Implementation of a Parole Process for Venezuelans, 63507-63517 [2022-22739]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 201 / Wednesday, October 19, 2022 / Notices
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Dated: October 13, 2022.
A.H. Moore, Jr.,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Chief, Prevention
Division, Eighth Coast Guard District.
[FR Doc. 2022–22712 Filed 10–18–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
1 33
U.S.C. 1605.
CFR 81.5.
3 33 CFR 81.9.
4 33 U.S.C. 1605(c) and 33 CFR 81.18.
5 33 U.S.C. 1605(a); 33 CFR 81.9.
2 33
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DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Implementation of a Parole Process for
Venezuelans
Department of Homeland
Security.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This notice describes a new
effort designed to immediately address
the increasing number of encounters of
Venezuelan nationals along the
southwest border (SWB), as the
Administration continues to implement
its broader, multi-pronged and regional
strategy to address the challenges posed
by irregular migration. Venezuelans
who do not avail themselves of this
process, and instead enter the United
States without authorization between
POEs, will be subject to expulsion or
removal. As part of this effort, the
Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) will implement a process—
modeled on the successful Uniting for
Ukraine (U4U) parole process—for
certain Venezuelan nationals to lawfully
enter the United States in a safe and
orderly manner. To be eligible,
individuals must have a supporter in
the United States who agrees to provide
housing and other supports as needed;
must pass national security and public
safety vetting; and must agree to fly at
their own expense to an interior U.S.
port of entry (POE), rather than entering
at a land POE. Individuals are ineligible
if they have been ordered removed from
the United States within the prior five
years or have entered unauthorized into
the United States between POEs,
Mexico, or Panama after the date of this
notice’s publication.
DATES: DHS will begin accepting online
applications for this process on October
18, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ihsan Gunduz, Office of Strategy, Policy,
and Plans, Department of Homeland
Security, 2707 Martin Luther King Jr.
Ave. SE, Washington, DC 20528–0445,
(202) 282–9708.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
63507
and filing process. The parole process is
intended to enhance border security by
reducing the record levels of
Venezuelan nationals entering the
United States between POEs, while also
providing a process for certain such
nationals to lawfully enter the United
States in a safe and orderly manner.
The Secretary’s announcement
followed detailed consideration of a
wide range of relevant facts and
alternatives, as reflected in the
Secretary’s decision memorandum
dated October 12, 2022.2 The complete
reasons for the Secretary’s decision are
included in that memorandum. This
Federal Register notice is intended to
provide appropriate context and
guidance for the public regarding the
policy and relevant procedures
associated with this policy.
I. Background—Venezuela Parole
Process
This notice describes the
implementation of a new parole process
for certain Venezuelan nationals
announced by the Secretary of
Homeland Security on October 12,
2022,1 including the eligibility criteria
A. Overview
The U.S. Government is engaged in a
multi-pronged, regional strategy to
address the challenges posed by
irregular migration. The strategy—a
shared endeavor with partner
countries—focuses on addressing the
root causes of migration, which
currently are fueling unprecedented
levels of irregular migration, and
creating safe and orderly processes for
migration throughout the region. This
strategy will reduce regional irregular
migration in the mid- to long-term, but
we anticipate continued substantial
pressures along the southwest border
over the coming months.
In light of this reality, DHS is
implementing an immediate effort to
address the increasing number of
encounters of Venezuelan nationals at
the SWB as we continue to implement
the broader and long-term strategy. We
anticipate that this new effort would
reduce the record levels of Venezuelan
nationals seeking to irregularly enter the
United States between POEs along the
SWB, while also providing a process for
certain such nationals to lawfully enter
the United States in a safe and orderly
manner.
With the cooperation of the
Government of Mexico (GOM), and
potentially other governments, this
effort is intended to serve as a deterrent
to irregular migration by providing a
meaningful alternative to irregular
migration and by imposing immediate
consequences on Venezuelan nationals
who choose to not avail themselves of
the new process and instead seek to
irregularly enter the United States
1 DHS Announces New Migration Enforcement
Process for Venezuelans, October 12, 2022,
available at: https://www.dhs.gov/news/2022/10/12/
dhs-announces-new-migration-enforcementprocess-venezuelans.
2 See Memorandum for the Secretary from U.S.
Customs and Border Protection Commissioner and
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Director,
Parole Process for Certain Venezuelan Nationals
(Oct. 12, 2022).
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between POEs. It will also provide an
incentive for Venezuelans to avoid the
often dangerous journey to the border
altogether, by putting in place a safe and
orderly process for Venezuelan
nationals to travel to the United States
to seek a discretionary, case-by-case
grant of parole into the United States,
based on significant public benefit and
urgent humanitarian reasons.3
Venezuelan nationals who irregularly
enter the United States between POEs
after October 19, 2022 are subject to
expulsion or removal from the United
States; those who enter irregularly into
the United States, Mexico, or Panama
will also be found ineligible for a
discretionary grant of parole under this
process. Only those who meet specified
criteria and pass national security and
public safety vetting would be eligible
for consideration for parole under this
process.
Implementation of the parole process
is conditioned on Mexico continuing to
accept the expulsion or removal of
Venezuelan nationals seeking to
irregularly enter the United States
between POEs. As such, this new
process will couple a meaningful
incentive to seek a lawful, safe and
orderly means of traveling to the United
States with the imposition of
consequences for those who seek to
enter irregularly.
The new policy is modeled on Uniting
for Ukraine (U4U), the successful parole
process that was put in place in the
wake of Russia’s unprovoked invasion
of Ukraine, when thousands of
Ukrainian migrants spontaneously
arrived at SWB POEs. Once U4U was
implemented, such spontaneous arrivals
fell sharply, and travel shifted to a safe
and orderly process. This new process
is procedurally similar to U4U, in which
certain Ukrainians with U.S.-based
supporters who meet specified
eligibility criteria have been able to
travel to the United States to seek a
discretionary, case-by-case grant of
parole for up to two years. As in U4U,
applications using this parole process
will be initiated by a supporter in the
United States who would apply on
behalf of a Venezuelan individual and
commit to providing the beneficiary
housing and other financial support, as
needed, for the duration of their parole.
In addition to the supporter
requirement, Venezuelan nationals are
required to meet several eligibility
criteria, as outlined in more detail later
in this notice, to receive advance
authorization to travel to the United
States and be considered for parole, on
3 See INA sec. 212(d)(5)(A), 8 U.S.C.
1182(d)(5)(A).
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a case-by-case basis. Importantly,
individuals are ineligible if they have
been ordered removed from the United
States within the prior five years; they
are also ineligible if they have crossed
into the United States between POEs, or
entered Mexico or Panama without
authorization, after October 19, 2022.
Only those who pass national security
and public safety vetting and agree to fly
to an interior POE, as opposed to
entering between POEs, and who meet
all specified criteria below will be
eligible to receive advance authorization
to travel to the United States and be
considered for parole, on a case-by-case
basis, under this process.
Any discretionary grants of parole
will be for a temporary period of up to
two years. During this two-year period,
the United States will continue to build
on the multi-pronged and long-term
strategy and engage with our foreign
partners throughout the region. These
efforts are intended to support
conditions that would decrease irregular
migration, work to improve refugee
processing and other lawful
immigration pathways in the region,
and allow for increased removals of
those who continue to migrate
irregularly and lack a valid claim of
asylum or other lawful basis to remain
in the United States. The two-year
period will also enable individuals to
seek humanitarian relief or other
immigration benefits for which they
may be eligible, and to work and
contribute to the U.S. economy as they
do so. Those who are not granted
asylum or other immigration benefits
will need to leave the United States at
the expiration of their authorized period
of parole or will generally be placed in
removal proceedings after the period of
parole expires.
The temporary, case-by-case parole of
qualifying Venezuelan nationals
pursuant to this process will provide a
significant public benefit for the United
States, while also addressing the urgent
humanitarian reasons that Venezuelan
nationals are fleeing, to include
repression and unsafe conditions in
their home country. Most significantly,
we anticipate that parole will: (i)
enhance the security of our SWB by
reducing irregular migration of
Venezuelan nationals; (ii) enhance
border security and national security by
vetting individuals prior to their arrival
at a United States POE; (iii) reduce the
strain on DHS personnel and resources;
(iv) minimize the domestic impact of
Venezuelan irregular migration; (v)
disincentivize a dangerous irregular
journey that puts migrant lives and
safety at risk and enriches smuggling
networks; and (vi) fulfill important
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foreign policy goals to manage migration
collaboratively in the hemisphere. The
process is capped at 24,000
beneficiaries. After this cap is reached,
DHS will not approve additional
beneficiaries, absent a Secretary-level
decision, at the Secretary’s sole
discretion, to continue the process.
B. Conditions at the Border
1. Trends and Flows: Increase of
Venezuelan Nationals Arriving at the
Southwest Border
The last decades have yielded a
dramatic increase in encounters at the
SWB and a dramatic shift in the
demographics of those encountered.
Throughout the 1980s and into the first
decade of the 2000s, encounters along
the SWB routinely numbered in the
millions per year. By the early 2010s,
three decades of investments in border
security and strategy contributed to
reduced border flows, with border
encounters averaging fewer than
400,000 per year from 2011–2017.4
These gains were subsequently reversed,
however, as border encounters more
than doubled between 2017 and 2019,
and—following a steep drop in the first
months of the COVID–19 pandemic—
continued to increase at a similar pace
in 2021 and 2022.
Shifts in demographics have also had
a significant effect on irregular
migration. Border encounters in the
1980s and 1990s consisted
overwhelmingly of single adults from
Mexico, most of whom were migrating
for economic reasons. Beginning in the
2010s, a growing share of migrants have
been from Northern Central America 5
(NCA) and, since the late 2010s, from
countries throughout the Americas.
Migrant populations from these newer
source countries have included large
numbers of families and children, many
of whom are traveling to escape
violence and political oppression and
for other non-economic reasons.6
The most recent rise in the numbers
of encounters at the border has been
driven in significant part by a surge in
4 Office of Immigration Statistics (OIS) analysis of
historic CBP data.
5 Northern Central America refers to El Salvador,
Guatemala, and Honduras.
6 Prior to 2013, the overall share of encounters
who were processed for expedited removal and
claimed fear averaged less than 2 percent annually.
Between 2013 and 2018, the share rose from 8 to
20 percent, before dropping with the surge of family
unit encounters in 2019 (most of whom were not
placed in expedited removal) and the onset of Title
42 expulsions in 2020. As the same time, between
2013 and 2021, among those placed in expedited
removal, the share making fear claims increased
from 16 to 82 percent. OIS analysis of historic CBP
and USCIS data and OIS Enforcement Lifecycle
through June 30, 2022.
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migration of Venezuelan nationals.
Unique encounters of Venezuelan
nationals increased throughout fiscal
year (FY) 2021, totaling 47,328. More
than 25% of Venezuela’s population has
left the country. The United States is
seeing a rising rate of Venezuelans
encountered at our border over the past
two years, which has surged in the last
few months. Average monthly unique
encounters of Venezuelan nationals at
the land border totaled 15,494 in FY
2022,7 rising further to over 25,000 in
August and 33,000 in September,
compared to a monthly average of 127
unique encounters from FY 2014–2019.8
Of note, unique encounters of
Venezuelan nationals rose 293 percent
between FY 2021 and FY 2022, while
unique encounters of all other
nationalities combined increased by 45
percent. Panama is currently seeing
more than 3,000 people, mostly
Venezuelan nationals, crossing into its
territory from Colombia via the Darie´n
jungle each day.
In recent months, this surge in
irregular migration of Venezuelan
nationals has been accelerating.
Nationals from Venezuela accounted for
25,130 unique encounters in August
2022, and the Office of Immigration
Statistics (OIS) estimates that there were
33,500 unique encounters in September,
more than Mexico and more than all
three NCA countries combined.9
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2. Push and Pull Factors
DHS assesses that the high—and
rising—number of Venezuelan
encounters has three key causes: First,
the deteriorating conditions in
Venezuela, including repression,
instability, and violence, are pushing
large numbers to leave their home
country. Second, the lack of safe and
orderly migration alternatives
throughout the entire region, including
to the United States, means that those
seeking refuge outside of Venezuela
have few lawful options. Third, the
United States faces significant limits on
the ability to return Venezuelan
nationals to Venezuela or elsewhere, as
7 FY 2022 CBP data cited in this notice is based
on internal reporting to date. CBP releases official
data in regular intervals; final FY 2022 figures may
differ to some degree from the figures cited here.
8 OIS analysis of OIS Persist Dataset based on data
through August 31, 2022 and OIS analysis of U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) data from
Unified Immigration Portal (UIP) as of October 6,
2022. Unique encounters include encounters of
persons at the Southwest Border who were not
previously encountered in the prior 12 months.
Throughout this notice unique encounter data are
defined to also include OFO parolees and other
OFO administrative encounters.
9 OIS Persist Dataset based on data through
August 31, 2022 and OIS analysis of CBP UIP data
as of October 6, 2022.
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described below; absent such a return
ability, more individuals are willing to
take a chance that they can come—and
stay.
a. Factors Pushing Migration From
Venezuela
A complex political, humanitarian,
and economic crisis; the widespread
presence of non-state armed groups;
crumbling infrastructure; and the
repressive tactics of Nicola´s Maduro
have caused nearly 7 million
Venezuelans to flee their country.10
Maduro has arbitrarily banned key
opposition figures from participating in
the political process, detained hundreds
of political prisoners, employed judicial
processes to circumscribe political
parties, and denied opposition political
representatives equal access to media
coverage and freedom of movement in
the country.11 In a February 2022 report,
Amnesty International reported that
‘‘[c]rimes under international law and
human rights violations, including
politically motivated arbitrary
detentions, torture, extrajudicial
executions and excessive use of force
have been systematic and widespread,
and could constitute crimes against
humanity.’’ 12 Amnesty International
further reported that ‘‘trends of
repression in Venezuela have been
directed against a specific group of
people: those perceived as dissidents or
opponents’’ of Nicola´s Maduro.13
According to the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees, Venezuela
has become the second-largest external
displacement crisis in the world,
following Syria.14 At least in the short
term, the crisis is expected to continue,
thus continuing to push Venezuelans to
seek alternatives elsewhere. As
described above, Panama is currently
seeing more than 3,000 people, mostly
Venezuelan nationals, crossing into its
10 UNHCR, Venezuela Situation, available at:
https://www.unhcr.org/en-us/venezuelaemergency.html (last visited Sept. 24, 2022).
11 2021 Country Reports of Human Rights
Practices: Venezuela, U.S. Department of State, Apr.
12, 2022, available at: https://www.state.gov/
reports/2021-country-reports-on-human-rightspractices/venezuela/ (last visited Sept. 24, 2022).
12 Venezuela: Calculated repression: Correlation
between stigmatization and politically motivated
arbitrary detentions, Amnesty International, p. 11,
Feb. 10, 2022, available at: https://
www.amnesty.org/en/documents/amr53/5133/
2022/en/ (last visited Sept. 25, 2022).
13 Venezuela: Calculated repression: Correlation
between stigmatization and politically motivated
arbitrary detentions, Amnesty International, p.52,
Feb. 10, 2022, available at: https://
www.amnesty.org/en/documents/amr53/5133/
2022/en/ (last visited Sept. 25, 2022).
14 UNHCR, Venezuela Situation, available at:
https://www.unhcr.org/en-us/venezuelaemergency.html (last visited Sept. 24, 2022).
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territory from Colombia via the Darie´n
jungle each day.
b. Return Limitations
At this time, there are significant
limits in DHS’s ability to expel or return
Venezuelans who enter the United
States without authorization in between
POEs. DHS is currently under a courtordered obligation to implement the
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention’s (CDC) Title 42 public
health Order, under which covered
noncitizens may be prevented entry or
expelled to prevent the spread of
communicable disease.15 But Venezuela
does not presently allow repatriations
via charter flights, which significantly
limits DHS’s ability to return those
subject to the Title 42 Order or who are
ordered removed. To date, other
countries, including Mexico, have
generally been reluctant to accept
Venezuelans as well. As a result, DHS
was only able to repatriate a small
number of Venezuelan nationals to
Venezuela in FY 2022.
c. Overall Effect
DHS assesses that the combination of
the country conditions in Venezuela,
the lack of safe and orderly lawful
pathways, and the present inability to
expel or remove Venezuelan nationals
engaged in irregular migration, has
significantly led to the significant
increase in irregular migration among
Venezuelan nationals. Conversely, DHS
assesses that the return of a significant
portion of Venezuelans who enter
irregularly at the border, coupled with
an alternative process pursuant to
which Venezuelans could enter the
United States lawfully, would
meaningfully change the incentives for
those intending to migrate—leading to a
decline in the numbers of Venezuelans
seeking to irregularly cross the SWB.
This prediction is based on prior
experience: CBP saw rapidly increasing
numbers of encounters of Guatemalan
and Honduran nationals from January
2021 until August 2021, when these
countries began accepting the direct
return of their nationals. In January
2021, CBP encountered an average of
424 Guatemalan nationals and 362
Honduran nationals a day. By August 4,
2021, the 30-day average daily
encounter rates had climbed to 1,249
Guatemalan nationals and 1,502
Honduran nationals—an increase of 195
percent and 315 percent, respectively.
In the 60 days immediately following
the resumption of routine flights,
average daily encounters fell by 37
15 Louisiana v. CDC,—F. Supp. 3d—, 2022 WL
1604901 (W.D. La. May 20, 2022).
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percent for Guatemala and 42 percent
for Honduras, as shown in Figure 1
below.16
Figure 1: Daily Encounters of
Guatemalan and Honduran Nationals,
May 1–November 1, 2021.
l,800
1,000
800
Routine flights to Guatemala and
Honduras resumed - 8/4/2021
600
400
200
1-May
1-Jun
1-Jul
1-0ct
1-Nov
NOTE: Figure depicts 30-day average of
daily encounters.
Source: OIS analysis of OIS Persist Dataset.
Mexican officials also reported seeing a
similar decline in the number of
inbound Ukrainian air passengers.
Returns alone, however, are not
sufficient. While the numbers of
encounters of Guatemalan and
Honduran nationals have fallen, CBP is
currently encountering a total of around
1,000 nationals from these two countries
each day. The process thus seeks to
combine a consequence for Venezuelan
nationals who seek to enter the United
States irregularly at the land border with
an incentive to use the lawful process to
request authorization to travel by air to
and enter the United States, without
making the dangerous journey to the
border.
This effort is informed by the way that
similar incentives and disincentives
worked in the U4U process. In the two
weeks prior to U4U’s implementation,
DHS encountered a daily average of 940
nationals of Ukraine at the U.S.-Mexico
land border seeking to enter the United
States. After the new parole process
launched and approved Ukrainians
could fly directly into the United
States—whereas those who sought to
enter irregularly were subject to
expulsion pursuant to the Title 42
public health Order—daily encounters
dropped to fewer than twelve per day.17
3. Impact on DHS Resources and
Operations
To respond to the increase in
encounters along the SWB since FY
2021—an increase that has accelerated
in FY 2022, driven in significant part by
the number of Venezuelan nationals
encountered—DHS has taken a series of
extraordinary steps. Largely since FY
2021, DHS has built and now operates
10 soft-sided processing facilities,
which cost $688 million in FY 2022. It
has detailed 3,770 officers and agents
from CBP and ICE to the SWB. In FY
2022, DHS had to utilize its above
threshold reprogramming authority to
identify approximately $281 million
from elsewhere in the Department to
address SWB needs, to include
facilities, transportation, medical care,
and personnel costs.
The Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) has spent $260 million
in FYs 2021 and 2022 on grants to nongovernmental organizations (NGO) and
state and local entities through the
Emergency Food and Shelter Program—
Humanitarian (EFSP—H) to assist with
the reception and onward travel of
irregular migrants arriving at the SWB.
16 OIS analysis of OIS Persist Dataset based on
data through August 31, 2022.
17 OIS Persist Dataset based on data through
August 31, 2022.
18 DHS Plan for Southwest Border Security and
Preparedness, DHS Memorandum for Interested
Parties, Alejandro N. Mayorkas, Secretary of
Homeland Security, Apr. 26, 2022.
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This spending is in addition to $1.4
billion in FY 2022 one-year surge
funding for SWB enforcement and
processing capacities.18
The impact has been particularly
acute in certain border sectors. The
increased flows of Venezuelan nationals
are disproportionately occurring within
the remote Del Rio, El Paso, and Yuma
sectors, all of which are at risk of
operating, or are currently operating,
over capacity. In FY 2022, 93 percent of
unique encounters of Venezuelan
nationals occurred in these three
sectors, with the trend rising to 98
percent in September 2022.19 In FY
2022, the Del Rio, El Paso, and Yuma
sectors encountered almost double the
number of migrants as compared to FY
2021 (an 87 percent increase), and a tenfold increase over the average for FY
2014–FY 2019, primarily as a result of
increases in Venezuelans and other nontraditional sending countries.20
The focused increase in encounters in
those three sectors is particularly
challenging. Yuma and Del Rio sectors
are geographically remote, and
because—until the past two years—they
have never been a focal point for large
numbers of individuals entering
irregularly, they have limited
infrastructure and personnel in place to
safely process the elevated encounters
19 OIS analysis of OIS Persist Dataset through
August 31, 2022 and CBP UIP data for September
1–30, 2022.
20 OIS analysis of OIS Persist Dataset through
August 31, 2022.
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that they are seeing. El Paso sector has
relatively modern infrastructure for
processing noncitizens encountered at
the border, but is far away from other
CBP sectors, which makes it challenging
to move individuals elsewhere for
processing during surges.
In an effort to decompress sectors that
are experiencing surges, DHS deploys
lateral transportation, using buses and
flights to move noncitizens to other
sectors with capacity to process. In just
one week (between September 22–
September 28), El Paso and Yuma
sectors operated a combined 79
decompression buses staffed by Border
Patrol agents to neighboring sectors.21 In
that same week, El Paso and Yuma
sectors also operated 29 combined
lateral decompression flights,
redistributing noncitizens to other
sectors with additional capacity.22
Because these assets are finite, using
DHS air resources to operate lateral
flights impacts DHS’s ability to operate
international repatriation flights to
receiving countries, leaving noncitizens
in custody for longer and further taxing
DHS resources. This is concerning given
the correlation between DHS’s ability to
operate return flights to non-contiguous
home countries and encounters at the
border, as described above. DHS
assesses that a reduction in the flow of
Venezuelans arriving at the SWB would
reduce pressure on overstretched
resources and enable the Department to
more quickly process and, as
appropriate, return or remove those who
do not have a lawful basis to stay.
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II. DHS Parole Authority
The Immigration and Nationality Act
(INA or Act) provides the Secretary of
Homeland Security with discretionary
authority to parole noncitizens into the
United States temporarily, under such
reasonable conditions that the Secretary
may prescribe, on a case-by-case basis
for ‘‘urgent humanitarian reasons or
significant public benefit.’’ 23 Parole is
not an admission of the individual to
the United States, and a parolee remains
an ‘‘applicant for admission’’ during the
period of parole in the United States.24
DHS may set the duration of the parole
based on the purpose for granting the
parole request and may impose
reasonable conditions on parole.25
Individuals may be granted advance
authorization to travel to the United
21 Data
from SBCC, as of September 29, 2022.
from SBCC, as of September 29, 2022.
23 INA sec. 212(d)(5)(A), 8 U.S.C. 1182(d)(5)(A);
see also 6 U.S.C. 202(4) (charging the Secretary with
the responsibility for ‘‘[e]stablishing and
administering rules . . . governing . . . parole’’).
24 INA sec. 212(d)(5)(A), 8 U.S.C. 1182(d)(5)(A).
25 INA sec. 212(d)(5)(A), 8 U.S.C. 1182(d)(5)(A).
22 Data
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States to seek parole.26 DHS may
terminate parole in its discretion at any
time.27 Individuals who are paroled into
the United States generally may apply
for employment authorization.28
This effort will combine a
consequence for those who seek to enter
the United States irregularly between
POEs with a significant incentive for
Venezuelan nationals to remain where
they are and use a lawful process to
request authorization to travel by air to
and ultimately enter the United States
for the purpose of seeking a
discretionary grant of parole for up to
two years.
III. Justification for the Process
A. Significant Public Benefit
The case-by-case parole of
Venezuelan nationals pursuant to this
process—which combines consequences
for those who seek to enter the United
States irregularly between POEs with an
opportunity for eligible Venezuelan
nationals to seek advance authorization
to travel to the United States to seek
discretionary parole, on a case-by-case
basis, in the United States—will serve a
significant public benefit for multiple,
intersecting reasons. Specifically, as
noted above, we assess that the parole
of eligible individuals pursuant to this
process will result in the following: (i)
enhancing the security of our border by
reducing irregular migration of
Venezuelan nationals; (ii) enhancing
border security and national security by
vetting individuals before they arrive at
our border; (iii) reducing the strain on
DHS personnel and resources; (iv)
minimizing the domestic impact of
Venezuelan irregular migration; (v)
disincentivizing a dangerous irregular
journey that puts migrant lives and
safety at risk and enriches smuggling
networks; and (vi) fulfilling important
foreign policy goals to manage migration
collaboratively in the hemisphere and,
as part of those efforts, to establish
additional processing pathways from
within the region to discourage irregular
migration.
1. Enhancing the Security of Our Border
by Reducing Irregular Migration of
Venezuelan Nationals
Implementation of the parole process
is contingent on the GOM agreeing to
accept the return of Venezuelan
nationals encountered irregularly
entering the United States without
authorization between POEs. While
DHS remains under the court order to
implement the CDC’s Title 42 public
26 See
8 CFR 212.5(f).
8 CFR 212.5(e).
28 See 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(11).
27 See
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63511
health Order, these returns will take the
form of expulsions. Once Title 42 is no
longer in place, DHS will engage the
GOM to effectuate Title 8 removals of
individuals subject to expedited
removal who cannot be returned to
Venezuela or elsewhere. The ability to
effectuate returns to Mexico will impose
a consequence on irregular entry that
currently does not exist.
As described above, Venezuelan
nationals make up a significant and
growing number of those encountered
seeking to cross between POEs
irregularly. We assess that without
additional and more immediate
consequences imposed on those who
seek to do so, together with a safe and
orderly parole process, the numbers will
continue to grow. By pairing a
consequence on those seeking to
irregularly cross between the POEs with
the incentive provided by the
opportunity to apply for advance
authorization to travel to the United
States to seek a discretionary grant of
parole, this process will create a
combination of incentives and
disincentives that will lead to a
substantial decline in irregular
migration by Venezuelans to the SWB.
As also described above, this
expectation is informed, in part, by past
experience with respect to the ways that
flows of irregular migration decreased
from NCA countries once nationals from
those countries were returned to their
home countries and shifts that took
place once the U4U process was
initiated. These experiences provide
compelling evidence of the importance
of coupling effective disincentives for
irregular entry with incentives for
lawful entry as a way of addressing
migratory surges.
2. Enhance Border Security and
National Security by Vetting Individuals
Before They Arrive at Our Border
The Venezuelan parole process
described above will allow DHS to vet
potential beneficiaries for national
security and public safety purposes
before they travel to the United States.
It is important to note that all
noncitizens DHS encounters at the
border undergo thorough vetting against
national security and public safety
databases during their processing, and
that individuals who are determined to
pose a national security or public safety
threat are detained pending removal.
Venezuelan nationals seeking parole via
this process will still be subject to this
vetting upon their arrival at the POE.
That said, there are distinct advantages
to being able to conduct some vetting
actions before an individual arrives at
the border to prevent individuals who
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could pose threats to national security
or public safety from even traveling to
the United States.
As described above, the vetting will
require prospective beneficiaries to
upload a live photograph via a mobile
application. This will substantially
enhance the scope of the pre-travel
vetting—thereby enabling DHS to better
identify those with criminal records or
other disqualifying information of
concern and deny them an advance
authorization to travel before they arrive
at our border.
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3. Reduce the Burden on DHS Personnel
and Resources
As discussed above, the impact of the
increased migratory flows has strained
the DHS workforce in ways that have
been particularly concentrated in
certain sectors along the SWB. By
reducing encounters of Venezuelan
nationals at the SWB, and channeling
decreased flows of Venezuelan nationals
to interior POEs through this
streamlined process, we anticipate the
process will relieve some of this burden.
This will free up resources, including
those focused on decompression of
border sectors, which in turn could
enable an increase in removal flights—
enabling the removal of more
noncitizens with final orders of removal
faster and reducing the number of days
in DHS custody. While the process will
also draw on DHS resources within
USCIS and CBP to process requests for
discretionary parole on a case-by-case
basis and conduct vetting, these
requirements involve different parts of
DHS and require minimal resources as
compared to the status quo.
4. Minimize the Domestic Impact
The increase in irregular migration,
including the change in demographics,
has put a strain on domestic resources,
which is felt most acutely by border
communities. As the number of arrivals
increases, thus necessitating more
conditional releases, the strains are
shared by others as well. Given the
current inability to return or repatriate
Venezuelans in substantial numbers,
Venezuelan nationals account for a
significant percentage of the individuals
being conditionally released pending
their removal proceedings or the
initiation of such proceedings after
being encountered and processed along
the SWB.
State and local governments, along
with NGOs, are providing services and
assistance to the Venezuelans and other
noncitizens who have arrived at our
border, including by building new
administrative structures, finding
additional housing facilities, and
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constructing tent shelters to address the
increased need.29 DHS also has worked
with Congress to make approximately
$290 million available since FY 2019
through FEMA’s EFSP to support NGOs
and local governments that provide
initial reception for migrants entering
through the SWB. This funding has
allowed DHS to support building
significant NGO capacity along the
SWB, including a substantial increase in
available shelter beds in key locations.
Despite these efforts, local
communities have reported strain on
their ability to provide needed social
services.30 Local officials and NGOs
report that the temporary shelters that
house migrants are quickly reaching
capacity due to the high number of
arrivals,31 and stakeholders in the
border region have expressed concern
that shelters will eventually reach full
bed space capacity and not be able to
host any new arrivals.32 The parole
process will address these concerns by
diverting flows of Venezuelan nationals
to interior POEs through a safe and
orderly process and ensuring that those
who do arrive in the United States have
support during their period of parole.
The effort is intended to yield a
decrease in the numbers arriving at the
SWB.
Moreover, and critically, beneficiaries
will be required to fly to the interior,
rather than arriving at the SWB, absent
extraordinary circumstances. They will
only be authorized to come to the
United States if they have a supporter
who has agreed to receive them and
provide basic needs, including housing
support. Beneficiaries also will be
eligible to apply for work authorization,
thus enabling them to support
themselves. We anticipate that this
process will help reduce the burden on
29 Aya Elamroussi and Adrienne Winston,
Washington, DC, approves creation of new agency
to provide services for migrants arriving from other
states, CNN, Sept. 21, 2022, available at: https://
www.cnn.com/2022/09/21/us/washington-dcmigrant-services-office (last visited Sept. 29, 2022).
30 Lauren Villagran. El Paso struggles to keep up
with Venezuelan migrants: 5 key things to know.
Sep. 14, 2022, available at: https://
www.elpasotimes.com/story/news/2022/09/14/
venezuelan-migrants-el-paso-what-to-know-abouttheir-arrival/69493289007/ (last visited Sept. 29,
2022); Uriel J. Garcia. El Paso scrambles to move
migrants off the streets and gives them free bus
rides as shelters reach capacity. Sept. 20, 2022,
available at: https://www.texastribune.org/2022/09/
20/migrants-el-paso-texas-shelter/ (last visited Sept.
29, 2022).
31 Email from City of San Diego Office of
Immigration Affairs to DHS, Sept. 23, 2022.
32 Denelle Confair, Local migrant shelter reaching
max capacity as it receives hundreds per day,
KGUN9 Tucson, Sept. 23, 2022, available at: https://
www.kgun9.com/news/local-news/local-migrantshelter-reaching-max-capacity-as-it-receiveshundreds-per-day (last visited Sept. 29, 2022).
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communities, state and local
governments, and NGOs that currently
support the reception and onward travel
of migrants arriving at the SWB.
5. Disincentivize a Dangerous Journey
That Puts Migrant Lives and Safety at
Risk and Enriches Smuggling Networks
In FY 2022, more than 750 migrants
died attempting to enter the United
States across the SWB,33 an estimated
32 percent increase from FY 2021 (568
deaths) and a 195 percent increase from
FY 2020 (254 deaths).34 The
approximate number of migrants
rescued by CBP in FY 2022 (almost
19,000 rescues) 35 increased 48 percent
from FY 2021 (12,857 rescues), and 256
percent from FY 2020 (5,336 rescues).36
Although exact figures are unknown,
experts estimate that about 30 bodies
have been taken out of the Rio Grande
River each month since March 2022.37
CBP attributes these rising trends to
increasing numbers of migrants, as
evidenced by increases in overall U.S.
Border Patrol encounters.38 The
increased rates of both migrant deaths
and those needing rescue at the SWB
demonstrate the perils of the journey.
Meanwhile, these numbers do not
account for the countless incidents of
death, illness, and exploitation migrants
experience during the perilous journey
north. Migrants are increasingly
traveling to the SWB from South
America through the Darie´n Gap, an
incredibly dangerous and grueling 100kilometer stretch of dense jungle
between Colombia and Panama. Women
and children are particularly vulnerable.
Children are particularly at risk for
diarrhea, respiratory diseases,
dehydration, and other ailments that
33 Priscilla Alvarez, First on CNN: A record
number of migrants have died crossing the USMexico border, Sept. 7, 2022, available at: https://
www.cnn.com/2022/09/07/politics/us-mexicoborder-crossing-deaths/ (last visited
Sept. 30, 2022).
34 Rescue Beacons and Unidentified Remains,
Fiscal Year 2022 Report to Congress, U.S. Customs
and Border Protection.
35 Priscilla Alvarez, First on CNN: A record
number of migrants have died crossing the USMexico border, Sept. 7, 2022, available at: https://
www.cnn.com/2022/09/07/politics/us-mexicoborder-crossing-deaths/ (last visited
Sept. 30, 2022).
36 Rescue Beacons and Unidentified Remains,
Fiscal Year 2022 Report to Congress, U.S. Customs
and Border Protection.
37 Valerie Gonzalez, The Guardian, Migrants risk
death crossing treacherous Rio Grande river for
‘American dream,’ Sept. 5, 2022, available at:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/sep/
05/migrants-risk-death-crossing-treacherous-riogrande-river-for-american-dream (last visited Oct.
11, 2022).
38 Rescue Beacons and Unidentified Remains,
Fiscal Year 2022 Report to Congress, U.S. Customs
and Border Protection.
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require immediate medical attention.39
According to Panama migration
authorities, of the over 31,000 migrants
passing through the Darie´n Gap in
August 2022, 23,600 were
Venezuelan.40
These migration movements are in
many cases facilitated by numerous
human smuggling organizations that
treat the migrants as pawns.41 These
organizations exploit migrants for profit,
often bringing them through across
inhospitable jungles, rugged mountains,
and raging rivers, often with small
children in tow. Upon reaching the
border area, noncitizens seeking to cross
the United States generally pay
transnational criminal organizations
(TCOs) to coordinate and guide them
along the final miles of their journey.
Tragically, a significant number of
individuals perish along the way. The
trailer truck accident that killed 55
migrants in Chiapas, Mexico last
December, and the tragic incident in
San Antonio, Texas on June 27, 2022, in
which 53 migrants died of the heat in
appalling conditions, are just two
examples of many in which TCOs
engaged in human smuggling prioritize
profit over safety.42
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39 UNICEF, 2021 Records Highest Ever Number of
Migrant Children Crossing the Darien Towards the
U.S., Oct. 11, 2021, available at: https://
www.unicef.org/lac/en/press-releases/2021-recordshighest-ever-number-migrant-children-crossingdarien-towards-us (last visited Sept. 29, 2022).
40 Panama
´ Migracio´n, Irregulares en Tra´nsito
Frontera Panama´—Colombia 2022, available at:
https://www.migracion.gob.pa/inicio/estadisticas
41 DHS Plan for Southwest Border Security and
Preparedness, DHS Memorandum for Interested
Parties, Alejandro N. Mayorkas, Secretary of
Homeland Security, Apr. 26, 2022.
42 Jacob Garcia, Reuters, Migrant truck crashes in
Mexico killing 54, available at: https://
www.reuters.com/article/uk-usa-immigrationmexico-accident-idUKKBN2IP01R (last visited Sept.
29, 2022); Mica Rosenberg, Kristina Cooke, Daniel
Trotta, The border’s toll: Migrants increasingly die
crossing into U.S. from Mexico, July 25, 2022,
available at: https://www.reuters.com/article/usaimmigration-border-deaths/the-borders-tollmigrants-increasingly-die-crossing-into-u-s-frommexico-idUSL4N2Z247X (last visited Oct. 2, 2022).
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This new process, which will
incentivize intending migrants to use a
safe and orderly means to access the
United States via commercial air flights,
cuts out the smuggling networks. DHS
anticipates it will save lives and
undermine the profits and operations of
the dangerous TCOs that put migrants’
lives at risk for profit.
6. Fulfill Important Foreign Policy Goals
To Manage Migration Collaboratively in
the Hemisphere
Promoting a safe, orderly, legal, and
humane migration strategy throughout
the Western Hemisphere has been a top
foreign policy priority for the
Administration. This is reflected in
three policy-setting documents: the U.S.
Strategy for Addressing the Root Causes
of Migration in Central America (Root
Causes Strategy); the Collaborative
Migration Management Strategy
(CMMS); and the Los Angeles
Declaration on Migration and Protection
(L.A. Declaration), which was endorsed
in June 2022 by 21 countries. The
CMMS and the L.A. Declaration call for
a collaborative and regional approach to
migration. Countries that have endorsed
the L.A. Declaration are committed to
implementing programs and processes
to stabilize communities that host
migrants, or that have high outward
migration. They commit to humanely
enforcing existing laws regarding
movements across international
boundaries, especially when minors are
involved, taking actions to stop migrant
smuggling by targeting the criminals
involved in these activities, and
providing increased regular pathways
and protections for migrants residing in
or transiting through the 21 countries.
The L.A. Declaration specifically lays
out the goal of collectively ‘‘expand[ing]
access to regular pathways for migrants
and refugees.’’ 43
43 L.A.
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Frm 00040
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This new process helps achieve these
goals by providing an immediate and
temporary safe and orderly process for
Venezuelan nationals to lawfully enter
the United States while we work to
improve conditions in sending countries
and expand more permanent lawful
immigration pathways in the region,
including refugee processing, and other
lawful pathways into the United States
and other Western Hemisphere
countries. It thus enables the United
States to lead by example.
The process also responds to an acute
foreign policy need. The current surge
of Venezuelan nationals transiting the
Darie´n Gap is impacting every country
between Colombia and the SWB.
Colombia, Peru, and Ecuador are now
hosting almost 4 million displaced
Venezuelans among them. The
Government of Panama has repeatedly
signaled that it is overwhelmed with the
number of migrants, a significant
portion of whom are Venezuelan,
emerging from harrowing journeys
through the Darie´n Gap.
Reporting indicates that in the first six
months of 2022, 85 percent more
migrants, primarily Venezuelans,
crossed from Colombia into Panama
through the Darie´n Gap than during the
same period in 2021—including
approximately 40,000 Venezuelans in
September alone.44 Again, Darie´n Gap
migrant encounters now average more
than 3,000 each day, predominantly
comprised of Venezuelan nationals.
Figure 2 shows that the number of
Venezuelan nationals processed by
Panama after entering irregularly from
Colombia increased by almost 30-fold
from the week of April 1, 2022 to the
week of October 1, 2022.
Figure 2: Panamanian Encounters of
Venezuelan Nationals in the Darie´n
Gap, February–September 2022
44 The
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45,000
40,000
35,000
""""""""""'"' """"'" __ ,_,,,,,,,,,,.,,,.,,,.,,,,,.,.,.._,,.,,,,.,,,,.,."".""'"""'"--'--
30,000
25,000
20,000
15,000
10,000
"""""""""""-'"""""""""'""""" _ _ _,
5,000
Key allies throughout the region—
including the Governments of Mexico,
Costa Rica, and Panama, all of which are
also affected by the increased movement
of Venezuelan nationals—have been
seeking greater action to address these
challenging flows for some time.
Meanwhile, the GOM has consistently
expressed concerns with policies,
programs, and trends that contribute to
large populations of migrants, many of
whom are Venezuelan, entering Mexico.
These entries strain local governmental
and civil society resources in Mexican
border communities in both the south
and north, and have at times led to
violence, crime, and unsafe and
unhealthy encampments.
The United States is already taking
key steps to address some of these
concerns. On June 10, 2022, the
Department of State’s Bureau of
Population, Refugees, and Migration
(PRM) and the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID)
announced $314 million in new funding
for humanitarian and development
assistance for refugees and vulnerable
migrants across the hemisphere,
including support for socio-economic
integration and humanitarian aid for
Venezuelans in 17 countries of the
region.45 And on September 22, 2022,
45 The United States Announces More Than $314
Million in New Stabilization Efforts and
Humanitarian Assistance for Venezuelans and
Other Migrants at the Summit of the Americas, June
10, 2022, available at: https://www.usaid.gov/newsinformation/press-releases/jun-10-2022-unitedstates-announces-more-314-million-new-
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PRM and USAID announced nearly
$376 million in additional humanitarian
assistance, which will provide essential
support for vulnerable Venezuelans
inside Venezuela, as well as urgently
needed assistance for migrants, refugees,
and host communities across the region.
This funding will further address
humanitarian needs in the region.46
This new process adds to these efforts
and enables the United States to lead by
example. It is a key mechanism to
advance the larger domestic and foreign
policy goals of this Administration to
promote a safe, orderly, legal, and
humane migration strategy throughout
our hemisphere. It also lays the
foundation for the United States to press
regional partners to undertake
additional actions with regards to these
populations, many of which are already
taking important steps. Colombia, for
example, is hosting more than 2.4
million displaced Venezuelans and has
provided temporary protected status for
more than 1.5 million of them. Costa
Rica is developing plans to renew
temporary protection for Venezuelans.
And on June 1, 2022, the Government of
Ecuador—which is hosting more than
500,000 Venezuelans—authorized a
second regularization process that
would provide certain Venezuelans a
stabilization-efforts-venezuela (last visited Oct. 11,
2022).
46 The United States Announces Nearly $376
Million in Additional Humanitarian Assistance for
People Affected by the Ongoing Crisis in Venezuela
and the Region, Sept. 22, 2022, available at: https://
www.usaid.gov/news-information/press-releases/
sep-22-2022-the-us-announces-nearly-376-millionadditional-humanitarian-assistance-for-peopleaffected-by-ongoing-crisis-in-venezuela (last visited
Sept. 30, 2022).
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two-year temporary residency visa.47
Any effort to meaningfully address the
crisis in Venezuela will require
continued efforts by these and other
regional partners.
Importantly, the United States will
not implement the new parole process
without the ability to return Venezuelan
nationals to Mexico who enter
irregularly. The United States’ ability to
execute this process thus requires the
GOM to accept the return of Venezuelan
nationals who bypass this new process
and enter the United States irregularly
between POEs.
For its part, the GOM has made clear
that in order to effectively manage the
migratory flows that are impacting both
countries, the United States needs to
provide additional safe and orderly
processes for migrants who seek to enter
the United States. As the GOM makes a
unilateral decision whether to accept
returns of third country nationals at the
border and how best to manage
migration within Mexico, it is closely
watching the United States’ approach to
migration management and whether the
United States is delivering on its plans
in this space. Initiating and managing
this process—which is dependent on
the GOM’s actions—will require careful,
deliberate, and regular assessment of the
GOM’s responses to unilateral U.S.
actions and ongoing, sensitive
diplomatic engagements.
This process is responsive to the
GOM’s desire to see more lawful
pathways to the United States and is
aligned with broader Administration
47 Venezuela Regional Crisis—Complex
Emergency, June 14, 2022, available at: https://
www.usaid.gov/sites/default/files/documents/202206-14_USG_Venezuela_Regional_Crisis_Response_
Fact_Sheet_3.pdf (last visited Sept. 29, 2022).
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
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EN19OC22.008
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Note: September figure is a preliminary
estimate.
Source: Panama Migration Report,
September 24, 2022.
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 201 / Wednesday, October 19, 2022 / Notices
domestic and foreign policy priorities in
the region. It will couple a meaningful
incentive to seek a lawful, orderly
means of traveling to the United States
with the imposition of consequences for
those who seek to enter irregularly. The
goal of this process is to reduce the
irregular migration of Venezuelan
nationals throughout the hemisphere
while we, together with partners in the
region, work to improve conditions in
sending countries and create more
lawful immigration and refugee
pathways in the region, including to the
United States.
B. Urgent Humanitarian Reasons
The case-by-case temporary parole of
individuals pursuant to this process will
address the urgent humanitarian reasons
faced by so many Venezuelans subject
to the repressive regime of Nicola´s
Maduro. This process provides a safe
and orderly mechanism for Venezuelan
nationals who seek to leave their home
country to enter the United States
without having to make the dangerous
journey to the United States.
IV. Eligibility To Participate in the
Process and Processing Steps
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A. Supporters
U.S.-based supporters will initiate an
application on behalf of a Venezuelan
national 48 by submitting a Form I–134,
Declaration of Financial Support, to
USCIS for each beneficiary. Supporters
can be sole individuals, individuals
filing on behalf of a group, or
individuals representing an entity. To
serve as a supporter under the process,
an individual must:
• be a U.S. citizen, national, or lawful
permanent resident; hold a lawful status
in the United States; or be a parolee or
recipient of deferred action or Deferred
Enforced Departure;
• pass security and background
vetting, including for public safety,
national security, human trafficking,
and exploitation concerns; and
• demonstrate sufficient financial
resources to receive, maintain, and
support the intended beneficiary whom
they commit to support for the duration
of their parole period.
B. Beneficiaries
In order to be eligible to request and
ultimately be considered for a
discretionary issuance of advance
authorization to travel to the United
48 Certain non-Venezuelans may use this process
if they are an immediate family member of a
Venezuelan beneficiary and traveling with that
Venezuelan beneficiary. For purposes of this
process, immediate family members are limited to
a spouse, common-law partner, and/or unmarried
child(ren) under the age of 21.
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States to seek a discretionary grant of
parole at the POE, such individuals
must:
• be outside the United States;
• be a national of Venezuela or be a
non-Venezuelan immediate family
member 49 of and traveling with a
Venezuelan principal beneficiary;
• have a U.S.-based supporter who
filed a Form I–134 on their behalf that
USCIS has vetted and confirmed;
• possess a passport valid for
international travel;
• provide for their own commercial
travel to an air POE and final U.S.
destination;
• undergo and pass required national
security and public safety vetting;
• comply with all additional
requirements, including vaccination
requirements and other public health
guidelines; and
• demonstrate that a grant of parole is
warranted based on significant public
benefit or urgent humanitarian reasons,
as described above, and that a favorable
exercise of discretion is otherwise
merited.
A Venezuelan national is ineligible to
be considered for parole under this
process if that person is a permanent
resident or dual national of any country
other than Venezuela, or currently holds
refugee status in any country.50
In addition, a potential beneficiary is
ineligible for advance authorization to
travel to the United States as well as
parole under this process if that person:
• failed to pass national security and
public safety vetting or is otherwise
deemed not to merit a favorable exercise
of discretion;
• has been ordered removed from the
United States within the prior five years
or is subject to a bar based on a prior
removal order; 51
• has crossed irregularly into the
United States, between the POEs, after
October 19, 2022;
• has irregularly crossed the Mexican
or Panamanian borders after October 19,
2022; or
• is under 18 and not traveling
through this process accompanied by a
parent or legal guardian, and as such is
a child whom the inspecting officer
would determine to be an
unaccompanied child.52
49 See
the preceding footnote.
limitation does not apply to immediate
family members traveling with a Venezuelan
national.
51 See, e.g., INA sec. 212(a)(9)(A), 8 U.S.C.
1182(a)(9)(A).
52 As defined in 6 U.S.C. 279(g)(2). Children
under the age of 18 must be traveling to the United
States in the care and custody of their parent or
legal guardian to be considered for parole at the
POE under the process.
50 This
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Travel requirements: Beneficiaries
who receive advance authorization to
travel to the United States to seek parole
into the United States will be
responsible for arranging and funding
their own commercial air travel to the
United States.
Health Requirements: Beneficiaries
must follow all applicable requirements,
as determined by DHS’s Chief Medical
Officer, in consultation with CDC, with
respect to health and travel, including
vaccination and/or testing requirements
for diseases including COVID–19, polio,
and measles. The most up-to-date public
health requirements applicable to this
process will be available at https://
www.uscis.gov/venezuela.
C. Processing Steps
Step 1: Financial Support
A U.S.-based supporter will submit a
Form I–134, Declaration of Financial
Support with USCIS through the online
myUSCIS web portal to initiate the
process. The Form I–134 identifies and
collects information on both the
supporter and the beneficiary. The
supporter must submit a separate Form
I–134 for each beneficiary they are
seeking to support, including
Venezuelans’ immediate family
members and minor children. The
supporter will then be vetted by USCIS
to protect against exploitation and
abuse, and to ensure that the supporter
is able to financially support the
individual and any immediate family
members whom they agree to support.
Supporters must be vetted and
confirmed by USCIS, at USCIS’
discretion, before moving forward in the
process.
Step 2: Submit Biographic Information
If a supporter is confirmed by USCIS,
the listed beneficiary will receive an
email from USCIS on how to create an
account with myUSCIS and instructions
on next steps for completing the
application. The beneficiary will be
required to confirm their biographic
information in myUSCIS and attest to
meeting the eligibility requirements.
As part of confirming eligibility in
their myUSCIS account, individuals
who seek authorization to travel to the
United States will need to confirm that
they meet public health requirements,
including certain vaccination
requirements.
Step 3: Submit Request in CBP One
Mobile Application
After confirming biographic
information in myUSCIS and
completing required eligibility
attestations, the beneficiary will receive
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instructions through myUSCIS on how
to access the CBP One mobile
application. The beneficiary must then
enter limited biographic information
into CBP One and submit a live photo.
Step 4: Approval To Travel to the
United States
After completing Step 3, the
beneficiary will receive a notice to their
myUSCIS account confirming whether
CBP has, in CBP’s discretion, provided
the beneficiary advance authorization to
travel to the United States to seek a
discretionary grant of parole on a caseby-case basis. If approved, this
authorization is generally valid for 90
days, and beneficiaries are responsible
for securing their own travel via
commercial air to the United States.53
Approval of advance authorization to
travel does not guarantee parole into the
United States at a U.S. POE. That parole
is a discretionary determination made
by CBP at the POE.
All of the steps in this process,
including the decision to grant or deny
advance travel authorization and the
parole decision at the POE, are entirely
discretionary and not subject to appeal
on any grounds.
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Step 5: Seeking Parole at the POE
Upon their arrival at a POE, each
individual arriving under this process
will be inspected by CBP and
considered for a grant of discretionary
parole for a period of up to two years
on a case-by-case basis.
As part of the inspection,
beneficiaries will undergo additional
screening and vetting, to include
additional fingerprint biometric vetting
consistent with the CBP inspectional
process. Individuals who are
determined to pose a national security
or public safety threat or otherwise do
not warrant parole pursuant to section
212(d)(5)(A) of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1182(d)(5)(A), and as a matter of
discretion upon inspection, will be
processed under an appropriate
processing pathway and may be referred
to U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) for detention.
Step 6: Parole
If granted parole pursuant to this
process, each individual generally will
be paroled into the United States for a
period of up to two years, subject to
applicable health and vetting
requirements, and will be eligible to
53 Air carriers can validate an approved and valid
travel authorization submission using the same
mechanisms that are currently in place to validate
that a traveler has a valid visa or other
documentation to facilitate issuance of a boarding
pass for air travel.
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apply for employment authorization
under existing regulations. Individuals
may request authorization to work from
USCIS. USCIS is leveraging
technological and process efficiencies to
minimize processing times for requests
for work authorization. All individuals
two years of age or older will be
required to complete a medical
screening for tuberculosis, including an
IGRA test, within 90 days of arrival to
the United States.
not implement the new parole process
without the ability to return Venezuelan
nationals who enter irregularly to
Mexico, and the United States’ ability to
execute this process thus requires the
GOM’s willingness to accept into
Mexico those who bypass this new
process and enter the United States
irregularly between POEs. Thus,
initiating and managing this process
will require careful, deliberate, and
regular assessment of the GOM’s
responses to this unilateral U.S. action
D. Sunset, Renewal, and Termination
and ongoing, sensitive diplomatic
The process is capped at 24,000
engagements.
beneficiaries. After this cap is reached,
Delaying issuance and
the program will sunset absent a
implementation of this process to
decision by the Secretary to continue
undertake rulemaking would undermine
the process, based on the Secretary’s
the foreign policy imperative to act now
sole discretion. The Secretary also
and result in definitely undesirable
retains the sole, unreviewable discretion international consequences. It also
to terminate the process at any point.
would complicate broader discussions
and negotiations about migration
E. Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
management. For now, Mexico has
This process is exempt from noticeindicated it is prepared to make a
and-comment rulemaking requirements
unilateral decision to accept a
on multiple grounds, and is therefore
substantial number of Venezuela
amenable to immediate issuance and
returns. That willingness to accept the
implementation.
returns could be impacted by the delay
First, the Department is merely
associated with a public rulemaking
adopting a general statement of policy,54 process involving advance notice and
i.e., a ‘‘statement[ ] issued by an agency
comment and a delayed effective date.
to advise the public prospectively of the Additionally, making it publicly known
manner in which the agency proposes to that we plan to return nationals of
exercise a discretionary power.’’ 55 As
Venezuela to Mexico at a future date
section 212(d)(5)(A) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. would likely result in a surge in
1182(d)(5)(A), provides, parole
migration, as migrants rush to the
decisions are made by the Secretary of
border to enter before the rule becomes
Homeland Security ‘‘in his discretion.’’
final—which would adversely impact
Second, even if this process were
each country’s border security and
considered to be a legislative rule that
further strain their personnel and
would normally be subject to
resources deployed to the border.
requirements for notice-and-comment
Moreover, this process is not only
rulemaking and a delayed effective date, responsive to the request of Mexico and
the process is exempt from such
key foreign partners—and necessary for
requirements because it involves a
addressing migration issues requiring
foreign affairs function of the United
coordination between two or more
States.56 In addition, although under the governments—it is also fully aligned
APA, invocation of this exemption from with larger and important foreign policy
notice-and-comment rulemaking does
objectives of this Administration and
not require the agency to show that such fits within a web of carefully negotiated
procedures may result in ‘‘definitely
actions by multiple governments (for
undesirable international
instance in the L.A. Declaration). It is
consequences,’’ some courts have
the view of the United States that the
required such a showing,57 and DHS can implementation of this process will
make one here.
advance the Administration’s foreign
As described above, this process is
policy goals by demonstrating U.S.
directly responsive to requests from key partnership and U.S. commitment to the
foreign partners—including the GOM—
shared goals of addressing migration
to provide a lawful process for
through the hemisphere, both of which
Venezuelan nationals to enter the
are essential to maintaining a strong
United States. The United States will
bilateral relationship.
The invocation of the foreign affairs
54 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(A).
exemption here is also consistent with
55 Lincoln v. Vigil, 508 U.S. 182, 197 (1993)
Department precedent. For example, in
(quoting Chrysler Corp. v. Brown, 441 U.S. 281, 302
2017 DHS published a notice
n.31 (1979)).
eliminating an exception to expedited
56 5 U.S.C. 553(a)(1).
removal for certain Cuban nationals,
57 See, e.g., Rajah v. Mukasey, 544 F.3d 427, 437
(2d Cir. 2008).
which explained that the change in
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policy was consistent with the foreign
affairs exemption because the change
was central to ongoing negotiations
between the two countries.58
Third, DHS assesses that there is good
cause to find that the delay associated
with implementing this process through
notice-and-comment rulemaking would
be impracticable and contrary to the
public interest because of the need for
coordination with the GOM described
above, and the urgent border and
national security and humanitarian
interests in reducing and diverting the
flow of irregular migration.59 It would
be impracticable to delay issuance in
order to undertake such procedures
because—as noted above—maintaining
the status quo, which involves record
numbers of Venezuelan nationals
currently being encountered attempting
to enter irregularly at the SWB, coupled
with DHS’s extremely limited options
for processing, detaining, or quickly
removing such migrants, unduly
impedes DHS’s ability to fulfill its
critical and varied missions. At current
rates, a delay of just a few months to
conduct notice-and-comment
rulemaking would effectively forfeit an
opportunity to reduce and divert
migrant flows in the near term, harm
border security, and potentially result in
scores of additional migrant deaths.
Undertaking such procedures would
also be contrary to the public interest
because an advance announcement of
this process would seriously undermine
a key goal of the policy by incentivizing
even more irregular migration of
Venezuelan nationals seeking to enter
the United States before the process
would take effect.
F. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA), 44 U.S.C. chapter 35, all
Departments are required to submit to
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB), for review and approval, any
new reporting requirements they
impose. The process announced by this
notice requires changes to two
collections of information, as follows.
First, OMB has approved a revision to
USCIS Form I–134, Declaration of
Financial Support (OMB control
number 1615–0014) under the PRA’s
emergency processing procedures at 5
CFR 1320.13. USCIS is making some
changes to the online form in
connection with the implementation of
the process described above. These
changes include: requiring two new data
elements for U.S.-based supporters
(‘‘Sex’’ and ‘‘Social Security Number’’);
58 See
59 5
82 FR 4902 (Jan. 17, 2017).
U.S.C. 553(b)(B).
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adding a third marker (‘‘X’’) in addition
to ‘‘M’’ and ‘‘F’’ in accordance with this
Administration’s stated gender equity
goals; and adding Venezuela as an
acceptable option for the beneficiary’s
country of origin. USCIS has submitted
and OMB has approved a request for
emergency authorization of the required
changes (under 5 CFR 1320.13) for a
period of 6 months. Within the next 90
days, USCIS will immediately begin
normal clearance procedures under the
PRA.
Second, OMB has approved an
emergency request under 5 CFR 1320.13
for a new information collection from
CBP entitled Advance Travel
Authorization. OMB has approved the
emergency request for a period of 6
months and will assign a control
number to the collection. This new
information collection will allow certain
noncitizens from Venezuela, and their
qualifying immediate family members,
who lack United States entry documents
to submit information through the
newly developed CBP ATA capability
within the CBP OneTM application as
part of the process to request an advance
authorization to travel to the United
States to seek parole. Within the next 90
days, CBP will immediately begin
normal clearance procedures under the
PRA. More information about both
collections can be viewed at
www.reginfo.gov.
Alejandro N. Mayorkas,
Secretary of Homeland Security.
[FR Doc. 2022–22739 Filed 10–18–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–9M–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–7050–N–52]
30-Day Notice of Proposed Information
Collection: Debt Resolution Program,
OMB Control No.: 2502–0483
Office of Policy Development
and Research, Chief Data Officer, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
HUD is seeking approval from
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for the information collection
described below. In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act, HUD is
requesting comment from all interested
parties on the proposed collection of
information. The purpose of this notice
is to allow for an additional 30 days of
public comment.
DATES: Comments Due Date: November
18, 2022.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
invited to submit comments regarding
SUMMARY:
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this proposal. Written comments and
recommendations for the proposed
information collection should be sent
within 30 days of publication of this
notice to OIRA_submission@
omb.eop.gov or www.reginfo.gov/public/
do/PRAMain. Find this particular
information collection by selecting
‘‘Currently under 30-day Review—Open
for Public Comments’’ or by using the
search function.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Colette Pollard, Reports Management
Officer, QDAM, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 7th Street
SW, Room 4176, Washington, DC
20410–5000; email Colette Pollard at
Colette.Pollard@hud.gov or telephone
202–402–3400. This is not a toll-free
number. HUD welcomes and is prepared
to receive calls from individuals who
are deaf or hard of hearing, as well as
individuals with speech and
communication disabilities. To learn
more about how to make an accessible
telephone call, please visit: https://
www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/
telecommunications-relay-service-trs.
Copies of available documents
submitted to OMB may be obtained
from Ms. Pollard.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
notice informs the public that HUD is
seeking approval from OMB for the
information collection described in
Section A.
The Federal Register notice that
solicited public comment on the
information collection for a period of 60
days was published on March 23, 2022
at 87 FR 1479.
A. Overview of Information Collection
Title of Information Collection: Debt
Resolution Program.
OMB Approval Number: 2502–0483.
OMB Expiration Date: November 30,
2022.
Type of Request: Revision of a
currently approved collection.
Form Number: HUD–56141, HUD–
56142, HUD–56146.
Description of the need for the
information and proposed use: HUD is
required to collect debt owed to the
agency. As part of the collection
process, demand for repayment is made
on the debtor(s).
Respondents: Individuals or
Households, Business or other ForProfit.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
648.
Estimated Number of Responses:
2,159.
Frequency of Response: 1.
Average Hours per Response: 1.
Total Estimated Burden: 590 hours.
E:\FR\FM\19OCN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 201 (Wednesday, October 19, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 63507-63517]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-22739]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
Implementation of a Parole Process for Venezuelans
AGENCY: Department of Homeland Security.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice describes a new effort designed to immediately
address the increasing number of encounters of Venezuelan nationals
along the southwest border (SWB), as the Administration continues to
implement its broader, multi-pronged and regional strategy to address
the challenges posed by irregular migration. Venezuelans who do not
avail themselves of this process, and instead enter the United States
without authorization between POEs, will be subject to expulsion or
removal. As part of this effort, the Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) will implement a process--modeled on the successful Uniting for
Ukraine (U4U) parole process--for certain Venezuelan nationals to
lawfully enter the United States in a safe and orderly manner. To be
eligible, individuals must have a supporter in the United States who
agrees to provide housing and other supports as needed; must pass
national security and public safety vetting; and must agree to fly at
their own expense to an interior U.S. port of entry (POE), rather than
entering at a land POE. Individuals are ineligible if they have been
ordered removed from the United States within the prior five years or
have entered unauthorized into the United States between POEs, Mexico,
or Panama after the date of this notice's publication.
DATES: DHS will begin accepting online applications for this process on
October 18, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ihsan Gunduz, Office of Strategy,
Policy, and Plans, Department of Homeland Security, 2707 Martin Luther
King Jr. Ave. SE, Washington, DC 20528-0445, (202) 282-9708.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background--Venezuela Parole Process
This notice describes the implementation of a new parole process
for certain Venezuelan nationals announced by the Secretary of Homeland
Security on October 12, 2022,\1\ including the eligibility criteria and
filing process. The parole process is intended to enhance border
security by reducing the record levels of Venezuelan nationals entering
the United States between POEs, while also providing a process for
certain such nationals to lawfully enter the United States in a safe
and orderly manner.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ DHS Announces New Migration Enforcement Process for
Venezuelans, October 12, 2022, available at: https://www.dhs.gov/news/2022/10/12/dhs-announces-new-migration-enforcement-process-venezuelans.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Secretary's announcement followed detailed consideration of a
wide range of relevant facts and alternatives, as reflected in the
Secretary's decision memorandum dated October 12, 2022.\2\ The complete
reasons for the Secretary's decision are included in that memorandum.
This Federal Register notice is intended to provide appropriate context
and guidance for the public regarding the policy and relevant
procedures associated with this policy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See Memorandum for the Secretary from U.S. Customs and
Border Protection Commissioner and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services Director, Parole Process for Certain Venezuelan Nationals
(Oct. 12, 2022).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Overview
The U.S. Government is engaged in a multi-pronged, regional
strategy to address the challenges posed by irregular migration. The
strategy--a shared endeavor with partner countries--focuses on
addressing the root causes of migration, which currently are fueling
unprecedented levels of irregular migration, and creating safe and
orderly processes for migration throughout the region. This strategy
will reduce regional irregular migration in the mid- to long-term, but
we anticipate continued substantial pressures along the southwest
border over the coming months.
In light of this reality, DHS is implementing an immediate effort
to address the increasing number of encounters of Venezuelan nationals
at the SWB as we continue to implement the broader and long-term
strategy. We anticipate that this new effort would reduce the record
levels of Venezuelan nationals seeking to irregularly enter the United
States between POEs along the SWB, while also providing a process for
certain such nationals to lawfully enter the United States in a safe
and orderly manner.
With the cooperation of the Government of Mexico (GOM), and
potentially other governments, this effort is intended to serve as a
deterrent to irregular migration by providing a meaningful alternative
to irregular migration and by imposing immediate consequences on
Venezuelan nationals who choose to not avail themselves of the new
process and instead seek to irregularly enter the United States
[[Page 63508]]
between POEs. It will also provide an incentive for Venezuelans to
avoid the often dangerous journey to the border altogether, by putting
in place a safe and orderly process for Venezuelan nationals to travel
to the United States to seek a discretionary, case-by-case grant of
parole into the United States, based on significant public benefit and
urgent humanitarian reasons.\3\ Venezuelan nationals who irregularly
enter the United States between POEs after October 19, 2022 are subject
to expulsion or removal from the United States; those who enter
irregularly into the United States, Mexico, or Panama will also be
found ineligible for a discretionary grant of parole under this
process. Only those who meet specified criteria and pass national
security and public safety vetting would be eligible for consideration
for parole under this process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See INA sec. 212(d)(5)(A), 8 U.S.C. 1182(d)(5)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Implementation of the parole process is conditioned on Mexico
continuing to accept the expulsion or removal of Venezuelan nationals
seeking to irregularly enter the United States between POEs. As such,
this new process will couple a meaningful incentive to seek a lawful,
safe and orderly means of traveling to the United States with the
imposition of consequences for those who seek to enter irregularly.
The new policy is modeled on Uniting for Ukraine (U4U), the
successful parole process that was put in place in the wake of Russia's
unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, when thousands of Ukrainian migrants
spontaneously arrived at SWB POEs. Once U4U was implemented, such
spontaneous arrivals fell sharply, and travel shifted to a safe and
orderly process. This new process is procedurally similar to U4U, in
which certain Ukrainians with U.S.-based supporters who meet specified
eligibility criteria have been able to travel to the United States to
seek a discretionary, case-by-case grant of parole for up to two years.
As in U4U, applications using this parole process will be initiated by
a supporter in the United States who would apply on behalf of a
Venezuelan individual and commit to providing the beneficiary housing
and other financial support, as needed, for the duration of their
parole.
In addition to the supporter requirement, Venezuelan nationals are
required to meet several eligibility criteria, as outlined in more
detail later in this notice, to receive advance authorization to travel
to the United States and be considered for parole, on a case-by-case
basis. Importantly, individuals are ineligible if they have been
ordered removed from the United States within the prior five years;
they are also ineligible if they have crossed into the United States
between POEs, or entered Mexico or Panama without authorization, after
October 19, 2022. Only those who pass national security and public
safety vetting and agree to fly to an interior POE, as opposed to
entering between POEs, and who meet all specified criteria below will
be eligible to receive advance authorization to travel to the United
States and be considered for parole, on a case-by-case basis, under
this process.
Any discretionary grants of parole will be for a temporary period
of up to two years. During this two-year period, the United States will
continue to build on the multi-pronged and long-term strategy and
engage with our foreign partners throughout the region. These efforts
are intended to support conditions that would decrease irregular
migration, work to improve refugee processing and other lawful
immigration pathways in the region, and allow for increased removals of
those who continue to migrate irregularly and lack a valid claim of
asylum or other lawful basis to remain in the United States. The two-
year period will also enable individuals to seek humanitarian relief or
other immigration benefits for which they may be eligible, and to work
and contribute to the U.S. economy as they do so. Those who are not
granted asylum or other immigration benefits will need to leave the
United States at the expiration of their authorized period of parole or
will generally be placed in removal proceedings after the period of
parole expires.
The temporary, case-by-case parole of qualifying Venezuelan
nationals pursuant to this process will provide a significant public
benefit for the United States, while also addressing the urgent
humanitarian reasons that Venezuelan nationals are fleeing, to include
repression and unsafe conditions in their home country. Most
significantly, we anticipate that parole will: (i) enhance the security
of our SWB by reducing irregular migration of Venezuelan nationals;
(ii) enhance border security and national security by vetting
individuals prior to their arrival at a United States POE; (iii) reduce
the strain on DHS personnel and resources; (iv) minimize the domestic
impact of Venezuelan irregular migration; (v) disincentivize a
dangerous irregular journey that puts migrant lives and safety at risk
and enriches smuggling networks; and (vi) fulfill important foreign
policy goals to manage migration collaboratively in the hemisphere. The
process is capped at 24,000 beneficiaries. After this cap is reached,
DHS will not approve additional beneficiaries, absent a Secretary-level
decision, at the Secretary's sole discretion, to continue the process.
B. Conditions at the Border
1. Trends and Flows: Increase of Venezuelan Nationals Arriving at the
Southwest Border
The last decades have yielded a dramatic increase in encounters at
the SWB and a dramatic shift in the demographics of those encountered.
Throughout the 1980s and into the first decade of the 2000s, encounters
along the SWB routinely numbered in the millions per year. By the early
2010s, three decades of investments in border security and strategy
contributed to reduced border flows, with border encounters averaging
fewer than 400,000 per year from 2011-2017.\4\ These gains were
subsequently reversed, however, as border encounters more than doubled
between 2017 and 2019, and--following a steep drop in the first months
of the COVID-19 pandemic--continued to increase at a similar pace in
2021 and 2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Office of Immigration Statistics (OIS) analysis of historic
CBP data.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shifts in demographics have also had a significant effect on
irregular migration. Border encounters in the 1980s and 1990s consisted
overwhelmingly of single adults from Mexico, most of whom were
migrating for economic reasons. Beginning in the 2010s, a growing share
of migrants have been from Northern Central America \5\ (NCA) and,
since the late 2010s, from countries throughout the Americas. Migrant
populations from these newer source countries have included large
numbers of families and children, many of whom are traveling to escape
violence and political oppression and for other non-economic
reasons.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Northern Central America refers to El Salvador, Guatemala,
and Honduras.
\6\ Prior to 2013, the overall share of encounters who were
processed for expedited removal and claimed fear averaged less than
2 percent annually. Between 2013 and 2018, the share rose from 8 to
20 percent, before dropping with the surge of family unit encounters
in 2019 (most of whom were not placed in expedited removal) and the
onset of Title 42 expulsions in 2020. As the same time, between 2013
and 2021, among those placed in expedited removal, the share making
fear claims increased from 16 to 82 percent. OIS analysis of
historic CBP and USCIS data and OIS Enforcement Lifecycle through
June 30, 2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The most recent rise in the numbers of encounters at the border has
been driven in significant part by a surge in
[[Page 63509]]
migration of Venezuelan nationals. Unique encounters of Venezuelan
nationals increased throughout fiscal year (FY) 2021, totaling 47,328.
More than 25% of Venezuela's population has left the country. The
United States is seeing a rising rate of Venezuelans encountered at our
border over the past two years, which has surged in the last few
months. Average monthly unique encounters of Venezuelan nationals at
the land border totaled 15,494 in FY 2022,\7\ rising further to over
25,000 in August and 33,000 in September, compared to a monthly average
of 127 unique encounters from FY 2014-2019.\8\ Of note, unique
encounters of Venezuelan nationals rose 293 percent between FY 2021 and
FY 2022, while unique encounters of all other nationalities combined
increased by 45 percent. Panama is currently seeing more than 3,000
people, mostly Venezuelan nationals, crossing into its territory from
Colombia via the Dari[eacute]n jungle each day.
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\7\ FY 2022 CBP data cited in this notice is based on internal
reporting to date. CBP releases official data in regular intervals;
final FY 2022 figures may differ to some degree from the figures
cited here.
\8\ OIS analysis of OIS Persist Dataset based on data through
August 31, 2022 and OIS analysis of U.S. Customs and Border
Protection (CBP) data from Unified Immigration Portal (UIP) as of
October 6, 2022. Unique encounters include encounters of persons at
the Southwest Border who were not previously encountered in the
prior 12 months. Throughout this notice unique encounter data are
defined to also include OFO parolees and other OFO administrative
encounters.
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In recent months, this surge in irregular migration of Venezuelan
nationals has been accelerating. Nationals from Venezuela accounted for
25,130 unique encounters in August 2022, and the Office of Immigration
Statistics (OIS) estimates that there were 33,500 unique encounters in
September, more than Mexico and more than all three NCA countries
combined.\9\
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\9\ OIS Persist Dataset based on data through August 31, 2022
and OIS analysis of CBP UIP data as of October 6, 2022.
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2. Push and Pull Factors
DHS assesses that the high--and rising--number of Venezuelan
encounters has three key causes: First, the deteriorating conditions in
Venezuela, including repression, instability, and violence, are pushing
large numbers to leave their home country. Second, the lack of safe and
orderly migration alternatives throughout the entire region, including
to the United States, means that those seeking refuge outside of
Venezuela have few lawful options. Third, the United States faces
significant limits on the ability to return Venezuelan nationals to
Venezuela or elsewhere, as described below; absent such a return
ability, more individuals are willing to take a chance that they can
come--and stay.
a. Factors Pushing Migration From Venezuela
A complex political, humanitarian, and economic crisis; the
widespread presence of non-state armed groups; crumbling
infrastructure; and the repressive tactics of Nicol[aacute]s Maduro
have caused nearly 7 million Venezuelans to flee their country.\10\
Maduro has arbitrarily banned key opposition figures from participating
in the political process, detained hundreds of political prisoners,
employed judicial processes to circumscribe political parties, and
denied opposition political representatives equal access to media
coverage and freedom of movement in the country.\11\ In a February 2022
report, Amnesty International reported that ``[c]rimes under
international law and human rights violations, including politically
motivated arbitrary detentions, torture, extrajudicial executions and
excessive use of force have been systematic and widespread, and could
constitute crimes against humanity.'' \12\ Amnesty International
further reported that ``trends of repression in Venezuela have been
directed against a specific group of people: those perceived as
dissidents or opponents'' of Nicol[aacute]s Maduro.\13\
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\10\ UNHCR, Venezuela Situation, available at: https://www.unhcr.org/en-us/venezuela-emergency.html (last visited Sept. 24,
2022).
\11\ 2021 Country Reports of Human Rights Practices: Venezuela,
U.S. Department of State, Apr. 12, 2022, available at: https://www.state.gov/reports/2021-country-reports-on-human-rights-practices/venezuela/ (last visited Sept. 24, 2022).
\12\ Venezuela: Calculated repression: Correlation between
stigmatization and politically motivated arbitrary detentions,
Amnesty International, p. 11, Feb. 10, 2022, available at: https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/amr53/5133/2022/en/ (last visited Sept.
25, 2022).
\13\ Venezuela: Calculated repression: Correlation between
stigmatization and politically motivated arbitrary detentions,
Amnesty International, p.52, Feb. 10, 2022, available at: https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/amr53/5133/2022/en/ (last visited Sept.
25, 2022).
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According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees,
Venezuela has become the second-largest external displacement crisis in
the world, following Syria.\14\ At least in the short term, the crisis
is expected to continue, thus continuing to push Venezuelans to seek
alternatives elsewhere. As described above, Panama is currently seeing
more than 3,000 people, mostly Venezuelan nationals, crossing into its
territory from Colombia via the Dari[eacute]n jungle each day.
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\14\ UNHCR, Venezuela Situation, available at: https://www.unhcr.org/en-us/venezuela-emergency.html (last visited Sept. 24,
2022).
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b. Return Limitations
At this time, there are significant limits in DHS's ability to
expel or return Venezuelans who enter the United States without
authorization in between POEs. DHS is currently under a court-ordered
obligation to implement the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention's (CDC) Title 42 public health Order, under which covered
noncitizens may be prevented entry or expelled to prevent the spread of
communicable disease.\15\ But Venezuela does not presently allow
repatriations via charter flights, which significantly limits DHS's
ability to return those subject to the Title 42 Order or who are
ordered removed. To date, other countries, including Mexico, have
generally been reluctant to accept Venezuelans as well. As a result,
DHS was only able to repatriate a small number of Venezuelan nationals
to Venezuela in FY 2022.
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\15\ Louisiana v. CDC,--F. Supp. 3d--, 2022 WL 1604901 (W.D. La.
May 20, 2022).
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c. Overall Effect
DHS assesses that the combination of the country conditions in
Venezuela, the lack of safe and orderly lawful pathways, and the
present inability to expel or remove Venezuelan nationals engaged in
irregular migration, has significantly led to the significant increase
in irregular migration among Venezuelan nationals. Conversely, DHS
assesses that the return of a significant portion of Venezuelans who
enter irregularly at the border, coupled with an alternative process
pursuant to which Venezuelans could enter the United States lawfully,
would meaningfully change the incentives for those intending to
migrate--leading to a decline in the numbers of Venezuelans seeking to
irregularly cross the SWB.
This prediction is based on prior experience: CBP saw rapidly
increasing numbers of encounters of Guatemalan and Honduran nationals
from January 2021 until August 2021, when these countries began
accepting the direct return of their nationals. In January 2021, CBP
encountered an average of 424 Guatemalan nationals and 362 Honduran
nationals a day. By August 4, 2021, the 30-day average daily encounter
rates had climbed to 1,249 Guatemalan nationals and 1,502 Honduran
nationals--an increase of 195 percent and 315 percent, respectively. In
the 60 days immediately following the resumption of routine flights,
average daily encounters fell by 37
[[Page 63510]]
percent for Guatemala and 42 percent for Honduras, as shown in Figure 1
below.\16\
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\16\ OIS analysis of OIS Persist Dataset based on data through
August 31, 2022.
Figure 1: Daily Encounters of Guatemalan and Honduran Nationals, May 1-
November 1, 2021.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN19OC22.007
Note: Figure depicts 30-day average of daily encounters.
Source: OIS analysis of OIS Persist Dataset.
Returns alone, however, are not sufficient. While the numbers of
encounters of Guatemalan and Honduran nationals have fallen, CBP is
currently encountering a total of around 1,000 nationals from these two
countries each day. The process thus seeks to combine a consequence for
Venezuelan nationals who seek to enter the United States irregularly at
the land border with an incentive to use the lawful process to request
authorization to travel by air to and enter the United States, without
making the dangerous journey to the border.
This effort is informed by the way that similar incentives and
disincentives worked in the U4U process. In the two weeks prior to
U4U's implementation, DHS encountered a daily average of 940 nationals
of Ukraine at the U.S.-Mexico land border seeking to enter the United
States. After the new parole process launched and approved Ukrainians
could fly directly into the United States--whereas those who sought to
enter irregularly were subject to expulsion pursuant to the Title 42
public health Order--daily encounters dropped to fewer than twelve per
day.\17\ Mexican officials also reported seeing a similar decline in
the number of inbound Ukrainian air passengers.
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\17\ OIS Persist Dataset based on data through August 31, 2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Impact on DHS Resources and Operations
To respond to the increase in encounters along the SWB since FY
2021--an increase that has accelerated in FY 2022, driven in
significant part by the number of Venezuelan nationals encountered--DHS
has taken a series of extraordinary steps. Largely since FY 2021, DHS
has built and now operates 10 soft-sided processing facilities, which
cost $688 million in FY 2022. It has detailed 3,770 officers and agents
from CBP and ICE to the SWB. In FY 2022, DHS had to utilize its above
threshold reprogramming authority to identify approximately $281
million from elsewhere in the Department to address SWB needs, to
include facilities, transportation, medical care, and personnel costs.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has spent $260
million in FYs 2021 and 2022 on grants to non-governmental
organizations (NGO) and state and local entities through the Emergency
Food and Shelter Program--Humanitarian (EFSP--H) to assist with the
reception and onward travel of irregular migrants arriving at the SWB.
This spending is in addition to $1.4 billion in FY 2022 one-year surge
funding for SWB enforcement and processing capacities.\18\
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\18\ DHS Plan for Southwest Border Security and Preparedness,
DHS Memorandum for Interested Parties, Alejandro N. Mayorkas,
Secretary of Homeland Security, Apr. 26, 2022.
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The impact has been particularly acute in certain border sectors.
The increased flows of Venezuelan nationals are disproportionately
occurring within the remote Del Rio, El Paso, and Yuma sectors, all of
which are at risk of operating, or are currently operating, over
capacity. In FY 2022, 93 percent of unique encounters of Venezuelan
nationals occurred in these three sectors, with the trend rising to 98
percent in September 2022.\19\ In FY 2022, the Del Rio, El Paso, and
Yuma sectors encountered almost double the number of migrants as
compared to FY 2021 (an 87 percent increase), and a ten-fold increase
over the average for FY 2014-FY 2019, primarily as a result of
increases in Venezuelans and other non-traditional sending
countries.\20\
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\19\ OIS analysis of OIS Persist Dataset through August 31, 2022
and CBP UIP data for September 1-30, 2022.
\20\ OIS analysis of OIS Persist Dataset through August 31,
2022.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The focused increase in encounters in those three sectors is
particularly challenging. Yuma and Del Rio sectors are geographically
remote, and because--until the past two years--they have never been a
focal point for large numbers of individuals entering irregularly, they
have limited infrastructure and personnel in place to safely process
the elevated encounters
[[Page 63511]]
that they are seeing. El Paso sector has relatively modern
infrastructure for processing noncitizens encountered at the border,
but is far away from other CBP sectors, which makes it challenging to
move individuals elsewhere for processing during surges.
In an effort to decompress sectors that are experiencing surges,
DHS deploys lateral transportation, using buses and flights to move
noncitizens to other sectors with capacity to process. In just one week
(between September 22-September 28), El Paso and Yuma sectors operated
a combined 79 decompression buses staffed by Border Patrol agents to
neighboring sectors.\21\ In that same week, El Paso and Yuma sectors
also operated 29 combined lateral decompression flights, redistributing
noncitizens to other sectors with additional capacity.\22\
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\21\ Data from SBCC, as of September 29, 2022.
\22\ Data from SBCC, as of September 29, 2022.
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Because these assets are finite, using DHS air resources to operate
lateral flights impacts DHS's ability to operate international
repatriation flights to receiving countries, leaving noncitizens in
custody for longer and further taxing DHS resources. This is concerning
given the correlation between DHS's ability to operate return flights
to non-contiguous home countries and encounters at the border, as
described above. DHS assesses that a reduction in the flow of
Venezuelans arriving at the SWB would reduce pressure on overstretched
resources and enable the Department to more quickly process and, as
appropriate, return or remove those who do not have a lawful basis to
stay.
II. DHS Parole Authority
The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA or Act) provides the
Secretary of Homeland Security with discretionary authority to parole
noncitizens into the United States temporarily, under such reasonable
conditions that the Secretary may prescribe, on a case-by-case basis
for ``urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit.'' \23\
Parole is not an admission of the individual to the United States, and
a parolee remains an ``applicant for admission'' during the period of
parole in the United States.\24\ DHS may set the duration of the parole
based on the purpose for granting the parole request and may impose
reasonable conditions on parole.\25\ Individuals may be granted advance
authorization to travel to the United States to seek parole.\26\ DHS
may terminate parole in its discretion at any time.\27\ Individuals who
are paroled into the United States generally may apply for employment
authorization.\28\
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\23\ INA sec. 212(d)(5)(A), 8 U.S.C. 1182(d)(5)(A); see also 6
U.S.C. 202(4) (charging the Secretary with the responsibility for
``[e]stablishing and administering rules . . . governing . . .
parole'').
\24\ INA sec. 212(d)(5)(A), 8 U.S.C. 1182(d)(5)(A).
\25\ INA sec. 212(d)(5)(A), 8 U.S.C. 1182(d)(5)(A).
\26\ See 8 CFR 212.5(f).
\27\ See 8 CFR 212.5(e).
\28\ See 8 CFR 274a.12(c)(11).
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This effort will combine a consequence for those who seek to enter
the United States irregularly between POEs with a significant incentive
for Venezuelan nationals to remain where they are and use a lawful
process to request authorization to travel by air to and ultimately
enter the United States for the purpose of seeking a discretionary
grant of parole for up to two years.
III. Justification for the Process
A. Significant Public Benefit
The case-by-case parole of Venezuelan nationals pursuant to this
process--which combines consequences for those who seek to enter the
United States irregularly between POEs with an opportunity for eligible
Venezuelan nationals to seek advance authorization to travel to the
United States to seek discretionary parole, on a case-by-case basis, in
the United States--will serve a significant public benefit for
multiple, intersecting reasons. Specifically, as noted above, we assess
that the parole of eligible individuals pursuant to this process will
result in the following: (i) enhancing the security of our border by
reducing irregular migration of Venezuelan nationals; (ii) enhancing
border security and national security by vetting individuals before
they arrive at our border; (iii) reducing the strain on DHS personnel
and resources; (iv) minimizing the domestic impact of Venezuelan
irregular migration; (v) disincentivizing a dangerous irregular journey
that puts migrant lives and safety at risk and enriches smuggling
networks; and (vi) fulfilling important foreign policy goals to manage
migration collaboratively in the hemisphere and, as part of those
efforts, to establish additional processing pathways from within the
region to discourage irregular migration.
1. Enhancing the Security of Our Border by Reducing Irregular Migration
of Venezuelan Nationals
Implementation of the parole process is contingent on the GOM
agreeing to accept the return of Venezuelan nationals encountered
irregularly entering the United States without authorization between
POEs. While DHS remains under the court order to implement the CDC's
Title 42 public health Order, these returns will take the form of
expulsions. Once Title 42 is no longer in place, DHS will engage the
GOM to effectuate Title 8 removals of individuals subject to expedited
removal who cannot be returned to Venezuela or elsewhere. The ability
to effectuate returns to Mexico will impose a consequence on irregular
entry that currently does not exist.
As described above, Venezuelan nationals make up a significant and
growing number of those encountered seeking to cross between POEs
irregularly. We assess that without additional and more immediate
consequences imposed on those who seek to do so, together with a safe
and orderly parole process, the numbers will continue to grow. By
pairing a consequence on those seeking to irregularly cross between the
POEs with the incentive provided by the opportunity to apply for
advance authorization to travel to the United States to seek a
discretionary grant of parole, this process will create a combination
of incentives and disincentives that will lead to a substantial decline
in irregular migration by Venezuelans to the SWB.
As also described above, this expectation is informed, in part, by
past experience with respect to the ways that flows of irregular
migration decreased from NCA countries once nationals from those
countries were returned to their home countries and shifts that took
place once the U4U process was initiated. These experiences provide
compelling evidence of the importance of coupling effective
disincentives for irregular entry with incentives for lawful entry as a
way of addressing migratory surges.
2. Enhance Border Security and National Security by Vetting Individuals
Before They Arrive at Our Border
The Venezuelan parole process described above will allow DHS to vet
potential beneficiaries for national security and public safety
purposes before they travel to the United States. It is important to
note that all noncitizens DHS encounters at the border undergo thorough
vetting against national security and public safety databases during
their processing, and that individuals who are determined to pose a
national security or public safety threat are detained pending removal.
Venezuelan nationals seeking parole via this process will still be
subject to this vetting upon their arrival at the POE. That said, there
are distinct advantages to being able to conduct some vetting actions
before an individual arrives at the border to prevent individuals who
[[Page 63512]]
could pose threats to national security or public safety from even
traveling to the United States.
As described above, the vetting will require prospective
beneficiaries to upload a live photograph via a mobile application.
This will substantially enhance the scope of the pre-travel vetting--
thereby enabling DHS to better identify those with criminal records or
other disqualifying information of concern and deny them an advance
authorization to travel before they arrive at our border.
3. Reduce the Burden on DHS Personnel and Resources
As discussed above, the impact of the increased migratory flows has
strained the DHS workforce in ways that have been particularly
concentrated in certain sectors along the SWB. By reducing encounters
of Venezuelan nationals at the SWB, and channeling decreased flows of
Venezuelan nationals to interior POEs through this streamlined process,
we anticipate the process will relieve some of this burden. This will
free up resources, including those focused on decompression of border
sectors, which in turn could enable an increase in removal flights--
enabling the removal of more noncitizens with final orders of removal
faster and reducing the number of days in DHS custody. While the
process will also draw on DHS resources within USCIS and CBP to process
requests for discretionary parole on a case-by-case basis and conduct
vetting, these requirements involve different parts of DHS and require
minimal resources as compared to the status quo.
4. Minimize the Domestic Impact
The increase in irregular migration, including the change in
demographics, has put a strain on domestic resources, which is felt
most acutely by border communities. As the number of arrivals
increases, thus necessitating more conditional releases, the strains
are shared by others as well. Given the current inability to return or
repatriate Venezuelans in substantial numbers, Venezuelan nationals
account for a significant percentage of the individuals being
conditionally released pending their removal proceedings or the
initiation of such proceedings after being encountered and processed
along the SWB.
State and local governments, along with NGOs, are providing
services and assistance to the Venezuelans and other noncitizens who
have arrived at our border, including by building new administrative
structures, finding additional housing facilities, and constructing
tent shelters to address the increased need.\29\ DHS also has worked
with Congress to make approximately $290 million available since FY
2019 through FEMA's EFSP to support NGOs and local governments that
provide initial reception for migrants entering through the SWB. This
funding has allowed DHS to support building significant NGO capacity
along the SWB, including a substantial increase in available shelter
beds in key locations.
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\29\ Aya Elamroussi and Adrienne Winston, Washington, DC,
approves creation of new agency to provide services for migrants
arriving from other states, CNN, Sept. 21, 2022, available at:
https://www.cnn.com/2022/09/21/us/washington-dc-migrant-services-office (last visited Sept. 29, 2022).
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Despite these efforts, local communities have reported strain on
their ability to provide needed social services.\30\ Local officials
and NGOs report that the temporary shelters that house migrants are
quickly reaching capacity due to the high number of arrivals,\31\ and
stakeholders in the border region have expressed concern that shelters
will eventually reach full bed space capacity and not be able to host
any new arrivals.\32\ The parole process will address these concerns by
diverting flows of Venezuelan nationals to interior POEs through a safe
and orderly process and ensuring that those who do arrive in the United
States have support during their period of parole. The effort is
intended to yield a decrease in the numbers arriving at the SWB.
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\30\ Lauren Villagran. El Paso struggles to keep up with
Venezuelan migrants: 5 key things to know. Sep. 14, 2022, available
at: https://www.elpasotimes.com/story/news/2022/09/14/venezuelan-migrants-el-paso-what-to-know-about-their-arrival/69493289007/ (last
visited Sept. 29, 2022); Uriel J. Garcia. El Paso scrambles to move
migrants off the streets and gives them free bus rides as shelters
reach capacity. Sept. 20, 2022, available at: https://www.texastribune.org/2022/09/20/migrants-el-paso-texas-shelter/
(last visited Sept. 29, 2022).
\31\ Email from City of San Diego Office of Immigration Affairs
to DHS, Sept. 23, 2022.
\32\ Denelle Confair, Local migrant shelter reaching max
capacity as it receives hundreds per day, KGUN9 Tucson, Sept. 23,
2022, available at: https://www.kgun9.com/news/local-news/local-migrant-shelter-reaching-max-capacity-as-it-receives-hundreds-per-day (last visited Sept. 29, 2022).
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Moreover, and critically, beneficiaries will be required to fly to
the interior, rather than arriving at the SWB, absent extraordinary
circumstances. They will only be authorized to come to the United
States if they have a supporter who has agreed to receive them and
provide basic needs, including housing support. Beneficiaries also will
be eligible to apply for work authorization, thus enabling them to
support themselves. We anticipate that this process will help reduce
the burden on communities, state and local governments, and NGOs that
currently support the reception and onward travel of migrants arriving
at the SWB.
5. Disincentivize a Dangerous Journey That Puts Migrant Lives and
Safety at Risk and Enriches Smuggling Networks
In FY 2022, more than 750 migrants died attempting to enter the
United States across the SWB,\33\ an estimated 32 percent increase from
FY 2021 (568 deaths) and a 195 percent increase from FY 2020 (254
deaths).\34\ The approximate number of migrants rescued by CBP in FY
2022 (almost 19,000 rescues) \35\ increased 48 percent from FY 2021
(12,857 rescues), and 256 percent from FY 2020 (5,336 rescues).\36\
Although exact figures are unknown, experts estimate that about 30
bodies have been taken out of the Rio Grande River each month since
March 2022.\37\ CBP attributes these rising trends to increasing
numbers of migrants, as evidenced by increases in overall U.S. Border
Patrol encounters.\38\ The increased rates of both migrant deaths and
those needing rescue at the SWB demonstrate the perils of the journey.
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\33\ Priscilla Alvarez, First on CNN: A record number of
migrants have died crossing the US-Mexico border, Sept. 7, 2022,
available at: https://www.cnn.com/2022/09/07/politics/us-mexico-border-crossing-deaths/ (last visited Sept. 30, 2022).
\34\ Rescue Beacons and Unidentified Remains, Fiscal Year 2022
Report to Congress, U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
\35\ Priscilla Alvarez, First on CNN: A record number of
migrants have died crossing the US-Mexico border, Sept. 7, 2022,
available at: https://www.cnn.com/2022/09/07/politics/us-mexico-border-crossing-deaths/ (last visited Sept. 30, 2022).
\36\ Rescue Beacons and Unidentified Remains, Fiscal Year 2022
Report to Congress, U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
\37\ Valerie Gonzalez, The Guardian, Migrants risk death
crossing treacherous Rio Grande river for `American dream,' Sept. 5,
2022, available at: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/sep/05/migrants-risk-death-crossing-treacherous-rio-grande-river-for-american-dream (last visited Oct. 11, 2022).
\38\ Rescue Beacons and Unidentified Remains, Fiscal Year 2022
Report to Congress, U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
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Meanwhile, these numbers do not account for the countless incidents
of death, illness, and exploitation migrants experience during the
perilous journey north. Migrants are increasingly traveling to the SWB
from South America through the Dari[eacute]n Gap, an incredibly
dangerous and grueling 100-kilometer stretch of dense jungle between
Colombia and Panama. Women and children are particularly vulnerable.
Children are particularly at risk for diarrhea, respiratory diseases,
dehydration, and other ailments that
[[Page 63513]]
require immediate medical attention.\39\ According to Panama migration
authorities, of the over 31,000 migrants passing through the
Dari[eacute]n Gap in August 2022, 23,600 were Venezuelan.\40\
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\39\ UNICEF, 2021 Records Highest Ever Number of Migrant
Children Crossing the Darien Towards the U.S., Oct. 11, 2021,
available at: https://www.unicef.org/lac/en/press-releases/2021-records-highest-ever-number-migrant-children-crossing-darien-towards-us (last visited Sept. 29, 2022).
\40\ Panam[aacute] Migraci[oacute]n, Irregulares en
Tr[aacute]nsito Frontera Panam[aacute]--Colombia 2022, available at:
https://www.migracion.gob.pa/inicio/estadisticas
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These migration movements are in many cases facilitated by numerous
human smuggling organizations that treat the migrants as pawns.\41\
These organizations exploit migrants for profit, often bringing them
through across inhospitable jungles, rugged mountains, and raging
rivers, often with small children in tow. Upon reaching the border
area, noncitizens seeking to cross the United States generally pay
transnational criminal organizations (TCOs) to coordinate and guide
them along the final miles of their journey. Tragically, a significant
number of individuals perish along the way. The trailer truck accident
that killed 55 migrants in Chiapas, Mexico last December, and the
tragic incident in San Antonio, Texas on June 27, 2022, in which 53
migrants died of the heat in appalling conditions, are just two
examples of many in which TCOs engaged in human smuggling prioritize
profit over safety.\42\
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\41\ DHS Plan for Southwest Border Security and Preparedness,
DHS Memorandum for Interested Parties, Alejandro N. Mayorkas,
Secretary of Homeland Security, Apr. 26, 2022.
\42\ Jacob Garcia, Reuters, Migrant truck crashes in Mexico
killing 54, available at: https://www.reuters.com/article/uk-usa-immigration-mexico-accident-idUKKBN2IP01R (last visited Sept. 29,
2022); Mica Rosenberg, Kristina Cooke, Daniel Trotta, The border's
toll: Migrants increasingly die crossing into U.S. from Mexico, July
25, 2022, available at: https://www.reuters.com/article/usa-immigration-border-deaths/the-borders-toll-migrants-increasingly-die-crossing-into-u-s-from-mexico-idUSL4N2Z247X (last visited Oct.
2, 2022).
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This new process, which will incentivize intending migrants to use
a safe and orderly means to access the United States via commercial air
flights, cuts out the smuggling networks. DHS anticipates it will save
lives and undermine the profits and operations of the dangerous TCOs
that put migrants' lives at risk for profit.
6. Fulfill Important Foreign Policy Goals To Manage Migration
Collaboratively in the Hemisphere
Promoting a safe, orderly, legal, and humane migration strategy
throughout the Western Hemisphere has been a top foreign policy
priority for the Administration. This is reflected in three policy-
setting documents: the U.S. Strategy for Addressing the Root Causes of
Migration in Central America (Root Causes Strategy); the Collaborative
Migration Management Strategy (CMMS); and the Los Angeles Declaration
on Migration and Protection (L.A. Declaration), which was endorsed in
June 2022 by 21 countries. The CMMS and the L.A. Declaration call for a
collaborative and regional approach to migration. Countries that have
endorsed the L.A. Declaration are committed to implementing programs
and processes to stabilize communities that host migrants, or that have
high outward migration. They commit to humanely enforcing existing laws
regarding movements across international boundaries, especially when
minors are involved, taking actions to stop migrant smuggling by
targeting the criminals involved in these activities, and providing
increased regular pathways and protections for migrants residing in or
transiting through the 21 countries. The L.A. Declaration specifically
lays out the goal of collectively ``expand[ing] access to regular
pathways for migrants and refugees.'' \43\
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\43\ L.A. Declaration.
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This new process helps achieve these goals by providing an
immediate and temporary safe and orderly process for Venezuelan
nationals to lawfully enter the United States while we work to improve
conditions in sending countries and expand more permanent lawful
immigration pathways in the region, including refugee processing, and
other lawful pathways into the United States and other Western
Hemisphere countries. It thus enables the United States to lead by
example.
The process also responds to an acute foreign policy need. The
current surge of Venezuelan nationals transiting the Dari[eacute]n Gap
is impacting every country between Colombia and the SWB. Colombia,
Peru, and Ecuador are now hosting almost 4 million displaced
Venezuelans among them. The Government of Panama has repeatedly
signaled that it is overwhelmed with the number of migrants, a
significant portion of whom are Venezuelan, emerging from harrowing
journeys through the Dari[eacute]n Gap.
Reporting indicates that in the first six months of 2022, 85
percent more migrants, primarily Venezuelans, crossed from Colombia
into Panama through the Dari[eacute]n Gap than during the same period
in 2021--including approximately 40,000 Venezuelans in September
alone.\44\ Again, Dari[eacute]n Gap migrant encounters now average more
than 3,000 each day, predominantly comprised of Venezuelan nationals.
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\44\ The Department of State Cable, 22 Panama 624.
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Figure 2 shows that the number of Venezuelan nationals processed by
Panama after entering irregularly from Colombia increased by almost 30-
fold from the week of April 1, 2022 to the week of October 1, 2022.
Figure 2: Panamanian Encounters of Venezuelan Nationals in the
Dari[eacute]n Gap, February-September 2022
[[Page 63514]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN19OC22.008
Note: September figure is a preliminary estimate.
Source: Panama Migration Report, September 24, 2022.
Key allies throughout the region--including the Governments of
Mexico, Costa Rica, and Panama, all of which are also affected by the
increased movement of Venezuelan nationals--have been seeking greater
action to address these challenging flows for some time. Meanwhile, the
GOM has consistently expressed concerns with policies, programs, and
trends that contribute to large populations of migrants, many of whom
are Venezuelan, entering Mexico. These entries strain local
governmental and civil society resources in Mexican border communities
in both the south and north, and have at times led to violence, crime,
and unsafe and unhealthy encampments.
The United States is already taking key steps to address some of
these concerns. On June 10, 2022, the Department of State's Bureau of
Population, Refugees, and Migration (PRM) and the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) announced $314 million in new funding
for humanitarian and development assistance for refugees and vulnerable
migrants across the hemisphere, including support for socio-economic
integration and humanitarian aid for Venezuelans in 17 countries of the
region.\45\ And on September 22, 2022, PRM and USAID announced nearly
$376 million in additional humanitarian assistance, which will provide
essential support for vulnerable Venezuelans inside Venezuela, as well
as urgently needed assistance for migrants, refugees, and host
communities across the region. This funding will further address
humanitarian needs in the region.\46\
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\45\ The United States Announces More Than $314 Million in New
Stabilization Efforts and Humanitarian Assistance for Venezuelans
and Other Migrants at the Summit of the Americas, June 10, 2022,
available at: https://www.usaid.gov/news-information/press-releases/jun-10-2022-united-states-announces-more-314-million-new-stabilization-efforts-venezuela (last visited Oct. 11, 2022).
\46\ The United States Announces Nearly $376 Million in
Additional Humanitarian Assistance for People Affected by the
Ongoing Crisis in Venezuela and the Region, Sept. 22, 2022,
available at: https://www.usaid.gov/news-information/press-releases/sep-22-2022-the-us-announces-nearly-376-million-additional-humanitarian-assistance-for-people-affected-by-ongoing-crisis-in-venezuela (last visited Sept. 30, 2022).
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This new process adds to these efforts and enables the United
States to lead by example. It is a key mechanism to advance the larger
domestic and foreign policy goals of this Administration to promote a
safe, orderly, legal, and humane migration strategy throughout our
hemisphere. It also lays the foundation for the United States to press
regional partners to undertake additional actions with regards to these
populations, many of which are already taking important steps.
Colombia, for example, is hosting more than 2.4 million displaced
Venezuelans and has provided temporary protected status for more than
1.5 million of them. Costa Rica is developing plans to renew temporary
protection for Venezuelans. And on June 1, 2022, the Government of
Ecuador--which is hosting more than 500,000 Venezuelans--authorized a
second regularization process that would provide certain Venezuelans a
two-year temporary residency visa.\47\ Any effort to meaningfully
address the crisis in Venezuela will require continued efforts by these
and other regional partners.
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\47\ Venezuela Regional Crisis--Complex Emergency, June 14,
2022, available at: https://www.usaid.gov/sites/default/files/documents/2022-06-14_USG_Venezuela_Regional_Crisis_Response_Fact_Sheet_3.pdf (last
visited Sept. 29, 2022).
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Importantly, the United States will not implement the new parole
process without the ability to return Venezuelan nationals to Mexico
who enter irregularly. The United States' ability to execute this
process thus requires the GOM to accept the return of Venezuelan
nationals who bypass this new process and enter the United States
irregularly between POEs.
For its part, the GOM has made clear that in order to effectively
manage the migratory flows that are impacting both countries, the
United States needs to provide additional safe and orderly processes
for migrants who seek to enter the United States. As the GOM makes a
unilateral decision whether to accept returns of third country
nationals at the border and how best to manage migration within Mexico,
it is closely watching the United States' approach to migration
management and whether the United States is delivering on its plans in
this space. Initiating and managing this process--which is dependent on
the GOM's actions--will require careful, deliberate, and regular
assessment of the GOM's responses to unilateral U.S. actions and
ongoing, sensitive diplomatic engagements.
This process is responsive to the GOM's desire to see more lawful
pathways to the United States and is aligned with broader
Administration
[[Page 63515]]
domestic and foreign policy priorities in the region. It will couple a
meaningful incentive to seek a lawful, orderly means of traveling to
the United States with the imposition of consequences for those who
seek to enter irregularly. The goal of this process is to reduce the
irregular migration of Venezuelan nationals throughout the hemisphere
while we, together with partners in the region, work to improve
conditions in sending countries and create more lawful immigration and
refugee pathways in the region, including to the United States.
B. Urgent Humanitarian Reasons
The case-by-case temporary parole of individuals pursuant to this
process will address the urgent humanitarian reasons faced by so many
Venezuelans subject to the repressive regime of Nicol[aacute]s Maduro.
This process provides a safe and orderly mechanism for Venezuelan
nationals who seek to leave their home country to enter the United
States without having to make the dangerous journey to the United
States.
IV. Eligibility To Participate in the Process and Processing Steps
A. Supporters
U.S.-based supporters will initiate an application on behalf of a
Venezuelan national \48\ by submitting a Form I-134, Declaration of
Financial Support, to USCIS for each beneficiary. Supporters can be
sole individuals, individuals filing on behalf of a group, or
individuals representing an entity. To serve as a supporter under the
process, an individual must:
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\48\ Certain non-Venezuelans may use this process if they are an
immediate family member of a Venezuelan beneficiary and traveling
with that Venezuelan beneficiary. For purposes of this process,
immediate family members are limited to a spouse, common-law
partner, and/or unmarried child(ren) under the age of 21.
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be a U.S. citizen, national, or lawful permanent resident;
hold a lawful status in the United States; or be a parolee or recipient
of deferred action or Deferred Enforced Departure;
pass security and background vetting, including for public
safety, national security, human trafficking, and exploitation
concerns; and
demonstrate sufficient financial resources to receive,
maintain, and support the intended beneficiary whom they commit to
support for the duration of their parole period.
B. Beneficiaries
In order to be eligible to request and ultimately be considered for
a discretionary issuance of advance authorization to travel to the
United States to seek a discretionary grant of parole at the POE, such
individuals must:
be outside the United States;
be a national of Venezuela or be a non-Venezuelan
immediate family member \49\ of and traveling with a Venezuelan
principal beneficiary;
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\49\ See the preceding footnote.
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have a U.S.-based supporter who filed a Form I-134 on
their behalf that USCIS has vetted and confirmed;
possess a passport valid for international travel;
provide for their own commercial travel to an air POE and
final U.S. destination;
undergo and pass required national security and public
safety vetting;
comply with all additional requirements, including
vaccination requirements and other public health guidelines; and
demonstrate that a grant of parole is warranted based on
significant public benefit or urgent humanitarian reasons, as described
above, and that a favorable exercise of discretion is otherwise
merited.
A Venezuelan national is ineligible to be considered for parole
under this process if that person is a permanent resident or dual
national of any country other than Venezuela, or currently holds
refugee status in any country.\50\
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\50\ This limitation does not apply to immediate family members
traveling with a Venezuelan national.
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In addition, a potential beneficiary is ineligible for advance
authorization to travel to the United States as well as parole under
this process if that person:
failed to pass national security and public safety vetting
or is otherwise deemed not to merit a favorable exercise of discretion;
has been ordered removed from the United States within the
prior five years or is subject to a bar based on a prior removal order;
\51\
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\51\ See, e.g., INA sec. 212(a)(9)(A), 8 U.S.C. 1182(a)(9)(A).
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has crossed irregularly into the United States, between
the POEs, after October 19, 2022;
has irregularly crossed the Mexican or Panamanian borders
after October 19, 2022; or
is under 18 and not traveling through this process
accompanied by a parent or legal guardian, and as such is a child whom
the inspecting officer would determine to be an unaccompanied
child.\52\
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\52\ As defined in 6 U.S.C. 279(g)(2). Children under the age of
18 must be traveling to the United States in the care and custody of
their parent or legal guardian to be considered for parole at the
POE under the process.
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Travel requirements: Beneficiaries who receive advance
authorization to travel to the United States to seek parole into the
United States will be responsible for arranging and funding their own
commercial air travel to the United States.
Health Requirements: Beneficiaries must follow all applicable
requirements, as determined by DHS's Chief Medical Officer, in
consultation with CDC, with respect to health and travel, including
vaccination and/or testing requirements for diseases including COVID-
19, polio, and measles. The most up-to-date public health requirements
applicable to this process will be available at https://www.uscis.gov/venezuela.
C. Processing Steps
Step 1: Financial Support
A U.S.-based supporter will submit a Form I-134, Declaration of
Financial Support with USCIS through the online myUSCIS web portal to
initiate the process. The Form I-134 identifies and collects
information on both the supporter and the beneficiary. The supporter
must submit a separate Form I-134 for each beneficiary they are seeking
to support, including Venezuelans' immediate family members and minor
children. The supporter will then be vetted by USCIS to protect against
exploitation and abuse, and to ensure that the supporter is able to
financially support the individual and any immediate family members
whom they agree to support. Supporters must be vetted and confirmed by
USCIS, at USCIS' discretion, before moving forward in the process.
Step 2: Submit Biographic Information
If a supporter is confirmed by USCIS, the listed beneficiary will
receive an email from USCIS on how to create an account with myUSCIS
and instructions on next steps for completing the application. The
beneficiary will be required to confirm their biographic information in
myUSCIS and attest to meeting the eligibility requirements.
As part of confirming eligibility in their myUSCIS account,
individuals who seek authorization to travel to the United States will
need to confirm that they meet public health requirements, including
certain vaccination requirements.
Step 3: Submit Request in CBP One Mobile Application
After confirming biographic information in myUSCIS and completing
required eligibility attestations, the beneficiary will receive
[[Page 63516]]
instructions through myUSCIS on how to access the CBP One mobile
application. The beneficiary must then enter limited biographic
information into CBP One and submit a live photo.
Step 4: Approval To Travel to the United States
After completing Step 3, the beneficiary will receive a notice to
their myUSCIS account confirming whether CBP has, in CBP's discretion,
provided the beneficiary advance authorization to travel to the United
States to seek a discretionary grant of parole on a case-by-case basis.
If approved, this authorization is generally valid for 90 days, and
beneficiaries are responsible for securing their own travel via
commercial air to the United States.\53\ Approval of advance
authorization to travel does not guarantee parole into the United
States at a U.S. POE. That parole is a discretionary determination made
by CBP at the POE.
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\53\ Air carriers can validate an approved and valid travel
authorization submission using the same mechanisms that are
currently in place to validate that a traveler has a valid visa or
other documentation to facilitate issuance of a boarding pass for
air travel.
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All of the steps in this process, including the decision to grant
or deny advance travel authorization and the parole decision at the
POE, are entirely discretionary and not subject to appeal on any
grounds.
Step 5: Seeking Parole at the POE
Upon their arrival at a POE, each individual arriving under this
process will be inspected by CBP and considered for a grant of
discretionary parole for a period of up to two years on a case-by-case
basis.
As part of the inspection, beneficiaries will undergo additional
screening and vetting, to include additional fingerprint biometric
vetting consistent with the CBP inspectional process. Individuals who
are determined to pose a national security or public safety threat or
otherwise do not warrant parole pursuant to section 212(d)(5)(A) of the
INA, 8 U.S.C. 1182(d)(5)(A), and as a matter of discretion upon
inspection, will be processed under an appropriate processing pathway
and may be referred to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
for detention.
Step 6: Parole
If granted parole pursuant to this process, each individual
generally will be paroled into the United States for a period of up to
two years, subject to applicable health and vetting requirements, and
will be eligible to apply for employment authorization under existing
regulations. Individuals may request authorization to work from USCIS.
USCIS is leveraging technological and process efficiencies to minimize
processing times for requests for work authorization. All individuals
two years of age or older will be required to complete a medical
screening for tuberculosis, including an IGRA test, within 90 days of
arrival to the United States.
D. Sunset, Renewal, and Termination
The process is capped at 24,000 beneficiaries. After this cap is
reached, the program will sunset absent a decision by the Secretary to
continue the process, based on the Secretary's sole discretion. The
Secretary also retains the sole, unreviewable discretion to terminate
the process at any point.
E. Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
This process is exempt from notice-and-comment rulemaking
requirements on multiple grounds, and is therefore amenable to
immediate issuance and implementation.
First, the Department is merely adopting a general statement of
policy,\54\ i.e., a ``statement[ ] issued by an agency to advise the
public prospectively of the manner in which the agency proposes to
exercise a discretionary power.'' \55\ As section 212(d)(5)(A) of the
INA, 8 U.S.C. 1182(d)(5)(A), provides, parole decisions are made by the
Secretary of Homeland Security ``in his discretion.''
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\54\ 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(A).
\55\ Lincoln v. Vigil, 508 U.S. 182, 197 (1993) (quoting
Chrysler Corp. v. Brown, 441 U.S. 281, 302 n.31 (1979)).
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Second, even if this process were considered to be a legislative
rule that would normally be subject to requirements for notice-and-
comment rulemaking and a delayed effective date, the process is exempt
from such requirements because it involves a foreign affairs function
of the United States.\56\ In addition, although under the APA,
invocation of this exemption from notice-and-comment rulemaking does
not require the agency to show that such procedures may result in
``definitely undesirable international consequences,'' some courts have
required such a showing,\57\ and DHS can make one here.
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\56\ 5 U.S.C. 553(a)(1).
\57\ See, e.g., Rajah v. Mukasey, 544 F.3d 427, 437 (2d Cir.
2008).
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As described above, this process is directly responsive to requests
from key foreign partners--including the GOM--to provide a lawful
process for Venezuelan nationals to enter the United States. The United
States will not implement the new parole process without the ability to
return Venezuelan nationals who enter irregularly to Mexico, and the
United States' ability to execute this process thus requires the GOM's
willingness to accept into Mexico those who bypass this new process and
enter the United States irregularly between POEs. Thus, initiating and
managing this process will require careful, deliberate, and regular
assessment of the GOM's responses to this unilateral U.S. action and
ongoing, sensitive diplomatic engagements.
Delaying issuance and implementation of this process to undertake
rulemaking would undermine the foreign policy imperative to act now and
result in definitely undesirable international consequences. It also
would complicate broader discussions and negotiations about migration
management. For now, Mexico has indicated it is prepared to make a
unilateral decision to accept a substantial number of Venezuela
returns. That willingness to accept the returns could be impacted by
the delay associated with a public rulemaking process involving advance
notice and comment and a delayed effective date. Additionally, making
it publicly known that we plan to return nationals of Venezuela to
Mexico at a future date would likely result in a surge in migration, as
migrants rush to the border to enter before the rule becomes final--
which would adversely impact each country's border security and further
strain their personnel and resources deployed to the border.
Moreover, this process is not only responsive to the request of
Mexico and key foreign partners--and necessary for addressing migration
issues requiring coordination between two or more governments--it is
also fully aligned with larger and important foreign policy objectives
of this Administration and fits within a web of carefully negotiated
actions by multiple governments (for instance in the L.A. Declaration).
It is the view of the United States that the implementation of this
process will advance the Administration's foreign policy goals by
demonstrating U.S. partnership and U.S. commitment to the shared goals
of addressing migration through the hemisphere, both of which are
essential to maintaining a strong bilateral relationship.
The invocation of the foreign affairs exemption here is also
consistent with Department precedent. For example, in 2017 DHS
published a notice eliminating an exception to expedited removal for
certain Cuban nationals, which explained that the change in
[[Page 63517]]
policy was consistent with the foreign affairs exemption because the
change was central to ongoing negotiations between the two
countries.\58\
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\58\ See 82 FR 4902 (Jan. 17, 2017).
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Third, DHS assesses that there is good cause to find that the delay
associated with implementing this process through notice-and-comment
rulemaking would be impracticable and contrary to the public interest
because of the need for coordination with the GOM described above, and
the urgent border and national security and humanitarian interests in
reducing and diverting the flow of irregular migration.\59\ It would be
impracticable to delay issuance in order to undertake such procedures
because--as noted above--maintaining the status quo, which involves
record numbers of Venezuelan nationals currently being encountered
attempting to enter irregularly at the SWB, coupled with DHS's
extremely limited options for processing, detaining, or quickly
removing such migrants, unduly impedes DHS's ability to fulfill its
critical and varied missions. At current rates, a delay of just a few
months to conduct notice-and-comment rulemaking would effectively
forfeit an opportunity to reduce and divert migrant flows in the near
term, harm border security, and potentially result in scores of
additional migrant deaths. Undertaking such procedures would also be
contrary to the public interest because an advance announcement of this
process would seriously undermine a key goal of the policy by
incentivizing even more irregular migration of Venezuelan nationals
seeking to enter the United States before the process would take
effect.
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\59\ 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B).
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F. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), 44 U.S.C. chapter 35, all
Departments are required to submit to the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB), for review and approval, any new reporting requirements
they impose. The process announced by this notice requires changes to
two collections of information, as follows.
First, OMB has approved a revision to USCIS Form I-134, Declaration
of Financial Support (OMB control number 1615-0014) under the PRA's
emergency processing procedures at 5 CFR 1320.13. USCIS is making some
changes to the online form in connection with the implementation of the
process described above. These changes include: requiring two new data
elements for U.S.-based supporters (``Sex'' and ``Social Security
Number''); adding a third marker (``X'') in addition to ``M'' and ``F''
in accordance with this Administration's stated gender equity goals;
and adding Venezuela as an acceptable option for the beneficiary's
country of origin. USCIS has submitted and OMB has approved a request
for emergency authorization of the required changes (under 5 CFR
1320.13) for a period of 6 months. Within the next 90 days, USCIS will
immediately begin normal clearance procedures under the PRA.
Second, OMB has approved an emergency request under 5 CFR 1320.13
for a new information collection from CBP entitled Advance Travel
Authorization. OMB has approved the emergency request for a period of 6
months and will assign a control number to the collection. This new
information collection will allow certain noncitizens from Venezuela,
and their qualifying immediate family members, who lack United States
entry documents to submit information through the newly developed CBP
ATA capability within the CBP OneTM application as part of
the process to request an advance authorization to travel to the United
States to seek parole. Within the next 90 days, CBP will immediately
begin normal clearance procedures under the PRA. More information about
both collections can be viewed at www.reginfo.gov.
Alejandro N. Mayorkas,
Secretary of Homeland Security.
[FR Doc. 2022-22739 Filed 10-18-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110-9M-P