful permanent residents (LPRs), while increasing the
ability of such workers to seek promotions, accept lateral positions
with current employers, change employers, or pursue other employment
options.
First, DHS proposes to amend its regulations consistent with
certain worker portability and other provisions in the American
Competitiveness in the Twenty-first Century Act of 2000 (AC21), as
amended, as well as the American Competitiveness and Workforce
Improvement Act of 1998 (ACWIA). These proposed amendments would
clarify and improve longstanding agency policies and procedures--
previously articulated in agency memoranda and precedent decisions--
implementing sections of AC21 and ACWIA related to certain foreign
workers, including sections specific to workers who have been sponsored
for LPR status by their employers. In so doing, the proposed rule would
enhance consistency among agency adjudicators and provide a primary
repository of governing rules for the regulated community. In addition,
the proposed rule would clarify several interpretive questions raised
by AC21 and ACWIA.
Second, consistent with existing DHS authorities and the goals of
AC21 and ACWIA, DHS proposes to amend its regulations governing certain
employment-based immigrant and nonimmigrant visa programs to provide
additional stability and flexibility to employers and workers in those
programs. The proposed rule would, among other things: improve job
portability for certain beneficiaries of approved employment-based
immigrant visa petitions by limiting the grounds for automatic
revocation of petition approval; further enhance job portability for
such beneficiaries by increasing their ability to retain their priority
dates for use with subsequently approved employment-based immigrant
visa petitions; establish or extend grace periods for certain high-
skilled nonimmigrant workers so that they may more easily maintain
their nonimmigrant status when changing employment opportunities; and
provide additional stability and flexibility to certain high-skilled
workers by allowing those who are working in the United States in
certain nonimmigrant statuses, are the beneficiaries of approved
employment-based immigrant visa petitions, are subject to immigrant
visa backlogs, and demonstrate compelling circumstances to
independently apply for employment authorization for a limited period.
These and other proposed changes would provide much needed flexibility
to the beneficiaries of employment-based immigrant visa petitions, as
well as the U.S. employers who employ and sponsor them for permanent
residence.
Finally, to provide additional certainty and stability to certain
employment-authorized individuals and their U.S. employers, DHS is also
proposing changes to its regulations governing the processing of
applications for employment authorization to minimize the risk of any
gaps in such authorization. These changes would provide for the
automatic extension of the validity of certain Employment Authorization
Documents (EADs or Forms I-766) for an interim period upon the timely
filing of an application to renew such documents. At the same time, in
light of national security and fraud concerns, DHS is proposing to
remove regulations that provide a 90-day processing timeline for EAD
applications and that require the issuance of interim EADs if
processing extends beyond the 90-day mark.
DATES: Written comments must be received on or before February 29,
2016.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by DHS Docket No. USCIS-
2015-0008, by one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: You may submit comments to
USCIS by visiting https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the instructions
for submitting comments.
Email: You may submit comments directly to USCIS by
emailing them to: USCISFRComment@dhs.gov. Please include DHS Docket No.
USCIS-2015-0008 in the subject line of the message.
Mail: You may submit comments directly to USCIS by mailing
them to: Laura Dawkins, Chief, Regulatory Coordination Division, Office
of Policy and Strategy, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services,
Department of Homeland Security, 20 Massachusetts Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20529. This mailing address may be used for paper, disk,
or CD-ROM submissions. To ensure proper handling, please reference DHS
Docket No. USCIS-2015-0008 on your correspondence.
Hand Delivery/Courier: You may submit comments directly to
USCIS by hand delivery or courier to: Laura Dawkins, Chief, Regulatory
Coordination Division, Office of Policy and Strategy, U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services, Department of Homeland Security, 20
Massachusetts Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20529. The contact telephone
number is (202) 272-8377. To ensure proper handling, please reference
DHS Docket No. USCIS-2015-0008 on your delivery.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kathleen Angustia or Nikki Lomax-
Larson, Adjudications Officers (Policy), Office of Policy and Strategy,
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, Department of Homeland
Security, 20 Massachusetts Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20529. The
contact telephone number is (202) 272-8377.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Public Participation
II. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Summary of the Regulatory Action
B. Legal Authority
C. Costs and Benefits
III. Background
A. Permanent Employment-Based Immigration
1. Employment-Based Immigrant Visa Preference Categories
2. The Employment-Based Immigrant Visa Process
B. Nonimmigrant Visa Classifications
1. The H-1B Nonimmigrant Visa Classification
2. Other Relevant Nonimmigrant Visa Classifications
[[Page 81901]]
C. ACWIA and AC21
1. The American Competitiveness and Workforce Improvement Act of
1998
2. The American Competitiveness in the Twenty-first Century Act
of 2000
a. AC21 Provisions Relating to Employment-Based Immigrant Visas
b. AC21 Provisions Seeking to Improve the H-1B Nonimmigrant
Worker Classification
i. Exemptions From the H-1B Numerical Cap
ii. Application of the H-1B Numerical Cap to Persons Previously
Counted
iii. H-1B Portability
D. The Processing of Applications for Employment Authorization
Documents
E. The Increasing Damage Caused by Immigrant Visa Backlogs
IV. Proposed Regulatory Changes
A. Proposed Implementation of AC21 and ACWIA
1. Extending H-1B Nonimmigrant Status for Certain Individuals
Who Are Being Sponsored for Lawful Permanent Residence
a. H-1B Extensions for Individuals Affected by the Per-Country
Limitations
b. H-1B Extensions for Individuals Affected by Lengthy
Adjudication Delays
2. Job Portability Under AC21 for Certain Applicants for
Adjustment of Status
3. Job Portability for H-1B Nonimmigrant Workers
4. Calculating the H-1B Admission Period
5. Exemptions From the H-1B Numerical Cap Under AC21 and ACWIA
a. Employers Not Subject to H-1B Numerical Limitations
b. Counting Previously Exempt H-1B Nonimmigrant Workers
6. Whistleblower Protections in the H-1B Program
B. Additional Changes to Further Improve Stability and Job
Flexibility for Certain Foreign Workers
1. Revocation of Approved Employment-Based Immigrant Visa
Petitions
2. Retention of Priority Dates
3. Nonimmigrant Grace Periods
a. Extending 10-Day Grace Periods to Certain Nonimmigrant
Classifications
b. Providing a 60-Day Grace Period to Certain Nonimmigrant
Classifications
4. Eligibility for Employment Authorization in Compelling
Circumstances
5. H-1B Licensing Requirements
C. Processing of Applications for Employment Authorization
Documents
1. Automatic Extensions of EADs in Certain Circumstances
2. Elimination of 90-Day Processing Timeframe and Interim EADs
3. Conforming and Technical Amendments
V. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements
A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 (Regulatory Planning and
Review)
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
D. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
E. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
F. Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice Reform)
G. Paperwork Reduction Act
I. Public Participation
All interested parties are invited to participate in this
rulemaking by submitting written data, views, or comments on all
aspects of this proposed rule. DHS and USCIS also invite comments that
relate to the economic, environmental, or federalism effects that might
result from this proposed rule. To provide the most assistance to USCIS
in implementing these changes, comments should reference a specific
portion of the proposed rule, explain the reason for any recommended
change, and include data, information, or authority that supports such
recommended change.
Instructions: All submissions must include the agency name and DHS
Docket No. USCIS-2015-0008 for this rulemaking. Regardless of the
method used for submitting comments or material, all submissions will
be posted, without change, to the Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov, and will include any personal information you
provide. Submitted information will be made public. You may thus wish
to consider limiting the amount of personal information that you
provide in any voluntary public comment submission you make to DHS. DHS
may withhold information provided in comments from public viewing if
DHS determines that such information is offensive or may impact the
privacy of an individual. For additional information, please read the
Privacy Act notice that is available via the link in the footer of
https://www.regulations.gov.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or
comments received, go to https://www.regulations.gov and enter this
rulemaking's eDocket number: USCIS-2015-0008.
II. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Summary of the Regulatory Action
DHS is proposing to amend its regulations related to certain
employment-based immigrant and nonimmigrant visa programs. The proposed
rule is intended to benefit U.S. employers and foreign workers
participating in these programs, by streamlining the processes for
employer sponsorship of nonimmigrant workers for lawful permanent
resident (LPR) status, increasing job portability and otherwise
providing stability and flexibility for such workers, and providing
additional transparency and consistency in the application of agency
policies and procedures related to these programs. These changes are
primarily intended to better enable U.S. employers to employ and retain
high-skilled workers who are beneficiaries of employment-based
immigrant visa petitions, while increasing the ability of such workers
to further their careers by accepting promotions, changing positions
with current employers, changing employers, and pursuing other
employment opportunities.
First, this proposed rule would largely conform DHS regulations to
longstanding agency policies and procedures established in response to
certain sections of the American Competitiveness and Workforce
Improvement Act of 1998 (ACWIA), Public Law 105-277, div. C, tit. IV,
112 Stat. 2681, and the American Competitiveness in the Twenty-first
Century Act of 2000 (AC21), Public Law 106-313, 114 Stat. 1251, as
amended by the 21st Century Department of Justice Appropriations
Authorization Act, Public Law 107-273, 116 Stat. 1758 (2002). These
sections were intended, among other things, to provide greater
flexibility and job portability to certain nonimmigrant workers,
particularly those who have been sponsored for LPR status as an
employment-based immigrant, while enhancing opportunities for
innovation and expansion, maintaining U.S. competitiveness, and
protecting U.S. workers. The proposed rule would further clarify and
improve agency policies and procedures in this area--policies and
procedures that have long been set through a series of policy memoranda
and a precedent decision of the USCIS Administrative Appeals Office. By
clarifying such policies in regulation, DHS would provide greater
transparency and certainty to affected employers and workers, while
increasing consistency among agency adjudications. In addition, the
proposed rule would clarify several interpretive questions raised by
AC21 and ACWIA.
Specifically, this proposed rule would clarify and improve policies
and practices related to:
The ability of H-1B nonimmigrant workers who are being
sponsored for lawful permanent residence (and their dependents in H-4
nonimmigrant status) to extend their nonimmigrant status beyond the
otherwise-applicable 6-year limit pursuant to AC21.
The ability of certain workers who have pending
applications for adjustment of status to change employers or jobs
without endangering the approved employment-based immigrant visa
petitions filed on their behalf.
The ability of H-1B nonimmigrant workers to change jobs or
employers,
[[Page 81902]]
including: (1) The ability to begin employment with new H-1B employers
that have filed non-frivolous petitions for new H-1B employment; and
(2) the ability of H-1B employers to file successive H-1B portability
petitions (often referred to as ``bridge petitions'') and how these
petitions affect lawful status and work authorization.
The way in which H-1B nonimmigrant workers are counted
against the annual H-1B numerical cap, including: (1) The method for
calculating when such workers may access so-called ``remainder time''
(i.e., time when they were physically outside the United States), thus
allowing them to use their full period of H-1B status; and (2) the
method for determining which H-1B nonimmigrant workers are ``cap-
exempt'' as a result of previously being counted against the cap.
The method for determining which H-1B nonimmigrant workers
are exempt from the H-1B numerical cap due to their employment with an
institution of higher education, a nonprofit entity related to or
affiliated with such an institution, or a governmental or nonprofit
research organization, including a revision to the definition of the
term ``related or affiliated nonprofit entity'' for such purposes.
The ability of H-1B nonimmigrant workers who are
disclosing information in aid of, or otherwise participating in,
investigations regarding alleged violations of Labor Condition
Application obligations in the H-1B program to provide documentary
evidence to USCIS to demonstrate that their resulting failure to
maintain H-1B status was due to ``extraordinary circumstances.''
Except where changes to current policies and practices are noted in
the preamble of this proposed rule, DHS intends these proposals to
effectively capture the longstanding policies and procedures that have
developed since enactment of AC21 and ACWIA. The Department welcomes
comments that identify any such proposals that commenters believe are
unintentionally inconsistent with current practices, so that any such
inconsistencies can be resolved in the final rule.
Second, this rulemaking builds on the provisions listed above by
proposing additional changes consistent with the immigration laws to
further provide stability and flexibility in certain immigrant and
nonimmigrant visa categories. These provisions would improve the
ability of certain foreign workers, particularly those who are
successfully sponsored for LPR status by their employers, to accept new
employment opportunities, pursue normal career progression, better
establish their lives in the United States, and contribute more fully
to the U.S. economy. The changes would also provide certainty in the
regulated community and improve consistency across agency
adjudications, thereby enhancing the agency's ability to fulfill its
responsibilities related to U.S. employers and certain foreign workers.
Specifically, this proposed rule would provide the following:
Retention of employment-based immigrant visa petitions.
DHS proposes to enhance job portability for certain workers who have
approved immigrant visa petitions in the employment-based first
preference (EB-1), second preference (EB-2), and third preference (EB-
3) categories but who are unable to obtain those visas in the
foreseeable future due to significant immigrant visa backlogs.
Specifically, DHS proposes to amend its automatic revocation
regulations so that immigrant visa petitions that have been approved
for 180 days or more would no longer be subject to automatic revocation
based solely on withdrawal by the petitioner or termination of the
petitioner's business. As long as the petition approval has not been
revoked for fraud, material misrepresentation, the invalidation or
revocation of a labor certification, or USCIS error, the petition will
generally continue to be valid to the beneficiary for various job
portability and status extension purposes under the immigration laws.
Such a beneficiary, however, must obtain a new job offer and may need
another immigrant visa petition approved on his or her behalf to
ultimately obtain status as an LPR.
Retention of priority dates. DHS proposes to further
enhance job portability for workers with approved EB-1, EB-2, and EB-3
immigrant visa petitions by providing greater clarity regarding when
they may retain the priority dates assigned to those petitions and
effectively transfer those dates to new and subsequently approved
employment-based immigrant visa petitions. As with the immediately
preceding provision, priority date retention generally would be
available so long as the initial immigrant visa petition was approved
and this approval has not been revoked for fraud, material
misrepresentation, the invalidation or revocation of a labor
certification, or USCIS error. This provision would improve the ability
of certain workers to accept promotions, change employers, or accept
other employment opportunities without fear of losing their place in
line for immigrant visas based on the skills they contribute to the
U.S. economy.
Nonimmigrant grace periods. To enhance job portability for
certain high-skilled nonimmigrants, DHS proposes to generally establish
a one-time grace period, during an authorized validity period, of up to
60 days whenever employment ends for individuals holding E-1, E-2, E-3,
H-1B, H-1B1, L-1, or TN nonimmigrant status. This proposal would allow
these high-skilled workers to more readily pursue new employment should
they be eligible for other employer-sponsored nonimmigrant
classifications or for the same classification with a new employer.
Conversely, the proposal allows U.S. employers to more easily
facilitate changes in employment for existing or newly recruited
nonimmigrant workers. The individual may not work during the grace
period, unless otherwise authorized by regulation. As needed, DHS in
its discretion may eliminate or shorten the 60-day period on a case-by-
case basis.
Eligibility for employment authorization in compelling
circumstances. DHS also proposes to provide additional stability and
flexibility to certain high-skilled nonimmigrant workers in the United
States who are the beneficiaries of approved employment-based immigrant
visa petitions but who cannot obtain an immigrant visa number due to
statutory limits on immigrant visa issuance and are experiencing
compelling circumstances. Specifically, DHS proposes to allow such
beneficiaries in the United States on E-3, H-1B, H-1B1, L-1, or O-1
nonimmigrant status to apply for separate employment authorization for
a limited period if there are compelling circumstances that, in the
discretionary determination of DHS, justify the consideration of such
employment authorization.
H-1B licensing. DHS proposes to clarify exceptions to the
requirement that make approval of an H-1B petition contingent upon
licensure where such licensure is required to fully perform the duties
of the specialty occupation. The proposed rule would generally allow a
petitioning employer that has filed an H-1B petition for an unlicensed
worker to meet the licensure requirement by demonstrating that the
worker has filed a request for such license but is unable to obtain it,
or is unable to file a request for such a license, because a state or
locality requires a social security number or the issuance of
employment authorization before accepting or approving such requests.
The proposed rule also clarifies that DHS may approve an H-1B
[[Page 81903]]
petition on behalf of an unlicensed worker if he or she will work in a
State that allows such individuals to be employed in the occupation
under the supervision of licensed senior or supervisory personnel.
As noted above, these changes would help improve various
employment-based immigrant and nonimmigrant visa classifications,
including by making it easier to hire and retain nonimmigrant workers
who have approved immigrant visa petitions and giving such workers
additional career options as they wait for immigrant visa numbers to
become available. These improvements are increasingly important
considering the lengthy and growing backlogs of immigrant visas.
Finally, to provide additional stability and certainty to U.S.
employers and individuals eligible for employment authorization in the
United States, DHS is also proposing several changes to its regulations
governing its processing of applications for employment authorization.
First, to minimize the risk of any gaps in employment authorization,
DHS proposes to automatically extend the validity of Employment
Authorization Documents (EADs or Forms I-766) in certain circumstances
based on the timely filing of an application to renew such EADs.
Specifically, DHS would automatically extend the employment
authorization and validity of existing EADs issued to certain
employment-eligible individuals for up to 180 days from the date of the
cards' expiration, so long as: (1) A renewal application is filed based
on the same employment authorization category as the previously issued
EAD (or the renewal application is for an individual approved for
Temporary Protected Status (TPS) whose EAD was issued pursuant to 8 CFR
274a.12(c)(19)); (2) such renewal application is timely filed prior to
the expiration of the EAD and remains pending; and (3) the individual's
eligibility for employment authorization continues beyond the
expiration of his or her EAD, and an independent adjudication of the
individual's underlying eligibility is not a prerequisite to the
extension of employment authorization. At the same time, DHS would
eliminate the current regulatory provisions that require adjudication
of EAD applications within 90 days of filing and that authorize interim
EADs in cases where such adjudications are not conducted within the 90-
day timeframe. These changes would provide enhanced stability and
certainty to employment-authorized individuals and their employers,
while reducing opportunities for fraud and protecting the security-
related processes undertaken for each EAD application.
B. Legal Authority
The authority of the Secretary of Homeland Security (Secretary) for
these regulatory amendments is found in various sections of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), 8 U.S.C. 1101 et seq., ACWIA,
AC21, and the Homeland Security Act of 2002 (HSA), Public Law 107-296,
116 Stat. 2135, 6 U.S.C. 101 et seq. General authority for issuing the
proposed rule is found in section 103(a) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1103(a),
which authorizes the Secretary to administer and enforce the
immigration and nationality laws, as well as section 102 of the HSA, 6
U.S.C. 112, which vests all of the functions of DHS in the Secretary
and authorizes the Secretary to issue regulations. Further authority
for the regulatory amendments in the proposed rule is found in:
Section 205 of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1155, which grants the
Secretary broad discretion in determining whether and how to revoke any
immigrant visa petition approved under section 204 of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1154;
Section 214(a)(1) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(a)(1), which
authorizes the Secretary to prescribe by regulation the terms and
conditions of the admission of nonimmigrants;
Section 274A(h)(3)(B) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1324a(h)(3)(B),
which recognizes the Secretary's authority to extend employment
authorization to noncitizens in the United States;
Section 413(a) of ACWIA, which amended Section
212(n)(2)(C) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(2)(C), to authorize the
Secretary to provide certain whistleblower protections to H-1B
nonimmigrant workers;
Section 414 of ACWIA, which added section 214(c)(9) of the
INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(c)(9), to authorize the Secretary to impose a fee on
certain H-1B petitioners to fund the training and education of U.S.
workers;
Section 103 of AC21, which amended section 214(g) of the
INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(g), to provide: (1) An exemption from the H-1B
numerical cap for certain H-1B nonimmigrant workers employed at
institutions of higher education, nonprofit entities related to or
affiliated with such institutions, and nonprofit or governmental
research organizations; and (2) that a worker who has been counted
against the H-1B numerical cap within the 6 years prior to petition
approval will not again be counted against the cap unless the
individual would be eligible for a new 6-year period of authorized H-1B
admission.
Section 104(c) of AC21, which authorizes the extension of
H-1B status beyond the general 6-year maximum for H-1B nonimmigrant
workers who have approved EB-1, EB-2, or EB-3 immigrant visa petitions
but are subject to backlogs due to application of certain ``per-
country'' limitations on immigrant visas;
Section 105 of AC21, which added what is now section
214(n) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(n),\1\ to allow an H-1B nonimmigrant
worker to begin concurrent or new H-1B employment upon the filing of a
timely, non-frivolous H-1B petition;
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Section 8(a)(3) of the Trafficking Victims Protection
Reauthorization Act of 2003, Public Law 108-193, (Dec. 19, 2003),
redesignated section 214(m) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(m), as section
214(n) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(n).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sections 106(a) and (b) of AC21, which, as amended,
authorize the extension of H-1B status beyond the general 6-year
maximum for H-1B nonimmigrant workers who have been sponsored for
permanent residence by their employers and who are subject to certain
lengthy adjudication or processing delays;
Section 106(c) of AC21, which added section 204(j) of the
INA, 8 U.S.C. 1154(j), to authorize certain beneficiaries of approved
EB-1, EB-2, and EB-3 immigrant visa petitions who have filed
applications for adjustment of status to change jobs or employers
without invalidating their approved petitions; and
Section 101(b)(1)(F) of the HSA, 6 U.S.C. 111(b)(1)(F),
which establishes as a primary mission of DHS the duty to ``ensure that
the overall economic security of the United States is not diminished by
efforts, activities, and programs aimed at securing the homeland.''
C. Costs and Benefits
Taken together, the proposed amendments aim to reduce unnecessary
disruption to businesses and families caused by immigrant visa
backlogs, as described in Section III.E. The benefits from these
proposed amendments add value to the U.S. economy by retaining high-
skilled workers who make important contributions to the U.S. economy,
including technological advances and research and development
endeavors, which are highly correlated with overall economic growth and
job creation.\2\ For more information, the
[[Page 81904]]
public may consult the Regulatory Impact Analysis, reflecting that
although there may be short-term negative or neutral impacts, the
addition of high-skilled workers presents long-term benefits to the
U.S. economy.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Hart, David, et al., ``High-tech Immigrant Entrepreneurship
in the United States,'' Small Business Administration Office of
Advocacy (July 2009), available at: https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/rs349tot_0.pdf. See also Fairlie, Robert., ``Open for
Business: How Immigrants are Driving Small Business Creation in the
United States,'' The Partnership for a New American Economy (August
2012), available at: https://www.renewoureconomy.org/sites/all/themes/pnae/openforbusiness.pdf; ``Immigrant Small Business Owners a
Significant and Growing Part of the Economy,'' Fiscal Policy
Institute (June 2012), available at: https://www.fiscalpolicy.org/immigrant-small-business-owners-FPI-20120614.pdf; Anderson, Stuart,
``American Made 2.0 How Immigrant Entrepreneurs Continue to
Contribute to the U.S. Economy,'' National Venture Capital
Association (June 2013), available at: https://nvca.org/research/stats-studies/.
\3\ ``The Economic Impact of S. 744, the Border Security,
Economic Opportunity, and Immigration Modernization Act,'' June 18,
2013, available at https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/44346-Immigration.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DHS has analyzed potential costs of these proposed regulations and
has determined that the changes proposed by DHS have direct impacts to
individual beneficiaries of employment-based nonimmigrant and immigrant
visa petitions in the form of filing costs, consular processing costs,
and potential for longer processing times for EAD applications during
filing surges, among other costs. Due to the fact that some of these
petitions are filed by a sponsoring employer, this rule also has
indirect effects on employers in the form of employee replacement
costs.
The proposed amendments would clarify and amend policies and
practices in various employment-based immigrant and nonimmigrant visa
programs, with the primary aim of providing additional stability and
flexibility to both foreign workers and U.S. employers participating in
those programs. In part, the proposed rule clarifies and improves upon
longstanding policies adopted in response to the enactment of ACWIA and
AC21 to ensure greater consistency across agency adjudications and
provide greater certainty to regulated employers and workers. These
changes would provide various benefits to U.S. employers and certain
foreign workers, including the enhanced ability of such workers to
accept promotions or change positions with their employers, as well as
change employers or pursue other employment opportunities. These
proposals also benefit the regulated community by providing instructive
rules governing: Extensions of stay for certain H-1B nonimmigrant
workers facing long delays in the immigrant visa process; the ability
of workers who have been sponsored by their employers for LPR status to
change jobs or employers 180 days after they file applications for
adjustment of status; the circumstances under which H-1B nonimmigrant
workers may begin employment with a new employer; how H-1B nonimmigrant
workers count time toward maximum periods of stay; which entities are
properly considered related to or affiliated with institutions of
higher education for purposes of the H-1B program; and when H-1B
nonimmigrant workers can claim whistleblower protections. The increased
clarity provided by these rules will enhance the ability of these
workers to take advantage of the job portability and related provisions
in AC21 and ACWIA.
The proposed rule would also amend the current regulatory scheme
governing certain immigrant and nonimmigrant visa programs to enhance
job portability for certain workers and improve the ability of U.S.
businesses to retain highly valued individuals. These benefits are
achieved by: Proposing a revised method to retain the approval of
employment-based immigrant visa petitions already adjudicated by DHS
and to retain priority dates of these approved petitions for purposes
of immigrant visa or adjustment of status processing; providing a grace
period to certain nonimmigrants to enhance their ability to seek an
authorized change of employment; establishing a means for certain
nonimmigrant workers with approved employment-based immigrant visa
petitions to directly request separate employment authorization for a
limited time when facing compelling circumstances; and identifying
exceptions to licensing requirements applicable to certain H-1B
nonimmigrant workers.
Finally, the proposed rule would also amend current regulations
governing the processing of applications for employment authorization
to provide additional stability to certain employment-authorized
individuals in the United States while addressing fraud and national
security concerns. To prevent gaps in employment for such individuals
and their employers, the proposed rule would provide for the automatic
extension of EADs (and, where necessary, employment authorization) upon
the timely filing of a renewal application. To protect against fraud
and other abuses, the proposed rule would also eliminate current
regulatory provisions that require adjudication of applications for
employment authorization in 90 days and that authorize interim EADs
when that timeframe is not met.
DHS has prepared a full costs and benefits analysis of the proposed
regulation, which can be found on regulations.gov.
III. Background
A. Permanent Employment-Based Immigration
1. Employment-Based Immigrant Visa Preference Categories
Current employment-based immigrant visa (i.e., permanent visa) \4\
levels were set 25 years ago with the enactment of the Immigration Act
of 1990 (``IMMACT 90''), Public Law 101-649, 104 Stat. 4978. As amended
by IMMACT 90, the INA generally makes 140,000 employment-based
immigrant visas available each fiscal year, plus any family-sponsored
immigrant visas authorized under section 203(a) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1153(a) that went unused during the previous fiscal year. See INA
section 201(d), 8 U.S.C. 1151(d). The INA allots the minimum 140,000
immigrant visas per fiscal year through five separate employment-based
(EB) ``preference categories'' as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Immigrant visas are essentially permanent visas that lead to
LPR status. The employment-based immigration process discussed here
focuses on the process through which an individual may obtain LPR
status in the United States through an employment-based immigration
category.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
First Preference (EB-1) Category: 40,040 immigrant visas
for so-called ``priority workers,'' including (1) ``aliens with
extraordinary ability,'' (2) ``outstanding professors and
researchers,'' and (3) ``certain multinational executives and
managers.'' INA section 203(b)(1), 8 U.S.C. 1153(b)(1).
Second Preference (EB-2) Category: 40,040 immigrant visas
for (1) ``members of the professions holding advanced degrees'' and (2)
``aliens of exceptional ability.'' INA section 203(b)(2), 8 U.S.C.
1153(b)(2).
Third Preference (EB-3) Category: 40,040 immigrant visas
for (1) ``skilled workers'' (workers with at least 2 years of training
or experience), (2) ``professionals'' (members of the professions
holding baccalaureate degrees), and (3) ``other workers'' (unskilled
workers of less than 2 years of training or experience). INA section
203(b)(3), 8 U.S.C. 1153(b)(3).
Fourth Preference (EB-4) Category: 9,940 immigrant visas
for certain ``special immigrants'' described in section 101(a)(27) of
the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(27). INA section 203(b)(4), 8 U.S.C.
1153(b)(4).
Fifth Preference (EB-5) Category: 9,940 immigrant visas
for employment-creation immigrant investors seeking to enter the United
States for the purpose of engaging in a ``new commercial
[[Page 81905]]
enterprise.'' INA section 203(b)(5), 8 U.S.C. 1153(b)(5).\5\
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\5\ This proposed rule largely does not affect individuals
applying for immigrant visas in the EB-4 and EB-5 preference
categories. Accordingly, the remainder of this section concerns only
individuals seeking immigrant visas under the EB-1, EB-2, and EB-3
preference categories.
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The INA further provides that immigrant visa numbers authorized in
one preference category may be moved to other preference categories
when demand for visas in the original preference category is
insufficient to use all available visas. See generally INA section
203(b), 8 U.S.C. 1153(b).
Although the INA makes the above minimum number of employment-based
immigrant visas available each fiscal year, the INA requires that no
more than 27 percent of the available number be issued in any of the
first 3 quarters of the fiscal year. See INA section 201(a)(2), 8
U.S.C. 1151(a)(2). Moreover, these immigrant visa numbers are subject
to what are known as ``per-country'' limitations. See INA section
202(a)(2), 8 U.S.C. 1152(a)(2). Generally, in any fiscal year,
individuals born in any given country may be allocated no more than 7
percent of the total number of immigrant visas. As discussed further
below, depending on the level of demand in the governing preference
category, the individual's country of birth, and the applicability of
any statutory exceptions to these limitations, an individual may be
subject to lengthy delays in the employment-based immigration process
due to lack of immigrant visa availability.
2. The Employment-Based Immigrant Visa Process
Individuals seeking to obtain LPR status in the United States
through the EB-1, EB-2, or EB-3 preference categories must often go
through a complex, multi-step process. With respect to most individuals
described in the EB-2 and EB-3 categories, the immigrant visa process
normally begins when a U.S. employer seeks to obtain a labor
certification from the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL).\6\ See INA
section 212(a)(5), 8 U.S.C. 1182(a)(5); 8 CFR 204.5. Generally, the
U.S. employer is required to test the U.S. labor market for the offered
position by advertising the position and attempting to recruit
qualified U.S. workers in the area of intended employment. See 20 CFR
656.17. In the alternative, the employer may provide evidence to USCIS
that the position to be filled by the worker qualifies for what is
known as a ``Schedule A'' designation due to a shortage of U.S. workers
in a specific occupation. See 20 CFR 656.5, 656.15. Schedule A
applications are not required to obtain labor certification through DOL
prior to petitioning USCIS. Id.
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\6\ Labor certifications are unnecessary for petitions seeking
EB-1 classification and for petitions seeking a ``national interest
waiver'' under the EB-2 category. See INA sections 203(b)(2)(B) and
212(a)(5)(D), 8 U.S.C. 1153(b)(2)(B) and 1182(a)(5)(D); 8 CFR
204.5(h)(5), (i)(3)(iii), (j)(5), (k)(4)(ii).
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Upon completion of the recruitment process (if recruitment is
required), the employer files an ``Application for Permanent Employment
Certification'' (ETA Form 9089) with DOL's Office of Foreign Labor
Certification. See 20 CFR 656.17(a). The application constitutes a
request for DOL to certify, among other things, that (1) there ``are
not sufficient workers who are able, willing, qualified . . . , and
available'' to perform the advertised job, and (2) the individual's
admission to the United States ``will not adversely affect the wages
and working conditions'' of U.S. workers. INA section 212(a)(5)(A)(i),
8 U.S.C. 1182(a)(5)(A)(i). For immigrant visa petitions that require an
approved permanent labor certification from DOL, the date the
application for labor certification is accepted by DOL for processing
is the employee's ``priority date.'' See 8 CFR 204.5(d). The priority
date sets an individual's place in the queue for the allocation of
employment-based immigrant visas.
After obtaining an approved permanent labor certification from DOL,
or if no such certification is required for the classification sought,
the U.S. employer files an immigrant visa petition with USCIS on behalf
of the worker (or ``beneficiary'').\7\ See INA section 204(a)(1)(F), 8
U.S.C. 1154(a)(1)(F). Such petition is known as an ``Immigrant Petition
for Alien Worker,'' or USCIS Form I-140. The purpose of the petition is
to demonstrate that the job offered and the beneficiary's
qualifications meet the requirements of the requested immigrant visa
classification under section 203(b) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1153(b), and
pertinent regulatory requirements, see 8 CFR 204.5. If no labor
certification was required, the employee's priority date (i.e., place
in the queue for an employment-based immigrant visa) is the date the
immigrant visa petition is properly filed with USCIS. See 8 CFR
204.5(d); see also 22 CFR 42.53(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Individuals seeking immigrant visas through the EB-1
preference category as workers with extraordinary ability (rather
than as outstanding professors and researchers or multinational
executives and managers), or through the EB-2 preference category
with ``national interest waivers,'' may file immigrant visa
petitions on their own behalf and thus do not require sponsorship by
a U.S. employer. See INA sections 203(b)(1)(B), (b)(1)(C), and
(b)(2)(B)(i), 8 U.S.C. 1153(b)(1)(B), (b)(1)(C), and (b)(2)(B)(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If the immigrant visa petition is approved, the beneficiary must
take additional steps to obtain LPR status, by either requesting an
immigrant visa to enter the United States from abroad or filing an
application for adjustment of status while in the United States. The
ability to take such steps, however, is limited by the number of
immigrant visas authorized for issuance and any superseding demand for
such visas. As mentioned above, the beneficiary's priority date
determines the duration of that beneficiary's wait for an immigrant
visa by positioning the beneficiary behind individuals with earlier
priority dates in the same employment-based preference category and
country of birth. In certain situations, the beneficiary of an approved
EB-1, EB-2, or EB-3 immigrant visa petition may retain the priority
date listed in the approved petition for use in a subsequent immigrant
visa petition. See 8 CFR 204.5(e).
The beneficiary of an approved immigrant visa petition may be able
to obtain LPR status in one of two ways. The beneficiary may apply at a
U.S. consular post abroad for an immigrant visa, which, once received,
would allow the beneficiary to apply for admission to the United States
as an LPR.\8\ Such a beneficiary must generally wait to receive visa
application instructions from the U.S. Department of State (DOS)
National Visa Center. After receiving these instructions, the
beneficiary collects required information and files the immigrant visa
application with DOS. Depending on the demand for immigrant visas in
the beneficiary's preference category and country of birth, the
beneficiary may be required to wait further for visa issuance. Once DOS
allocates visa numbers to be issued to applicants in the relevant
preference category and country of birth with the beneficiary's
priority date, DOS contacts the beneficiary for an immigrant visa
interview. If the beneficiary's application is ultimately approved, he
or she is issued an immigrant visa and, on the date of admission to the
United States, obtains LPR status. DOS publishes a monthly ``Visa
Bulletin'' that indicates when individuals may expect to receive their
visa application instructions, as well as whether they are currently
authorized to be issued immigrant visas by DOS consular offices abroad.
See INA sections 203(e) and (g), 245(a), 8 U.S.C. 1153(e) and (g),
1255(a); see also 8 CFR 245.1(g)(1) and
[[Page 81906]]
245.2(a)(2)(i)(B), 22 CFR 42.51 through 42.55.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ INA sections 203, 221 and 222; 8 U.S.C. 1153, 1201 and 1202.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the alternative, a beneficiary who is in the United States in
lawful nonimmigrant status, with limited exception, may seek LPR status
by filing with USCIS an application for adjustment of status to that of
a lawful permanent resident (``application for adjustment of status'')
in accordance with section 245 of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1255. Before filing
such an application, however, the beneficiary must wait until an
immigrant visa is ``immediately available'' to him or her. See INA
section 245(a), 8 U.S.C. 1255(a); 8 CFR 245.2(a)(2)(i)(B) and (C). An
immigrant visa is considered ``immediately available'' to the
beneficiary if his or her priority date for the preference category is
earlier than the relevant cut-off date indicated in the monthly DOS
Visa Bulletin.\9\ See 8 CFR 245.1(g)(1) and 245.2(a)(2)(i)(B). These
dates allow individuals to determine--based on their priority dates,
countries of birth, and preference categories--whether they can file
applications for adjustment of status and when they may expect to have
their status adjusted to that of an LPR.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ The Visa Bulletin, which is issued monthly, is available at
https://travel.state.gov/visa/bulletin/bulletin_1360.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After the application for adjustment of status is filed, USCIS
commences its adjudication. It is possible, however, that while the
application is pending, higher than expected demand for immigrant visas
will cause DOS to determine that immigrant visas that previously were
available are no longer available to the applicant and cannot be
authorized for issuance to him or her. This is often referred to as
``visa retrogression.'' In such cases, USCIS may not approve the
application until an immigrant visa is again available and authorized
for issuance to the applicant under the Visa Bulletin. USCIS will place
these cases on ``hold'' in the interim. Similarly, retrogression may
cause a DOS consular post abroad to no longer be able to issue an
immigrant visa to an overseas applicant.
B. Nonimmigrant Visa Classifications
Prior to being sponsored for an immigrant visa by a U.S. employer,
many foreign national employees first come to the United States
pursuant to a nonimmigrant visa, such as an H-1B visa for ``specialty
occupation workers'' or an L-1 visa for ``intracompany transferees.''
These and other nonimmigrant visa classifications allow these
individuals to be employed in the United States for temporary periods.
Each classification has its own eligibility requirements, as well as
requirements related to duration of status, ability to renew status,
ability to change jobs or employers, minimum wages, and worker
protections.
1. The H-1B Nonimmigrant Visa Classification
A U.S. employer seeking to temporarily employ a foreign national in
the United States in a ``specialty occupation'' may file a petition to
obtain H-1B nonimmigrant classification on behalf of the
individual.\10\ See INA section 101(a)(15)(H)(i)(B), 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(H)(i)(B). A specialty occupation is defined as an
occupation that requires (1) ``theoretical and practical application of
a body of highly specialized knowledge'' and (2) ``the attainment of a
bachelor's or higher degree in the specific specialty (or its
equivalent) as a minimum qualification for entry into the occupation in
the United States.'' See INA section 214(i)(l), 8 U.S.C. 1184(i)(1).
Subject to certain exemptions, the total number of individuals who may
be issued H-1B visas or otherwise accorded H-1B status in a fiscal year
may not exceed 65,000. See INA section 214(g)(1)(A)(vii), 8 U.S.C.
1184(g)(1)(A)(vii). Employers eligible to file H-1B petitions include
the actual employer of the worker as well as certain agents that
satisfy DHS regulatory requirements. See 8 CFR 214.2(h)(2)(i)(A) and
(F).
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\10\ An H-1B petition can be filed for a foreign national to
perform services in a specialty occupation, services relating to a
Department of Defense (DOD) cooperative research and development
project or coproduction project, or services of distinguished merit
and ability in the field of fashion modeling. 8 CFR
214.2(h)(4)(i)(A).
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Before filing an H-1B petition, the U.S. employer (or
``petitioner'') generally must first file a Labor Condition Application
(LCA) with DOL that covers the proposed dates of H-1B employment.\11\
See INA sections 101(a)(15)(H)(i)(B) and 212(n), 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(H)(i)(B) and 1182(n). Among other things, the LCA requires
the petitioner to attest to the occupational classification in which
the worker will be employed, the wage to be paid to the worker, and the
location(s) where the employment will occur. See INA section 212(n), 8
U.S.C. 1182(n); see also 20 CFR 655.730(c)(4). If DOL certifies the
LCA, the petitioner may then file a Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker
(Form I-129) with USCIS seeking approval of H-1B classification for the
worker (or ``beneficiary'').\12\ See INA section 214(c)(1), 8 U.S.C.
1184(c)(1); 8 CFR 214.2(h)(4)(i)(B)(1). If the H-1B position requires a
state or local license to fully perform the job duties, the H-1B
petition may not be approved unless the beneficiary possesses the
required license. See 8 CFR 214.2(h)(4)(v)(A).
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\11\ Petitions for H-1B visas relating to Department of Defense
cooperative research, development, and coproduction projects do not
require petitioners to file a Labor Condition Application. See 8 CFR
214.2(h)(4)(vi).
\12\ In such case, the worker would be considered the
beneficiary of the H-1B petition.
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If the H-1B petition is approved, H-1B classification may generally
be issued for a period of up to 3 years but may not exceed the validity
period of the LCA.\13\ See 8 CFR 214.2(h)(9)(iii)(A)(1). Subsequently,
the original petitioner or a different petitioner may petition USCIS to
authorize continued or new employment of the beneficiary as an H-1B
nonimmigrant worker. Such a renewal petition may, if the H-1B
nonimmigrant worker is in the United States and (with limited
exception) maintaining H-1B status at the time the petition is filed,
include a request to extend his or her stay in H-1B status. See 8 CFR
214.1(c)(1) and 214.2(h)(2)(i)(D), (h)(14) and (h)(15).
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\13\ H-1B visas relating to Department of Defense cooperative
research, development, and coproduction projects may be issued for
up to 5 years, and they may be renewed for a maximum H-1B period of
10 years. See Public Law 101-649, section 222(a)(2), 104 Stat. 4978
(Nov. 29, 1990); 8 CFR 214.2(h)(9)(iii)(A)(2).
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The maximum period of authorized admission of an individual in the
H-1B classification is generally limited to 6 years. See INA section
214(g)(4), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(4).\14\ Typically, an H-1B petition may not
be approved for a beneficiary who has stayed for the maximum allowable
amount of time in the United States as an H-1B (or L-1 \15\)
nonimmigrant worker, unless the beneficiary has resided and been
physically present outside the United States for the immediate prior
year. See 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(A). The INA defines the terms
``admission'' and ``admitted'' to mean ``the lawful entry of the
[foreign national] into the United States after inspection and
authorization by an immigration officer.'' See INA section 101(a)(13),
8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(13). Therefore, DHS calculates an H-1B nonimmigrant
worker's period of authorized admission by excluding time spent outside
the United States during the validity of an H-1B petition. Such
[[Page 81907]]
``remainder time'' is effectively added back to the period of stay
allowed the individual as an H-1B nonimmigrant worker. Reclaiming this
time is referred to as ``recapture'' of H-1B time (i.e., the time
allowed an individual to be employed in H-1B status within the 6-year
period of authorized admission).\16\
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\14\ The maximum period of authorized admission for Department
of Defense H-1B nonimmigrant workers is 10 years. As explained in
detail below, AC21, as amended, contains two provisions that allow
for USCIS to approve H-1B petitions for beneficiaries beyond the
otherwise applicable statutory 6-year maximum period of authorized
admission.
\15\ The L-1 nonimmigrant classification is described further
below.
\16\ See USCIS Memorandum from Michael Aytes, ``Procedures for
Calculating Maximum Period of Stay Regarding the Limitations on
Admission for H-1B and L-1 Nonimmigrants,'' (Oct. 21, 2005) (``Aytes
Memo Oct. 2005'').
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Spouses and minor, unmarried children of an H-1B nonimmigrant
worker are eligible for H-4 nonimmigrant status subject to the same
period of admission and limits as the H-1B nonimmigrant. See 8 CFR
214.2(h)(9)(iv). H-1B nonimmigrant workers and their H-4 nonimmigrant
dependents are currently afforded a grace period of up to 10 days to
remain in the United States after the end of the petition validity
period. See 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(i)(A). During any such grace period, the
H-1B nonimmigrant worker is considered ``admitted to the United
States,'' but not authorized to work. Id.
Generally, a request for an extension of H-1B stay may be filed
only if the individual's H-1B status has not expired. See 8 CFR
214.1(c)(4) and 214.2(h)(14). Under certain circumstances, failure to
file a request for an extension of H-1B stay before H-1B nonimmigrant
status has expired may be excused. Id. In such cases, the petitioner
must demonstrate that:
The delay was due to extraordinary circumstances beyond
the control of the foreign national or petitioner, and USCIS finds the
delay commensurate with the circumstances;
The foreign national has not otherwise violated his or her
nonimmigrant status;
The foreign national remains a bona fide nonimmigrant; and
The foreign national is not the subject of deportation
proceedings under section 242 of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1252 (prior to April
1, 1997), or removal proceedings under section 240 of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1229a.
Id. If such a request for an extension of H-1B stay is approved,
the extension may be granted from the date the previously authorized
stay expired. Id.
2. Other Relevant Nonimmigrant Visa Classifications
Foreign nationals may also work in the United States in other
temporary nonimmigrant statuses. The employment-based nonimmigrant
statuses that are relevant to this proposed rule are described below.
E-1 classification. The E-1 nonimmigrant classification allows
nationals of certain ``treaty countries'' to be admitted to the United
States solely to engage in international trade on his or her own
behalf. To qualify for E-1 classification, the ``treaty trader'' must:
(1) Be a national of a country with which the United States maintains a
qualifying treaty; and (2) carry on substantial trade, principally
between the United States and the treaty country that qualifies the
treaty trader for E-1 classification. See 8 CFR 214.2(e)(1). Certain
employees of such a person or of a qualifying organization may also be
eligible for this classification. A treaty trader or employee may only
engage in the trade activity or work in the employment for which he or
she was approved at the time the classification was granted. See 8 CFR
214.2(e)(8)(i). An E-1 employee, however, may also work for the treaty
organization's parent company or one of its subsidiaries in certain
circumstances. See 8 CFR 214.2(e)(8)(ii). Treaty traders may be
admitted in E-1 nonimmigrant status for a period of up to 2 years, and
such status may be renewed indefinitely so long as the individual
continues to meet the relevant qualifications. See 8 CFR 214.2(e)(19)
and (20).
E-2 classification. The E-2 nonimmigrant classification concerns
nationals of treaty countries who invest a substantial amount of
capital in a U.S. enterprise. To qualify for E-2 classification, the
``treaty investor'' must: (1) Be a national of a country with which the
United States maintains a qualifying treaty; (2) have invested, or be
actively in the process of investing, a substantial amount of capital
in a bona fide enterprise in the United States; and (3) be seeking to
enter the United States solely to develop and direct the enterprise.
Certain employees of such a person or of a qualifying organization may
also be eligible for this classification. A ``treaty investor'' or
employee in E-2 nonimmigrant status may only engage in the investment
activity or work in the employment for which he or she was approved at
the time the classification was granted. See 8 CFR 214.2(e)(8)(i). An
E-2 nonimmigrant employee, however, may also work for the treaty
organization's parent company or one of its subsidiaries in certain
circumstances. See 8 CFR 214.2(e)(8)(ii). Treaty investors may be
admitted in E-2 nonimmigrant status for a period of 2 years, and such
status may be renewed indefinitely so long as the individual continues
to meet the relevant qualifications. See 8 CFR 214.2(e)(19) and (20).
E-3 classification. The E-3 nonimmigrant visa classification
concerns specialty occupation workers who are nationals of the
Commonwealth of Australia. See INA section 101(a)(15)(E)(iii), 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(E)(iii). The definition of the term ``specialty
occupation'' is the same for E-3 classification as that for the H-1B
classification. See INA section 214(i)(1), 8 U.S.C. 1184(i)(1). To
qualify for E-3 classification, the applicant must present a Labor
Condition Application in accordance with section 212(t)(1) of the INA,
8 U.S.C. 1182(t)(1). The total number of Australian nationals who may
be accorded E-3 nonimmigrant status in a fiscal year is capped at
10,500. See INA section 214(g)(11)(B), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(11)(B). E-3
nonimmigrant workers may be admitted initially for a period not to
exceed the validity period of the accompanying LCA (granted for 2
years) and may be granted indefinite extensions of stay in increments
of up to 2 years. See 20 CFR 655.750(a)(2).\17\
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\17\ See Michael Aytes Memorandum: Processing Guidelines for E-3
Australian Specialty Occupation Workers and Employment Authorization
for E-3 Dependent Spouses (Dec. 15, 2005), available at https://www.uscis.gov/sites/default/files/USCIS/Laws/Memoranda/Static_Files_Memoranda/Archives%201998-2008/2005/e3polgdnc_121505.pdf.
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H-1B1 classification. Similar to the H-1B and E-3 classifications,
the H-1B1 classification is for specialty occupation workers, but is
limited to temporary workers from Chile and Singapore. See INA sections
101(a)(15)(H)(i)(b)(1) and 214(i), 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(15)(H)(i)(b)(1) and
1184(i). Consistent with Free Trade Agreements with Chile and
Singapore, up to 1,400 nationals from Chile and 5,400 nationals from
Singapore may enter the United States annually in the H-1B1
classification to perform specialty occupation work. See INA section
214(g)(8)(B), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(8)(B). Individuals admitted in such
status are counted against the overall H-1B annual numerical limitation
of 65,000. Id. The H-1B1 nonimmigrant classification requires the
filing of an LCA certified by DOL. See INA sections
101(a)(15)(H)(i)(B)(1) and 212(t), 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(15)(H)(i)(B)(1) and
1182(t). H-1B1 nonimmigrants may be admitted for a period of up to 1
year, and may extend their period of stay in the United States in up to
1-year increments. See INA section 214(g)(8)(C), 8 U.S.C.
1184(g)(8)(C).
L-1 classification. The L-1 nonimmigrant visa classification
[[Page 81908]]
concerns ``intracompany transferees'' of multinational entities who are
executives, managers, or employees with specialized knowledge and who
are transferring from an office abroad to a qualifying office in the
United States. See INA section 101(a)(15)(L), 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(15)(L).
Executive and managerial employees qualify for L-1A status and are
admitted for a maximum initial stay of 3 years, with extensions of stay
granted in increments of up to 2 years, until the employee has reached
the maximum limit of 7 years. See INA section 214(c)(1)(D)(i), 8 U.S.C.
1184(c)(1)(D)(i); see also 8 CFR 214.2(l)(12)(i) and (15)(ii).
Specialized knowledge employees qualify for L-1B status and are
admitted for a maximum initial stay of 3 years, with extensions of stay
granted in increments of up to 2 years, until the employee has reached
the maximum limit of 5 years. See INA section 214(c)(1)(D)(ii); see
also 8 CFR 214.2(l)(12)(i) and (15)(ii).
O-1 classification. The O-1 nonimmigrant visa classification
includes individuals who either: (1) Have ``extraordinary ability'' in
the sciences, arts, education, business or athletics, as demonstrated
by sustained national or international acclaim; or (2) have a
demonstrated record of extraordinary achievements in the motion picture
or television industry, as recognized in the field through extensive
documentation. See INA section 101(a)(15)(O), 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(15)(O).
O-1 nonimmigrants must be coming temporarily to the United States to
continue work in the relevant area of extraordinary ability or
achievement. Id. O-1 nonimmigrants may be admitted to the United States
for up to 3 years, plus a period of up to 10 days before the validity
period begins and 10 days after the validity period ends. See 8 CFR
214.2(o)(6)(iii)(A) and (o)(10). Extensions of status may be authorized
in increments of up to 1 year, and such status may be renewed
indefinitely so long as the individual continues to meet the relevant
qualifications. See 8 CFR 214.2(o)(12)(ii).
TN Classification. The TN nonimmigrant classification, established
in the North American Free Trade Agreement,\18\ permits qualified
Canadian and Mexican citizens to seek temporary entry into the United
States to engage in business activities at a professional level. See
INA section 214(e), 8 U.S.C. 1184(e); see also 8 CFR 214.6(b). The TN
nonimmigrant worker may not intend to establish a business in the
United States or be self-employed in this country, and he or she must
be arriving pursuant to a prearranged agreement with a U.S. employer.
Id. The TN nonimmigrant worker must also demonstrate that he or she
possesses at least the minimum qualification prescribed for his or her
respective profession and that he or she intends to remain in the
United States temporarily. See 8 CFR 214.6(a), (d)(3)(ii). An eligible
alien seeking TN classification may be granted TN status for an initial
period not to exceed 3 years. See 8 CFR 214.6(e). Extensions of stay
may be granted for periods not to exceed 3 years at a time. See 8 CFR
214.6(h)(1)(iii). TN is a temporary nonimmigrant classification,
although there is no specific limit on the total period of time an
alien may remain in the United States in TN status as long as he or she
continues to be engaged in TN business activities for a U.S. employer
or entity at a professional level, and otherwise continues to properly
maintain TN status. See 8 CFR 214.6(h)(1)(iv).
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\18\ See 58 FR 69205 (Dec. 30, 1993); 58 FR 68526 (Dec. 28,
1993).
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C. ACWIA and AC21
1. The American Competitiveness and Workforce Improvement Act of 1998
ACWIA was enacted on October 21, 1998. Among other things, ACWIA
was intended to address shortages of workers in the U.S. high-
technology sector. To increase the number of such workers in the United
States, section 411 of ACWIA increased the annual numerical cap on H-1B
visas from 65,000 to 115,000 in each of fiscal years (FY) 1999 and
2000, and to 107,500 in FY 2001.\19\ See ACWIA section 411 (amending
INA section 214(g)(1), codified at 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(1)). The
congressional statements accompanying ACWIA recognized that the
continued competitiveness of the U.S. high-technology sector is
``crucial for [U.S.] economic well-being as a nation, and for increased
economic opportunity for American workers.'' See 144 Cong. Rec.
S12,741, S12,749 (daily ed. Oct. 21, 1998) (statement of Sen. Spencer
Abraham); see also id. (``This issue is not only about shortages, it is
about opportunities for innovation and expansion, since people with
valuable skills, whatever their national origin, will always benefit
our nation by creating more jobs for everyone.'').\20\
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\19\ Section 102(a) of AC21 further amended INA section
214(g)(1) by increasing the annual numerical cap on H-1B visas to
195,000 for each of the fiscal years 2001, 2002, 2003.
\20\ Senator Abraham drafted and sponsored the original Senate
bill for ACWIA, then titled the American Competitiveness Act, S.
1723, 105th Cong. (1998), which passed the full Senate by a 78-20
margin on May 18, 1998. 144 Cong. Rec. as S12,748-49 (daily ed. Oct.
21, 1998). He negotiated with the House of Representatives on a
compromise ACWIA bill and was deputized to negotiate in talks
between Congress and the White House to finalize the bill.
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ACWIA also included several measures intended to improve
protections for U.S. and H-1B nonimmigrant workers. Section 413 of the
act provided enhanced penalties for employer violations of LCA
obligations, as well as willful misrepresentations by employers in
LCAs. See ACWIA section 413 (creating INA section 212(n)(2)(C),
codified at 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(2)(C)). Such enhancements included
increased monetary penalties, as well as temporary prohibitions on the
approval of certain types of petitions, such as H-1B petitions and
employment-based immigrant visa petitions.\21\ Id. This prohibition
against petition approval is often referred to as ``debarment.'' The
severity of the penalty awarded to an employer depends upon the
seriousness of the employer's violation, as determined by DOL. See INA
section 212(n)(2)(C)(i)-(iii), 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(2)(C)(i)-(iii). DOL is
required to notify USCIS of the entities determined to be subject to
debarment. See 20 CFR 655.855 and 656.31(f)(2).
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\21\ Legal Opinion: INS Procedure for Processing Debarment of
Employer Pursuant to Sec. 212(n)(2)(C)(ii) of the INA, Genco Op. No.
94-21, 1994 WL 1753125 (Apr. 12, 1994) (concluding that the
determination of whether a section 212(n)(2)(C)(ii) violation has
occurred rests solely with DOL, and that DHS must accept that
determination).
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Section 413 of ACWIA also made it a violation for an H-1B employer
to retaliate against an employee for providing information to the
employer or other persons, or for cooperating in an investigation,
related to an employer's violation of its LCA attestations and
obligations. Employers are prohibited from taking retaliatory action in
such situations, including any action ``to intimidate, threaten,
restrain, coerce, blacklist, discharge, or in any other manner
discriminate'' against an employee for ``disclos[ing] information to
the employer, or to any other person, that the employee reasonably
believes evidences [an LCA] violation, any rule or regulation
pertaining to the statutory LCA attestation requirements, or for
cooperating, or attempting to cooperate, in an investigation or
proceeding pertaining to the employer's LCA compliance.'' See INA
section 212(n)(2)(C)(iv), 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(2)(C)(iv). Section 413
further required the development of a process to enable H-1B
nonimmigrant workers who file complaints with DOL regarding such
illegal retaliation, and are otherwise eligible to remain and work in
[[Page 81909]]
the United States, to seek other appropriate employment in the United
States. See INA section 212(n)(2)(C)(v), 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(2)(C)(v).
Section 412 of ACWIA created additional requirements for U.S.
employers deemed to be ``H-1B dependent,'' see INA section
212(n)(3)(A), 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(3)(A), and those that have willfully
failed to comply with their LCA obligations or who have misrepresented
material facts in an LCA, see INA section 212(n)(1)(E)-(G), 8 U.S.C.
1182(n)(1)(E)-(G). These U.S. employers are required to attest that
they will not displace U.S. workers to fill a prospective position with
an H-1B nonimmigrant worker, and that they took good faith steps to
recruit qualified U.S. workers for the prospective H-1B position. Id.
Employers are not subject to these additional non-displacement
requirements, however, with regard to petitions for H-1B nonimmigrant
workers who receive at least $60,000 in annual wages or have attained a
master's or higher degree in a specialty related to the relevant
employment. See ACWIA section 412 (creating INA section
212(n)(1)(E)(ii) and (n)(3)(B), codified at 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(1)(E)(ii)
and (n)(3)(B)).
Section 414 of ACWIA imposed a temporary fee on certain H-1B
employers to fund, among other things, job training of U.S. workers and
scholarships in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics
(STEM) fields. See ACWIA section 414 (creating INA section 214(c)(9),
codified at 8 U.S.C. 1184(c)(9)). The ACWIA fee was initially scheduled
to sunset on September 30, 2001. Public Law 106-311, however, increased
the fee from $500 to $1,000 and extended the sunset provision to
September 30, 2003. Public Law 106-311 also amended section
214(c)(9)(A) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(c)(9), by specifying additional
employers that are exempt from the ACWIA fee (i.e., employers in
addition to the exempt employers described in section 212(p)(1) of the
INA, 8 U.S.C. 1182(p)(1)). Exempt employers currently include
institutions of higher education, nonprofit entities related or
affiliated with such institutions, and nonprofit or governmental
research organizations, among others. See INA section 214(c)(9)(A), 8
U.S.C. 1184(c)(9)(A). Subsequently, the H-1B Visa Reform Act of 2004,
enacted as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2005, Public
Law 108-447, div. J, tit. IV, made the ACWIA fee permanent and raised
it from $1,000 to $1,500 per qualifying petition filed with USCIS after
December 8, 2004. This fee was also reduced to $750 for employers with
no more than 25 full-time equivalent employees employed in the United
States (including employees employed by any affiliate or subsidiary of
such employer).
2. The American Competitiveness in the Twenty-first Century Act of 2000
AC21 was enacted on October 17, 2000. It made numerous changes to
the INA designed, among other things, to improve the U.S. economy in
both the short and long term. First, AC21 sought to positively impact
economic growth and job creation by immediately increasing the United
States' access to high-skilled workers. See S. Rep. No. 260, at 10
(``[A]rtificially limiting companies' ability to hire skilled foreign
professionals will stymie our country's economic growth and thereby
partially atrophy its creation of new jobs. . . . American workers'
interests are advanced, rather than impeded, by raising the H-1B
cap''). Second, AC21 sought to improve the education and training of
U.S. workers in high-skilled sectors, and thereby produce a U.S.
workforce better equipped to fill the need in such sectors, through the
funding of scholarships and high-skilled training programs. See AC21
section 111. As noted by the accompanying Senate Report, foreign-born
high-skilled individuals have played an important role in U.S. economic
prosperity and the competitiveness of U.S. companies in numerous
fields. Id. AC21 sought to provide such benefits by making improvements
to both the employment-based immigrant visa process and the H-1B
specialty occupation worker program.
a. AC21 Provisions Relating to Employment-Based Immigrant Visas
To improve the immigrant visa process for certain workers, AC21
contained several provisions designed to improve access to employment-
based immigrant visas. Section 104 of AC21, for example, sought to
ameliorate the impact on intending immigrants of the per-country
limitations, which, as noted earlier, generally limit the number of
immigrant visas that may be issued to the nationals of any one country
to no more than 7 percent of the total number of such visas. See INA
section 202(a)(2), 8 U.S.C. 1152(a)(2). Sections 104(a) and (b) of AC21
amended the INA to excuse application of the per country limitations
when such application would result in immigrant visas going unused in
any quarter of the fiscal year. Specifically, these sections amended
the INA so that when the number of employment-based immigrant visas
authorized for issuance in a calendar quarter exceeds the number of
qualified immigrants who may otherwise be issued such visas, the visas
may be issued in the same quarter without regard to per-country
limitations. See AC21 sections 104(a) and (b) (amending INA section
202(a)(5), codified at 8 U.S.C. 1152(a)(5)); see also S. Rep. No. 260,
106th Cong., 2nd Sess. at 2. This provision recognized ``the
discriminatory effects of [the per-country limitations] on nationals
from certain Asian Pacific nations,'' specifically Chinese and Indian
nationals, which ``prevent[ed] an employer from hiring or sponsoring
someone permanently simply because he or she is Chinese or Indian, even
though the individual meets all other legal criteria.'' S. Rep. No.
260, at 22.
Section 104(c) of AC21 was designed to further ameliorate the
impact of the per-country limitations on H-1B nonimmigrant workers who
are the beneficiaries of approved EB-1, EB-2, or EB-3 immigrant visa
petitions. Specifically, section 104(c) authorized the extension of H-
1B status beyond the statutory 6-year maximum for such individuals if
immigrant visa numbers are not immediately available to them because
the relevant preference category is already over-subscribed for that
foreign national's country of birth. See AC21 section 104(c). In
support of this provision, Congress noted that ``these immigrants would
otherwise be forced to return home at the conclusion of their allotted
time in H-1B status, disrupting projects and American workers.'' See S.
Rep. No. 260, at 22. Section 104(c) ``enables these foreign nationals
to remain in H-1B status until they are able to receive an immigrant
visa and adjust their status within the United States, thus limiting
the disruption to American businesses.'' Id.
AC21 also sought to more generally ameliorate the impact of the
lack of employment-based immigrant visas on the high-skilled
beneficiaries of approved immigrant visa petitions. Sections 106(a) and
(b) of AC21, as amended by section 11030A of the 21st Century DOJ
Appropriations Act, Public Law 107-273(2002), authorized the extension
of H-1B status beyond the statutory 6-year maximum for H-1B
nonimmigrant workers who are being sponsored for LPR status by U.S.
employers and are subject to lengthy adjudication or processing delays.
Specifically, these provisions exempted H-1B nonimmigrant workers from
the 6-year limitation on H-1B status contained in INA section
214(g)(4), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(4), if 365 days or more have elapsed since
the filing of a labor certification application (if such
[[Page 81910]]
certification is required under INA section 212(a)(5), 8 U.S.C.
1182(a)(5)), or an immigrant visa petition under INA section 203(b), 8
U.S.C. 1153(b). These provisions were intended to allow such high-
skilled individuals to remain in the United States as H-1B nonimmigrant
workers, rather than being forced to leave the country and disrupt
their employers due to a long pending labor certification application
or immigrant visa petition. See S. Rep. No. 260, at 23.
Finally, to provide stability and flexibility to beneficiaries of
approved immigrant visa petitions subject to immigrant visa backlogs
and processing delays, AC21 also provided certain workers the improved
ability to change jobs or employers without losing their position in
the immigrant visa queue. Specifically, section 106(c) of AC21 provides
that certain immigrant visa petitions filed under the EB-1, EB-2, and
EB-3 preference categories will remain valid with respect to a new
qualifying job offer if the beneficiary changes jobs or employers,
provided an application for adjustment of status has been filed and
such application has been pending for 180 days or more. See AC21
section 106(c) (creating INA section 204(j), codified at 8 U.S.C.
1154(j)). In such cases, the new job offer must be in the same or a
similar occupational classification as the job for which the original
immigrant visa petition was filed. Id.
b. AC21 Provisions Seeking To Improve the H-1B Nonimmigrant Worker
Classification
As noted above, one of the principle purposes for the enactment of
AC21 was to improve the country's access to high-skilled workers. As
such, AC21 contains several additional provisions intended to expand
and strengthen the H-1B program.
i. Exemptions From the H-1B Numerical Cap
Section 103 of AC21 amended the INA to create an exemption from the
H-1B numerical cap for those H-1B nonimmigrant workers who are employed
or offered employment at an institution of higher education, a
nonprofit entity related or affiliated to such an institution, or a
nonprofit research or governmental research organization. See INA
section 214(g)(5)(A) and (B); 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(5)(A) and (B).\22\
Congress deemed such employment advantageous to the United States.
Among other things, Congress recognized a short- and long-term need to
increase the number of workers in specialty occupation fields, and it
determined that increasing the number of high-skilled foreign nationals
working in specialty occupations at U.S. institutions of higher
education would increase the number of Americans who will be ready to
fill specialty occupation positions upon completion of their education.
See S. Rep. No. 260, at 21-22. Congress reasoned that ``by virtue of
what they are doing, people working in universities are necessarily
immediately contributing to educating Americans.'' Id. at 21. Congress
also recognized that U.S. institutions of higher education are on a
different hiring cycle from other U.S. employers, and in years of high
H-1B demand, these institutions would be unable to hire cap-subject H-
1B nonimmigrant workers. Id. at 22.
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\22\ See USCIS Memorandum from Michael Aytes, ``Guidance
Regarding Eligibility for Exemption from the H-1B Cap Based on Sec.
103 of the American Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century Act
of 2000 (AC21) (Public Law 106-313) 2-4 (June 6, 2006)'' (``Aytes
Memo June 2006'').
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For purposes of this H-1B numerical cap exemption, the term
``institution of higher education'' is given the same meaning as that
set forth in section 101(a) of the Higher Education Act of 1965, Public
Law 89-329, 79 Stat. 1224 (1965), as amended (codified at 20 U.S.C.
1001(a) (``Higher Education Act'').\23\ See INA section 214(g)(5)(A); 8
U.S.C. 1184(g)(5)(A). The terms ``related or affiliated nonprofit
entity,'' and ``nonprofit research organization or governmental
research organization'' are defined at 8 CFR 214.2(h)(19)(iii)(B) and 8
CFR 214.2(h)(19)(iii)(C), respectively, and adopted as a matter of
interpretation in the cap exemption context.\24\
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\23\ Section 101(a) of the Higher Education Act of 1965, as
amended, defines ``institution of higher education'' as an
educational institution in any State that--
(1) admits as regular students only persons having a certificate
of graduation from a school providing secondary education, or the
recognized equivalent of such a certificate, or persons who meet the
requirements of [8 U.S.C. 1091(d)];
(2) is legally authorized within such State to provide a program
of education beyond secondary education;
(3) provides an educational program for which the institution
awards a bachelor's degree or provides not less than a 2-year
program that is acceptable for full credit toward such a degree, or
awards a degree that is acceptable for admission to a graduate or
professional degree program, subject to review and approval by the
Secretary [of Education];
(4) is a public or other nonprofit institution; and
(5) is accredited by a nationally recognized accrediting agency
or association, or if not so accredited, is an institution that has
been granted preaccreditation status by such an agency or
association that has been recognized by the Secretary [of Education]
for the granting of preaccreditation status, and the Secretary [of
Education] has determined that there is satisfactory assurance that
the institution will meet the accreditation standards of such an
agency or association within a reasonable time.
\24\ See Aytes Memo June 2006, at 4.
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ii. Application of the H-1B Numerical Cap to Persons Previously Counted
Section 103 of AC21 also amended the INA to ensure that H-1B
nonimmigrant workers can change jobs or employers without requiring
that they again count against the H-1B cap. Specifically, section 103
provides that an individual who has been counted against the H-1B
numerical cap within the 6 years prior to petition approval will not be
counted against the cap unless that individual would be eligible for a
new 6-year period of authorized H-1B admission. See INA section
214(g)(6); 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(6). As noted above, an individual
previously in the United States on H-1B nonimmigrant status is eligible
for a full 6 years of authorized admission as an H-1B nonimmigrant
after residing and being physically present outside the United States
for the immediate prior year. See 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(A).
Section 103 of AC21 also amended the INA to address cases in which
an H-1B nonimmigrant worker seeks to change employment from a cap-
exempt entity to a ``cap-subject'' entity. Specifically, section 103
provides that once employment ceases with respect to a cap-exempt
entity, the H-1B nonimmigrant worker will be subject to the cap if not
previously counted and no other exemptions from the cap apply. See INA
section 214(g)(6), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(6).
iii. H-1B Portability
Section 105 of AC21 further improved the H-1B program by increasing
job portability for H-1B nonimmigrant workers. Specifically, section
105 allows an H-1B nonimmigrant worker to begin concurrent or new H-1B
employment upon the filing of a timely, non-frivolous H-1B petition.
See INA section 214(n), 8 U.S.C. 1184(n). The H-1B nonimmigrant worker
must have been lawfully admitted to the United States, must not have
worked without authorization subsequent to such lawful admission, and
must be in a period of stay authorized by the Secretary.\25\ Employment
authorization based on the pending petition continues until
adjudication. See INA section 214(n)(1), 8 U.S.C. 1184(n)(1). If the H-
1B petition is denied, the employment
[[Page 81911]]
authorization provided under this provision ceases. Id. Congress
created such H-1B portability to ``allow an H-1B visa holder to change
employers at the time a new employer files the initial paperwork,
rather than having to wait for the new H-1B petition to be approved.
This responds to concerns raised about the potential for exploitation
of H-1B visa holders as a result of a specific U.S. employer's control
over the employee's legal status.'' See S. Rep. No. 260, at 22-23.
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\25\ See USCIS Memorandum from Donald Neufeld, ``Consolidation
of Guidance Concerning Unlawful Presence for Purposes of Sections
212(a)(9)(B)(i) and 212(a)(9)(C)(i)(I) of the Act'' (May 6, 2009)
(``Neufeld Memo May 2009'') (describing various ``periods of
authorized stay'').
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D. The Processing of Applications for Employment Authorization
Documents
The Secretary of Homeland Security has broad authority to extend
employment authorization to noncitizens in the United States. See,
e.g., section 274A(h)(3)(B) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1324a(h)(3)(B). DHS
regulations at 8 CFR 274a.12(a), (b), and (c) describe three broad
categories of foreign nationals authorized to work in the United
States. Individuals in the first class, described at 8 CFR 274a.12(a),
are authorized to work in the United States incident to their
immigration status, without restriction on the location of their
employment or the type of employment they may accept. Such individuals
who travel to the United States by air and sea may electronically
access an Arrival-Departure Record (Form I-94) indicating their
nonimmigrant status and attendant employment authorization; such
individuals who are admitted at land border port of entry may receive a
paper Form I-94. Those individuals seeking to obtain an EAD (Form I-
766) containing both evidence of employment authorization and a
photograph typically must file a separate application with USCIS. See 8
CFR 274a.13(a).
Individuals in the second class, described at 8 CFR 274a.12(b), are
also employment authorized incident to their nonimmigrant status, but
such employment authorization is valid only with a specific employer.
Individuals in this second group are not issued an EAD; instead these
individuals obtain an Arrival-Departure Record (Form I-94) indicating
their nonimmigrant status and attendant employment authorization and do
not file separate requests for evidence of employment authorization.
Individuals in the third class, described at 8 CFR 274a.12(c), are
required to apply for employment authorization and may begin working
only if USCIS approves their application. Such employment authorization
is subject to the restrictions described in the regulations for his or
her respective employment eligibility category. With respect to
individuals described in the first and third categories, USCIS has the
discretion to establish a specific validity period for the EAD.
Individuals requesting an EAD must file an Application for
Employment Authorization (Form I-765) with USCIS in accordance with the
form instructions. See 8 CFR 274a.13. Under current regulations, if
USCIS does not adjudicate an Application for Employment Authorization
within 90 days from the date USCIS receives the application, an
applicant will be granted an interim document evidencing employment
authorization with a validity period not to exceed 240 days. See 8 CFR
274a.13(d). Generally, the approval of an Application for Employment
Authorization by an individual described in 8 CFR 274a.12(c) is within
the discretion of USCIS.\26\ And there is no right to appeal the denial
of an Application for Employment Authorization. See 8 CFR 274a.13(c).
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\26\ Approval of an application for employment authorization
based on a pending asylum application is not discretionary. See 8
CFR 274a.13(a)(1).
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E. The Increasing Damage Caused by Immigrant Visa Backlogs
This proposed rule is intended, in part, to address some of the
challenges that flow from the statutory limits on immigrant visas,
consistent with existing DHS authorities. As noted above, the number of
employment-based immigrant visas allocated per year has remained
unchanged since the passage of the Immigration Act of 1990. In the
intervening 25 years, the country's economy has expanded dramatically.
The U.S. economy, as measured by U.S. gross domestic product (GDP), has
increased by 78 percent from $8.955 trillion in 1990 to $15.961
trillion in 2014.\27\ The per capita share of GDP has also increased by
almost 40 percent from $35,794 in 1990 to $50,010 in 2014.\28\ And the
number of entities doing business in the United States increased at
least 24 percent during the same period.\29\ Over the same period,
employer demand for immigrant visas has increasingly outpaced supply,
resulting in growing waits for sponsored employees to obtain their LPR
status. Such delays have resulted in substantial inequalities and other
hardships flowing from limits on a sponsored worker's ability to seek
employment to enhance his or her skills and on the ability of employers
to promote them or otherwise change their positions.
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\27\ U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis,
Table 1.1.6 Real Gross Domestic Product, Chained (2009) Dollars,
https://www.bea.gov/iTable/index_nipa.cfm.
\28\ U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis,
Table 7.1 Selected Per Capita Product and Income Series and Chained
(2009) Dollars, https://www.bea.gov/iTable/index_nipa.cfm.
\29\ Compare U.S. Census data collected in 1992 identifying over
4.61 million firms doing business in the United States, available at
https://www.census.gov/prod/www/economic_census.html, with U.S.
Census data collected in 2012 identifying over 5.72 million firms
doing business, available at https://www.census.gov/econ/susb/.
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Since AC21 was enacted in October of 2000, workers seeking LPR
status in the United States--particularly within the EB-2 and EB-3
preference categories--have faced increasing challenges as a
consequence of the escalating wait times for immigrant visas. It often
takes many years before an immigrant visa number becomes available. For
some, the delays can last more than a decade. The combination of
numerical limitations in the various employment-based preference
categories with the per-country limitations that further limit visa
availability to certain workers, has produced significant
oversubscription in the EB-2 and EB-3 categories, particularly for
Indian and Chinese nationals. For instance, the current approximate
backlog for an EB-3 immigrant visa for workers from most countries is
only a few months. For nationals of certain countries applying in the
EB-3 category, delays have extended more than a decade.\30\
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\30\ According to the DOS Visa Bulletin for November 2015,
immigrant visas are currently issuable to all persons qualifying
under the EB-1 preference category. The EB-2 category Application
Final Action date is current for all countries except for China and
India, with cut-off dates for nationals of those countries currently
set between 2006 and 2012 (a wait of 3 to 9 years). The Application
Final Action cut-off dates for nationals of most countries under the
EB-3 preference category are set at August 15, 2015 (a wait of less
than one month). But for Indian nationals, the Application Final
Action cut-off dates are set at April 1, 2004 (a wait of over 10
years). See DOS Visa Bulletin for November 2015, https://www.travel.state.gov/content/visas/en/law-and-policy/bulletin/2016/visa-bulletin-for-november-2015.html.
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Given the long and growing delays for many beneficiaries of
employment-based immigrant visa petitions, the challenges facing such
workers and the U.S. economy, while similar to those recognized by
AC21, are substantially greater than those that existed at the time
AC21 passed. Although DHS has worked diligently to improve processing
times during the intervening period, visa backlogs due to statutory
numerical limits for many individuals seeking EB-2 and EB-3
classification have grown significantly.\31\ DHS recognizes the
[[Page 81912]]
resulting realities confronting individuals seeking employment-based
permanent residence who, due to immigrant visa unavailability, are
required to wait many years for visa numbers to become available before
they can file applications for adjustment of status or seek immigrant
visas abroad and become LPRs. In many instances, these individuals are
in the United States in a nonimmigrant, employer-specific temporary
worker category (e.g., H-1B or L-1 visa classification) and may be
unable to accept promotions or otherwise change jobs or employers
without abandoning their existing efforts--including great investments
of time and money--to become permanent residents. Their employment
opportunities may be limited to their original job duties with the U.S.
employer that sponsored their temporary admission to the United States,
despite the fact that they may have gained professional experience that
would otherwise have allowed them to progress substantially in their
careers.
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\31\ According to the DOS Visa Bulletin for October 2000 (the
month AC21 was enacted), visa availability was current for all
persons qualifying under the EB-1 preference category. The EB-2
category was current for all countries except for China and India.
The EB-2 cut-off dates were March 8, 1999 for persons chargeable to
China (a wait of 19 months) and November 1, 1999 for persons
chargeable to India (a wait of 11 months). The EB-3 category
likewise was current for all countries except for China and India,
with a cut-off date of March 15, 1998 for individuals charged to
China (a wait of 31 months) and February 8, 1997 for individuals
charged to India (a wait of 44 months). See https://dosfan.lib.uic.edu/ERC/visa_bulletin/2000-10bulletin.html.
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Indeed, many individuals subject to the immigrant visa backlogs
confront the choice between remaining employed in a specific job under
the same terms and conditions originally offered to them or abandoning
either their place in the immigrant visa queue or the pursuit of LPR
status altogether. When such a worker changes employers or jobs--
including a change to an identical job with a different employer or to
a related job for the same employer--the worker is typically subject to
uncertainty as well as expensive additional immigration processes,
greatly discouraging any such changes. Indeed, under current
regulations, some changes in employment could result in the loss of
nonimmigrant status, loss of the ability to change to another
nonimmigrant status, loss of the ability to obtain an immigrant visa or
adjust to LPR status, and the need for the affected worker and his or
her family to immediately depart the United States. As a result, these
employees often suffer through many years of effective career
stagnation, as they are largely dependent on current employers for
immigration status and are substantially restricted in their ability to
change employers or even accept promotions from, or make lateral
movements within, their current employers.
Simply put, many workers in the immigrant visa process are not free
to consider all available employment and career development
opportunities. This effectively prevents U.S. employers from treating
them like the high-potential individuals the employer hired them to be,
thus restricting productivity and the promise they offer to our
nation's economy and undermining the very purpose of the employment-
based immigrant visa system that prioritizes such workers for LPR
status. The lack of predictability and flexibility for such workers may
also prevent them from otherwise investing in and contributing to the
local, regional, and national economy or fully assimilating into
American society.
IV. Proposed Regulatory Changes
DHS is proposing to amend its regulations related to certain
employment-based immigrant and nonimmigrant visa programs. The proposed
amendments are intended to benefit U.S. employers and workers
participating in these programs, including by: Streamlining the
processes for employer sponsorship of individuals for permanent
residence; ameliorating some of the effects of immigrant visa backlogs
by increasing job portability and otherwise providing stability and
flexibility for such workers; and providing additional transparency and
consistency in the application of agency policies and procedures
related to these programs. These changes are primarily aimed at
improving the ability of U.S. employers to employ and retain workers
who are beneficiaries of approved immigrant visa petitions and are
waiting for LPR status, while increasing the ability of such workers to
further their careers by accepting promotions, making lateral changes
within current employers, changing employers, and pursuing other
employment opportunities.
The improvements proposed in this rulemaking would help DHS fulfill
its responsibility to assist U.S. employers, U.S. workers, and foreign
national workers, while strengthening and protecting the U.S. economy.
The immigrant and nonimmigrant visa programs at issue in this proposed
rule were designed to improve the ability of U.S. employers to hire and
retain critical foreign workers, while creating job opportunities for
and protecting U.S. workers. Consistent with these provisions, the
proposed rule would enhance the Department's ability to administer the
INA in a manner that better accounts for fluctuating economic
conditions and that provides additional stability and flexibility to
regulated persons and entities.
A. Proposed Implementation of AC21 and ACWIA
DHS proposes to clarify and improve longstanding agency policies
and procedures established in response to certain sections of AC21 and
ACWIA. These sections were intended, among other things, to provide
greater flexibility and job portability to certain workers,
particularly those who have been sponsored for LPR status by their
employers, while protecting U.S. workers, enhancing opportunities for
innovation and expansion, and maintaining U.S. competitiveness. The
proposed rule would further clarify and improve agency policies and
procedures in this area--policies and procedures that have long been
set through a series of policy memoranda and a precedent decision of
the USCIS Administrative Appeals Office. By establishing such policies
in regulation, DHS would provide greater transparency and certainty to
affected employers and workers and increase consistency among agency
adjudications. In addition, the proposed rule would clarify several
interpretive questions raised by AC21 and ACWIA.
As noted above, except where improvements on current practices are
noted in the following sections, DHS intends the following proposals to
effectively capture the longstanding policies and procedures that have
developed since enactment of AC21 and ACWIA. The Department welcomes
all comments on these proposals, including those that identify any such
proposals that commenters believe are inconsistent with current
practices (and not identified as such in the preamble), so that any
such inconsistencies can be resolved in the final rule.
1. Extending H-1B Nonimmigrant Status for Certain Individuals Who Are
Being Sponsored for Lawful Permanent Residence
DHS proposes to codify in regulation and improve longstanding
agency policies and practices related to two provisions in AC21 that
allow for certain individuals who are being sponsored by employers for
permanent residence to obtain H-1B status beyond the general 6-year
maximum period of stay. The first provision provides an exemption to
certain beneficiaries of approved employment-based immigrant
[[Page 81913]]
visa petitions who are subject to per-country limitations on immigrant
visas that prevent the filing and adjudication of applications for
adjustment of status. The second provision provides an exemption to
certain H-1B nonimmigrant workers who are being sponsored for permanent
residence by U.S. employers and are subject to certain lengthy
adjudication delays.
a. H-1B Extensions for Individuals Affected by the Per-Country
Limitations
First, the proposed rule would clarify and improve DHS'
implementation of section 104(c) of AC21. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(E). This section authorizes approval of H-1B status
beyond the general 6-year maximum period for certain beneficiaries of
approved EB-1, EB-2, and EB-3 immigrant visa petitions. See AC21
section 104(c). Specifically, section 104(c) authorizes such an
exemption from the 6-year limit when the H-1B petitioner can
demonstrate that an immigrant visa is not available to the beneficiary
at the time the H-1B petition is filed because the immigrant visa
classification sought is already over-subscribed for that beneficiary's
country of birth (i.e., is subject to the per-country limitations on
immigrant visas). Id.
Consistent with current practice, DHS proposes that such exemptions
be granted in 3-year increments until USCIS adjudicates the
beneficiary's adjustment of status application. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(E)(1). Although the heading for section 104(c)
describes a ``one-time protection,'' the statutory text makes clear
that the exemption remains available until the beneficiary has an EB-1,
EB-2, or EB-3 immigrant visa number immediately available to him or
her. See AC21 section 104(c) (authorizing H-1B extensions under this
exemption ``until the alien's application for adjustment of status has
been processed and a decision made thereon''). As such, the proposed
rule ``enables these individuals to remain in H-1B status until they
are able to receive an immigrant visa and adjust their status within
the United States, thus limiting the disruption to American
businesses.'' See S. Rep. No. 260, at 22. Moreover, this proposal would
allow DHS to review the continued eligibility of the H-1B nonimmigrant
worker in 3-year intervals, which is consistent with the duration of H-
1B status awarded under general H-1B provisions. See 8 CFR
214.2(h)(9)(iii)(A)(1) and (h)(15)(ii)(B)(1). An H-1B petition filed
under this provision may include any time remaining within the normal
6-year period of authorized H-1B stay \32\ in addition to the exemption
request, but in no case may the approval period exceed 3 years or the
validity period of the LCA. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(E)(5).
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\32\ Where applicable, the time remaining within the normal 6-
year period (``remainder time'') may include periods in which the
beneficiary was outside the United States during qualifying H-1B or
L-1 visa petition validity that the petitioner seeks to recapture
for the beneficiary. As noted previously, USCIS counts any time
spent in H-1B or L-1 status towards the limitation for either
classification. See 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(i)(B) and 214.2(l)(12)(i).
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DHS also proposes, consistent with current policy guidance, to make
this exemption available to individuals who remain eligible for an
additional period of admission in H-1B status, whether or not such
individuals are physically in the United States on H-1B status at the
time the H-1B petition is filed.\33\ See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(E)(3). Section 104(c) of AC21 does not specifically
limit the granting of H-1B status under its provisions to only those
individuals currently in H-1B status within the United States. Rather,
as is stated in current policy guidance, DHS interprets the provision
to require only that the individual have previously held H-1B status
and be otherwise eligible for an H-1B approval, including through an
extension of current H-1B status, a change to H-1B status, or
notification to a U.S. consulate or port of entry (if visa exempt).\34\
The petitioner bears the burden of proving the individual's eligibility
under this provision.
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\33\ Aytes Memo Dec. 2006 supra note 11 at 3-4.
\34\ Id.
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Consistent with current practice, DHS proposes to allow any
qualified H-1B petitioner to file for an exemption under section 104(c)
with respect to any qualified beneficiary of an approved EB-1, EB-2, or
EB-3 immigrant visa petition. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(E)(4). There is no requirement that the H-1B
petitioner be the same employer as that listed on the qualifying
immigrant visa petition, which by definition contemplates an offer of
future employment upon a grant of permanent residence.\35\ Similarly,
the H-1B nonimmigrant worker can rely on any currently approved and
qualifying immigrant visa petition, even if the H-1B nonimmigrant
worker had previously been granted an exemption under section 104(c)
based on a different petition.
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\35\ See, e.g., Matter of Rajah, 25 I&N Dec. 127, 132-133 (BIA
2009).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed later in this proposed rule, however, DHS is
effectively proposing to improve access to exemptions under section
104(c) by proposing amendments to DHS regulations promulgated under
section 205 of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1155, that govern when approvals of
immigrant visa petitions are automatically revoked. See Section IV.B.
Pursuant to these amendments, employment-based immigrant visa petitions
that have been approved for 180 days or more would no longer have such
approval automatically revoked based only on withdrawal by the
petitioner or termination of the petitioner's business. See proposed 8
CFR 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(C) and (D). As long as such an approval has not
been revoked for fraud, material misrepresentation, the invalidation or
revocation of a labor certification, or USCIS error, the petition will
generally continue to be valid with regard to the beneficiary for
various job portability and status extension purposes under the
immigration laws. Id. As further described below, this change would
effectively improve the ability of H-1B nonimmigrants with approved EB-
1, EB-2, or EB-3 immigrant visa petitions to rely on such petitions for
obtaining exemptions under section 104(c) of AC21.
Finally, the proposed rule, as per current practice, would allow
exemptions authorized under section 104(c) of AC21 only with respect to
the principal beneficiaries of employment-based immigrant visa
petitions, and not any derivative beneficiaries named in such petitions
who may also be in H-1B status. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(E)(6). Section 104(c) expressly allows H-1B
nonimmigrant status beyond the six-year general limitation for ``the
beneficiary of a petition filed under section 204(a) of [the INA] for a
preference status under paragraph (1), (2), or (3) of section 203(b)
[of the INA].'' AC21 section 104(c). Section 203(b), in turn, applies
to principal beneficiaries of immigrant visa petitions, but not
derivative beneficiaries who are separately addressed in section 203(d)
of the INA. Compare INA section 203(b), 8 U.S.C 1153(b), with INA
section 203(d), 8 U.S.C 1153(d). The reference to a single beneficiary
(i.e., ``the beneficiary'') in section 104(c) of AC21 further supports
the interpretation that the provision applies only to the principal
beneficiary of the immigrant visa petition. As noted above, however,
the spouse or dependent children of H-1B nonimmigrant workers are
eligible for H-4 status and are subject to the same period of
authorized stay as the principal H-1B nonimmigrant worker. Therefore,
eligible H-4 spouses and
[[Page 81914]]
dependent children may be granted H-4 status during the period the H-1B
nonimmigrant spouse or parent maintains H-1B status under this
exemption.
Thus, if both spouses are H-1B nonimmigrant workers, to extend
their H-1B authorized admission period under section 104(c) of AC21,
each spouse would individually have to be the beneficiary of an
approved EB-1, EB-2, or EB-3 immigrant visa petition. If only one
spouse is eligible for the exemption as an H-1B nonimmigrant, the
spouse who is not eligible could seek a change of status to H-4 status
and, if otherwise eligible, may remain in H-4 status, as described
above. While such a spouse may no longer be eligible to be employed as
an H-1B nonimmigrant, certain H-4 spouses may be eligible to apply for
and obtain work authorization pursuant to 8 CFR 214.2(h)(9)(iv),
including, among others, those whose H-1B nonimmigrant spouse is the
beneficiary of an approved EB-1, EB-2, or EB-3 immigrant visa petition.
DHS invites the public to comment on all aspects of this proposal.
b. H-1B Extensions for Individuals Affected by Lengthy Adjudication
Delays
Second, the proposed rule would clarify and improve DHS'
implementation of sections 106(a) and (b) of AC21, as amended by the
21st Century DOJ Appropriations Act. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D). These provisions authorize approval of H-1B
status beyond the general 6-year maximum period for certain H-1B
nonimmigrant workers who are being sponsored by their employers for
permanent residence and are subject to lengthy adjudication delays. See
AC21 section 106(a) and (b). Specifically, section 106(b) provides
extensions of H-1B status in 1-year increments for H-1B nonimmigrant
workers seeking LPR status through employment if 365 days or more have
passed since the filing by a U.S. employer of a labor certification
application or an employment-based immigrant visa petition on the
nonimmigrant's behalf. Id. These 1-year extensions would generally
remain available until a final decision is made to grant or deny the
pertinent labor certification application or immigrant visa petition,
or to grant or deny the beneficiary's application for adjustment of
status or for an immigrant visa. Id.
Consistent with existing policy, DHS proposes to make H-1B
extensions under section 106(b) available to workers who remain
eligible for additional periods of H-1B status, whether or not such
individuals are in H-1B status or in the United States at the time the
H-1B petition is filed. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(1). DHS
also proposes to allow the H-1B petitioner to file for an extension
under section 106(b) with respect to any qualifying labor certification
application or employment-based immigrant visa petition, pursuant to
section 106(a) of AC21, as amended. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(6).
As with section 104(c), section 106 of AC21 does not limit its
application only to those individuals currently in H-1B status within
the United States. DHS interprets the provision to require only that
the individuals have previously been issued H-1B status, meet the
requirements of section 106(a), and are otherwise eligible for an H-1B
approval.\36\ Also like section 104(c), section 106 contains no
requirement that the H-1B petitioner be the same employer as that
listed on the labor certification application or immigrant visa
petition in order to seek an exemption from the six-year period of
authorized admission. The H-1B nonimmigrant worker can thus rely on any
qualifying labor certification application or immigrant visa petition,
even if the nonimmigrant had previously been granted an extension under
section 106(b) based on a different application or petition. The
petitioner bears the burden of proving the individual's eligibility
under these provisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ Aytes Memo Dec. 2006, at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DHS also proposes to conform its regulations with existing policy
in this area by requiring the prospective H-1B employer to file an H-1B
petition demonstrating that the beneficiary has previously held H-1B
status and that 365 days has elapsed or will have elapsed between: (1)
The filing of an application for labor certification or an employment-
based immigrant visa petition on behalf of the individual; and (2) the
date on which the individual reached or will reach the 6-year
limitation on H-1B admission. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(1) and (2). DHS further proposes, consistent with
current policy, to grant H-1B approvals in 1-year increments for such
individuals until either the application for labor certification
expires or a final decision is made to: (1) Deny the labor
certification application; (2) revoke or invalidate approval of the
labor certification application; (3) deny the immigrant visa petition;
(4) revoke approval of the immigrant visa petition; (5) grant or deny
the individual's application for adjustment of status or for an
immigrant visa; or (6) administratively close the application for
permanent labor certification, immigrant visa petition, or application
for adjustment of status. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(2).\37\ DHS notes that in cases involving denials,
invalidations, or revocations of labor certification applications and
denials of immigrant visa petitions, the petitioner may
administratively appeal those determinations with DOL and USCIS,
respectively. Under this proposed rule, a denial or revocation would
not be considered final by USCIS during the period authorized to file
such an administrative appeal, or during the period in which any such
appeal is pending. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(3). During
any such period, as with current practice, the petition or labor
certification application that is the subject of the appeal may be used
for purposes of seeking an extension of H-1B status under this
section.\38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ See Aytes Memo Dec. 2005, at 6.
\38\ See Aytes Memo Dec. 2005, at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Also consistent with existing policy, DHS proposes not to grant an
extension of H-1B status under section 106(b) if, at the time the
extension request is filed, the labor certification is deemed expired
under DOL regulations. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(2).
Under current DOL regulations, ``[a]n approved permanent labor
certification granted on or after July 16, 2007 expires if not filed in
support of a Form I-140 [employment-based immigrant visa] petition with
[DHS] within 180 calendar days of the date [DOL] granted the
certification.'' 20 CFR 656.30(b)(1). DHS treats a labor certification
that has expired similarly to one that has been denied or revoked.
Indeed, DHS automatically rejects or denies immigrant visa petitions
related to expired labor certifications, effectively barring the
granting of extensions under section 106(b) in such cases.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ DHS also proposes to conform its regulations to current
policy regarding the substitution of beneficiaries in labor
certification applications. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(4). In 2007, DOL changed its regulations to
effectively prohibit the substitution of labor certification
beneficiaries, except for substitution requests submitted on or
before July 16, 2007. See 20 CFR 656.11(a). With respect to
substitutions occurring before July 16, 2007, DHS policy now
provides that for purposes of section 106(b) of AC21, the labor
certification application may only be used for the most recently
substituted individual. See Neufeld Memo May 2008, at 5 n.4. DHS
proposes to conform its regulations accordingly, which will prevent
multiple individuals from using the same labor certification to
obtain H-1B extensions under this proposed rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DHS also proposes to conform its regulations with current policy by
[[Page 81915]]
allowing petitioners to file H-1B petitions under sections 106(a) and
(b) as early as 6 months prior to the requested H-1B start date. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(5). The petitioner would generally
be required to demonstrate that the individual will meet the
requirements of sections 106(a) and (b) as of the date he or she will
reach the end of the 6-year period of H-1B admission. This request may
include any time remaining within the general 6-year period, including,
for example, periods of time spent outside the United States during H-
1B petition validity, for which ``recapture'' of H-1B remainder time is
sought, as well as any H-1B ``remainder'' periods available to the
foreign national.\40\ But in no case may the approval period exceed 3
years or the validity period of the LCA. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(5); see also 8 CFR 214.2(h)(9)(iii)(A)(1) and
(h)(15)(ii)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ See Aytes Memo Dec. 2006, at 4. (``The `remainder' period
of the initial six-year admission period refers to the full six-year
period of admission minus the period of time that the individual
previously spent in the United States in valid H-1B status.'') USCIS
policy relating to such ``recapture'' is discussed in greater detail
below at section IV.C.(2), ``Calculating the 6-Year H-1B Authorized
Admission Period.'' The ``remainder'' period is discussed at
IV.C.(2), ``Recapture of H-1B Remainder Period.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, each approval granted under sections 106(a) and (b) will
provide the beneficiary with a new date upon which the limitation on H-
1B admission will be reached. Employers filing an H-1B petition seeking
a second or subsequent extension of H-1B status for a beneficiary under
sections 106(a) and (b) must demonstrate that a qualifying labor
certification or immigrant visa petition was filed at least 365 days
prior to the new H-1B expiration date authorized under that
section.\41\ See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(7). However, only
one labor certification application or immigrant visa petition may be
used to establish eligibility in support of any single H-1B petition
filed under sections 106(a) and (b). A petitioner may not aggregate the
days on which multiple labor certification applications or immigrant
visa petitions are on file in order to satisfy the 365-day requirement.
See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(8).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ As noted above, the H-1B petitioner need not be the same
employer that filed the labor certification or immigrant visa
petition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DHS proposes, consistent with current practice, to allow
applications for extensions under section 106(b) to be filed only by
principal beneficiaries seeking to obtain status under section 203(b)
of the INA, and not by derivative beneficiaries described in section
203(d) of the INA. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(9). Section
106(a) expressly limits eligibility to individuals who have been
accorded H-1B status and who have had a labor certification application
or employment-based immigrant visa petition filed on their behalf. See
AC21 section 106(a), as amended. H-4 dependents do not meet these
statutory criteria. As noted previously, however, dependents in H-4
status are subject to the same period of authorized stay as the
principal H-1B nonimmigrant worker. Therefore, eligible H-4 spouses and
dependent children may be granted H-4 status during the period the H-1B
nonimmigrant spouse or parent maintains H-1B status under section 106.
Finally, DHS proposes to restrict extensions of H-1B status under
sections 106(a) and (b) for beneficiaries who have not taken certain
steps in furtherance of obtaining LPR status. As noted above, these
sections were intended to allow individuals to remain in the United
States as H-1B nonimmigrant workers while pursuing permanent residence.
See S. Rep. No. 260, at 23. Accordingly, the proposed rule would
generally require that to remain eligible for extensions of H-1B status
under sections 106(a) and (b), the individual must file an application
for adjustment of status or submit an application for an immigrant visa
within 1 year of an immigrant visa becoming immediately available. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(D)(10). This requirement would be
effectively tolled, however, during any period in which an application
for adjustment of status could not be filed due to the unavailability
of immigrant visas. Id. Moreover, if the accrual of the 1-year period
is interrupted by the retrogression of previously available immigrant
visas, the individual would be permitted a full new 1-year period to
seek LPR status when immigrant visas become available again. Id. In
addition, failure to file within such year could be excused at the
discretion of DHS if the individual establishes that the failure to
apply was due to circumstances beyond his or her control. Id.
DHS invites the public to comment on all aspects of this proposal.
2. Job Portability Under AC21 for Certain Applicants for Adjustment of
Status
DHS is proposing to clarify and improve policies and procedures
related to the job portability protections provided by section 106(c)
of AC21. See proposed 8 CFR 245.25. That section amended the INA by
adding section 204(j), codified at 8 U.S.C. 1154(j), to enhance the
ability of certain workers to change jobs or employers if they have
been sponsored for permanent residence by U.S. employers and have
pending applications for adjustment of status. See AC21 section 106(c).
Specifically, section 204(j) of the INA provides that an employment-
based immigrant visa petition filed for EB-1 (other than for ``aliens
of extraordinary ability''), EB-2, or EB-3 classification will remain
valid with respect to a new qualifying job offer when the worker
changes jobs or employers if an application for adjustment of status
has been filed and remains pending for 180 days or more. See INA
section 204(j), 8 U.S.C. 1154(j); see also INA sections 204(a)(1)(F)
and 212(a)(5)(A)(iv), 8 U.S.C. 1154(a)(1)(F) and 1182(a)(5)(A)(iv).
Section 204(j) allows such portability when the new job offer is for a
job which is in the same or a similar occupational classification as
the job for which the original immigrant visa petition was filed. Id.
To provide greater clarity to the regulated community and enhance
consistency across agency determinations under section 204(j) of the
INA, DHS proposes to update and conform its regulations governing
adjustment of status consistent with longstanding agency policy. For
purposes of approving an application for adjustment of status, the
proposed rule would clarify that an immigrant visa petition for EB-1
(other than for ``aliens of extraordinary ability''), EB-2, or EB-3
classification filed under section 204(a)(1)(F) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1154(a)(1)(F), remains valid if the petition is approved and either:
(1) The employment offer from the petitioning employer is
continuing and remains bona fide; or
(2) pursuant to section 204(j), the beneficiary has a new offer of
employment in the same or a similar occupational classification as the
employment offer listed in the approved petition, the application for
adjustment of status based on this petition has been pending for 180
days or more, and the approval of the petition has not been revoked.
See proposed 8 CFR 245.25(a). Under the second option, the new
offer of employment may be from the petitioning employer, from a
different U.S. employer, or based on self-employment. Id. Under either
option, the individual and his or her U.S. employer must intend that
the individual will be employed under the continuing or new employment
offer (including self-employment), as
[[Page 81916]]
applicable, upon the individual's grant of LPR status. Id.
Although the individual need not have been employed at any time by
the employer that filed the immigrant visa petition--or, in a case
involving section 204(j) portability, the employer presenting the new
offer of employment--DHS will in all cases determine whether a relevant
offer of employment is bona fide. In cases involving 204(j)
portability, DHS considers whether the employer that filed the
immigrant visa petition had the intent, at the time the petition was
approved, to employ the beneficiary upon approval of the application
for adjustment of status.\42\ With respect to the new employer, DHS
considers whether the employer intends to employ the beneficiary in the
offered position, and whether the beneficiary intends to work in that
position, upon approval of the application for adjustment of
status.\43\
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\42\ See USCIS Adjudicator's Field Manual, Chapter 20.2(c).
\43\ See Aytes Memo Dec. 2005, at 4; Matter of Cardoso, 13 I. &
N. Dec. 228, 230-31 (BIA 1969).
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As noted above, DHS is proposing to amend its regulations governing
applications for adjustment of status to prohibit approval of such an
application when the approval of the immigrant visa petition on which
the application is based has been revoked. See proposed 8 CFR
245.25(a). DHS is also proposing, however, as discussed in section
IV.B., to amend its regulations governing revocation of petition
approval so that employment-based immigrant visa petitions that have
been approved for 180 days or more would no longer have such approval
automatically revoked based only on withdrawal by the petitioner or
termination of the petitioner's business. See proposed 8 CFR
205.1(a)(3)(iii)(C) and (D). As long as such an approval has not been
revoked for fraud, material misrepresentation, the invalidation or
revocation of a labor certification, or USCIS error, the petition would
generally continue to be valid for purposes of section 204(j) job
portability and certain status extension purposes under the immigration
laws. Id. Such a petition, however, cannot on its own serve as the
basis for obtaining an immigrant visa or adjustment of status as there
is no longer a bona fide employment offer related to the petition. Id.
In such cases, the beneficiary will need a new immigrant visa petition
approved on his or her behalf, or a new offer of employment in section
204(j) portability cases, in order to obtain an immigrant visa or
adjust status. Id.
Taken together, these regulatory changes are generally consistent
with current policy concerning adjustment of status. The regulatory
amendments, for example, do not change existing policy with respect to
applications for adjustment of status filed by beneficiaries of
immigrant visa petitions who seek to adjust status based on a
continuing offer of employment from the petitioning employer. In such
cases, if the petitioning employer withdraws or goes out of business,
there would be no continuing offer of employment on which the
beneficiary may rely. Thus, even in a case where such a petition has
been approved for at least 180 days and would no longer be subject to
automatic revocation based upon withdrawal of the petition or
termination of the employer's business, the beneficiary would remain
ineligible to file for adjustment of status based solely on that
petition. See proposed 8 CFR 204.5(a)(3)(iii)(C) and (D); see also
proposed 8 CFR 245.25(a). Under this proposed rule, the beneficiary
would require a new immigrant visa petition filed on his or her behalf
in order to file for or receive adjustment of status. Id.
With respect to beneficiaries who have applications for adjustment
of status that have been pending for at least 180 days and seek to
adjust status pursuant to section 204(j), the proposed regulations are
also consistent with current policy, except in one respect. Under
current policy, withdrawal by the petitioner in such cases does not
require the beneficiary to be named in a new immigrant visa petition;
rather, the beneficiary would only be required to demonstrate, pursuant
to section 204(j) of the INA, that he or she has a new offer of
employment in a same or similar occupational classification.\44\ This
would continue to be the case under this proposed rule. See proposed 8
CFR 204.5(a)(3)(iii)(C); see also proposed 8 CFR 245.25(a). The
proposed rule would, however, expand such treatment to cover cases in
which the petitioner's business terminates after the application for
adjustment of status has been pending for at least 180 days. Under
current policy, termination of the employer's business in such cases
would require the beneficiary to be named in a new employment-based
immigrant visa petition in order to adjust status. Under the proposed
rule, the beneficiary would not be required to have a new immigrant
visa petition filed on his or her behalf, and instead would be required
to demonstrate that he or she has a new offer of employment in a same
or similar occupational classification, consistent with section 204(j)
of the INA. Id. DHS believes that such an extension of section 204(j)
portability is consistent with congressional intent to allow long-
delayed applicants for adjustment of status to change employers with
reasonable assurance that they will not be disadvantaged by so
doing.\45\
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\44\ See Aytes Memo Dec. 2005, at 4-5.
\45\ DHS also proposes conforming changes to 8 CFR 204.5 to
ensure the retention of priority dates related to certain
employment-based immigrant visa petitions that are approved for less
than 180 days when a petitioner withdraws the petition or the
petitioner goes out of business. In such cases, the priority date
listed in the petition may still be used for section 204(j)
portability purposes. This regulatory amendment codifies current
agency policy and practice. See proposed 8 CFR 204.5(e)(5).
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DHS is further proposing a new supplementary form to the
application for adjustment of status to assist the Department in the
adjudicative process. In general cases, the supplementary form will
assist DHS in confirming that a job offer described in an employment-
based immigrant visa petition is still available at the time an
individual files an application for adjustment of status. In cases
involving section 204(j) portability requests, the form will assist DHS
in determining, among other things, whether a new offer of employment
is in the same or a similar occupational classification as the job
offer listed in the immigrant visa petition. In section 204(j) cases,
an individual may submit the supplement affirmatively or when required
at the request of USCIS to establish eligibility under the proposed
regulatory requirements. Currently, DHS is not proposing an extra fee
for submission of this new supplement, but may consider implementing a
fee in the future.
DHS contemplates that applicants for adjustment of status seeking
approval based on a new offer of employment will submit various pieces
of evidence, along with the supplementary form, demonstrating
compliance with section 204(j) and the proposed regulations. Unless
instructed otherwise, including by the form or form instructions, an
applicant will be able to submit: (1) A written attestation signed by
the applicant and employer describing the new employment offer,
including a description of the position and its requirements; (2) an
explanation demonstrating that the new employment offer is in the same
or a similar occupational classification as the original employment
offer listed in the approved petition; and (3) a copy of the Notice of
Action (Form I-797C) issued by USCIS (or, if unavailable, secondary
evidence) showing that the individual's application for adjustment of
status has
[[Page 81917]]
been pending with USCIS for 180 days or more. See proposed 8 CFR
245.25(b)(2).
Because the statute does not define the terms ``same'' or
``similar,'' DHS proposes definitions for those terms based on their
common dictionary definitions, as well as the agency's practice and
experience in this context.\46\ The proposed regulatory provision
accordingly defines ``same occupational classification'' as an
occupation that resembles in every relevant respect \47\ the occupation
for which the underlying employment-based immigrant visa petition was
approved.\48\ See proposed 8 CFR 245.25(c). The term ``similar
occupational classification'' is defined as an occupation that shares
essential qualities or has a marked resemblance or likeness with the
occupation for which the underlying employment-based immigrant visa
petition was approved.\49\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ See Taniguchi v. Kan Pacific Saipan, Ltd., 132 S. Ct. 1997,
2002-03 (2012) (when a term goes undefined in a statute, an agency
ordinarily should ``give the term its ordinary meaning'').
\47\ For these purposes, USCIS adjudicators may consider, among
other factors, the job duties of the respective jobs, and the
skills, experience, education, training, licenses or certifications
specifically required to perform each of the jobs.
\48\ See, e.g., Same Definition, Merriam-Webster.com, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/same (last visited May 20, 2015)
(defining ``same'' as ``identical'' or ``resembling in every
relevant respect''); Same Definition, OED.com, https://www.oed.com/view/Entry/170362?redirectedFrom=same#eid (last visited Jan. 2,
2015) (defining ``same'' as ``identical'').
\49\ See, e.g., Similar Definition, Merriam-Webster.com, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/similar (last visited May 20,
2015) (defining ``similar'' as ``alike in substance or
essentials''); Similar Definition, Oed.com, https://www.oed.com/view/Entry/179873?redirectedFrom=similar#eid (last visited May 20, 2015)
(defining ``similar'' as ``having a marked resemblance or
likeness'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DHS invites the public to comment on all aspects of this proposal,
including the new proposed supplementary form to the application for
adjustment of status (and form instructions) and the possibility of
charging a supplemental fee in the future related to such form.
3. Job Portability for H-1B Nonimmigrant Workers
DHS proposes to conform its regulations to its policies and
practices under section 105(a) of AC21, which amended the INA by adding
the H-1B job portability provision at section 214(n), 8 U.S.C. 1184(n).
This section enhances the ability of H-1B nonimmigrant workers to
change jobs or employers by authorizing them to accept new or
concurrent employment upon the filing of a non-frivolous H-1B petition
(``H-1B portability petition''). See INA section 214(n), 8 U.S.C.
1184(n). The H-1B nonimmigrant worker must have been lawfully admitted
into the United States, must not have worked without authorization
subsequent to such lawful admission, and must be in a period of stay
authorized by the Secretary of Homeland Security.\50\ Employment
authorization under the pending H-1B portability petition continues
until its adjudication. Id.
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\50\ Neufeld Memo May 2009 (describing various ``periods of
authorized stay'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In harmony with the statutory provision, the proposed rule would
provide that H-1B nonimmigrant workers who are beneficiaries of new H-
1B petitions seeking an amendment or extension of their stay in H-1B
status are eligible to commence new or concurrent employment upon the
filing of a non-frivolous H-1B petition by that employer. See proposed
8 CFR 214.2(h)(2)(i)(H). If the H-1B nonimmigrant worker meets the
requirements of section 214(n), he or she is authorized to commence new
employment while adjudication of the new H-1B petition is pending. Id.
If the petition is approved, the H-1B nonimmigrant worker's employment
authorization continues under the approved petition. Id. If the
petition is denied, employment authorization under section 214(n)
generally ceases upon the date of denial.\51\ Id.
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\51\ If the petition is denied after the H-1B nonimmigrant
worker's Arrival-Departure Record (Form I-94) or successor form) has
expired, and while the H-1B nonimmigrant worker is in an authorized
period of stay consistent with 8 CFR 274a.12(b)(20) and proposed
revisions to 8 CFR 274a.12(b)(9), DHS intends to interpret section
214(g)(4) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(4), to count the time spent
in the United States based on a timely filed H-1B extension of stay
petition towards the 6 year H-1B period of authorized admission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DHS proposes, consistent with current policy, to make the H-1B
portability provision discussed in this section available only to H-1B
beneficiaries who are in the United States in H-1B status.\52\ This
interpretation is consistent with the language of section 214(n), which
requires in part that the H-1B nonimmigrant worker have been lawfully
admitted into the United States at the time the new H-1B petition is
filed. See INA section 214(n), 8 U.S.C. 1184(n). This interpretation is
also in harmony with congressional intent behind the creation of the
provision. As noted in the Senate Report accompanying the bill, the H-
1B portability provision was intended to ``respond[ ] to concerns
raised about the potential for exploitation of H-1B visa holders as a
result of a specific employer's control over the employee's legal
status.'' See S. Rep. No. 260, at 22-23.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ Aytes Memo Dec. 2005, at 7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DHS also proposes to conform its regulations to current policy
regarding the ability of H-1B employers to file successive H-1B
portability petitions (often referred to as ``bridge petitions'') on
behalf of H-1B nonimmigrant workers. Under current policy, an H-1B
nonimmigrant worker who has changed employment based on an H-1B
portability petition filed on his or her behalf may again change
employment based on the filing of a new H-1B portability petition, even
if the former H-1B portability petition remains pending.\53\ Approval
of any subsequent H-1B portability petition, however, would effectively
be dependent on the approval of any prior H-1B portability petition if
the individual's Arrival-Departure Record (Form I-94) has expired and
the prior portability petitions remain pending at the time that the
subsequent portability petition is filed. In such a case, where the
request for an extension of stay was denied in a preceding H-1B
portability petition, a request for an extension of stay in any
successive H-1B portability petition(s) must also be denied. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(2)(i)(H)(3). DHS proposes to maintain this
policy in order to best achieve the ameliorative purpose of section
212(n) to enhance the job flexibility of H-1B nonimmigrant workers and
minimize their potential exploitation by employers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ Aytes Memo Dec. 2005, at 7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DHS is also proposing conforming changes to its employment
authorization regulations to recognize the employment authorization of
H-1B nonimmigrant workers who are employed pursuant to an H-1B
portability petition filed under section 214(n) of the INA. See
proposed 8 CFR 274a.12(b)(9). Specifically, the proposed rule would add
this class of H-1B nonimmigrant workers to the description of H
nonimmigrants authorized for employment incident to status with a
specific employer. Id.
DHS invites the public to comment on all aspects of this proposal.
4. Calculating the H-1B Admission Period
DHS proposes to clarify in regulation its current policy with
respect to calculating and ``recapturing'' what is known as ``remainder
time'' for H-1B nonimmigrant workers. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(C). Currently, with respect to an H-1B nonimmigrant
worker's maximum period of authorized admission in H-1B status, DHS
does not count against this period any days he or
[[Page 81918]]
she spent outside of the United States during the validity period of
the H-1B petition.\54\ Any such period outside the United States may
still be used, or ``recaptured,'' by an H-1B petitioner on behalf of
the H-1B nonimmigrant worker.\55\ An H-1B petitioner seeking to
recapture such time must establish, through objective, documentary
evidence--such as passport stamps, Arrival-Departure Records (Forms I-
94), or airline ticket stubs--that the H-1B nonimmigrant worker was in
fact physically outside of the United States during the day(s) for
which recapture is sought.\56\
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\54\ See Aytes Memo Oct. 2005.
\55\ Id.
\56\ To assist in the adjudication process, a petitioner may
also provide complementary evidence explaining any such time to be
recaptured, such as a chart indicating the dates spent outside of
the United States and referencing the relevant objective documentary
evidence supporting the chart.
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DHS proposes to codify this policy through this rulemaking. Under
this proposed rule, time spent outside the United States by an
individual during the validity of an H-1B petition that was approved on
his or her behalf could be added back to or ``recaptured'' for his or
her maximum period of authorized admission as an H-1B nonimmigrant
worker. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(C); see also INA section
214(g)(4), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(4) (generally establishing a 6-year limit
on the period of stay of an H-1B nonimmigrant worker). Consistent with
current practice, if an H-1B nonimmigrant worker had counted against
the H-1B numerical cap with respect to the 6-year maximum period of H-
1B admission from which recapture is sought, then the H-1B petition
seeking recapture of such time (``H-1B recapture petition'') would not
subject the H-1B nonimmigrant worker again to the cap.\57\ See proposed
8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(iii)(C)(2). If the H-1B nonimmigrant worker had not
counted against the H-1B cap in such a case, the recapture petition
would be cap-subject (i.e., require that the H-1B nonimmigrant worker
count against the cap), unless the H-1B nonimmigrant worker is eligible
for another exemption from the cap.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ This analysis would also be applied to cases in which the
worker has been outside the United States for a full year and would
thus be eligible for a new period of admission under section
214(g)(4) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(4). In such cases, the H-1B
petitioner may file a recapture petition or a petition seeking a new
period of H-1B admission. If the petitioner does not include a
recapture request in the H-1B petition, DHS generally would treat
the petition as a request for a new 6-year maximum H-1B admission
period under section 214(g)(4) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(4). The
worker in such a case would be subject to the numerical cap unless
an exemption applies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In accordance with current policy, the H-1B petitioner would bear
the burden of demonstrating ``recapture'' eligibility. Along with
documentary evidence, the petitioner may provide complementary,
explanatory evidence (as described above) to assist USCIS adjudicators
in the adjudication process. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(iii)(C)(1). Moreover, as with current practice, an H-1B
petitioner filing a recapture petition would not need to demonstrate
that the time spent outside the United States by the H-1B nonimmigrant
worker was meaningfully interruptive of the H-1B period in which
recapture is sought. The reason for the absence is irrelevant to the
recapture determination, but such reason may be relevant to the
determination of the individual's admissibility. Any trip of at least
one continuous 24-hour period (``day'') outside the United States for
any purpose may be recaptured.
DHS invites public comment on all aspects of this proposal.
5. Exemptions from the H-1B Numerical Cap Under AC21 and ACWIA
a. Employers Not Subject to H-1B Numerical Limitations
DHS proposes to clarify and improve its regulations and policies
identifying which employers are cap-exempt under the H-1B program. As
discussed above in section III.C.2.b.i., AC21 amended section 214(g)(5)
of the INA to allow certain employers to employ H-1B nonimmigrant
workers without application of the numerical cap on H-1B visas. See
AC21 section 103 (adding paragraphs (5), (6), and (7) to INA section
214(g), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)). As amended by AC21, section 214(g)(5) of the
INA specifically exempts from the H-1B cap those H-1B nonimmigrant
workers who are employed (1) ``at an institution of higher education .
. . , or a related or affiliated nonprofit entity,'' or (2) ``at a
nonprofit research organization or a governmental research
organization.'' INA section 214(g)(5), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(5). DHS is now
proposing to codify its long-standing policy interpretations regarding
this exemption from the cap. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F).
DHS has interpreted this provision to exempt H-1B nonimmigrant
workers in two types of circumstances. First, H-1B nonimmigrant workers
are currently exempt from the cap if they are employed directly by an
employer described in section 214(g)(5) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1184(g)(5). Thus, any H-1B nonimmigrant worker would be exempt if
employed directly by: (1) An institution of higher education, (2) a
nonprofit entity related to or affiliated with such an institution, (3)
a nonprofit research organization, or (4) a governmental research
organization. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(1)-(3). Second,
because section 214(g)(5) exempts workers who are employed ``at'' such
qualifying institutions, organizations, or entities, H-1B nonimmigrant
workers may also be exempt from the cap in certain circumstances even
when they are not directly employed by them.\58\ See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(4). Under current policy, such H-1B nonimmigrant
workers may only be treated as cap exempt when: (1) The employment is
located at a qualifying institution, organization, or entity; and (2)
the H-1B nonimmigrant worker will perform job duties that directly and
predominately further the normal, primary, or essential purpose,
mission, objectives or function of the qualifying institution,
organization, or entity.\59\
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\58\ In contrast to the ``employed at'' terminology used in
section 214(g)(5) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(5), other provisions
governing the H-1B program use terminology limited to a direct
employer-employee relationship with a qualifying employer. Section
212(p)(1) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1182(p)(1), for example, provides for
special prevailing wage computations where an H-1B nonimmigrant is
to be an ``employee of'' a qualifying institution, organization, or
entity. Similarly, section 214(c)(9)(A) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1184(c)(9)(A), exempts only qualifying employers from certain H-1B
petition fees enacted under ACWIA. Unlike section 214(g)(5), these
provisions clearly apply only when the H-1B petitioner is itself a
qualifying employer.
\59\ Aytes Memo June 2006, at 2-3 and note 2.
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DHS is now proposing to amend its regulations, in part, to provide
additional clarity with respect to the ``employed at'' statutory
language. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(4). Under the proposed
rule, an H-1B petitioner that is not itself a qualifying institution,
organization or entity may claim an exemption from the cap for an H-1B
nonimmigrant worker employed at such organization or entity if: (1) The
majority of the worker's duties will be performed at a qualifying
institution, organization, or entity; and (2) such job duties directly
and predominately further the essential purpose, mission, objectives or
functions of the qualifying institution, organization or entity (e.g.,
higher education, or nonprofit or governmental research). Id. In such
cases, the burden is on the petitioner to establish by a preponderance
of the evidence that there is a nexus between the work performed by the
H-1B nonimmigrant worker and the essential purpose, mission, objectives
or
[[Page 81919]]
functions of the qualifying institution, organization, or entity.
DHS also proposes to conform its regulations to current policy with
respect to the definitions of several terms in section 214(g)(5) and
the applicability of these terms to both: (1) ACWIA provisions that
require the payment of fees by certain H-1B employers; and (2) AC21
provisions that exempt certain employers from the H-1B numerical caps.
First, the proposed rule would expressly adopt for the purpose of cap
exemption the definition of the term ``institution of higher
education'' provided by section 101(a) of the Higher Education Act.\60\
See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(1). Notably, this definition does
not include for-profit institutions of higher education, which would
continue to be subject to the H-1B cap. The proposed rule would also
adopt definitions for the terms ``nonprofit research organization'' and
``governmental research organization'' as currently set forth in DHS
regulations at 8 CFR 214.2(h)(19)(iii). See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(3). The proposed rule additionally clarifies that an
entity would be considered a ``nonprofit entity'' for purpose of
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F) if it meets the definition of that
term at 8 CFR 214.2(h)(19)(iv).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ See id, note 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Furthermore, consistent with current DHS regulations, see 8 CFR
214.2(h)(19)(iii)(B), the term ``related or affiliated nonprofit
entity'' would be defined, both for ACWIA fee and cap exemption
purposes, to continue to include nonprofit entities that are: (1)
Connected or associated with an institution of higher education through
shared ownership or control by the same board or federation; (2)
operated by an institution of higher education; or (3) attached to an
institution of higher education as a member, branch, cooperative, or
subsidiary. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(2). DHS intends to
improve upon current policy, however, by proposing additional means by
which nonprofit entities may establish a sufficient relation or
affiliation with an institution of higher education. This change would
better reflect current operational realities for institutions of higher
education and how they interact with, and sometimes rely on, nonprofit
entities. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(2)(iv) and
(h)(19)(iii)(B).
In particular, based on its experience in this area, DHS believes
that the current definition for ``affiliated or related nonprofit
entities'' does not sufficiently account for the nature and scope of
common, bona fide affiliations between nonprofit entities and
institutions of higher education. To better account for such
relationships, DHS proposes to expand on the current definition by
including nonprofit entities that have entered into formal written
affiliation agreements with institutions of higher education and are
able to meet two additional criteria. First, such entities must
establish an active working relationship with the institution of higher
education for the purposes of research or education. Second, they must
establish that one of their primary purposes is to directly contribute
to the research or education mission of the institution of higher
education. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(2)(iv) and
(h)(19)(iii)(B)(4).
This proposed definition provides much needed flexibility in this
area, allowing DHS to better account for the full range of nonprofit
entities that are ``related or affiliated'' with institutions of higher
education and thus better ensure that such entities are not subject to
the H-1B cap or the ACWIA fee as Congress intended. For example, under
federal statute, Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals are considered
affiliated with a medical school or institution of higher learning
based on ``a contract or agreement . . . for the training or education
of health personnel.'' 38 U.S.C. 7423(d)(1). But such agreements may be
inadequate under the current regulatory definition to establish the
requisite affiliation or relation for purposes of the H-1B cap or ACWIA
fee exemptions. Such bona fide affiliation contracts or agreements are
common in the private sector as well. DHS believes the proposed
definition better captures these and other valid types of relationships
with institutions of higher education that are contemplated under AC21
and ACWIA.
DHS welcomes public comment on all aspects of this proposal.
b. Counting Previously Exempt H-1B Nonimmigrant Workers
DHS also proposes to conform its regulations to existing policy for
determining when a change in employment requires a previously exempt H-
1B nonimmigrant worker to be counted against the H-1B cap. See proposed
8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(5). As discussed above, an H-1B nonimmigrant
worker is exempt from the H-1B cap if he or she is employed at an
institution of higher education, a nonprofit entity related or
affiliated to such an institution, a nonprofit research organization,
or a governmental research organization.\61\ See INA section 214(g)(5),
8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(5). Under section 214(g)(6) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1184(g)(6), once cap-exempt employment ceases, the H-1B nonimmigrant
worker will be subject to the cap if he or she was not previously
counted against it and exemptions from the cap no longer apply. Section
214(g)(6) expressly refers to cap-exempt H-1B nonimmigrant workers who
cease to be employed by employers described under subparagraph (A) of
section 214(g)(5), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(5)(A), which lists only
institutions of higher education and related or affiliated nonprofit
entities. DHS, however, has long maintained the same policy with regard
to cessation of employment with employers described under subparagraph
(B) of section 214(g)(5), 8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(5)(B), which lists nonprofit
research organizations and governmental research organizations.\62\ DHS
now proposes to incorporate this interpretation into its H-1B
regulations. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(5). DHS believes
this reading is a reasonable interpretation and best implements the
congressional intent behind the H-1B cap exemption provisions, which
expressly exempt workers employed at those entities described in
sections 214(g)(5)(A) and (B). It reasonably follows that termination
of such employment should result in the cessation of the cap-exemption.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ Such cap-exempt H-1B nonimmigrant workers may also
undertake concurrent, non-exempt H-1B employment without being
subjected to the cap. See INA section 214(g)(5), 8 U.S.C.
1184(g)(5).
\62\ Neufeld Memo May 2008, at 7-8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with this interpretation, the proposed rule would
require a reassessment of an H-1B nonimmigrant worker's cap-exempt
status when he or she ceases employment at an institution of higher
education, a nonprofit entity related to or affiliated with such an
institution, a nonprofit research organization, or a governmental
research organization. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(ii)(F)(5) and
(6). If such an H-1B nonimmigrant worker was not previously counted
against the H-1B numerical cap within the 6-year period of authorized
admission to which the cap-exempt employment applied, he or she would
now be subject to the cap if no other exemptions from the cap apply.
Id. Accordingly, USCIS will deny any subsequent cap-subject H-1B
petition \63\ filed for the H-1B nonimmigrant worker if no cap numbers
are available, and
[[Page 81920]]
may revoke the approval of a petition for concurrent employment of the
H-1B nonimmigrant worker at a cap-subject employer. Id.
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\63\ The subsequent petition may be, for example, a cap-subject
petition by a new employer or a petition by the same cap-subject
employer for an extension of the beneficiary's stay.
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DHS welcomes public comment on this proposal.
6. Whistleblower Protections in the H-1B Program
DHS proposes to conform its regulations governing the H-1B program
to certain policies and practices that have developed since ACWIA
amended the INA to provide additional protections to H-1B nonimmigrant
workers and other workers. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(20). As noted
previously, section 413 of ACWIA amended the INA by adding new section
212(n)(2)(C), which is codified at 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(2)(C). Among other
things, section 212(n)(2)(C) makes it a violation for an H-1B employer
to retaliate against an employee for providing information to the
employer or any other person, or for cooperating in an investigation,
with respect to an employer's violation of its LCA attestations. See
INA section 212(n)(2)(C)(iv), 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(2)(C)(iv). Employers are
prohibited from taking retaliatory action against such an employee,
including any action to intimidate, threaten, restrain, coerce,
blacklist, discharge, or in any other manner discriminate against an
employee for disclosing information to the employer, or to any other
person, that the employee reasonably believes evidences an LCA
violation, any rule or regulation pertaining to the statutory LCA
attestation requirements, or for cooperating, or attempting to
cooperate, in an investigation or proceeding pertaining to the
employer's LCA compliance. Id.
Section 212(n)(2)(C) also requires DHS to establish a process under
which an H-1B nonimmigrant worker who files a complaint with DOL
regarding such illegal retaliation, and is otherwise eligible to remain
and work in the United States, ``may be allowed to seek other
appropriate employment in the United States for a period not to exceed
the maximum period of stay authorized for such nonimmigrant
classification.'' INA section 212(n)(2)(C)(v), 8 U.S.C.
1182(n)(2)(C)(v). Under current policy, if credible documentary
evidence is provided in support of an H-1B petition demonstrating that
the H-1B nonimmigrant worker faced retaliatory action from his or her
employer based on a report regarding a violation of the employer's LCA
obligations, DHS may consider any related loss of H-1B status by the
worker as an ``extraordinary circumstance'' under 8 CFR 214.1(c)(4) and
248.1(b) justifying an extension of H-1B status or change of status for
the worker.\64\ Accordingly, the H-1B nonimmigrant worker is afforded
time to acquire new H-1B employment or employment under another
nonimmigrant classification notwithstanding a termination of employment
or other retaliatory action by his or her employer. Credible
documentary evidence may include a copy of the complaint filed by the
individual, along with corroborative documentation that such a
complaint has resulted in retaliatory action against the individual as
described in 20 CFR 655.801.\65\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ See Neufeld Memo May 2008, at 8.
\65\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule would codify in regulation DHS' current policy
regarding these protections. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(20). Under the
proposed rule, a qualifying employer seeking an extension of stay for
an H-1B nonimmigrant worker, or a change of status from H-1B status to
another nonimmigrant classification, would be able to submit
documentary evidence indicating that the beneficiary faced retaliatory
action from his or her employer (or former employer) based on a report
regarding a violation of the employer's LCA obligations. Id. If DHS
determines such documentary evidence to be credible, DHS may consider
any loss or failure to maintain H-1B status by the beneficiary related
to such violation as an ``extraordinary circumstance'' under 8 CFR
214.1(c)(4) and 248.1(b). Those regulations, in turn, authorize DHS to
grant a discretionary extension of H-1B stay or a change of status to
another nonimmigrant classification. See 8 CFR 214.1(c)(4) and
248.1(b). As with current policy, credible documentary evidence should
include a copy of the complaint filed by the individual, along with
corroborative documentation that such a complaint has resulted in the
retaliatory action against the individual as described in 20 CFR
655.801. All evidence submitted will be considered to determine whether
``extraordinary circumstances'' have been met.
DHS invites the public to comment on all aspects of this proposal.
B. Additional Changes To Further Improve Stability and Job Flexibility
for Certain Workers
DHS further proposes to amend its regulations, consistent with AC21
and DHS authorities, related to certain employment-based immigrant and
nonimmigrant visa programs to provide additional stability and
flexibility to employers and workers in those programs. The proposals
are primarily intended to improve job portability for certain
beneficiaries of approved employment-based immigrant visa petitions,
including by limiting the grounds for automatic revocation of petition
approval and increasing the ability of such workers to retain their
priority dates for use with subsequently approved employment-based
immigrant visa petitions.
The proposed rule would also: Improve or establish grace periods
for certain nonimmigrant workers so that they may more easily seek and
accept new employment opportunities; further assist applicants for
adjustment of status and certain other employment-eligible individuals
by automatically extending EADs for an interim period upon the timely
filing of a renewal application; and provide additional stability and
flexibility to high-skilled workers in certain nonimmigrant statuses to
apply for employment authorization for a limited period if they meet
certain criteria, including demonstrating that they are beneficiaries
of approved employment-based immigrant visa petitions, are subject to
immigrant visa backlogs, and demonstrate compelling circumstances.
These and other proposed changes would provide much needed flexibility
to a limited group of beneficiaries of employment-based immigrant visa
petitions, as well as the U.S. employers who employ and sponsor them
for permanent residence.
1. Revocation of Approved Employment-Based Immigrant Visa Petitions
As referenced above, DHS is proposing to amend its regulations
governing revocation of petition approval to provide greater stability
and flexibility to certain workers who have approved EB-1, EB-2, or EB-
3 immigrant visa petitions and are on the path to obtaining LPR status
in the United States. The INA provides that any immigrant visa
petition, once approved, may have such approval revoked by the
Secretary of Homeland Security ``for what he deems to be good and
sufficient cause.'' INA section 205, 8 U.S.C. 1155. Pursuant to this
statutory authority, current DHS regulations provide grounds for
automatic revocation and revocation on notice to the petitioner. See 8
CFR 205.1 and 205.2.\66\ With respect to employment-
[[Page 81921]]
based immigrant visa petitions, the current regulatory grounds for
automatic revocation include: (1) Invalidation of the labor
certification supporting the petition; (2) death of the petitioner or
beneficiary; (3) withdrawal by the petitioning employer; and (4)
termination of the petitioning employer's business. See 8 CFR 205.1.
The regulatory provisions governing revocation on notice to the
petitioner allow for revocation to be pursued on any other ground
``when the necessity for the revocation comes to the attention of
[DHS].'' 8 CFR 205.2(a). Such revocation may be used, for example, for
petitions involving fraud, material misrepresentation, or erroneous
approval.\67\
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\66\ The Department of Justice (DOJ) Executive Office for
Immigration Review (EOIR) has corresponding revocation regulations.
See 8 CFR part 1205. DHS and DOJ, however, are not proposing to
amend those regulations. The EOIR regulations do not permit EOIR to
revoke under section 205 of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1155, employment-based
immigrant visa petitions approved under section 204 of the INA, 8
U.S.C. 1154. Subsequent to enactment of the Homeland Security Act,
DOJ promulgated regulations transferring or duplicating certain
parts of regulations codified in 8 CFR chapter I, including the
automatic revocation regulations, to a new chapter pertaining to
EOIR at 8 CFR chapter V. See Aliens and Nationality; Homeland
Security; Reorganization of Regulations, 68 FR 9824 (Feb. 28, 2003).
Thereafter, on December 17, 2004, Congress vested authority for
revocations under section 205 of the INA solely in the Secretary of
Homeland Security, rather than the Attorney General. See
Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004, Public Law
108-458, sec. 5304(c), 118 Stat. 3638 (striking ``Attorney General''
and inserting ``Secretary of Homeland Security''). Moreover, EOIR's
Board of Immigration Appeals has held that immigration judges are
not authorized to revoke employment-based immigrant visa petitions
approved under section 204 of the INA, and that the Board lacks
jurisdiction to review DHS decisions to revoke such petitions. See,
e.g., Matter of Marcal-Neto, 25 I&N Dec. 169, 174 (BIA 2010)
(immigration judges lack authority to decide whether visa petitions
should be revoked); Matter of Aurelio, 19 I&N Dec. 458, 460 (BIA
1987) (the Board lacks jurisdiction over matters involving the
automatic revocation of a visa petition) (citing Matter of Zaidan,
19 I&N Dec. 297 (BIA 1985)). Accordingly, EOIR regulations at 8 CFR
part 1205 need not be revised to conform with the proposed revisions
in this rule.
\67\ See Adjudicator's Field Manual, Chapter 22: Employment-
Based Petitions, Entrepreneurs, and Special Immigrants Sec.
22.2(d)(1) Employment-based Immigrant Visa Petitions (Form I-140);
Determining the Priority Date, available at https://www.uscis.gov/iframe/ilink/docView/AFM/HTML/AFM/0-0-0-1.html.
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The proposed rule would amend these regulations so that EB-1, EB-2,
and EB-3 immigrant visa petitions that have been approved for 180 days
or more would no longer have such approval automatically revoked based
only on withdrawal by the petitioner or termination of the petitioner's
business. See proposed 8 CFR 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(C) and (D). As long as
such an approval has not been revoked for fraud, material
misrepresentation, the invalidation or revocation of a labor
certification, or USCIS error, the petition will generally continue to
be valid for various purposes under the immigration laws. Id. Such
purposes include: (1) The retention of priority dates; (2) job
portability under section 204(j) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1154(j); and (3)
extensions of status for certain H-1B nonimmigrant workers under
sections 104(c) and 106(a) and (b) of AC21. Id. An employment-based
immigrant visa petition that is subject to withdrawal or business
termination, however, cannot on its own serve as the basis for
obtaining an immigrant visa or applying for adjustment of status as
there is no longer a bona fide employment offer related to the
petition. See id. In such cases, the beneficiary will need a new
immigrant visa petition filed on his or her behalf, or a new offer of
employment in section 204(j) portability cases, in order to obtain an
immigrant visa or adjust status. Id.
DHS believes these regulatory changes are critical to fully
implementing the job portability provisions of AC21. The current
regulations concerning revocation of employment-based petition approval
were last amended in 1996,\68\ when wait times for employment-based
immigrant visas were relatively short and the immigration laws seemed
to contemplate that sponsored employees would remain with their
petitioning employers during the short time it took to obtain LPR
status. The passage of time, and AC21, changed this landscape. In the
intervening period, wait times for immigrant visas increased
substantially, particularly for workers from India and China. See
section III.D. And in recognition of these and other delays, Congress
enacted AC21 in 2000 to provide additional flexibility to workers who
were subject to lengthy delays in the immigrant visa process. Since
AC21, wait times for immigrant visas have grown dramatically, so that
for many workers the period between the approval of an employment-based
immigrant visa petition \69\ and the worker's ability to obtain
permanent residence is now counted in years, if not decades. Id. This
has placed increased emphasis on and further necessitates the benefits
Congress sought to provide through AC21.
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\68\ See 61 FR 13061 (1996). In 2006, the Department of Homeland
Security and the Department of Justice amended the revocation
regulations pertaining to immediate relatives and family-sponsored
beneficiaries. See 71 FR 35749.
\69\ The period of time necessary for USCIS to approve an
employment-based immigrant visa petition requiring a labor
certification from DOL does not account for the time that is
required for DOL adjudication of the labor certification
application. A worker's priority date in such cases, which is
established as of the date DOL accepts the labor certification
application for processing, see 8 CFR 204.5(e), typically will be
more than one year before the date of petition approval under
current processing times.
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Importantly, Congress enacted AC21 with the specific purpose of
providing increased job flexibility to certain workers who are being
sponsored for permanent residence by a particular employer, but who as
a result of long delays are forced to wait inordinate periods of time
for such permanent residence. Section 106(c) of AC21, for example,
created section 204(j) of the INA to allow certain workers with
approved immigrant visa petitions and pending applications for
adjustment of status to change jobs or employers without invalidating
their approved immigrant visa petitions. See Section III.A. This
statutory change supports the regulatory change proposed in this
section. In cases involving section 204(j) portability, allowing a
withdrawal by the petitioning employer, or termination of its business,
to automatically cause revocation of the immigrant visa petition's
approval would substantially undermine the protections Congress
intended to provide the beneficiaries of such petitions through section
204(j).
The same is true with respect to the various provisions of AC21
that were intended to provide certainty and flexibility to H-1B
nonimmigrant workers. AC21 provided various ways in which such workers
could extend their H-1B status beyond the general 6-year limitation if
they had been sponsored for permanent residence by an employer. See
Section III.C. (discussing AC21 sections 104(c) and 106(a) and (b)). At
the same time, AC21 enhanced the ability of H-1B nonimmigrant workers
to change jobs or employers, including by authorizing such workers to
immediately commence new employment upon the filing of a non-frivolous
H-1B petition. Id. (discussing AC21 section 105(a)). These extension
and portability provisions are far less meaningful if, after the H-1B
nonimmigrant worker changes jobs, the approval of his or her qualifying
immigrant visa petition can be automatically revoked solely due to
withdrawal by the petitioning employer or termination of its business.
Accordingly, this proposed rule would amend DHS regulations
governing revocation with respect to employment-based immigrant visa
petitions to better reflect and enhance the job portability eligibility
authorized by AC21. As noted above, DHS proposes that an employment-
based immigrant visa petition that has been approved for 180 days or
more would no longer have such approval automatically revoked based
only on withdrawal by the
[[Page 81922]]
petitioner or termination of the petitioner's business. See proposed 8
CFR 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(C) and (D). This change would effectively improve
the ability of certain workers with approved EB-1, EB-2, or EB-3
immigrant visa petitions to rely on such petitions for various job
portability and status extension provisions in the immigration laws.
Among other things, qualifying workers would be able to take advantage
of these provisions without fear that certain circumstances outside of
their control will automatically cause the revocation of the approval
of their immigrant visa petitions, eliminate access to status extension
and portability provisions intended to assist them, and potentially
force them to leave their homes in the United States at a moment's
notice.
While enhancing these protections, the regulatory changes in this
proposed rule would remain consistent with current policy concerning
these workers' ability to obtain adjustment of status or an immigrant
visa. The proposed rule, for example, would continue to require a valid
and qualifying offer of employment (unless the requirement for such an
offer is exempted by law) at the time a worker seeks to apply for or
receive adjustment of status. As discussed in Section IV.B.1. of this
proposed rule, beneficiaries of employment-based immigrant visa
petitions who seek to adjust status based on continuing offers of
employment from petitioning employers would be unaffected by this rule.
If the petitioning employer of such a beneficiary withdraws or goes out
of business, the beneficiary must have a new offer of employment and a
new immigrant visa petition filed on his or her behalf in order to file
for or obtain adjustment of status, consistent with current policy. See
proposed 8 CFR 245.25(a)(2) and 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(C).
The analysis is similar for beneficiaries of immigrant visa
petitions who seek to adjust status based in part on the portability
protection of section 204(j) of the INA. Where the petitioner withdraws
or goes out of business 180 days or more after the adjustment of status
application is filed, the beneficiary would continue to be required to
demonstrate that he or she has a new and valid offer of employment in a
same or similar occupational classification, consistent with section
204(j). See proposed 8 CFR 245.25(b)(2) and 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(D). Thus,
in all instances of petition withdrawal or business termination where
an offer of employment is necessary, the beneficiary either will need a
new immigrant visa petition filed on his or her behalf, or a new offer
of employment consistent with section 204(j), in order to file for or
obtain adjustment of status. Id.
Accordingly, DHS believes that the proposed changes provide
important stability and flexibility to workers who have been sponsored
for permanent residence while also protecting against fraud and misuse.
First, as just discussed, beneficiaries of approved employment-based
immigrant visa petitions will continue to be unable to rely on such
petitions for the purposes of adjusting status or obtaining an
immigrant visa in cases where the petitioning employer has withdrawn or
gone out of business, unless eligible for section 204(j) portability.
Second, DHS is proposing to restrict revocation based on petitioner
withdrawal or business termination only for petitions that have been
approved for 180 days or more. See proposed 8 CFR 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(C)
and (D). In addition to the period that it typically takes for a
petitioning employer to obtain a labor certification from DOL and
approval of an immigrant visa petition from DHS, the 180-day
requirement would provide additional assurance that the petition was
bona fide when filed. Finally, the proposed amendments do not in any
way restrict DHS' current ability to revoke the approval of any
immigrant visa petition for fraud, material misrepresentation, the
invalidation or revocation of a labor certification, error, or any
other circumstance that DHS believes is good cause for revocation. See
8 CFR 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(A) and 205.2; see also 8 CFR 205.1(a)(3)(iii)(C)
and (D).
DHS welcomes public comment on all aspects of this proposed change.
2. Retention of Priority Dates
DHS also proposes to amend its regulations to enhance the ability
of beneficiaries with approved EB-1, EB-2 or EB-3 immigrant visa
petitions to retain the priority dates associated with those petitions
and rely on them when seeking to obtain an immigrant visa or adjust
status.
First, the proposed rule would update DHS regulations to provide
clarity to all beneficiaries of employment-based immigrant visa
petitions regarding the establishment of priority dates and to
eliminate obsolete references in this area. See proposed 8 CFR
204.5(d). DHS regulations currently provide how priority dates are
determined for employment-based immigrant visa petitions that: (1) Are
accompanied by labor certifications; (2) are accompanied by
applications for Schedule A designation; or (3) are filed on behalf of
special immigrants described in section 203(b)(4) of the INA. See 8 CFR
204.5(d). The regulations, however, do not specify how priority dates
are established for other employment-based immigrant visa petitions
that do not require labor certifications--such as petitions filed under
the EB-1 or EB-5 preference categories. DHS thus proposes to revise its
regulations to clarify that the priority date of any properly filed
employment-based immigrant visa petition that does not require a labor
certification (including EB-1 petitions, EB-2 petitions involving
national interest waivers, EB-5 petitions, and petitions filed on or
after October 1, 1991 on behalf of special immigrants) will be the date
the completed, signed petition is properly filed with DHS. See proposed
8 CFR 204.5(d). The proposed rule would also delete a reference to
``evidence that the alien's occupation is a shortage occupation within
the Department of Labor's Labor Market Information Pilot Program,'' as
that reference is now obsolete. Id.
Second, the proposed rule would clarify and expand the ability of
beneficiaries of approved EB-1, EB-2, and EB-3 immigrant visa petitions
to retain their priority dates for use with subsequently filed EB-1,
EB-2, and EB-3 petitions. See proposed 8 CFR 204.5(e). Current
regulations generally allow such retention, but not where DHS denies
the petition or revokes its approval under section 204(e) or 205 of the
INA, 8 U.S.C. 1154(e) or 1155. See 8 CFR 204.5(e). DHS proposes to
revise these regulations so that the priority dates of EB-1, EB-2, and
EB-3 petitions may be used for subsequently filed EB-1, EB-2 and EB-3
petitions, unless USCIS denies the petition (or otherwise fails to
approve it) or revokes the petition's approval due to: (1) Fraud or a
willful misrepresentation of a material fact; (2) a determination that
the petition was approved in error; or (3) revocation or invalidation
of the labor certification associated with the petition. See proposed 8
CFR 204.5(e). The priority date of a petition that has its approval
revoked on these grounds would not be retained, regardless of whether
the petition's approval was previously revoked on other grounds.
This change, in combination with the proposed changes to the
automatic revocation provisions discussed above, would effectively
expand beneficiaries' ability to retain the priority dates of their
approved EB-1, EB-2, and EB-3 petitions, particularly those that are
later withdrawn or that involve petitioning employers that go out of
business. Notably, the ability to retain priority dates under this
amendment
[[Page 81923]]
would begin immediately upon petition approval even if the petition's
approval is thereafter revoked based on petition withdrawal or business
termination less than 180 days after approval. This change would
provide greater certainty and stability for beneficiaries in their
pursuit of permanent residence in the United States. The change would
also continue to allow DHS to restrict retention of priority dates in
cases that merit such restriction, including in cases where the
petition does not satisfy the pertinent legal requirements, cases where
the underlying labor certification has been invalidated or revoked,
cases involving fraud or willful misrepresentation, and cases involving
DHS error.
DHS welcomes public comment on all aspects of this proposed change.
3. Nonimmigrant Grace Periods
To further improve stability and flexibility for high-skilled
nonimmigrant workers, DHS proposes to authorize and improve grace
periods in certain nonimmigrant visa classifications. As further
described below, DHS is effectively proposing to extend the current
grace periods for H-1B nonimmigrant workers--which authorize admission
up to 10 days before and after the relevant validity period--to certain
other high-skilled nonimmigrant classifications (E-1, E-2, E-3, L-1,
and TN classifications). DHS further proposes to make a grace period
available in these classifications, as well as the H-1B and H-1B1
nonimmigrant classifications, for up to 60 days during the period of
petition validity (or other authorized validity period).
a. Extending 10-Day Grace Periods to Certain Nonimmigrant
Classifications
First, DHS proposes to provide grace periods similar to those
currently available to H-1B nonimmigrant workers to other high-skilled
nonimmigrant workers. See proposed 8 CFR 214.1(l)(i). DHS regulations
currently allow H-1B nonimmigrant workers to receive grace periods of
up to 10 days before the validity periods of their H-1B petitions begin
and 10 days after such validity periods end. See 8 CFR
214.2(h)(13)(i)(A). During any such grace period, an H-1B nonimmigrant
worker is considered ``admitted to the United States'' but not
authorized to work. See 8 CFR 214.2(h)(13)(i)(A). The initial 10-day
grace period allows H-1B nonimmigrant workers to make necessary
preparations for their employment in the United States. The 10-day
grace period at the end of the validity period provides a short window
in which H-1B nonimmigrant workers may either (1) find new qualifying
H-1B employment and extend their H-1B status or (2) get their affairs
in order before departing the United States. See id.
The proposed rule would extend similar 10-day grace periods to
individuals in certain other employment-authorized nonimmigrant visa
classifications, namely the E-1, E-2, E-3, L-1, and TN classifications.
Providing grace periods in such classifications--which, like the H-1B
classification, are generally available to high-skilled individuals and
authorize stays of multiple years--reflects goals similar to those
underlying AC21 and serves the national interest by promoting stability
and flexibility for such workers. A 10-day grace period before the
petition or authorized validity period begins allows these
nonimmigrants a reasonable amount of time to enter the United States
and prepare for their employment in the country. A 10-day grace period
after their petition or authorized validity period ends provides a
reasonable amount of time to depart the United States or take other
actions to extend, change, or otherwise maintain lawful status after
their period of authorized employment ends.
Consistent with the current grace periods in the H-1B
classification, the proposed rule would not allow eligible
nonimmigrants to be employed during either of the 10-day grace periods.
See proposed 8 CFR 214.1(l). Such periods are provided merely for
eligible nonimmigrants to prepare for employment, seek new employment
in order to extend or change status, or prepare for departure from the
United States. Further, the proposed rule would extend grace periods to
dependents of eligible principal nonimmigrant workers. Id. If a
principal nonimmigrant worker is eligible to extend his or her stay
under a grace period provided by this proposed rule, his or her
dependent would also be eligible. Id. Finally, DHS also proposes to
amend the existing grace period provision in current regulation with
respect to the H-1B classification to align such provisions with the
proposed cross-classification provision described above. See proposed 8
CFR 214.2(h)(13)(i)(A).
DHS welcomes public comment on all aspects of this proposed change.
b. Providing a 60-Day Grace Period to Certain Nonimmigrant
Classifications
Second, the proposed rule would authorize a grace period in the E-
1, E-2, E-3, H-1B1, L-1, and TN classifications, as well as the H-1B
classification, during the period of petition validity (or other
authorized validity period). To enhance job portability for these high-
skilled nonimmigrants, DHS proposes to generally establish a one-time
grace period during an authorized nonimmigrant validity period of up to
60 days or until the existing validity period ends, whichever is
shorter, whenever employment ends for these individuals. See proposed 8
CFR 214.1(l)(ii). DHS currently provides flexibility in other
nonimmigrant classifications, such as those for F-1 nonimmigrant
students and J-1 nonimmigrant exchange visitors.\70\ DHS believes that
adding this one-time interim grace period of up to 60 days upon
cessation of employment for additional classifications of nonimmigrants
would allow nonimmigrants in the affected classifications sufficient
time to respond to sudden or unexpected changes related to their
employment. Such time may be used to seek new employment, seek a change
of status to a different nonimmigrant classification, or make
preparations for departure from the United States.
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\70\ DHS regulations currently provide 60- and 30-day grace
periods to F-1 nonimmigrant students and J-1 nonimmigrant exchange
visitors, respectively. See 8 CFR 214.2(f)(5)(iv) and (j)(1)(ii). F-
1 students who have completed their course of study and any
subsequently authorized practical training are granted an additional
60-day period to prepare for departure or transfer to another
school. See 8 CFR 214.2(f)(5)(iv). The 30-day grace period for J-1
nonimmigrant exchange visitors is available to them during the
validity period of their J-1 duration of status, which includes the
duration of their J-1 exchange program and a 30-day departure
preparation period. See 8 CFR 214.2(j)(1)(ii).
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Under current policy, for example, an H-1B nonimmigrant worker
whose employment ends--whether voluntarily or upon being laid off or
terminated by the H-1B employer--is generally considered to be in
violation of his or her status and must depart the United States
immediately. Under the proposed rule, however, H-1B nonimmigrant
workers would be afforded up to 60 days upon the end of employment to
seek new H-1B employment and thus extend their H-1B status without
having to immediately depart the country. Accordingly, this interim
grace period would further support the enhanced job portability
protections provided to H-1B nonimmigrant workers by AC21, which
authorizes them to change jobs or employers upon the filing of a non-
frivolous H-1B petition, if otherwise eligible. The proposed change
described in this section would provide H-1B and certain other
nonimmigrant workers a small degree of stability and flexibility
[[Page 81924]]
when faced with sudden changes to their employment.
As with the 10-day grace periods discussed in the preceding
section, eligible nonimmigrants would not be authorized for employment
during an interim grace period of up to 60 days proposed by this
rule.\71\ See proposed 8 CFR 214.1(l). Also consistent with the 10-day
grace periods, the proposed rule would extend the interim grace periods
to dependents of eligible principal nonimmigrant workers. Id. During
any interim period in which a principal nonimmigrant worker is eligible
to extend his or her stay under this proposed change, his or her
dependent would also be eligible.
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\71\ If a qualifying H-1B petition is properly filed on the H-1B
nonimmigrant worker's behalf during this 60-day grace period, DHS
would consider the individual to no longer be in the 60-day grace
period as they would be employment authorized under section 214(n)
of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1184(n).
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DHS welcomes public comment on all aspects of this proposal,
including on the appropriate length of the grace period and on the
nonimmigrant classifications that should be afforded eligibility for
such grace periods.
4. Eligibility for Employment Authorization in Compelling Circumstances
DHS proposes to further enhance stability and flexibility for high-
skilled nonimmigrant workers who are the beneficiaries of approved
immigrant visa petitions filed by sponsoring U.S. employers and who
face compelling circumstances while they wait for their immigrant visas
to become available. As discussed in Section III.E., the continually
expanding backlogs for employment-based immigrant visas can place
sponsored workers and their sponsoring employers in untenable
positions.
Currently, sponsoring employers and sponsored workers cannot
deviate from the specific job offer described in a labor certification
and approved employment-based immigrant visa petition until the worker:
(1) Has an immigrant visa immediately available to him or her; (2) has
filed an application for adjustment of status; and (3) has such
application pending for at least 180 days.\72\ See INA section 204(j),
8 U.S.C. 1154(j). Before all three of these conditions are met, an
employer generally cannot promote the sponsored worker, move the worker
to another position, or transfer the worker to the same or a similar
position in a different geographic area without jeopardizing the
immigrant visa petition approved on the worker's behalf, regardless of
the circumstances. Neither can a sponsored worker accept employment
with an employer other than the sponsoring employer without creating
the same risk. Whether the worker and his or her family are facing a
medical or other emergency is currently immaterial. Neither is it
relevant that the worker may have faced retaliation from the employer
for engaging in protected conduct, or that the lack of flexibility may
result in significant business or economic harm to the employer or
worker.
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\72\ Over 75 percent of principal beneficiaries of employment-
based immigrant visa petitions, sponsored for LPR status by
employers based on their skills and contributions to the U.S.
economy, are seeking classification as EB-2 and EB-3 immigrants and
thus, with limited exception, are subject to a labor market test
requiring a labor certification from the Department of Labor. See
DHS Yearbook of Immigration Statistics, Table 7 https://www.dhs.gov/yearbook-immigration-statistics-2013-lawful-permanent-residents.
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To provide flexibility in the face of such compelling
circumstances, DHS proposes to extend employment authorization to a
discrete subset of high-skilled workers who are the beneficiaries of
approved employment-based immigrant visa petitions and are in the
United States in certain nonimmigrant statuses. Specifically, the
proposed rule would provide the ability for individuals to apply for
employment authorization for 1 year when they meet all of the following
criteria: (1) The individual is currently in the United States and
maintaining E-3, H-1B, H-1B1, O-1 or L-1 nonimmigrant status; (2) the
individual is the beneficiary of an approved immigrant visa petition
under the EB-1, EB-2 or EB-3 classification; (3) the individual does
not have an immigrant visa immediately available; and (4) the
individual can demonstrate to the satisfaction of DHS compelling
circumstances that justify an independent grant of employment
authorization. See proposed 8 CFR 204.5(p)(1). DHS is proposing this
change to provide qualified nonimmigrants who are beneficiaries of
approved employment-based immigrant visa petitions, but are awaiting an
immigrant visa, a stopgap measure for retaining employment
authorization for a limited period when compelling circumstances arise.
DHS anticipates that use of this proposal, if finalized, would be
limited for various reasons. First, DHS believes that the other changes
proposed in this rule to enhance flexibility for employers and
nonimmigrant workers, if finalized, would significantly decrease
instances where this proposal will be needed. Second, nonimmigrant
workers will have significant incentive to choose other options, as the
proposal discussed in this section would require the worker to
relinquish his or her nonimmigrant status, thus restricting his or her
ability to change nonimmigrant status or adjust status to that of a
lawful permanent resident. Accepting the employment authorization under
this proposal, for example, would generally require the worker to
forego adjusting status in the United States and instead seek an
immigrant visa abroad through consular processing. Finally, DHS
anticipates that a limited number of nonimmigrant workers with approved
EB-1, EB-2, or EB-3 immigrant visa petitions will be able to
demonstrate compelling circumstances justifying an independent grant of
employment authorization. Employment authorization based on compelling
circumstances will not be available to a nonimmigrant worker solely
because his or her statutory maximum time period for nonimmigrant
status is approaching or has been reached. Likewise, employment
authorization generally would not be available to a nonimmigrant if the
tendered compelling circumstance is within his or her control.
DHS is not proposing to define the term ``compelling
circumstances'' at this time, as the Department seeks to retain
flexibility as to the types of compelling circumstances that clearly
warrant the Secretary's exercise of discretion in granting employment
authorization. DHS, however, has currently identified four
circumstances in which it may consider granting employment
authorization under the proposed change:
Serious Illnesses and Disabilities. The nonimmigrant
worker can demonstrate that he or she, or his or her dependent, is
facing a serious illness or disability that entails the worker moving
to a different geographic area for treatment or otherwise substantially
changing his or her employment circumstances.
Employer Retaliation. The nonimmigrant worker can
demonstrate that he or she is involved in a dispute regarding the
employer's illegal or dishonest activity as evidenced by, for example,
a complaint filed with a relevant government agency or court, and the
employer has taken retaliatory action that justifies granting separate
employment authorization to the worker on a discretionary basis.
Other Substantial Harm to the Applicant. The nonimmigrant
worker can demonstrate that due to compelling circumstances, he or she
will be unable to timely extend or otherwise maintain status, or obtain
another nonimmigrant status, and absent continued employment
authorization under this proposal the applicant and his or her family
would suffer substantial harm.
[[Page 81925]]
Such circumstances, for example, may involve an H-1B nonimmigrant
worker who has been applying an industry-specific skillset in a high-
technology sector for years with a U.S. entity that is unexpectedly
terminating its business, where the worker is able to establish: (1)
That the same or a similar industry (e.g., nuclear energy, aeronautics,
or artificial intelligence) does not materially exist in the home
country, and (2) that the resulting inability to find productive
employment would cause significant hardship to the worker and his or
her family if required to return home. In such circumstances, the
employment authorization proposal would provide the individual with an
opportunity to find another employer to sponsor him or her for
immigrant or nonimmigrant status and thereby protect the worker and his
or her family members from the substantial harm they would suffer if
required to depart the United States.
Significant Disruption to the Employer. The nonimmigrant
worker can show that due to compelling circumstances, he or she is
unexpectedly unable to timely extend or change status, there are no
other possible avenues for the immediate employment of such worker with
that employer, and the worker's departure would cause the petitioning
employer substantial disruption to a project for which the worker is a
critical employee. Such circumstances, for example, may include the
following:
[cir] An L-1B nonimmigrant worker is sponsored for permanent
residence by an employer that subsequently undergoes corporate
restructuring (e.g., a sale, split, or spin off) such that the worker's
new employer is no longer a multinational company eligible to employ L-
1B workers, there are no available avenues to promptly obtain another
work-authorized nonimmigrant status for the worker, and the employer
would suffer substantial disruption due to the critical nature of the
worker's services. In such cases, the employment authorization proposal
would provide the employer and worker a temporary bridge allowing for
continued employment while they continue in their efforts to obtain a
new nonimmigrant or immigrant status.
[cir] An H-1B nonimmigrant worker is providing critical work on
biomedical research for an entity affiliated with an institution of
higher education, thus making the entity exempt from the H-1B cap, when
the funding for the research unexpectedly changes and now comes through
a for-profit entity, thus causing the entity to lose its cap-exempt
status. In cases where the worker is unable to quickly obtain H-1B
status based on a cap-subject H-1B petition or another work-authorized
nonimmigrant status, the employment authorization proposal would
provide a temporary bridge for continued employment of the worker when
his or her departure would create substantial disruption to the
employer's biomedical research.
In each of these examples of situations where USCIS may find
compelling circumstances, the proposed provision would provide
individuals with the ability to retain employment authorization and the
opportunity to find a new sponsoring employer or explore options with
the current sponsoring employer. DHS invites public comment on these
examples of compelling circumstances or other types of compelling
circumstances that may warrant a discretionary grant of separate
employment authorization. DHS also welcomes public comment on the
manner in which applicants should be expected to document such
compelling circumstances.
As noted above, DHS is proposing this employment authorization only
for certain workers who are the beneficiaries of approved employment-
based immigrant visa petitions and who are in the United States in E-3,
H-1B, H-1B1, O-1, or L-1 nonimmigrant status. See proposed 8 CFR
204.5(p)(1)(i). The requirement that the individual must be the
beneficiary of an approved employment-based immigrant visa petition is
intended to limit employment authorization to those workers who are
seeking employment-based permanent residence in the United States and
are merely awaiting an immigrant visa and either: (1) Are the subject
of an approved labor certification indicating that their employment
would not harm U.S. workers or (2) are in a classification that
Congress has chosen to prioritize by exempting them from the labor
certification requirement. DHS is further limiting eligibility to the
listed nonimmigrant classifications as they represent the vast majority
of high-skilled nonimmigrant workers who are sponsored for permanent
residence by U.S. employers.\73\ DHS invites public comment on the
listed nonimmigrant classifications and whether other nonimmigrant
classifications should be considered. DHS also invites public comment
on the requirement that applicants be the beneficiaries of approved EB-
1, EB-2, or EB-3 immigrant visa petitions.
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\73\ Based on USCIS analysis of approved employment-based
immigrant visa petitions with the ``beneficiary's current
nonimmigrant status'' field completed, approximately 97 percent held
H-1B or H-1B1 status, and approximately 2.9 percent held L-1
nonimmigrant status. Approximately 10.5 percent of approved
petitions had missing information for that field.
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DHS is further proposing that workers who have been granted 1 year
of employment authorization under the proposed rule would not be able
to extend such employment authorization at the end of the 1-year period
unless certain criteria are met. DHS is proposing to limit renewal of
such employment authorization to those workers who can show that they
continue to be the principal beneficiary of an approved EB-1, EB-2 or
EB-3 immigrant visa petition and either: (1) The worker continues to
face compelling circumstances; or (2) the worker has a priority date
that is less than 1 year from the current cut-off date for the relevant
employment-based category and country of nationality in the most recent
visa bulletin published by the Department of State. See proposed 8 CFR
204.5(p)(3)(i).
DHS further proposes that individuals would be ineligible to obtain
employment authorization under this rule, whether initial or renewal,
if at the time of the filing of the EAD application the alien's
priority date is more than 1 year beyond the date on which immigrant
visa numbers were authorized to be issued to individuals with the same
priority date for the relevant employment-based category and country of
nationality. DHS believes this outer limit would discourage individuals
from relying on the proposed employment authorization in lieu of
completing the employment-based immigrant visa process. See proposed 8
CFR 204.5(p)(5).
DHS also proposes to generally require these applicants to appear
in person at a USCIS Application Support Center (ASC) to submit
biometric information and pay a biometric fee as prescribed in 8 CFR
103.7(b)(1)(i)(C). See proposed 8 CFR 204.5(p)(4). This requirement
would allow DHS to better assess the applicant's potential risk to
public safety and national security, and to enable DHS to make a more
informed decision when exercising discretion to approve or deny such
application for employment authorization. See 8 CFR 274a.13(a)(1). DHS
also is proposing that, in all cases, an individual would be ineligible
for employment authorization under this provision if convicted of any
felony or two or more misdemeanors. See proposed 8 CFR 204.5(p)(5)(i).
DHS welcomes public comment on these additional requirements.
With regard to dependents of qualifying principal nonimmigrants,
[[Page 81926]]
DHS proposes to extend employment authorization eligibility to those
dependent spouses and children who are also present in the United
States in nonimmigrant status, but only if the principal spouse or
parent is granted employment authorization under this rule and such
authorization has not been terminated or revoked. See proposed 8 CFR
204.5(p)(2). The validity period of the family member's employment
authorization may not extend beyond the period authorized for the
principal spouse or parent. Id. Dependent family members seeking
renewals of employment authorization would be subject to these same
limitations. See proposed 8 CFR 204.5(p)(3)(ii).
DHS further proposes conforming amendments to 8 CFR 274a.12(c),
which lists classes of individuals who must apply for employment
authorization. These amendments would add two new categories of
individuals eligible for employment authorization, one for the
principal beneficiaries described above and one for their dependent
spouses and children. See proposed 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(35) and (36). Under
these regulations, qualifying individuals would not be permitted to
engage in employment until USCIS approves, as a matter of discretion,
the employment authorization application and issues an EAD (Form I-766,
or successor form). See 8 CFR 274a.12(c) and 8 CFR 274a.13(a)(1).
DHS welcomes public comment on all aspects of this proposal,
including the appropriate validity period for grants of employment
authorization and the nonimmigrant visa classifications that should be
eligible to request such employment authorization.
5. H-1B Licensing Requirements
DHS proposes to amend its regulations consistent with current
policy for determining when H-1B status may be granted notwithstanding
the H-1B beneficiary's inability to obtain a required license. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(4)(v)(C)(2). Generally, if the beneficiary of
an H-1B petition requires a state or local license to fully perform the
duties of the occupation described in the petition, the petition may
not be approved unless the beneficiary possesses the license. See 8 CFR
214.2(h)(4)(v)(A). However, this sometimes results in a ``Catch-22''
situation, as the state or local licensing authority may not issue
licenses to individuals who do not have social security numbers or
cannot otherwise prove employment authorization (such as with an
approved H-1B petition). Under current policy, DHS may approve an H-1B
petition in such cases for a 1-year period, provided that the only
obstacle to obtaining licensure is the lack of a social security number
or employment authorization.\74\
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\74\ USCIS Memorandum from Donald Neufeld, ``Adjudicator's Field
Manual Update: Chapter 31: Accepting and Adjudicating H-1B Petitions
When a Required License is not Available due to State Licensing
Requirements Mandating Possession of a Valid Immigration Document as
Evidence of Employment Authorization.'' (March 21, 2008) (``Neufeld
Memo March 2008''), INS Memorandum from Thomas Cook, ``Social
Security Cards and the Adjudication of H-1B Petitions'' (Nov. 20,
2001) (``Cook Memo Nov. 2001'').
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DHS is now proposing to formalize this policy in its H-1B
regulations. Under the proposed rule, DHS may approve an H-1B petition
for a 1-year validity period if a state or local license to engage in
the relevant occupation is required and the appropriate licensing
authority will not grant such license absent evidence that the
beneficiary has been issued a social security number or granted
employment authorization. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(4)(v)(C)(2)(i).
Petitioners filing H-1B petitions on behalf of such beneficiaries would
be required to submit evidence from the relevant licensing board
indicating that the only obstacle to the beneficiary's licensure is the
lack of a social security number or employment authorization. Id. In
addition, the petitioner must establish that the beneficiary satisfies
all other regulatory and statutory requirements for engaging in the
occupation. In other words, the petitioner would need to demonstrate
that at the time of the petition's filing, the beneficiary meets the
educational, training, experience, or other substantive requirements
for obtaining the relevant license (other than acquiring a social
security number or being employment authorized).
Moreover, the petitioner would generally be required to demonstrate
that at the time of the petition's filing, the beneficiary has already
filed an application for the relevant license in accordance with state
or local licensing procedures. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(4)(v)(C)(2)(ii). In the alternative, the petitioner would be
required to demonstrate that the beneficiary cannot file such an
application due to the lack of a social security number or employment
authorization.\75\ Id. The proposed rule would also make clear that a
beneficiary who has been approved for a 1-year validity period may not
obtain an extension of H-1B status without proof of licensure. Any
subsequent H-1B petition filed on behalf of such a beneficiary with
respect to the same occupation must contain proof that the beneficiary
has obtained the required license. See proposed 8 CFR
214.2(h)(4)(v)(C)(3).
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\75\ For example, as of 2014, the State of California requires
provision of a social security account number when applying for an
acupuncture license. According to its Web site, California will not
process an application on which the applicant does not provide a
social security account number. See www.acupuncture.ca.gov/pubs_forms/license_app.pdf. In such cases under the proposed rule,
the petitioner would be allowed to obtain a 1-year approval for the
unlicensed H-1B beneficiary.
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The proposed rule would also clarify that an individual without an
occupational license may obtain H-1B status if he or she will be
employed in a state that allows such an unlicensed individual to fully
practice the occupation under the supervision of licensed senior or
supervisory personnel. In such cases, DHS will examine the nature of
the H-1B nonimmigrant worker's proposed duties and the level at which
they will be performed, as well as evidence provided by the petitioner
as to the identity, physical location, and credentials of the
individual(s) who will supervise the H-1B nonimmigrant worker. See
proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(4)(v)(C)(1). If the facts demonstrate that the
H-1B nonimmigrant worker will fully perform the duties of the
occupation under the supervision of licensed senior or supervisory
personnel in that occupation, H-1B classification may be granted. Id.
DHS invites public comment on all aspects of this proposal.
C. Processing of Applications for Employment Authorization Documents
DHS is also proposing to update its regulations governing the
processing of Applications for Employment Authorization (Forms I-765).
First, to help prevent gaps in employment authorization, DHS proposes
to automatically extend the validity of expiring EADs for up to 180
days from such document's and such employment authorization's
expiration date in certain circumstances upon the timely filing of an
application to renew such documents. Such automatic renewal would be
available to individuals with pending applications for adjustment of
status and other employment-authorized individuals who: (1) Are seeking
renewal of an EAD (and, if applicable, employment authorization) based
on the same employment authorization category under which it was
granted (or the renewal application is for an individual approved for
Temporary Protected Status (TPS) whose EAD was issued pursuant to 8 CFR
274a.12(c)(19)); and (2) either continue to be employment authorized
incident to status beyond the expiration of the
[[Page 81927]]
EAD or are applying for renewal under a category that does not first
require adjudication of an underlying application, petition, or
request. Second, to address national security and fraud concerns, DHS
is proposing to eliminate the current regulatory provisions that
require adjudication of EAD applications within 90 days of filing and
that authorize interim EADs in cases where such adjudications are not
conducted within the 90-day timeframe. Taken together, these updates
would provide additional stability and certainty to employment-
authorized individuals and their U.S. employers, while reducing
opportunities for fraud and better accommodating increased security
measures, including technological advances that utilize centralized
production of tamper-free documents.
1. Automatic Extensions of EADs in Certain Circumstances
First, DHS proposes to amend its regulations to help prevent gaps
in employment authorization for certain employment-authorized
individuals who are seeking to renew expiring EADs. Under the proposed
rule, such individuals who fall within certain classes of individuals
eligible for employment authorization may have the validity of their
EADs (and, if necessary, their employment authorization as well)
extended for up to 180 days from such document's and such employment
authorization's expiration date upon the timely filing of an
application to renew such EAD (or the renewal application is for an
individual approved for TPS whose EAD was issued pursuant to 8 CFR
274a.12(c)(19)). See proposed 8 CFR 274a.13(d)(1). Specifically, the
rule would authorize automatic extensions of their EADs--and, for those
qualifying individuals who are not employment authorized incident to
status, extensions of their employment authorization \76\--so long as
all of the following conditions are met:
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\76\ For classes of employment-eligible individuals listed at 8
CFR 274a.12(c), employment authorization is based on the
adjudication of the Application for Employment Authorization and is
not incident to their underlying immigration status. For such
individuals who are covered by this rule, DHS is proposing to extend
both their underlying employment authorization as well as their
EADs.
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(1) The individual files a request for renewal of his or her EAD
(currently through an Application for Employment Authorization, Form I-
765) prior to its expiration date.
(2) The individual is requesting renewal based on the same
employment authorization category under which the expiring EAD was
granted (as indicated on the face of the EAD), or the individual has
been approved for TPS and his or her EAD was issued pursuant to 8 CFR
274a.12(c)(19).
(3) The individual either continues to be employment authorized
incident to status beyond the expiration of the EAD or is applying for
renewal under a category that does not first require adjudication of an
underlying application, petition, or request.
Id. An expiring EAD that has its validity automatically extended
under this proposal would continue to be subject to any limitations and
conditions that applied before the extension. See proposed 8 CFR
274a.13(d)(2). Moreover, although the validity of such an EAD would be
extended for up to 180 days, such validity is automatically terminated
upon issuance of notification of a decision denying the individual's
renewal application. See proposed 8 CFR 274a.13(d)(3). The automatic
extension could also be terminated before a decision is made on the
renewal application through written notice to the applicant, notice
published in the Federal Register, or any other applicable authority.
Moreover, DHS is proposing that the expired EAD, in combination
with a Notice of Action (Form I-797C) indicating timely filing of the
application to renew the EAD (provided it lists the same employment
authorization category as that listed on the expiring or expired EAD),
would be considered an unexpired EAD for purposes of complying with
Employment Eligibility Verification (Form I-9) requirements. See
proposed 8 CFR 274a.13(d)(4). Thus, when the expiration date on the
face of the EAD is reached, an individual who is continuing in his or
her employment with the same employer may, along with the employer,
update the previously completed Form I-9 to reflect the extended
expiration date based on the automatic extension while the renewal is
pending. Reverification of employment authorization, however, would not
be triggered until after the expiration of the additional period of
validity granted through the automatic extension provisions discussed
above. See proposed 8 CFR 274a.2(b)(1)(vii).
These provisions would significantly mitigate the risk of gaps in
employment authorization and required documentation for eligible
individuals, thereby benefitting them and their employers. For
compliance with Form I-9 documentation requirements, however,
individuals would need to file their renewal applications far enough in
advance to receive the Notice of Action (Form I-797C), which is
necessary to document that filing for their employers, prior to the
expiration of their EADs. The Form I-797C generation and issuance
process is currently automated such that it is able to issue forms
within a few days after receiving an Application for Employment
Authorization. DHS expects that applicants would generally receive the
Form I-797C within 2 weeks of the date of filing.\77\
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\77\ Depending on any significant surges in filings, however,
there may be periods in which USCIS takes longer than 2 weeks to
issue Notices of Action (Forms I-797C).
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As discussed, DHS is proposing an automatic extension period of up
to 180 days past the expiration date noted on the face of the EAD for
qualifying individuals. DHS believes that this time period is
reasonable and provides more than ample time for USCIS to complete the
adjudication process based on USCIS's current 3-month average
processing time for Applications for Employment Authorization.\78\
Additionally, this 180-day automatic extension period is similar to
that used in other contexts and would thus provide consistency for
employers that are responsible for verifying employment authorization.
For example, DHS has a long-standing policy of providing 180-day
automatic extensions of EADs to re-registering beneficiaries of
Temporary Protected Status (TPS) when the re-registration period does
not provide sufficient time to renew EADs.\79\ DHS regulations also
provide certain F-1 nonimmigrants seeking extensions of Optional
Practical Training (OPT) with automatic extensions of their employment
authorization for up to 180 days. See 8 CFR 274a.12(b)(6)(iv).
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\78\ See current USCIS processing timeframes at https://egov.uscis.gov/cris/processTimesDisplayInit.do.
\79\ See, e.g., 80 FR 51582 (Aug. 25, 2015) (Notice auto-
extending EADs of Haitian TPS beneficiaries for 6 months).
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As noted above, DHS is proposing two conditions to ensure that only
eligible aliens receive automatic extensions of their EADs and thus to
protect the employment authorization program from abuse. First, DHS is
proposing to require that the renewal application be based on the same
employment authorization category as that indicated on the expiring
EAD, including renewal applications based on TPS re-registration filed
by applicants who still hold EADs that were initially issued under 8
CFR 274a.12(c)(19). See proposed 8 CFR 274a.13(d)(1)(ii). Because the
resulting Notice of Action (Form I-797C) would indicate the
[[Page 81928]]
employment authorization category cited in the application,\80\ this
requirement would help to ensure, both to DHS and to employers, that
such a notice was issued in response to a timely filed renewal
application. Second, DHS is proposing to limit eligibility for
automatic extensions to individuals who continue to be employment
authorized incident to status beyond the expiration of the EAD or who
are seeking to renew employment authorization in a category in which
eligibility for such renewal is not contingent on a USCIS adjudication
of a separate, underlying application, petition, or request. See
proposed 8 CFR 274a.13(d)(1)(iii). This limitation would similarly help
to ensure that only individuals eligible for employment authorization
are able to extend their employment authorization under this proposal.
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\80\ The Notice of Action that TPS beneficiaries will receive
may not necessarily be based on the filing of a Form I-765, but
instead on their TPS re-registration application filed on Form I-
821, Application for Temporary Protected Status. In such cases, the
employment authorization category would not be listed. USCIS intends
to revise the Notices of Action issued to TPS beneficiaries to
indicate the auto-extension provided by this rule.
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Based on the above parameters, DHS has identified 15 employment
authorization categories where renewal applicants would be able to
receive automatic extensions under this proposed rule. Among these are
applicants for adjustment of status. So long as their applications for
adjustment of status remain pending or USCIS determines, upon written
notice to the applicant or notice published in the Federal Register,
that it must terminate the auto-extension by category, these applicants
are eligible for employment authorization under current regulation. See
8 CFR 274a.12(c)(9). Because such eligibility is not contingent on the
adjudication of a separate application, petition, or request, DHS
believes it is reasonable to make automatic extensions available to
such individuals. The 15 categories of employment authorization that
would allow for automatic extensions under this rule are:
Aliens admitted as refugees. See 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(3).
Aliens granted asylum. See 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(5).
Aliens admitted as parents or dependent children of aliens
granted permanent residence under section 101(a)(27)(I) of the INA, 8
U.S.C. 1101(a)(27)(I). See 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(7).
Aliens admitted to the United States as citizens of the
Federated States of Micronesia or the Marshall Islands pursuant to
agreements between the United States and the former trust territories.
See 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(8).
Aliens granted withholding of deportation or removal. See
8 CFR 274a.12(a)(10).
Aliens granted Temporary Protected Status (TPS)
(regardless of the employment authorization category on their current
EADs).\81\ See 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(12) and (c)(19).
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\81\ DHS is further proposing to specifically identify TPS
beneficiaries as eligible for automatic extensions under this
proposed rule. See proposed 8 CFR 274a.13(d)(1)(iii). This will
include TPS beneficiaries who have existing EADs issued originally
under 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(12) or (c)(19).
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Aliens who have properly filed applications for TPS and
who have been deemed prima facie eligible for TPS under 8 CFR 244.10(a)
and have received an EAD as a ``temporary treatment benefit'' under 8
CFR 244.10(e) and 274a.12(c)(19).
Aliens who have properly filed applications for asylum or
withholding of deportation or removal. See 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(8).
Aliens who have filed applications for adjustment of
status under section 245 of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1255. See 8 CFR
274a.12(c)(9).
Aliens who have filed applications for suspension of
deportation under section 244 of the INA (as it existed prior to April
1, 1997), cancellation of removal pursuant to section 240A of the INA,
or special rule cancellation of removal under section 309(f)(1) of the
Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996.
See 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(10).
Aliens who have filed applications for creation of record
of lawful admission for permanent residence. See 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(16).
Aliens who have properly filed legalization applications
pursuant to section 210 of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1160. See 8 CFR
274a.12(c)(20).
Aliens who have properly filed legalization applications
pursuant to section 245A of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1255a. See 8 CFR
274a.12(c)(22).
Aliens who have filed applications for adjustment pursuant
to section 1104 of the LIFE Act. See 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(24).
Aliens who are the principal beneficiaries or qualified
children of approved VAWA self-petitioners, under the employment
authorization category ``(c)(31)'' in the form instructions to the
Application for Employment Authorization (Form I-765).
As noted above, each of these categories describes individuals who
are eligible to apply for employment authorization after their EADs
have expired and are thus candidates for automatic extensions of EADs
under this proposed rule. To provide maximum clarity to the regulated
public, DHS proposes to list these categories as eligible for automatic
extensions on USCIS' Web site.
DHS is not currently proposing to make automatic extensions of EADs
(or attendant employment authorization) available to other classes of
employment-authorized individuals. For example, DHS considered making
automatic extensions available to certain H-4 nonimmigrants (i.e.,
spouses of H-1B nonimmigrant workers) who are eligible for employment
authorization and EADs. See 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(26). Such H-4
nonimmigrants are generally eligible to renew their EADs, but only so
long as they can extend their H-4 status, which is itself dependent on
their spouses remaining in H-1B status. Thus, whether an H-4
nonimmigrant's eligibility for employment authorization continues
beyond the expiration date of his or her EAD is typically contingent
upon adjudication of an underlying application to extend his or her
stay in H-4 status and, in most instances, an underlying petition to
extend the stay of the H-1B nonimmigrant worker. In such cases, DHS
cannot be reasonably assured that the individual will continue to be
eligible to apply for employment authorization without first reviewing
the underlying application, petition, or request. DHS thus does not
propose to make automatic extensions of employment authorization
available to this category, or to other categories in which employment
authorization is contingent on adjudication of another application,
petition, or request.
DHS welcomes public comment on all aspects of this proposal.
2. Elimination of 90-Day Processing Timeframe and Interim EADs
Second, due to fraud and national security concerns, and in light
of technological and process advances with respect to document
production, DHS is proposing to eliminate certain existing regulations
concerning the processing of Applications for Employment Authorization
(Forms I-765). Specifically, DHS would eliminate the provision at 8 CFR
247a.13(d) that currently requires, with certain limited exceptions,
the adjudication of Applications for Employment Authorization within 90
days of receipt.\82\ DHS would also eliminate the
[[Page 81929]]
provision in that regulation that requires the issuance of interim EADs
with validity periods of up to 240 days when such an application is not
adjudicated within the 90-day period. In addition to the automatic
extension provisions for renewal applications proposed in this rule,
DHS would instead address processing timeframes through operational
policy guidance that reinforces the Department's continued commitment
to a 90-day processing timeframe and provides recourse to individuals
whose case is nearing the 90-day mark, including the ability to contact
USCIS to request prioritized processing.
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\82\ Excepted from the 90-day processing requirement are the
following classes of aliens: Applicants for asylum described in 8
CFR 274a.12(c)(8); certain H-4 spouses of H-1B nonimmigrants; and
applicants for adjustment applying under the Haitian Refugee
Immigrant Fairness Act of 1998 (HRIFA). Application processing for
asylum applicants are governed by current 8 CFR 274a.13(a)(2) and do
not include provisions for interim employment authorization
documentation. The provision at 8 CFR 274a.13(d) also exempts
adjustment applicants described in 8 CFR 245.13(j). In 2011, 8 CFR
245.13 was removed from DHS regulations. See 76 FR 53764, 53793
(Aug. 29, 2011). However, the cross-reference to 8 CFR 245.13(j) in
current 8 CFR 274a.13(d) was inadvertently retained. Prior to its
removal in 2011, 8 CFR 245.13 provided for adjustment of status for
certain nationals of Nicaragua and Cuba pursuant to section 202 of
the Nicaragua Adjustment and Central American Relief Act, Public Law
105-100, 111 Stat. 2160, 2193 (Nov. 19, 1997). The application
period for benefits under this provision ended April 1, 2000. USCIS
removed 8 CFR 245.13 from DHS regulations in 2011 as it no longer
has pending applications pursuant to this provision. See 76 FR at
53793.
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DHS believes that the 90-day timeframe and interim EAD provisions
are outdated and no longer reflect the operational realities of the
Department, including its adoption of improved processes and
technological advances in document production to reduce fraud and
address threats to national security. The 90-day timeframe at 8 CFR
274a.13(d), for example, was established more than 20 years ago when
Applications for Employment Authorization were adjudicated at local
offices of legacy INS and corresponding documents were also produced by
such offices. See 52 FR 16216, 16228 (May 1, 1987) (setting
adjudication timeframe at 60 days); see also 56 FR 41767, 41787 (Aug.
23. 1991) (increasing adjudication timeframe to 90 days). At the time,
EADs (then known as Forms I-688B) were produced by local offices that
were equipped with stand-alone machines for such purposes. While
decentralized card production resulted in immediate and customized
customer service for the public, the cards that were produced did not
contain state-of-the art security features and were thus susceptible to
tampering and counterfeiting. Such deficiencies became increasingly
apparent as the United States faced new and increasing threats to
national security and public safety that did not exist when the current
regulations were promulgated.
In response to these concerns, the former INS and DHS made
considerable efforts to upgrade application procedures and leverage
technology to enhance integrity, security, and efficiency in all
aspects of the immigration process. For example, to combat the document
security problem discussed above, the former INS took steps to
centralize application filing locations and card production. By 2006,
DHS fully implemented these centralization efforts.\83\ DHS now
requires that Applications for Employment Authorization be filed at
remote processing centers.\84\ Some classes of employment-eligible
aliens are also required to appear at an Application Support Center
(ASC) for collection of their biometric information before DHS can
complete adjudication of such applications.\85\ If DHS ultimately
approves such an application, a card order is sent to a card production
facility. The card facility produces a tamper-proof card reflecting the
specific employment authorized category and mails that card to the
applicant.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\83\ See USCIS Memorandum from Michael Aytes, ``Elimination of
Form I-688B, Employment Authorization Card'' (Aug. 18, 2006). In
January 1997, the former INS began issuing new, more secure EADs
from a centralized location and gave it a new form number (I-766) to
distinguish it from the less secure, locally produced EADs (Forms I-
688B). DHS stopped issuing Form I-688B EADs from local offices
altogether in 2006.
\84\ Asylum applicants, however, make their request for
employment authorization directly on the Application for Asylum and
Withholding of Removal, Form I-589, and need not file a separate
Application for Employment Authorization (Form I-765) following a
grant of asylum. If they are requesting employment authorization
based on their pending asylum application, they must file a separate
request for employment authorization on Form I-765.
\85\ For example, many individuals who concurrently file their
Application for Employment Authorization with another application or
petition, such as TPS applicants, must appear at an ASC for
submission of their biometric information before DHS completes
adjudication of their applications.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
While the 90-day timeframe and interim EAD provisions at 8 CFR
274a.13(d) may have made sense when applications were processed and
cards were produced at the local level, DHS believes that the
intervening changes discussed above now require that such provisions be
eliminated. DHS, for example, may be unable to meet the 90-day
processing timeframe for applicants who are required to submit
biometric information at an ASC but who do not provide such information
in a timely manner. DHS may also be unable to meet the 90-day timeframe
in a given case where security checks remain pending. Given the fraud
and national security concerns discussed above, DHS believes it is not
prudent to issue interim EADs in such cases. Moreover, the 90-day
timeframe constrains DHS' ability to maintain necessary levels of
security when application receipt volumes suddenly increase, as well as
the ability to implement security improvements if those improvements
may further extend the adjudication of applications in certain cases.
Given these considerations, DHS believes that the 90-day timeframe
and interim EAD provisions at 8 CFR 274a.13(d) do not provide
sufficient flexibility to reconcile with DHS' core missions to enforce
and administer our immigration laws and enhance security. Moreover, DHS
notes that under current processing timelines, elimination of these
provisions would not have any noticeable effect on the vast majority of
applicants.\86\ DHS remains committed to the current 90-day processing
goal, as well as the current policy of prioritizing application
processing where applications are pending for at least 75 days.
Consistent with current protocols, applicants whose initial or renewal
EAD applications have been pending for 75 days or more may continue
calling the National Customer Service Center (NCSC) to request priority
processing. In practice, as noted above, these policies result in the
adjudication of the vast majority of Applications for Employment
Authorization within 90 days of filing. DHS anticipates that it will be
unable to adjudicate applications within 90 days in only a small
percentage of cases, including those involving delays in security
processes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\86\ See USCIS current processing times at https://egov.uscis.gov/cris/processTimesDisplayInit.do.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DHS welcomes public comment on all aspects of this proposal,
including alternate suggestions for regulatory amendments to the 90-day
processing timeframe and interim employment authorization provisions
not already discussed that address customer service, national security,
and identity verification considerations that USCIS must fulfill as
part of its core mission within DHS.
3. Conforming and Technical Amendments
Finally, DHS proposes to make conforming and technical amendments
to its regulations in light of the changes described above. The
proposed rule first
[[Page 81930]]
would amend DHS regulations concerning individuals applying for
adjustment of status under the Haitian Refugee Immigrant Fairness Act
of 1998 (HRIFA), Public Law 105-277, div. A, title IX, sections 901-
904, 112 Stat. 2681-538 to 542 (codified as amended at 8 U.S.C. 1255
note (2006)). These regulations currently provide that interim
employment authorization is accorded upon expiration of a 180-day
waiting period or 90 days from the date the Application for Employment
Authorization is filed, whichever comes later. See 8 CFR 245.15(n)(2).
Consistent with the proposed changes to 8 CFR 274a.13(d) discussed
above, DHS is proposing to delete from the regulatory text at 8 CFR
245.15(n)(2) both: (1) The cross-reference to 8 CFR 274a.13(d), and (2)
the term ``interim'' modifying employment authorization. See proposed 8
CFR 245.15(n)(2). Pursuant to these changes, DHS would be required to
issue an EAD, rather than an interim EAD, within the timeframes
currently provided in 8 CFR 245.15(n)(2). DHS also proposes making
technical amendments to 8 CFR 245.15(n)(2) by replacing specific
references to the ``Director of the Nebraska Service Center'' and
``Service'' with broader references to USCIS and DHS. DHS believes
these changes would not have wide impact, as the Department receives
very few applications for adjustment of status based on HRIFA.\87\
Additionally, HRIFA-based applicants for adjustment of status would be
eligible for the automatic 180-day extension of expiring EADs proposed
in this rule, provided they file a timely request for renewal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ See 2013 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics at p 18
(available at https://www.dhs.gov/publication/yearbook-2013) showing
a decrease in HRIFA adjustments from 2,451 in 2004 to 62 in 2013.
During fiscal year 2015, USCIS adjudicated 8 HRIFA adjustment
applications.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Similarly, the proposed rule would amend DHS regulations at 8 CFR
214.2(h)(9)(iv) concerning H-4 nonimmigrant spouses of H-1B
nonimmigrant workers. This regulation currently allows H-4 spouses to
file their applications for employment authorization concurrently with
their underlying requests for nonimmigrant status, but tolls the 90-day
processing timeframe at 8 CFR 274a.13(d) until the underlying benefit
requests are approved. See 8 CFR 214.2(h)(9)(iv); see also 80 FR 10284,
10297 (Feb. 25, 2015). Consistent with the changes described above, DHS
is proposing to delete the sentence in 8 CFR 214.2(h)(9)(iv) containing
the cross-reference to 8 CFR 274a.13(d), regarding the applicability of
the 90-day period to the processing of EADs for certain H-4 dependent
spouses. See proposed 8 CFR 214.2(h)(9)(iv). DHS is also proposing to
move the regulatory text authorizing the concurrent filing of
applications for employment authorization to 8 CFR 274a.13(a), and to
apply that language to any class of employment-eligible aliens to the
extent permitted by the application form instructions. This amendment
to the regulations would codify current DHS policy applicable to
several classes of foreign nationals, and provide clear authority to
expand it to additional classes of foreign nationals.
This rule also proposes a technical amendment that would merge the
current text at paragraph (a) of 8 CFR 274a.13, with similar,
repetitive text at paragraph (a)(1) of that section. The text at
paragraph (a) currently describes the application requirement with
respect to individuals authorized for employment incident to status
listed in 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(3), (4), (6) through (8), (10) through (15),
and (20). Text describing the application requirement is essentially
repeated at paragraph (a)(1), but with respect to aliens listed in 8
CFR 274a.12(c) (except asylum applicants at 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(8), which
are covered by 8 CFR 274a.13(a)(2)). DHS has determined that listing
the application requirements at both 8 CFR 274a.13(a) and (a)(1) is
unnecessarily repetitive and potentially confusing. DHS proposes to
describe the application requirement once in the introductory text at 8
CFR 274a.13(a), which would apply to classes of individuals described
at both 8 CFR 274a.12(a) and (c). The proposed text also would clarify
that the same application requirement would apply to both individuals
requesting only an EAD \88\ and those requesting both employment
authorization and an EAD.\89\ Additionally, the proposed text would
identify the employment authorization document that USCIS will issue
based on a grant of such application, which is Form I-766.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ Individuals who would file an application for an EAD alone
are those aliens in 8 CFR 274a.12(a) who are authorized for
employment incident to status.
\89\ Individuals who would file an application for both
employment authorization and an EAD are those aliens listed in 8 CFR
274a.12(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements.
A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 (Regulatory Planning and Review)
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess the
costs and benefits of available alternatives, and if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic, environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting flexibility.
This rule has been designated a ``significant regulatory action'' that
is economically significant, under section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order
12866. Accordingly, the rule has been reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget.
DHS is proposing to amend its regulations relating to certain
employment-based immigrant and nonimmigrant visa programs. The proposed
amendments interpret existing law as well as propose regulatory changes
in order to provide various benefits to participants in those programs,
including: Improved processes for U.S. employers seeking to sponsor and
retain immigrant and nonimmigrant workers, greater stability and job
flexibility for such workers, and increased transparency and
consistency in the application of agency policy related to affected
classifications. Many of these changes are primarily aimed at improving
the ability of U.S. employers to retain high-skilled workers who are
beneficiaries of approved employment-based immigrant visa petitions and
are waiting to become lawful permanent residents (LPRs), while
increasing the ability of such workers to seek promotions, accept
lateral positions with current employers, change employers, or pursue
other employment options.
First, DHS proposes to amend its regulations consistent with
certain worker portability and other provisions in the American
Competitiveness in the Twenty-first Century Act of 2000 (AC21), as
amended, as well as the American Competitiveness and Workforce
Improvement Act of 1998 (ACWIA). These proposed amendments would
clarify and improve longstanding agency policies and procedures,
previously articulated in agency memoranda and precedent decisions.
These proposed amendments would also implement sections of AC21 and
ACWIA relating to certain foreign workers, specifically sections on
workers who have been sponsored for LPR status by their employers. In
so doing, the proposed rule would provide a primary repository of
governing rules for the regulated community and enhance consistency
among agency adjudicators. In addition, the proposed rule would clarify
several interpretive questions raised by AC21 and ACWIA.
[[Page 81931]]
Second, and consistent with existing DHS authorities and the goals
of AC21 and ACWIA, DHS proposes to amend its regulations governing
certain employment-based immigrant and nonimmigrant visa programs to
provide additional stability and flexibility to employers and workers
in those programs. The proposed rule would, among other things: Improve
portability for certain beneficiaries of approved employment-based
immigrant visa petitions by limiting the grounds for automatic
revocation of petition approval; enhance job portability for such
beneficiaries by improving their ability to retain their priority dates
for use with subsequently approved employment-based immigrant visa
petitions; establish or extend grace periods for certain high-skilled
nonimmigrant workers so that they may more easily maintain their
nonimmigrant status when changing employment opportunities or preparing
for departure; and provide additional stability and flexibility to
certain high-skilled workers by allowing those who are working in the
United States in certain nonimmigrant statuses, are the beneficiaries
of approved employment-based immigrant visa petitions, are subject to
immigrant visa backlogs, and demonstrate compelling circumstances to
effectively apply for independent employment authorization for a
limited period. These and other proposed changes would provide much
needed flexibility to the beneficiaries of employment-based immigrant
visa petitions, as well as the U.S. employers who employ and sponsor
them for permanent residence. In addition, these changes will provide
greater stability and predictability for U.S. employers and avoid
potential disruptions to ongoing business operations in the United
States.
Finally, consistent with providing additional certainty and
stability to certain employment-authorized individuals and their U.S.
employers, DHS is also proposing changes to its regulations governing
the processing of applications for employment authorization to minimize
the risk of any gaps in such authorization. These changes would provide
for the automatic extension of the validity of certain Employment
Authorization Documents (EADs or Form I-766) for an interim period upon
the timely filing of an application to renew such documents. At the
same time, in light of national security and fraud concerns, DHS is
proposing to remove regulations that provide a 90-day processing
timeline for EAD applications and that require the issuance of interim
EADs if processing extends beyond the 90-day mark.
Table 1, below, provides a more detailed summary of the proposed
provisions and their impacts.
Table 1--Summary of Provisions and Impacts
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expected impact of
Provisions Purpose proposed rule
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Priority Date............... Clarifies priority Quantitative:
date when a labor None.
certification is
not required by INA
203(b).
Qualitative:
Removes
ambiguity and sets
consistent priority
dates for affected
petitioners and
beneficiaries.
Priority Date Retention..... Revises regulation Quantitative:
so that the None.
priority date
attached to an
employment-based
immigrant visa
petition is only
lost when: USCIS
revokes approval of
the petition for
error, fraud or
willful
misrepresentation
of a material fact,
or upon revocation
or invalidation of
the labor
certification
accompanying the
petition.
Qualitative:
Results in
administrative
efficiency and
predictability by
explicitly listing
when priority dates
are lost as these
revoked petition
approvals cannot be
used as a basis for
an immigrant visa.
Employment-Based Immigrant Incorporates Quantitative:
Visa Petition Portability statutory Petitioners--
Under 204(j). portability Opportunity
provisions into costs to
regulation. petitioners for 1
year range from
$128,126 to
$4,678,956.
DHS/USCIS--
Neutral
because the
proposed
supplementary form
to the application
for adjustment of
status to permanent
residence will
formalize the
process for USCIS
requests for
evidence of
compliance with
section 204(j)
porting.
Qualitative:
Applicants/
Petitioners--
Provides
stability and job
flexibility to
certain individuals
with approved
employment-based
immigrant visas;
Clarifies
the definition of
``same or similar
occupational
classifications``;
Allows
certain foreign
workers to advance
and progress in
their careers;
Potential
increased employee
replacement costs
for employers.
DHS/USCIS--
Administrative
efficiency;
Standardized and
streamlined
process.
[[Page 81932]]
Employment Authorization for Proposes provisions Quantitative: Total
Certain Nonimmigrants Based allowing certain costs over 10-year
on Compelling Circumstances. nonimmigrant period to
principal applicants are:
beneficiaries, and $553.2
their dependent million for
spouses and undiscounted costs.
children, to apply $489.5
for unrestricted million at a 3%
employment discounted rate.
authorization if $423.2
the principal million at a 7%
beneficiary has an discounted rate.
approved EB-1, EB-
2, or EB-3
immigrant visa
petition while
waiting for his/her
immigrant visa to
become available.
Applicants must
demonstrate
compelling
circumstances
justifying an
independent grant
of employment
authorization.
Qualitative:
Applicants--
Provides
ability for
nonimmigrants who
have been sponsored
for LPR status to
change jobs or
employers when
compelling
circumstances
arise;
Incentivizes such
skilled
nonimmigrant
workers
contributing to the
economy to continue
seeking LPR status;
Nonimmigrant
principal workers
who take advantage
of the unrestricted
EAD would abandon
their current
nonimmigrant status
and not be able to
adjust to LPR
status in the
United States.
Consular processing
imposes potentially
significant costs,
risk and
uncertainty for
individuals and
their families as
well.
Dependents--
Allows them
to enter labor
market earlier and
can contribute to
household income.
90-Day Processing Time for Eliminates Quantitative:
Employment Authorization regulatory None.
Applications. requirement for 90-
day adjudication
timeframe and
issuance of interim-
EADs. Proposes an
automatic extension
of EADs for up to
180 days for
certain workers
filing renewal
requests.
Qualitative:
Applicants--
Removing a
regulatory
timeframe and
moving to one
governed by
processing goals
could potentially
lead to longer
processing times
whenever the agency
is faced with
higher than
expected filing
volumes. If such a
situation were to
occur, this could
lead to potential
delays in work
employment start
dates for first-
time EAD applicants
until approval is
obtained. However,
USCIS believes such
scenarios would be
rare and mitigated
by the auto
extension provision
for renewal
applications which
would allow the
movement of
resources in such
situations;
Providing
the automatic
continuing
authorization for
up to 180 days for
certain renewal
applicants could
lead to less
turnover costs for
U.S. employers.
DHS/USCIS--
Streamlines
the application and
card issuance
processes;
Enhances
the ability to
ensure all national
security
verification checks
are completed;
Reduces
agency duplication
efforts;
Reduces
opportunities for
fraud and better
accommodates
increased security
measures.
Automatic Revocation With Revises regulations Quantitative:
Respect to Approved so that a petition None.
Employment-Based Immigrant may continue to
Visa Petitions. remain valid,
despite withdrawal
by the employer or
termination of the
employer's business
after 180 days or
more of approval.
Qualitative:
Beneficiary
retains priority
date, has porting
ability under INA
204(j), or AC21
sections 104 (c)
and (b), and may be
eligible for the
new unrestricted
compelling
circumstances EAD.
Period of Admission for Nonimmigrants in Quantitative:
Certain Nonimmigrant certain high- None.
Classifications. skilled,
nonimmigrant
classifications
would be granted a
grace period of up
to 10 days before
and after their
validity period and
a one-time grace
period, upon
cessation of
employment, of up
to 60 days or until
the end of their
authorized validity
period, whichever
is shorter.
[[Page 81933]]
Qualitative:
Nonimmigrant Visa
Holders--
Assists the
beneficiary in
getting
sufficiently
settled such that
they are
immediately able to
begin working upon
the start of their
petition validity
period;
Provides
time necessary to
wrap up affairs to
depart the country;
Would not
have to enter into
non-status period
or take other
actions to extend,
change, or
otherwise maintain
lawful status after
the period of
authorized
employment ends in
order to wrap up
affairs to respond
to sudden or
unexpected changes
related to their
employment, or to
seek a change of
status to different
nonimmigrant
classification.
Portability of H-1B Status H- Updates, improves, Quantitative:
1B Licensing Requirements and clarifies DHS None.
Calculating the H-1B regulations
Admission Period Exemptions consistent with
Due to Lengthy Adjudication policy guidance.
Delays Per Country
Limitation Exemptions
Employer Debarment and H-1B
Whistleblower Provisions.
Qualitative:
Formalizes
existing DHS policy
in the regulations,
which will give the
public access to
existing policy in
one location.
Exemptions to the H-1B Codifies definition Quantitative:
Numerical Cap and Revised of institution of None.
Definition of ``Related and higher education
Affiliated Nonprofit and adds a broader
Entity'' in the ACWIA Fee definition of
Context. related or
affiliated
nonprofit entity.
Also, revises the
definition of
related or
affiliated
nonprofit entity
for purposes of the
ACWIA fee to
conform to the new
proposed definition
of the same term
for H-1B numerical
cap exemption.
Qualitative:
Expands the
numbers of
petitioners that
are cap exempt and
thus allows greater
access by certain
employers to H-1B
workers.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
As required by OMB Circular A-4,\90\ Table 2 also presents the
prepared accounting statement showing the expenditures associated with
the provisions of these regulations. The main benefits of this proposed
regulation are to improve processes for U.S. employers seeking to
sponsor and retain immigrant and nonimmigrant workers, provide greater
stability and job flexibility for such workers, and increase
transparency and consistency in the application of agency policy
related to affected classifications.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\90\ OMB Circular A-4 is available at www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/omb/circulars/a004/a-4.pdf.
Table 2--OMB A-4 Accounting Statement
[$ millions, 2015]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source citation
Category Primary estimate Minimum estimate Maximum estimate (RIA, preamble,
etc.)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benefits
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Monetized Benefits.............. Not estimated..... Not estimated..... Not estimated..... RIA.
Annualized quantified, but 0................. 0................. 0................. RIA.
unmonetized, benefits.
------------------------------------------------------------
Unquantified Benefits........... Improves processes for U.S. employers seeking to sponsor RIA.
and retain immigrant and nonimmigrant workers, provides
greater stability and job flexibility for such workers,
and increases transparency and consistency in the
application of agency policy related to affected
classifications.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 81934]]
Costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized monetized costs for (7%) $62.2........ $60.7............. $64.9............. RIA.
10 year period starting in 2016
to 2025 (discount rate in
parenthesis).
(3%) $59.7........ $57.9............. $62.1............. RIA.
Annualized quantified, but N/A............... N/A............... N/A............... RIA.
unmonetized, costs.
------------------------------------------------------------
Qualitative (unquantified) costs Potential turnover cost due to enhanced job mobility of RIA.
beneficiaries of nonimmigrant and immigrant petitions.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transfers
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annualized monetized transfers: N/A............... 0................. 0................. RIA.
``on budget''.
From whom to whom?.............. N/A............... N/A............... N/A............... N/A.
--------------------
Annualized monetized transfers: N/A............... 0................. 0................. RIA.
``off-budget''.
From whom to whom?.............. N/A............... N/A............... N/A............... N/A.
------------------------------------------------------------
Miscellaneous Analyses/Category. Effects Source Citation
(RIA, preamble,
etc.).
Effects on state, local, and/or None RIA.
tribal governments.
Effects on small businesses..... No direct costs. Indirect effects only. RIA.
Effects on wages................ None None.
Effects on growth............... None None.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DHS has prepared a full analysis according to Executive Orders
12866 and 13563 which can be found by searching for RIN 1615-AC05 on
regulations.gov.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601-612, as
amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996, Public Law 104-121 (March 29, 1996), requires Federal agencies to
consider the potential impact of regulations on small entities during
the development of their rules. The term ``small entities'' comprises
small businesses, not-for-profit organizations that are not dominant in
their fields, and governmental jurisdictions with populations of less
than 50,000. An ``individual'' is not defined by the RFA as a small
entity, and costs to an individual from a rule are not considered for
RFA purposes. In addition, the courts have held that the RFA requires
an agency to perform a regulatory flexibility analysis of small entity
impacts only when a rule directly regulates small entities.\91\
Consequently, any indirect impacts from a rule to a small entity are
not costs for RFA purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\91\ A Guide for Government Agencies How to Comply with the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, May 2012 page 22. See Direct versus
indirect impact discussion, https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/advocacy/rfaguide_0512_0.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The changes proposed by DHS have direct impacts to individual
beneficiaries of employment-based nonimmigrant and immigrant visa
petitions. As individual beneficiaries of employment-based immigrant
visa petitions are not defined as small entities, costs to these
individuals are not considered as RFA costs. However, due to the fact
that the petitions are filed by a sponsoring employer, this rule has
indirect effects on employers. The original sponsoring employer that
files the petition on behalf of an employee will incur employee
turnover related costs as those employees port to the same or a similar
occupation with another employer. Therefore, DHS has chosen to examine
the indirect impact of this proposed rule on small entities as well.
The analysis of the indirect impacts of these proposed changes on small
entities follows.
1. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
Small entities primarily affected by this rule that could incur
additional indirect costs are those that file and pay fees for certain
immigration benefit petitions, including Form I-140, Immigrant Petition
for Alien Worker. DHS conducted a statistically valid sample analysis
of these petition types to determine the number of small entities
indirectly impacted by this rule. While DHS acknowledges that the
changes engendered by these proposed rules would directly impact
individuals who are beneficiaries of employment-based immigrant visa
petitions, which are not small entities as defined by the RFA, DHS
believes that the actions taken by such individuals as a result of
these proposals will have immediate indirect impacts on U.S. employers.
Employers will be indirectly impacted by employee turnover-related
costs as beneficiaries of employment-based immigrant visa petitions
take advantage of these proposals. Therefore, DHS is choosing to
discuss these indirect impacts in this initial regulatory flexibility
analysis to aid the public in commenting on the impact of the proposed
requirements.
In particular, DHS requests information and data to gain a
better understanding of the potential impact of this rule on small
entities. Specifically, DHS requests information on: The numbers of
small entities that have filed immigrant visa petitions for high-
skilled workers who are waiting to adjust status, and the potential
costs to such small entities associated with employee turnover
resulting from employees who port;
[[Page 81935]]
the potential costs to employers that are small entities
associated with employee turnover if a sponsored nonimmigrant worker
pursues the option for unrestricted employment authorization based on
compelling circumstances; and
the number of small entities that would qualify for the
proposed exemptions of the ACWIA fee when petitioning for H-1B
nonimmigrant workers.
a. A description of the reasons why the action by the agency is
being considered.
The purpose of this action, in part, is to amend regulations
affecting certain employment-based immigrant and nonimmigrant
classifications in order for DHS regulations to conform to provisions
of AC21 and ACWIA. The proposed rule also seeks to permit greater job
flexibility, mobility and stability to beneficiaries of employment-
based nonimmigrant and immigrant visa petitions, especially when faced
with long waits for immigrant visas. In many instances, the need for
these individuals' employment has been demonstrated through the labor
certification process. In most cases, before an employment-based
immigrant visa petition can be approved, the DOL has certified that
there are no U.S. workers who are ready, willing and available to fill
those positions in the area of intended employment. By increasing
flexibility and mobility, the worker is more likely to remain in the
United States and help fill the demonstrated need for his or her
services.
b. A succinct statement of the objectives of, and legal basis for,
the proposed rule.
DHS objectives and legal authority for this proposed rule are
discussed in the preamble.
c. A description and, where feasible, an estimate of the number of
small entities to which the proposed changes would apply.
DHS conducted a statistically valid sample analysis of employment-
based immigrant visa petitions to determine the maximum potential
number of small entities indirectly impacted by this rule when a high-
skilled worker who has an approved employment-based immigrant visa
petition and a pending adjustment of status application for 180 days or
more ports to another employer. DHS utilized a subscription-based
online database of U.S. entities, Hoovers Online, as well as two other
open-access, free databases of public and private entities, Manta and
Cortera, to determine the North American Industry Classification System
(NAICS) code, revenue, and employee count for each entity.\92\ In order
to determine a business' size, DHS first classified each entity by its
NAICS code, and then used SBA guidelines to note the requisite revenue
or employee count threshold for each entity. Some entities were
classified as small based on their annual revenue and some by number of
employees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\92\ The Hoovers Web site can be found at https://www.hoovers.com/; The Manta Web site can be found at https://www.manta.com/; and the Cortera Web site can be found at https://www.cortera.com/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Using FY 2013 data on actual filings of employment-based immigrant
visa petitions, DHS collected internal data for each filing
organization. Each entity may make multiple filings. For instance,
there were 63,953 employment-based immigrant visa petitions filed, but
only 24,912 unique entities that filed petitions. DHS devised a
methodology to conduct the small entity analysis based on a
representative, random sample of the potentially impacted population.
To achieve a 95 percent confidence level and a 5 percent confidence
interval on a population of 24,912 entities, DHS used the standard
statistical formula to determine that a minimum sample size of 385
entities was necessary.\93\ DHS created a sample size 15 percent
greater than the 385 minimum necessary in order to increase the
likelihood that our matches would meet or exceed the minimum required
sample. Of the 443 entities sampled, 344 instances resulted in entities
defined as small. Of the 344 small entities, 185 entities were
classified as small by revenue or number of employees. The remaining
159 entities were classified as small because information was not found
(either no petitioner name was found or no information was found in the
databases).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\93\ See https://www.qualtrics.com/blog/determining-sample-size/.
Table 1--Summary Statistics and Results of Small Entity Analysis of Form
I-140 Petitions
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proportion of
Parameter Quantity sample
(percent)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Population--petitions................... 63,953 ..............
Population--unique entities............. 24,912 ..............
Minimum Required Sample................. 385 ..............
Selected Sample......................... 443 100.0
Entities Classified as ``Not Small''
by revenue.......................... 73 16.5
by number of employees.............. 26 5.9
Entities Classified as ``Small''
by revenue.......................... 145 32.7
by number of employees.............. 40 9.0
because no petitioner name found.... 109 24.6
because no information found in 50 11.3
databases..........................
-------------------------------
Total Number of Small Entities.. 344 77.7
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: USCIS analysis.
d. A description of the projected reporting, recordkeeping, and
other compliance requirements of the proposed rule, including an
estimate of the classes of small entities that will be subject to the
requirement and the types of professional skills.
The proposed amendments in this rule do not place direct
requirements on small entities that petition for workers. However, if
the principal beneficiaries of employment-based immigrant visa
petitions take advantage of the flexibility provisions proposed herein
(including porting to a new sponsoring
[[Page 81936]]
employer or pursuing the unrestricted employment authorization in cases
involving compelling circumstances), there could be increased turnover
costs (employee replacement costs) for U.S. entities sponsoring the
employment of those beneficiaries, including costs of petitioning for
new employees. While DHS has estimated 29,166 individuals who are
eligible to port to a new employer under section 204(j) of the INA, the
Department was unable to predict how many will actually do so. As
mentioned earlier in the Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 analysis, a
range of opportunity costs of time to petitioners who prepare
Supplement J ($43.93 for a human resources specialist, $93.69 for an
in-house lawyer, or $160.43 for an outsourced lawyer) are anticipated
depending on the total numbers of individuals who port. However, DHS is
currently unable to determine the numbers of small entities who take on
immigrant sponsorship of high-skilled workers who are waiting to adjust
status from the original sponsoring employer. The estimates presented
also do not represent employee turnover costs to the original
sponsoring employer, but only represent paperwork costs. Similarly, DHS
is unable to predict the volume of principal beneficiaries of
employment-based immigrant visa petitions who will pursue the option
for unrestricted employment authorization based on compelling
circumstances.
The proposed amendments relating to the H-1B numerical cap
exemptions may impact some small entities by allowing them to qualify
for exemptions of the ACWIA fee when petitioning for H-1B nonimmigrant
workers. As DHS cannot predict the numbers of entities these proposed
amendments would impact at this time, the exact impact on small
entities is not clear, though some positive impact should be
anticipated.
e. An identification of all relevant Federal rules, to the extent
practical, that may duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the proposed
rule.
DHS is unaware of any duplicative, overlapping, or conflicting
Federal rules, but invites any comment and information regarding any
such rules.
f. Description of any significant alternatives to the proposed rule
that accomplish the stated objectives of applicable statutes and that
minimize any significant economic impact of the proposed rule on small
entities.
This rule does not impose direct costs on small entities. Rather,
this rule imposes indirect cost on small entities because the proposed
provisions would affect beneficiaries of employment-based immigrant
visa petitions. If those beneficiaries take actions or steps in line
with the proposals that provide greater flexibility and job mobility,
then there would be an immediate indirect impact--an externality--to
the current sponsoring U.S. employers. DHS considered whether to
exclude from the flexibility and job mobility provisions those
beneficiaries who were sponsored by U.S. employers that were considered
small. However, because DHS so limited the eligibility for unrestricted
employment authorization to beneficiaries who are able to demonstrate
compelling circumstances, and restricted the portability provisions to
those seeking employment within the same or similar occupational
classification(s), DHS did not feel it was necessary to pursue this
proposal. There are no other alternatives that DHS considered that
would further limit or shield small entities from the potential of
negative externalities and that would still accomplish the goals of
this regulation. To reiterate, the goals of this regulation include
providing increased flexibility and normal job progression for
beneficiaries of approved employment-based immigrant visa petitions. To
incorporate alternatives that would limit such mobility for
beneficiaries that are employed or sponsored by small entities would be
counterproductive to the goals of this rule. DHS welcomes public
comments on significant alternatives to the proposed rule that would
minimize significant economic impact to small entities.
C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
The Unfunded Mandate Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) is intended, among
other things, to curb the practice of imposing unfunded Federal
mandates on State, local, and tribal governments. Title II of UMRA
requires each Federal agency to prepare a written statement assessing
the effects of any Federal mandate in a proposed or final agency rule
that may result in a $100 million or more expenditure (adjusted
annually for inflation) in any one year by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector. The value
equivalent of $100,000,000 in 1995 adjusted for inflation to 2014
levels by the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers is
$155,000,000.
Although this rule does exceed the $100 million expenditure
threshold in the first year of implementation (adjusted for inflation),
this rulemaking does not contain such a mandate. Providing job
flexibility through unrestricted employment authorization to a limited
number of employment-authorized nonimmigrants in compelling
circumstances is not a required immigration benefit, nor will use of
the proposed flexibilities result in any expenditures by State, local,
and tribal governments. The requirements of Title II of UMRA,
therefore, do not apply, and DHS has not prepared a statement under
UMRA.
D. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
This proposed rule is a major rule as defined by section 804 of the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Act of 1996. This rule will
result in an annual effect on the economy of more than $100 million in
the first year only. For each subsequent year, the annual effect on the
economy will remain under $100 million. As small businesses may be
impacted under this proposed regulation, DHS has prepared a Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) analysis. The RFA analysis can be found with the
analysis prepared under Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 on
regulations.gov.
E. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
This rule will not have substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the National Government and the States, or
on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Therefore, in accordance with section 6 of
Executive Order 13132, it is determined that this rule does not have
sufficient federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a
federalism summary impact statement.
F. Executive Order 12988 (Civil Justice Reform)
This rule meets the applicable standards set forth in sections 3(a)
and 3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988.
G. Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995, Public Law 104-13,
Departments are required to submit to the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB), for review and approval, any reporting requirements
inherent in a rule. This rule proposes revisions to the following
information collections:
1. The Application for Employment Authorization, Form I-765; and
Form I-765 Work Sheet, Form I-765WS, OMB Control Number 1615-0040.
Specifically, USCIS is revising this collection by revising the
instructions to Form I-765 to include information for the newly
proposed group of applicants (beneficiaries of an approved Form I-140
who are in the United States in E-
[[Page 81937]]
3, H-1B, H-1B1, O-1, or L-1 nonimmigrant status, who are the
beneficiaries of an approved employment-based immigrant visa petition,
who do not have immigrant visas immediately available to them, and who
demonstrate compelling circumstances justifying a grant of employment
authorization) eligible to apply for employment authorization under
proposed section 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(35). Their dependent spouses and
children who are present in the United States in nonimmigrant status
will also be eligible to obtain employment authorization under proposed
section 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(36), provided that the principal alien has
been granted employment authorization. USCIS is also proposing to amend
Form I-765 to include Yes/No questions requiring these applicants to
disclose certain criminal convictions. USCIS estimates an upper-bound
average of 155,067 respondents will request employment authorization as
a result of the changes proposed by this rule in the first 2 years.
This average estimate is derived from a maximum estimate of 257,039 new
respondents who may file applications for employment authorization
documents in year 1 and a maximum estimate of 53,095 respondents in
year 2. USCIS averaged this estimate for new I-765 respondents over a
2-year period of time based on its request seeking a 2-year approval of
the form and its instructions from OMB.
2. USCIS is revising the form and its instructions and the estimate
of total burden hours has increased due to the addition of this new
population of Form I-765 filers, and the increase of burden hours
associated with the collection of biometrics from these applicants.
3. The Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker, Form I-140; OMB Control
Number 1615-0015. Specifically, USCIS is revising this information
collection to remove ambiguity regarding whether information about the
principal beneficiary's dependent family members should be entered on
Form I-140, by revising the word ``requests'' to ``requires'' for
clarification in the form instructions. USCIS is also revising the
instructions to remove the terms ``in duplicate'' in the second
paragraph under the labor certification section of the instructions
because USCIS no longer requires uncertified Employment and Training
Administration (ETA) Forms 9089 to be submitted in duplicate. There is
no change in the data being captured on the information collection
instrument, but there is a change to the estimated annual burden hours
as a result of USCIS' revised estimate of the number of respondents for
this collection of information.
4. The Petition for Nonimmigrant Worker, Form I-129, OMB Control
Number 1615-0009. USCIS is making revisions to Form I-129, specifically
the H-1B Data Collection and Filing Fee Exemption Supplement and the
accompanying instructions, to correspond with revisions to the
regulatory definition of ``related or affiliated nonprofit entities''
for the purposes of determining whether the petitioner is exempt from:
(1) Payment of the $750/$1,500 fee associated with the American
Competitiveness and Workforce Improvement Act (ACWIA) and (2) the
statutory numerical limitation on H-1B visas (also known as the H-1B
cap). USCIS does not estimate that new respondents would file petitions
for alien workers as a result of the changes proposed by this rule.
5. The Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust
Status, Form I-485, including new Supplement J, ``Confirmation of Bona
Fide Job Offer or Request for Job Portability under INA Section
204(J),'' OMB Control Number 1615-0023. Specifically, USCIS is creating
a new Supplement J to Form I-485 to allow the adjustment applicant
requesting portability under section 204(j) of the INA, and the U.S.
employer offering the applicant a new permanent job offer, to provide
formal attestations regarding important aspects of the job offer.
Providing such attestations is an essential step to establish
eligibility for adjustment of status in any employment-based immigrant
visa classification requiring a job offer, regardless of whether the
applicant is making a portability request under section 204(j) or is
seeking to adjust status based upon the same job that was offered in
the underlying immigrant visa petition. Through this new supplement,
USCIS will collect required information from U.S. employers offering a
new permanent job offer to a specific worker under section 204(j).
Moreover, Supplement J will also be used by applicants who are not
porting pursuant to section 204(j) to confirm that the original job
offer described in the Form I-140 petition is still bona fide and
available to the applicant at the time the applicant files Form I-485.
Supplement J will replace the current Form I-485 initial evidence
requirement that an applicant must submit a letter on the letterhead of
the petitioning U.S. employer that confirms that the job offer on which
the Form I-140 petition is based is still available to the applicant.
This supplement will also serve as an important anti-fraud measure,
and it will allow USCIS to validate employers extending new permanent
job offers to individuals under section 204(j). USCIS estimates that
approximately 29,166 new respondents would file Supplement J as a
result of the changes proposed by the rule.
Additionally, USCIS is revising the instructions to Form I-485 to
reflect the implementation of Supplement J. The Form I-485 instructions
are also being revised to clarify that eligible applicants will need to
file Supplement J to request job portability under section 204(j) of
the INA. There is no change to the estimated annual burden hours as a
result of this revision as a result of the changes proposed in this
rule.
DHS is requesting comments on the proposed revisions to these
information collections until February 29, 2016.
In accordance with the PRA, information collection notices are
published in the Federal Register to obtain comments regarding the
nature of the information collection, the categories of respondents,
the estimated burden (i.e., the time, effort, and resources used by the
respondents to respond), the estimated cost to the respondent, and the
actual information collection instruments. When submitting comments on
this information collection, your comments should address one or more
of the following four points:
(1) Evaluate whether the proposed collection of information is
necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the agency,
including whether the information will have practical utility;
(2) Evaluate the accuracy of the agency's estimate of the burden of
the proposed collection of information, including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
(3) Enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected; and
(4) Minimize the burden of the collection of information on those
who are to respond, including through the use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology, e.g., permitting electronic
submission of responses.
Overview of this information collection:
(1) Type of Information Collection: Revision of a Currently
Approved Collection.
(2) Title of the Forms/Collections:
Application for Employment Authorization Document;
Form I-765 Work Sheet;
Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker;
[[Page 81938]]
Petition for Nonimmigrant Worker;
Application to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust
Status.
(3) Agency form number, if any, and the applicable component of the
DHS sponsoring the collection: Forms I-765/I-765WS, I-140, I-129 and I-
485; USCIS.
(4) Affected public who will be asked or required to respond, as
well as a brief abstract:
Form I-765: Primary: Individuals or households: This form was
developed for individuals to request employment authorization and
evidence of that employment authorization. USCIS is revising this form
to add a new class of workers eligible to apply for employment
authorization as the beneficiary of a valid immigrant petition for
classification under sections 203(b)(1), 203(b)(2) or 203(b)(3) of the
INA. Eligible applicants must be physically present in the United
States in E-3, H-1B, H-1B1, O-1, or L-1 nonimmigrant status, and must
demonstrate that they face compelling circumstances while they wait for
their immigrant visas to become available. Dependent spouses and
children who are present in the United States in nonimmigrant status
are also eligible to apply provided that the principal has been granted
employment authorization. Supporting documentation demonstrating
eligibility must be filed with the application. The form instructions
list examples of relevant documentation.
Form I-140: Primary: Business or other for-profit organizations, as
well as not-for profit organizations. USCIS will use the information
furnished on this information collection to classify individuals under
sections 203(b)(1), 203(b)(2) or 203(b)(3) of the INA.
Form I-129: Primary: Business: This form is used by an employer to
petition for workers to come to the U.S. temporarily to perform
services, labor, and training or to request extensions of stay or
changes in nonimmigrant status for nonimmigrant workers. USCIS is
revising Form I-129, specifically the H-1B Data Collection and Filing
Fee Exemption Supplement, and the accompanying instructions, to
correspond with revisions to the regulatory definition of ``related or
affiliated nonprofit entities'' for the purposes of determining whether
the petitioner is exempt from: (1) Payment of the $750/$1,500 fee
associated with the American Competitiveness and Workforce Improvement
Act (ACWIA), and (2) the statutory numerical limitation on H-1B visas
(also known as the cap).
Form I-485: Primary: Individuals or households: The information
collected is used to determine eligibility to adjust status under
section 245 of the INA. The instructions to Form I-485, Application to
Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status, are being revised to
reflect the implementation of Form I-485 Supplement J, Confirmation of
Bona Fide Job Offer or Request for Job Portability under INA Section
204(j) (Supplement J). Supplement J will be used by individuals
applying for adjustment of status to lawful permanent resident on the
basis of being the principal beneficiary of an approved Form I-140,
Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker. Applicants will use Supplement J
to confirm that the job offer described in the Form I-140 petition is
still bona fide and available to the applicant at the time the
applicant files Form I-485. Supplement J is replacing the current Form
I-485 initial evidence requirement that an applicant must submit a
letter on the letterhead of the petitioning employer which confirms
that the job offer on which the Form I-140 petition is based is still
available to the applicant. Applicants will also use Supplement J when
requesting job portability pursuant to section 204(j) of the INA.
Supplement J will provide a standardized procedure along with specific
evidentiary requirements for all job portability requests submitted to
USCIS.
(5) An estimate of the total annual number of respondents and the
amount of time estimated for an average respondent to respond:
Form I-765/I-765WS:
[cir] 4,618,099 responses related to Form I-765 at 3.42 hours per
response;
[cir] 437,070 responses related to Form I-765WS at .50 hours per
response;
[cir] 592,137 responses related to Biometrics services at 1.17
hours; and
[cir] 4,618,099 responses related to Passport-Style Photographs at
.50 hours per response.
Form I-140:
[cir] 101,719 respondents at 1.5 hours per response.
Form I-129:
[cir] Form I-129--333,891 respondents at 2.34 hours;
[cir] E-1/E-2 Classification to Form I-129--4,760 respondents at
.67 hours;
[cir] Trade Agreement Supplement to Form I-129--3,057 respondents
at .67 hours;
[cir] H Classification Supplement to Form I-129--255,872
respondents at 2 hours;
[cir] H-1B and H-1B1 Data Collection and Filing Fee Exemption
Supplement--243,965 respondents at 1 hour;
[cir] L Classification Supplement to Form I-129--37,831 respondents
at 1.34 hours;
[cir] O and P Classifications Supplement to Form I-129--22,710
respondents at 1 hour;
[cir] Q-1 Classification Supplement to Form I-129--155 respondents
at .34 hours; and
[cir] R-1 Classification Supplement to Form I-129--6,635
respondents at 2.34 hours.
Form I-485:
[cir] 697,811 respondents at 6.25 hours per response;
[cir] 697,811 respondents related to Biometrics services at 1.17
hours.
(6) An estimate of the total annual public burden (in hours)
associated with these collections:
Form I-765/I-765WS: 19,014,283.37 hours.
Form I-140: 152,579 hours.
Form I-129: 1,631,234 hours.
Form I-485: 5,238,957 hours.
(7) An estimate of the annual public burden (monetized) associated
with these collections:
Form I-765/I-765WS: $1,357,721,106
Form I-140: $42,365,964.
Form I-129: $73,751,280.
Form I-485: $239,349,173.
List of Subjects
8 CFR Part 204
Administrative practice and procedure, Adoption and foster care,
Immigration, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
8 CFR Part 205
Administrative practice and procedure, Immigration.
8 CFR Part 214
Administrative practice and procedure, Aliens, Cultural exchange
programs, Employment, Foreign officials, Health professions, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Students.
8 CFR Part 245
Aliens, Immigration, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
8 CFR Part 274a
Administrative practice and procedure, Aliens, Employment,
Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Accordingly, DHS proposes to amend chapter I of title 8 of the Code
of Federal Regulations as follows:
[[Page 81939]]
PART 204--IMMIGRANT PETITIONS
0
1. The authority citation for part 204 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101, 1103, 1151, 1153, 1154, 1182, 1184,
1186a, 1255, 1324a, 1641; 8 CFR part 2.
0
2. Section 204.5 is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (d);
0
b. Revising paragraph (e);
0
c. Revising paragraph (n)(3);
0
d. Adding paragraph (p).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 204.5 Petitions for employment-based immigrants.
* * * * *
(d) Priority date. The priority date of any petition filed for
classification under section 203(b) of the Act which is accompanied by
an individual labor certification from the Department of Labor shall be
the date the labor certification application was accepted for
processing by any office of the Department of Labor. The priority date
of any petition filed for a classification under section 203(b) of the
Act which does not require a labor certification from the Department of
Labor shall be the date the completed, signed petition (including all
initial evidence and the correct fee) is properly filed with USCIS. The
priority date of any petition filed for classification under section
203(b) of the Act which is accompanied by an application for Schedule A
designation shall be the date the completed, signed petition (including
all initial evidence and the correct fee) is properly filed with USCIS.
The priority date of an alien who filed for classification as a special
immigrant under section 203(b)(4) of the Act prior to October 1, 1991,
and who is the beneficiary of an approved petition for special
immigrant status after October 1, 1991, shall be the date the alien
applied for an immigrant visa or adjustment of status.
(e) Retention of section 203(b)(1), (2), or (3) priority date. (1)
A petition approved on behalf of an alien under sections 203(b)(1),
(2), or (3) of the Act accords the alien the priority date of the
approved petition for any subsequently filed petition for any
classification under sections 203(b)(1), (2), or (3) of the Act for
which the alien may qualify. In the event that the alien is the
beneficiary of multiple approved petitions under sections 203(b)(1),
(2), or (3) of the Act, the alien shall be entitled to the earliest
priority date.
(2) The priority date of a petition may not be retained under
paragraph (e)(1) of this section if at any time USCIS revokes the
approval of the petition because of:
(i) Fraud, or a willful misrepresentation of a material fact;
(ii) Revocation by the Department of Labor of the approved
permanent labor certification that accompanied the petition;
(iii) Invalidation by USCIS or the Department of State of the
permanent labor certification that accompanied the petition; or
(iv) A determination by USCIS that petition approval was in error.
(3) A denied petition will not establish a priority date.
(4) A priority date is not transferable to another alien.
(5) A petition filed under section 204(a)(1)(F) of the Act for an
alien shall remain valid with respect to a new employment offer as
determined by USCIS under section 204(j) of the Act and 8 CFR 245.25.
An alien will continue to be afforded the priority date of such
petition, if the requirements of paragraph (e) of this section are met.
* * * * *
(n) * * *
(3) Validity of approved petitions. Unless approval is revoked
under section 203(g) or 205 of the Act, an employment-based petition is
valid indefinitely.
* * * * *
(p) Eligibility for employment authorization in compelling
circumstances--(1) Eligibility of principal alien. An individual who is
the principal beneficiary of an approved immigrant petition for
classification under sections 203(b)(1), 203(b)(2) or 203(b)(3) of the
Act may be eligible to receive employment authorization, upon
application, if:
(i) In the case of an initial request for employment authorization,
the individual is in E-3, H-1B, H-1B1, O-1, or L-1 nonimmigrant status
at the time the application for employment authorization is filed;
(ii) An immigrant visa is not immediately available to the
principal beneficiary based on his or her priority date at the time the
application for employment authorization is filed; and
(iii) USCIS determines, as a matter of discretion, that the
principal beneficiary demonstrates compelling circumstances that
justify the issuance of employment authorization.
(2) Eligibility of spouses and children. The family members, as
described in section 203(d) of the Act, of a principal beneficiary, who
are in nonimmigrant status at the time the principal beneficiary
applies for employment authorization under paragraph (p)(1) of this
section, are eligible to apply for employment authorization provided
that the principal beneficiary has been granted employment
authorization under paragraph (p) of this section and such employment
authorization has not been terminated or revoked. Such family members
may apply for employment authorization concurrently with the principal
beneficiary, but cannot be granted employment authorization until the
principal beneficiary is so authorized. The validity period of
employment authorization granted to family members may not extend
beyond the validity period of employment authorization granted to the
principal beneficiary.
(3) Subject to paragraph (p)(5) of this section, an alien may be
eligible to receive renewal of employment authorization under paragraph
(p) of this section, upon application, if:
(i) He or she is the principal beneficiary of an approved immigrant
petition for classification under sections 203(b)(1), 203(b)(2) or
203(b)(3) of the Act and either:
(A) USCIS determines, as a matter of discretion, that the principal
beneficiary continues to demonstrate compelling circumstances that
justify the issuance of employment authorization, or
(B) The difference between the principal beneficiary's priority
date and the date upon which immigrant visas are authorized for
issuance for the principal beneficiary's preference category and
country of chargeability is 1 year or less according to the current
Department of State Visa Bulletin; or
(ii) Is a family member, as described under paragraph (p)(2) of
this section, of a principal beneficiary satisfying the requirements
under paragraph (p)(3)(i) of this section, except that the family
member need not be maintaining nonimmigrant status at the time the
principal beneficiary applies for renewal employment authorization
under paragraph (p) of this section.
(4) Application for employment authorization. To request employment
authorization, an eligible applicant described in paragraphs (p)(1) or
(2) of this section must file an application for employment
authorization, or a successor form, with USCIS, in accordance with 8
CFR 274a.13(a) and the form instructions, including evidence of
compelling circumstances. Such applicant is subject to the collection
of his or her biometric information and the payment of any biometric
services fee as provided in the form instructions. Employment
authorization under this paragraph may be granted solely in 1-year
increments.
(5) Ineligibility for employment authorization. An alien is not
eligible
[[Page 81940]]
for employment authorization, including renewal of employment
authorization, under this paragraph in the following circumstances:
(i) The individual has been convicted of any felony or two or more
misdemeanors; or
(ii) The principal beneficiary's priority date is more than 1 year
beyond the date immigrant visas were authorized for issuance for the
principal beneficiary's preference category and country of
chargeability according to the Department of State Visa Bulletin
current at the time the application for employment authorization, or
successor form, is filed.
PART 205--REVOCATION OF APPROVAL OF PETITIONS
0
3. The authority citation for part 205 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101, 1103, 1151, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1182,
1324a, and 1186a.
0
4. Section 205.1 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(3)(iii)(C) and
(D) to read as follows:
Sec. 205.1 Automatic revocation.
(a) * * *
(3) * * *
(iii) * * *
(C) In employment-based preference cases, upon written notice of
withdrawal filed by the petitioner to any officer of USCIS who is
authorized to grant or deny petitions, where the withdrawal is filed
less than 180 days after approval of the employment-based preference
petition, provided that the revocation of a petition's approval under
this clause will not, by itself, impact a beneficiary's ability to
retain his or her priority date under 8 CFR 204.5(e). A petition that
is withdrawn 180 days or more after approval remains approved unless
its approval is revoked on other grounds. If an employment-based
petition on behalf of an alien is withdrawn, the job offer of the
petitioning employer is rescinded and the alien must obtain a new
employment-based preference petition on his or her behalf in order to
seek adjustment of status or issuance of an immigrant visa as an
employment-based immigrant, unless eligible for adjustment of status
under section 204(j) of the Act and in accordance with 8 CFR 245.25.
(D) Upon termination of the petitioning employer's business less
than 180 days after petition approval in an employment-based preference
case under section 203(b)(1)(B), 203(b)(1)(C), 203(b)(2), or 203(b)(3)
of the Act, provided that the revocation of a petition's approval under
this clause will not, by itself, impact a beneficiary's ability to
retain his or her priority date under 8 CFR 204.5(e). If a petitioning
employer's business terminates 180 days or more after approval, the
petition remains approved unless its approval is revoked on other
grounds. If a petitioning employer's business terminates, the job offer
of the petitioning employer is rescinded and the beneficiary must
obtain a new employment-based preference petition on his or her behalf
in order to seek adjustment of status or issuance of an immigrant visa
as an employment-based immigrant, unless eligible for adjustment of
status under section 204(j) of the Act and in accordance with 8 CFR
245.25.
* * * * *
PART 214--NONIMMIGRANT CLASSES
0
5. The authority citation for part 214 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101, 1102, 1103, 1182, 1184, 1186a, 1187,
1221, 1281, 1282, 1301-1305 and 1372; sec. 643, Pub. L. 104-208, 110
Stat. 3009-708; Pub. L. 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681-641; Pub. L. 106-
313, 114 Stat. 1251-1255; Pub. L. 106-386, 114 Stat. 1477-1480;
section 141 of the Compacts of Free Association with the Federated
States of Micronesia and the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and
with the Government of Palau, 48 U.S.C. 1901 note, and 1931 note,
respectively; 48 U.S.C. 1806; 8 CFR part 2.
0
6. Section 214.1 is amended by adding a new paragraph (l) to read as
follows:
Sec. 214.1 Requirements for admission, extension, and maintenance of
status.
* * * * *
(l) Period of stay. (1) An alien admissible in E-1, E-2, E-3, H-1B,
L-1, or TN classification and his or her dependents may be admitted to
the United States for the validity period of the petition, or for a
validity period otherwise authorized for the E-1, E-2, E-3, and TN
classifications, plus an additional period of up to 10 days before the
validity period begins and a 10-day period following the expiration of
the validity period to prepare for departure from the United States or
to seek an extension or change of status based on a subsequent offer of
employment. Unless authorized under 8 CFR 274a.12, the alien may not
work except during the validity period.
(2) An alien admitted or otherwise provided status in E-1, E-2, E-
3, H-1B, H-1B1, L-1, or TN classification and his or her dependents
shall not be considered to have failed to maintain nonimmigrant status
solely on the basis of the cessation of the employment on which the
alien's classification was based for a one-time period during any
authorized validity period. Such one-time period shall last up to 60
days or until the end of the authorized validity period, whichever is
shorter.
(3) An alien in any authorized period described in paragraph (l) of
this section may apply for and be granted an extension of stay under
paragraph (c)(4) of this section or change of status under 8 CFR 248.1,
if otherwise eligible. DHS may eliminate or shorten the 60-day period
described in paragraph (l)(2) of this section as a matter of discretion
and, unless otherwise authorized under 8 CFR 274a.12, the alien may not
work during such period.
0
7. Section 214.2 is amended by:
0
a. Adding new paragraphs (h)(2)(i)(H), (h)(8)(ii)(F), (h)(13)(iii)(C)
through (E) and (h)(20);
0
b. Revising paragraphs (h)(4)(v)(C), (h)(13)(i)(A), and
(h)(19)(iii)(B); and
0
c. Removing the fifth sentence from paragraph (h)(9)(iv).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 214.2 Special requirements for admission, extension, and
maintenance of status.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) * * *
(H) H-1B portability. An eligible H-1B nonimmigrant is authorized
to start concurrent or new employment under section 214(n) of the Act
upon the filing, in accordance with 8 CFR 103.2(a), of a non-frivolous
H-1B petition on behalf of such alien, or as of the requested start
date, whichever is later.
(1) Eligible H-1B nonimmigrant. For H-1B portability purposes, an
eligible H-1B nonimmigrant is defined as an alien:
(i) Who has been lawfully admitted into the United States;
(ii) On whose behalf a non-frivolous H-1B petition for new
employment has been filed, including a petition for new employment with
the same employer, with a request to amend or extend the H-1B
nonimmigrant's stay, before the H-1B nonimmigrant's period of stay
authorized by the Secretary of Homeland Security expires; and
(iii) Who has not been employed without authorization in the United
States from the time of last admission through the filing of the
petition for new employment.
(2) Length of employment. Employment authorized under paragraph
(h)(2)(i)(H) of this section automatically ceases upon the adjudication
of the H-1B petition described in paragraph (h)(2)(i)(H)(1)(ii) of this
section.
[[Page 81941]]
(3) Successive H-1B portability petitions. (i) An alien maintaining
authorization for employment under paragraph (h)(2)(i)(H) of this
section, whose status, as indicated on the Arrival-Departure Record
(Form I-94), has expired, shall be considered to be in a period of stay
authorized by the Secretary of Homeland Security for purposes of
paragraph (h)(2)(i)(H)(ii) of this section. If otherwise eligible under
paragraph (h)(2)(i)(H) of this section, such alien may begin working in
a subsequent position upon the filing of another non-frivolous H-1B
petition or from the requested start date, whichever is later,
notwithstanding that the previous H-1B petition upon which employment
is authorized under paragraph (h)(2)(i)(H) of this section remains
pending and regardless of whether the validity period of an approved H-
1B petition filed on the alien's behalf expired during such pendency.
(ii) A request to amend the petition or for an extension of stay in
any successive H-1B portability petition cannot be approved if a
request to amend the petition or for an extension of stay in any
preceding H-1B portability petition in the succession is denied, unless
the beneficiary's previously approved period of H-1B status remains
valid.
(iii) Denial of a successive portability petition does not affect
the ability of the H-1B beneficiary to continue or resume working in
accordance with the terms of an H-1B petition previously approved on
behalf of the beneficiary if that petition approval remains valid and
the beneficiary has maintained H-1B status or been in a period of
authorized stay and has not been employed in the United States without
authorization.
* * * * *
(4) * * *
(v) * * *
(C) Duties without licensure. (1) In certain occupations which
generally require licensure, a State may allow an individual without
licensure to fully practice the occupation under the supervision of
licensed senior or supervisory personnel in that occupation. In such
cases, USCIS shall examine the nature of the duties and the level at
which they are performed, as well as evidence provided by the
petitioner as to the identity, physical location, and credentials of
the individual(s) who will supervise the alien. If the facts
demonstrate that the alien under supervision will fully perform the
duties of the occupation, H classification may be granted.
(2) An H-1B petition filed on behalf of an alien who does not have
a valid State or local license, where a license is otherwise required
to fully perform the duties in that occupation, may be approved for a
period of up to 1 year if:
(i) The license would otherwise be issued provided the alien was in
possession of a valid social security number or was authorized for
employment in the United States, and
(ii) The petitioner demonstrates, through evidence from the State
or local licensing authority, that the only obstacle to the issuance of
licensure is the lack of a social security number, a lack of employment
authorization, or both. The petitioner must demonstrate that the alien
is fully qualified to receive the State or local license in all other
respects, meaning that all educational, training, experience, and other
requirements have been met. The alien must have filed an application
for the license in accordance with applicable State or local rules and/
or procedures, provided that State or local rules and/or procedures do
not prohibit the alien from filing the license application without
provision of a social security number or proof of employment
authorization.
(3) An H-1B petition on behalf of an alien who has been previously
accorded H-1B classification under paragraph (h)(4)(v)(C)(2) of this
section may not be approved unless the petitioner demonstrates that the
alien has obtained the required license, is seeking to employ the alien
in a position requiring a different license, or the alien will be
employed in that occupation in a different location which does not
require a state or local license to fully perform the duties of the
occupation.
* * * * *
(8) * * *
(ii) * * *
(F) Cap-exemptions under sections 214(g)(5)(A) and (B) of the Act.
An alien is not subject to the numerical limitations identified in
section 214(g)(1)(A) of the Act if the alien qualifies for an exemption
under section 214(g)(5) of the Act. For purposes of section
214(g)(5)(A) and (B) of the Act:
(1) ``Institution of higher education'' has the same definition as
described at section 101(a) of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20
U.S.C. 1001(a)).
(2) A nonprofit entity shall be considered to be related to or
affiliated with an institution of higher education if:
(i) The nonprofit entity is connected to or associated with an
institution of higher education through shared ownership or control by
the same board or federation;
(ii) The nonprofit entity is operated by an institution of higher
education;
(iii) The nonprofit entity is attached to an institution of higher
education as a member, branch, cooperative, or subsidiary; or
(iv) The nonprofit entity has, absent shared ownership or control,
entered into a formal written affiliation agreement with an institution
of higher education that establishes an active working relationship
between the nonprofit entity and the institution of higher education
for the purposes of research and/or education, and a primary purpose of
the nonprofit entity is to directly contribute to the research or
education mission of the institution of higher education.
(3) An entity is considered a ``nonprofit entity'' if it meets the
definition described at paragraph (h)(19)(iv) of this section.
``Nonprofit research organization'' and ``governmental research
organization'' have the same definitions as described at paragraph
(h)(19)(iii)(C) of this section.
(4) An H-1B beneficiary who is not directly employed by a
qualifying institution, organization or entity identified in sections
214(g)(5)(A) or (B) of the Act shall qualify for an exemption under
such section if the H-1B beneficiary will spend the majority of his or
her work time performing job duties at a qualifying institution,
organization or entity and those job duties directly and predominately
further the essential purpose, mission, objectives or functions of the
qualifying institution, organization or entity, namely, either higher
education, nonprofit research or government research. The burden is on
the H-1B petitioner to establish that there is a nexus between the
duties to be performed by the H-1B beneficiary and the essential
purpose, mission, objectives or functions of the qualifying
institution, organization or entity.
(5) If cap-exempt employment ceases, and if the alien is not the
beneficiary of a new cap-exempt petition, then the alien will be
subject to the cap if not previously counted within the 6-year period
of authorized admission to which the cap-exempt employment applied. If
cap-exempt employment converts to cap-subject employment subject to the
numerical limitations in section 214(g)(1)(A) of the Act, USCIS may
revoke the petition authorizing such employment consistent with
paragraph (h)(11)(iii) of this section.
(6) Concurrent H-1B employment in a cap-subject position of an
alien that qualifies for an exemption under section 214(g)(5)(A) or (B)
of the Act shall not subject the alien to the numerical limitations in
section 214(g)(1)(A) of the
[[Page 81942]]
Act. When petitioning for concurrent cap-subject H-1B employment, the
petitioner must demonstrate that the H-1B beneficiary is employed in
valid H-1B status under a cap exemption under section 214(g)(5)(A) or
(B) of the Act, the beneficiary's employment with the cap exempt
employer is expected to continue after the new cap-subject petition is
approved, and the beneficiary can reasonably and concurrently perform
the work described in each employer's respective positions.
(i) Validity of a petition for concurrent cap-subject H-1B
employment approved under paragraph (h)(8)(ii)(F)(6) of this section
cannot extend beyond the period of validity specified for the cap-
exempt H-1B employment.
(ii) If H-1B employment subject to a cap exemption under section
214(g)(5)(A) or (B) of the Act is terminated by a petitioner, or
otherwise ends before the end of the validity period listed on the
approved petition filed on the alien's behalf, the alien who is
concurrently employed in a cap-subject position becomes subject to the
numerical limitations in section 214(g)(1)(A) of the Act, unless the
alien was previously counted with respect to the 6-year period of
authorized H-1B admission to which the petition applies or another
exemption applies. If such an alien becomes subject to the numerical
limitations in section 214(g)(1)(A) of the Act, USCIS may revoke the
cap-subject petition described in paragraph (h)(8)(ii)(F)(6) of this
section consistent with paragraph (h)(11)(iii) of this section.
* * * * *
(13) * * *
(i) * * *
(A) Except as set forth in 8 CFR 214.1(l) with respect to H-1B
beneficiaries and their dependents and paragraph (h)(5)(viii)(B) of
this section with respect to H-2A beneficiaries, a beneficiary shall be
admitted to the United States for the validity period of the petition,
plus a period of up to 10 days before the validity period begins and 10
days after the validity period ends. The beneficiary may not work
except during the validity period of the petition.
* * * * *
(iii) * * *
(C) Calculating the maximum H-1B Admission Period. Time spent
physically outside the United States exceeding 24 hours by an alien
during the validity of an H-1B petition that was approved on the
alien's behalf shall not be considered for purposes of calculating the
alien's total period of authorized admission under section 214(g)(4) of
the Act, regardless of whether such time is meaningfully interruptive
of the alien's stay in H-1B status and the reason for the alien's
absence. Accordingly, such time may be recaptured in a subsequent H-1B
petition on behalf of the alien, subject to the maximum period of
authorized H-1B admission described in section 214(g)(4) of the Act.
(1) It is the H-1B petitioner's burden to request and demonstrate
the specific amount of time for recapture on behalf of the beneficiary.
The beneficiary may provide appropriate evidence, such as copies of
passport stamps, Arrival-Departure Records (Form I-94), and/or airline
tickets, together with a chart, indicating the dates spent outside of
the United States, and referencing the relevant independent documentary
evidence, when seeking to recapture the alien's time spent outside the
United States. Based on the evidence provided, USCIS may grant all,
part, or none of the recapture period requested.
(2) If the beneficiary was previously counted toward the H-1B
numerical cap under section 214(g)(1) of the Act with respect to the 6-
year maximum period of H-1B admission from which recapture is sought,
the H-1B petition seeking to recapture a period of stay as an H-1B
nonimmigrant will not subject the beneficiary to the H-1B numerical
cap, notwithstanding whether the alien has been physically outside the
United States for 1 year or more and would be otherwise eligible for a
new period of admission under such section of the Act. An H-1B
petitioner may either seek such recapture on behalf of the alien or,
consistent with paragraph (h)(13)(iii) of this section, seek a new
period of admission on behalf of the alien under section 214(g)(1) of
the Act.
(D) Lengthy adjudication delay exemption from 214(g)(4) of the Act.
(1) An alien who is in H-1B status or has previously held H-1B status
is eligible for H-1B status beyond the 6-year limitation under section
214(g)(4) of the Act, if, prior to the 6-year limitation being reached,
at least 365 days have elapsed since:
(i) The filing of a labor certification with the Department of
Labor on the alien's behalf, if such certification is required for the
alien to obtain status under section 203(b) of the Act; or
(ii) The filing of an immigrant visa petition with USCIS on the
alien's behalf to accord classification under section 203(b) of the
Act.
(2) H-1B approvals under paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(D) of this section
may be granted in up to 1-year increments until either the approved
permanent labor certification expires or a final decision has been made
to:
(i) Deny the application for permanent labor certification, or, if
approved, to revoke or invalidate such approval;
(ii) Deny the immigrant visa petition, or, if approved, revoke such
approval;
(iii) Deny or approve the alien's application for an immigrant visa
or application to adjust status to lawful permanent residence; or
(iv) Administratively or otherwise close the application for
permanent labor certification, immigrant visa petition, or application
to adjust status.
(3) No final decision while appeal available or pending. A decision
to deny or revoke an application for labor certification, or to deny or
revoke the approval of an immigrant visa petition, will not be
considered final under paragraphs (h)(13)(iii)(D)(2)(i) or (ii) of this
section during the period authorized for filing an appeal of the
decision, or while an appeal is pending.
(4) Substitution of beneficiaries. An alien who has been replaced
by another alien, on or before July 16, 2007, as the beneficiary of an
approved permanent labor certification may not rely on that permanent
labor certification to establish eligibility for H-1B status based on
this lengthy adjudication delay exemption. Except for a substitution of
a beneficiary that occurred on or before July 16, 2007, an alien
establishing eligibility for this lengthy adjudication delay exemption
based on a pending or approved labor certification must be the named
beneficiary listed on the permanent labor certification.
(5) Advance filing. A petitioner may file an H-1B petition seeking
a lengthy adjudication delay exemption under paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(D)
of this section within 6 months of the requested H-1B start date. The
petition may be filed before 365 days have elapsed since the labor
certification application or immigrant visa petition was filed with the
Department of Labor or USCIS, respectively, provided that the
application for labor certification or immigrant visa petition must
have been filed at least 365 days prior to the last day of the alien's
authorized 6-year period of H-1B admission under section 214(g)(4) of
the Act. Such authorized 6-year period of H-1B status includes any
prior or concurrent request to recapture unused H-1B, L-1A, or L-1B
time spent outside of the United States. The petitioner may request any
time remaining to the beneficiary under the maximum period of admission
described at section 214(g)(4) of the Act along with the exemption
request, but in no case may the approved H-1B period
[[Page 81943]]
of validity exceed the limits specified by paragraph (h)(9)(iii) of
this section.
(6) Petitioners seeking exemption. The H-1B petitioner need not be
the employer that filed the application for labor certification or
immigrant visa petition that is used to qualify for this exemption.
Separate requests for lengthy adjudication delay exemptions under
paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(D) of this section may be based on separate,
eligible labor certification applications or immigrant visa petitions
on behalf of the same alien.
(7) Subsequent exemption approvals after the 7th year. Each
exemption granted under paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(D) of this section
affords the alien a new date at which the alien's maximum period of
admission expires. A petition for any subsequent extension under
paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(D) of this section must include evidence that a
qualifying labor certification or immigrant visa petition was filed at
least 365 days prior to the last day of the alien's authorized period
of H-1B admission. Such labor certification or immigrant visa petition
need not be the same as that used to qualify for the initial exemption
under paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(D) of this section.
(8) Aggregation of time not permitted. A petitioner may not
aggregate the number of days that have elapsed since the filing of one
labor certification or immigrant visa petition with the number of days
that have elapsed since the filing of another such application or
petition to meet the 365-day requirement.
(9) Exemption eligibility. Only a principal beneficiary of a non-
frivolous labor certification application or immigrant visa petition
filed on his or her behalf may be eligible under paragraph
(h)(13)(iii)(D) of this section for an exemption to the maximum period
of admission under section 214(g)(4) of the Act.
(10) Limits on future exemptions from the lengthy adjudication
delay. An immigrant visa petition under section 203(b) of the Act
cannot support a request for the lengthy adjudication delay exemption
under paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(D) of this section if the alien fails to
file an adjustment of status application or make an application for an
immigrant visa within 1 year of an immigrant visa becoming immediately
available. If the accrual of such 1-year period is interrupted by the
unavailability of an immigrant visa, a new 1-year period shall be
afforded when an immigrant visa again becomes immediately available.
USCIS may excuse a failure to file in its discretion if the alien
establishes that the failure to apply was due to circumstances beyond
his or her control. The limitations described in this paragraph apply
to any approved immigrant visa petition under section 203(b) of the
Act, including petitions withdrawn by the petitioner or those filed by
a petitioner whose business terminates 180 days after approval.
(E) Per-country limitation exemption from 214(g)(4) of the Act. An
alien who currently maintains or previously held H-1B status, who is
the beneficiary of an approved immigrant visa petition for
classification under sections 203(b)(1), (2), or (3) of the Act, and
who is eligible to be granted that immigrant status but for application
of the per country limitation, is eligible for H-1B status beyond the
6-year limitation under 214(g)(4) of the Act. The petitioner must
demonstrate such visa unavailability as of the date the H-1B petition
is filed with USCIS and the unavailability must exist at time of the
petition's adjudication.
(1) Validity periods. USCIS may grant validity periods of petitions
approved under this paragraph in increments of up to 3 years for as
long as the alien remains eligible for this exemption.
(2) H-1B approvals under (h)(13)(iii)(E) of this section may be
granted until a final decision has been made to:
(i) Revoke the approval of the immigrant visa petition; or
(ii) Approve or deny the alien's application for an immigrant visa
or application to adjust status to lawful permanent residence.
(3) Current H-1B status not required. An alien who is not in H-1B
status at the time the H-1B petition on his or her behalf is filed,
including an alien who is not in the United States, may seek an
exemption of the 6-year limitation under 214(g)(4) of the Act under
this clause, if otherwise eligible.
(4) Subsequent petitioners may seek exemptions. The H-1B petitioner
need not be the employer that filed the immigrant visa petition that is
used to qualify for this exemption. An H-1B petition may be approved
under paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(E) of this section with respect to any
approved immigrant visa petition, and a subsequent H-1B petition may be
approved with respect to a different approved immigrant visa petition
on behalf of the same alien.
(5) Advance filing. A petitioner may file an H-1B petition seeking
a per-country limitation exemption under paragraph (h)(13)(iii)(E) of
this section within 6 months of the requested H-1B start date. The
petitioner may request any time remaining to the beneficiary under the
maximum period of admission described at section 214(g)(4) of the Act
along with the exemption request, but in no case may the H-1B approval
period exceed the limits specified by paragraph (h)(9)(iii) of this
section.
(6) Exemption eligibility. Only the principal beneficiary of an
approved immigrant visa petition for classification under sections
203(b)(1), (2), or (3) of the Act may be eligible under paragraph
(h)(13)(iii)(E) of this section for an exemption to the maximum period
of admission under section 214(g)(4) of the Act.
* * * * *
(19) * * *
(iii) * * *
(B) An affiliated or related nonprofit entity. A nonprofit entity
shall be considered to be related to or affiliated with an institution
of higher education if:
(1) The nonprofit entity is connected to or associated with an
institution of higher education through shared ownership or control by
the same board or federation;
(2) The nonprofit entity is operated by an institution of higher
education; or
(3) The nonprofit entity is attached to an institution of higher
education as a member, branch, cooperative, or subsidiary.
(4) The nonprofit entity has, absent shared ownership or control,
entered into a formal written affiliation agreement with an institution
of higher education that establishes an active working relationship
between the nonprofit entity and the institution of higher education
for the purposes of research and/or education, and a primary purpose of
the nonprofit entity is to directly contribute to the research or
education mission of the institution of higher education.
* * * * *
(20) Retaliatory action claims. If credible documentary evidence is
provided in support of a petition seeking an extension of H-1B stay in
or change of status to another classification indicating that the
beneficiary faced retaliatory action from his or her employer based on
a report regarding a violation of the employer's labor certification
application obligations under section 212(n)(2)(C)(iv) of the Act,
USCIS may consider a loss or failure to maintain H-1B status by the
beneficiary related to such violation as due to, and commensurate with,
``extraordinary circumstances'' as defined by 8 CFR 214.1(c)(4) and 8
CFR 248.1(b).
* * * * *
[[Page 81944]]
PART 245--ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS TO THAT OF PERSON ADMITTED FOR
PERMANENT RESIDENCE
0
8. The authority citation for part 245 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101, 1103, 1182, 1255; Pub. L. 105-100,
section 202, 111 Stat. 2160, 2193; Pub. L. 105-277, section 902, 112
Stat. 2681; Pub. L. 110-229, tit. VII, 122 Stat. 754; 8 CFR part 2.
0
9. Revise Sec. 245.15(n)(2) to read as follows:
Sec. 245.15 Adjustment of status of certain Haitian Nationals under
the Haitian Refugee Immigrant Fairness Act of 1998 (HRIFA)
* * * * *
(n) * * *
(2) Adjudication and issuance. Employment authorization may not be
issued to an applicant for adjustment of status under section 902 of
HRIFA until the adjustment application has been pending for 180 days,
unless USCIS verifies that DHS records contain evidence that the
applicant meets the criteria set forth in section 902(b) or 902(d) of
HRIFA, and determines that there is no indication that the applicant is
clearly ineligible for adjustment of status under section 902 of HRIFA,
in which case USCIS may approve the application for employment
authorization, and issue the resulting document, immediately upon such
verification. If USCIS fails to adjudicate the application for
employment authorization upon the expiration of the 180-day waiting
period, or within 90 days of the filing of application for employment
authorization, whichever comes later, the applicant shall be eligible
for an employment authorization document. Nothing in this section shall
preclude an applicant for adjustment of status under HRIFA from being
granted an initial employment authorization or an extension of
employment authorization under any other provision of law or regulation
for which the applicant may be eligible.
* * * * *
0
10. Add Sec. 245.25 to read as follows:
Sec. 245.25 Adjustment of status of aliens with approved employment-
based immigrant visa petitions; validity of petition and offer of
employment.
(a) Validity of petition for continued eligibility for adjustment
of status. An alien who has a pending application to adjust status to
that of a lawful permanent resident based on an approved employment-
based immigrant visa petition filed under section 204(a)(1)(F) of the
Act on the applicant's behalf must have a valid offer of employment
based on a valid petition at the time the application to adjust status
is filed and at the time the alien's application to adjust status is
adjudicated, and the applicant must intend to accept such offer of
employment. Prior to a final administrative decision on an application
to adjust status, USCIS may require that the applicant demonstrate, or
the applicant may affirmatively demonstrate to USCIS, on a designated
form in accordance with the form instructions, or as otherwise
determined by USCIS, with any required supporting documentary evidence,
that:
(1) The employment offer by the petitioning employer is continuing;
or
(2) Under section 204(j) of the Act, the applicant has a new offer
of employment from the petitioning employer or a different U.S.
employer, or a new offer based on self-employment, in the same or a
similar occupational classification as the employment offer under the
qualifying petition, provided that:
(i) The alien's application to adjust status based on a qualifying
petition has been pending for 180 days or more; and
(ii) The approval of the qualifying petition has not been revoked.
In all cases, the applicant and his or her intended employer must
demonstrate the intention for the applicant to be employed under the
continuing or new employment offer (including self-employment)
described in paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of this section, as applicable,
within a reasonable period upon the applicant's grant of lawful
permanent resident status.
(b) Evidence--(1) Continuing employment offer. Unless otherwise
specified on the form or form instructions, for purposes of paragraph
(a)(1) of this section, evidence of a continuing employment offer shall
be provided in the form of a written attestation, signed by such
employer, attesting that the employer continues to extend the original
offer of employment and intends that the applicant will commence the
employment described in the offer of employment within a reasonable
period upon adjustment of status.
(2) New employment offer. Unless otherwise specified by a form or
form instructions, for purposes of paragraph (a)(2) of this section,
evidence of a new offer of employment that is in the same or a similar
occupational classification as the employment offer under the approved
petition as required by section 204(j) of the Act must include:
(i) A written attestation signed by the new employer describing the
new employment offer, including its requirements and a description of
the duties in the new position, and stating that the employer intends
that the applicant will commence the employment described in the new
employment offer within a reasonable period upon adjustment of status;
(ii) An explanation from the new employer establishing that the new
employment offer and the employment offer under the approved petition
are in the same or similar occupational classification, which may
include material and credible information provided by another Federal
government agency, such as information from the Standard Occupational
Classification (SOC) system, or similar or successor system,
administered by the Department of Labor; and
(iii) A copy of the receipt notice issued by USCIS, or if
unavailable, secondary evidence showing that the alien's application to
adjust status based on such petition has been pending with USCIS for
180 days or more.
(3) Intention after grant of adjustment of status application.
Evidence that the applicant intends to commence the employment
described either in the continuing employment offer or, if pursuing an
offer of new employment in accordance with section 204(j) of the Act,
the new employment offer, within a reasonable period upon adjustment of
status, including a written attestation signed by the applicant.
(c) Definition of same or similar occupational classification. The
term ``same occupational classification'' means an occupation that
resembles in every relevant respect the occupation for which the
underlying employment-based immigrant visa petition was approved. The
term ``similar occupational classification'' means an occupation that
shares essential qualities or has a marked resemblance or likeness with
the occupation for which the underlying employment-based immigrant visa
petition was approved.
PART 274a--CONTROL OF EMPLOYMENT OF ALIENS
0
11. The authority citation for part 274a continues to read as follows:
Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101, 1103, 1324a; 48 U.S.C. 1806; 8 CFR
part 2.
0
12. Amend Sec. 274a.2 by revising paragraph (b)(1)(vii) to read as
follows:
Sec. 274a.2 Verification of identity and employment authorization.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(vii) If an individual's employment authorization expires, the
employer,
[[Page 81945]]
recruiter or referrer for a fee must reverify on the Form I-9 to
reflect that the individual is still authorized to work in the United
States; otherwise, the individual may no longer be employed, recruited,
or referred. Reverification on the Form I-9 must occur not later than
the date work authorization expires. If an Employment Authorization
Document (Form I-766 or successor form) as described in Sec.
274a.13(d) was presented for completion of the Form I-9 in combination
with a Notice of Action (Form I-797C), or successor form, stating that
the original Employment Authorization Document has been automatically
extended for up to 180 days, reverification applies upon the expiration
of the automatically extended validity period under Sec. 274a.13(d)
and not upon the expiration date indicated on the face of the alien's
Employment Authorization Document. In order to reverify on the Form I-
9, the employee or referred individual must present a document that
either shows continuing employment eligibility or is a new grant of
work authorization. The employer or the recruiter or referrer for a fee
must review this document, and if it appears to be genuine and relate
to the individual, reverify by noting the document's identification
number and expiration date, if any, on the Form I-9 and signing the
attestation by a handwritten signature or electronic signature in
accordance with paragraph (i) of this section.
* * * * *
0
13. Amend Sec. 274a.12 by:
0
a. In paragraph (b)(9), removing ``;'' at the end and adding in its
place ``.'', and adding a new sentence to the end of the paragraph;
0
b. Adding and reserving new paragraphs (c)(27) to (c)(34); and
0
c. Adding new paragraphs (c)(35) and (c)(36).
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 274a.12 Classes of aliens authorized to accept employment.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(9) * * * In the case of a nonimmigrant with H-1B status,
employment authorization will automatically continue upon the filing of
a qualifying petition under 8 CFR 214.2(h)(2)(i)(H) until such petition
is adjudicated, in accordance with section 214(n) of the Act and 8 CFR
214.2(h)(2)(i)(H);
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(35) An alien who is the principal beneficiary of a valid immigrant
petition under section 203(b)(1), 203(b)(2) or 203(b)(3) of the Act
described as eligible for employment authorization in 8 CFR 204.5(p).
(36) A spouse or child of a principal beneficiary of a valid
immigrant petition under section 203(b)(1), 203(b)(2) or 203(b)(3) of
the Act described as eligible for employment authorization in 8 CFR
204.5(p).
* * * * *
0
14. Amend Sec. 274a.13 by:
0
a. Revising the paragraph (a) introductory text;
0
b. Removing the first sentence of paragraph (a)(1); and
0
c. Revising paragraph (d).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 274a.13 Application for employment authorization.
(a) Application. An alien requesting employment authorization or an
Employment Authorization Document (Form I-766 or successor form), or
both, may be required to apply on a form designated by USCIS with any
prescribed fee(s) in accordance with the form instructions. An alien
may file such request concurrently with a related benefit request that,
if granted, would form the basis for eligibility for employment
authorization, only to the extent permitted by the form instructions.
* * * * *
(d) Renewal application--(1) Automatic extension of Employment
Authorization Documents. Except as otherwise provided in this chapter
or by law, notwithstanding 8 CFR 274a.14(a)(1)(i), the validity period
of an expiring Employment Authorization Document (Form I-766 or
successor form) and, for aliens who are not employment authorized
incident to status, also the attendant employment authorization, will
be automatically extended for an additional period not to exceed 180
days from the date of such document's and such employment
authorization's expiration if a request for renewal on a form
designated by USCIS is:
(i) Properly filed as provided by form instructions before the
expiration date shown on the face of the Employment Authorization
Document;
(ii) Based on the same employment authorization category as shown
on the face of the expiring Employment Authorization Document or is for
an individual approved for Temporary Protected Status whose EAD was
issued pursuant to 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(19); and
(iii) Based on a class of aliens whose eligibility to apply for
employment authorization continues notwithstanding expiration of the
Employment Authorization Document and is based on an employment
authorization category that does not require adjudication of an
underlying application or petition before adjudication of the renewal
application, including aliens described in 8 CFR 274a.12(a)(12) granted
Temporary Protected Status and pending applicants for Temporary
Protected Status who are issued an EAD under 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(19), as
may be announced on the USCIS Web site.
(2) Terms and conditions. Any extension authorized under this
paragraph shall be subject to any conditions and limitations noted in
the immediately preceding employment authorization.
(3) Termination. The period authorized by paragraph (d)(1) of this
section shall automatically terminate the earlier of up to 180 days
after the expiration date of the Employment Authorization Document
(Form I-766, or successor form), or upon issuance of notification of a
decision denying the renewal request. Nothing in paragraph (d) of this
section shall affect DHS's ability to otherwise terminate any
Employment Authorization Document or extension period for such document
and, as applicable, employment authorization, in accordance with 8 CFR
274a.14 or otherwise in this chapter, by written notice to the
applicant, or by notice to a class of aliens published in the Federal
Register.
(4) Unexpired Employment Authorization Documents. An Employment
Authorization Document (Form I-766, or successor form) that has expired
on its face is considered unexpired when combined with a Notice of
Action (Form I-797C), or successor form which demonstrates that the
requirements of paragraph (d)(1) of this section have been met.
Jeh Charles Johnson,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015-32666 Filed 12-30-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111-97-P