Implementation of Changes to the Parole Process for Venezuelans, 1279-1282 [2023-00253]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 5 / Monday, January 9, 2023 / Notices
OneTM. OMB has approved the
emergency request for a period of 6
months. 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. 2023–00252 Filed 1–5–23; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 9110–09–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Implementation of Changes to the
Parole Process for Venezuelans
ACTION:
Notice
This notice announces that
the Secretary of Homeland Security
(Secretary) has authorized updates to
the Parole Process for Venezuelans that
was initiated in October 2022. The
Venezuela process provides a safe and
orderly pathway for certain individuals
to seek authorization to travel to the
United States to be considered for
parole at an interior port of entry,
contingent on the Government of
Mexico (GOM) making an independent
decision to accept the return or removal
of Venezuelan nationals who bypass
this new process and enter the United
States without authorization. Pursuant
to this notice, the Secretary has removed
the limit of 24,000 total travel
authorizations and replaced it with a
monthly limit of 30,000 travel
authorizations spread across this
process and the separate and
independent Parole Process for Cubans,
Parole Process for Haitians, and Parole
Process for Nicaraguans (as described in
separate notices published concurrently
in today’s edition of the Federal
Register). The Secretary also has
updated the eligibility criteria for the
Venezuela process by including an
exception that will enable Venezuelans
who cross without authorization into
the United States at the Southwest
Border (SWB) and are subsequently
permitted a one-time option to
voluntarily depart or voluntarily
withdraw their application for
admission to maintain eligibility to
participate in this parole process. DHS
believes that these changes are needed
to ensure that the Venezuela process
continues to deliver the already-realized
benefits of reducing the number of
Venezuelan nationals crossing our
border without authorization and the
surge in migration throughout the
hemisphere and channels migrants into
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SUMMARY:
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a safe and orderly process that enables
them to enter the United States without
making the dangerous journey to the
SWB.
DHS will begin using the Form
I–134A, Online Request to be a
Supporter and Declaration of Financial
Support, for this process on January 6,
2023. DHS will apply the changes to the
process beginning on January 6, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Daniel Delgado, Acting Director, Border
and Immigration Policy, Office of
Strategy, Policy, and Plans, Department
of Homeland Security, 2707 Martin
Luther King Jr. Ave. SE, Washington, DC
20528–0445; telephone (202) 447–3459
(not a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
I. Background—Venezuelan Parole
Process
On October 19, 2022, DHS published
a Federal Register Notice describing a
new effort to address the high number
of Venezuelans encountered at the
SWB.1 Since the announcement of that
process, Venezuelans who have not
availed themselves of the process, and
instead entered the United States
without authorization, have been
expelled to Mexico pursuant to the
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) Title 42 public health
Order or, if not expelled, processed for
removal or the initiation of removal
proceedings.
Once the Title 42 public health Order
is lifted, DHS will no longer expel
noncitizens to Mexico, but rather all
noncitizens will be processed pursuant
to DHS’s Title 8 immigration
authorities. The United States’
continued operation of this process will
continue to be contingent on the GOM’s
independent decision to accept the
return of removal of individuals,
including under Title 8 authorities.
Eligibility To Participate in the Process
As described in the October 19
Federal Register Notice, the Department
of Homeland Security (DHS)
implemented 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 financial support,
such as housing and other needs; must
pass national security and public safety
vetting; and must agree to fly at their
own expense to an interior U.S. port of
1 87
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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, Mexico, or Panama after October
19, 2022. Venezuelan nationals also are
generally ineligible if they are a
permanent resident or dual national of
any country or hold refugee status in
any country other than Venezuela,
though per the conforming change
described below, they will now remain
eligible to be considered for parole
under this process if DHS operates a
similar parole process for nationals of
that other country. Only those who meet
all specified criteria 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. The process
originally limited the number of
Venezuelans who could receive travel
authorization to 24,000.
II. Assessment of Venezuela Parole
Process to Date
The success of the Venezuela process
demonstrates that combining a clear and
meaningful consequence for
unauthorized entry along the SWB with
a significant incentive for migrants to
wait where they are and use a lawful
process to come to the United States can
change migratory flows. Within a week
of the October 12, 2022 announcement
of that process, the number of
Venezuelans encountered at the SWB
fell from over 1,100 per day to under
200 per day, and as of the week ending
December 4, to an average of 86 per
day.2 The new process and
accompanying consequence for
unauthorized entry also led to a
precipitous decline in Venezuelan
irregular migration 3 throughout the
Western Hemisphere. The number of
Venezuelans attempting to enter
Panama through the Darie´n was down
from 40,593 in October 2022 to just 668
in November.4 DHS provided the new
parole process for Venezuelans who are
backed by supporters in the United
States to come to the United States by
2 Office of Immigration Statistics (OIS) analysis of
data pulled from CBP Unified Immigration Portal
(UIP) December 5, 2022. Data are limited to USBP
encounters to exclude those being paroled in
through ports of entry.
3 In this notice, irregular migration refers to the
movement of people into another country without
authorization.
4 Servicio Nacional de Migracio
´ n de Panama´,
Irregulares en Tra´nsito Frontera Panama´-Colombia
2022, https://www.migracion.gob.pa/images/
img2022/PDF/IRREGULARES_%20POR_
%20DARI%C3%89N_NOVIEMBRE_2022.pdf (last
viewed Dec. 11, 2022).
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flying to interior POEs—thus obviating
the need for them to make the
dangerous journey to the SWB.
Meanwhile, the GOM for the first time
made an independent decision to accept
the returns of Venezuelans who crossed
the SWB without authorization
pursuant to the Title 42 public health
Order, which imposed a consequence
on Venezuelans who sought to come to
the SWB rather than avail themselves of
the newly announced parole process.
With the vast majority of those
encountered returned to Mexico, fewer
releases have freed up DHS resources
that would otherwise be used to process
these individuals; this has also reduced
the number of individuals state and
local governments, as supported by civil
society, have had to receive and assist.
The effects have been felt throughout
the Western Hemisphere, not just in the
United States. Thousands of
Venezuelans who had already crossed
the Darie´n have flown back to
Venezuela on voluntary flights
organized by the governments of
Mexico, Guatemala, and Panama, as
well as civil society.5 Other migrants
who were about to enter the Darie´n have
turned around and headed back south.6
Still others who were intending to
migrate north are staying where they are
to apply for this lawful process, rather
than make the dangerous journey to the
SWB.7
DHS has seen strong interest in this
parole process. As of December 27,
2022, DHS had authorized travel for
more than 15,700 Venezuelan
beneficiaries, already more than half of
the available number of travel
authorizations.8 Of those authorized to
travel to the United States, more than
10,600 have arrived and been paroled
into the country.9 More than 3,600 of
those Venezuelans who have flown into
the United States and were paroled
through this process arrived from
Colombia; another 2,300 came from
Venezuela, 1,500 from Mexico, and
5 La Prensa Latina Media, More than 4,000
migrants voluntarily returned to Venezuela from
Panama, https://www.laprensalatina.com/morethan-4000-migrants-voluntarily-returned-tovenezuela-from-panama/, Nov. 9 2022 (last viewed
Dec. 8, 2022).
6 Voice of America, U.S. Policy Prompts Some
Venezuelan Migrants to Change Route, https://
www.voanews.com/a/us-policy-prompts-somevenezuelan-migrants-to-change-route/
6790996.html, Oct. 14, 2022 (last viewed Dec. 8,
2022).
7 Axios, Biden’s new border policy throws
Venezuelan migrants into limbo, https://
www.axios.com/2022/11/07/biden-venezuelaborder-policy-darien-gap, Nov. 7 2022 (last viewed
Dec. 8, 2022).
8 Department of Homeland Security, Daily
Venezuela Report, Dec. 27, 2022.
9 Id.
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3,100 from other countries. Those
figures show that the process is reaching
both people in Venezuela and Colombia
before they seek to irregularly migrate,
and those who are displaced in transit
countries, like Mexico.10
III. Changes
Given the early success of the process,
the Secretary has authorized two
changes to the process to ensure its
continued viability, particularly as DHS
prepares for an eventual transition from
Title 42 processing to full Title 8
processing at the border.11
A. Removal of the 24,000 Limit on
Travel Authorizations and Replacement
With a 30,000 Monthly Limit Spread
Across Separate and Independent
Parole Processes
The process announced in the
October 19 Federal Register Notice was
subject to a numerical limit. Demand for
the Venezuela process has far exceeded
the 24,000 limit set in the first Federal
Register Notice. In just two months of
operation, DHS received thousands of
applications from supporters and has
already approved well more than half of
the available travel authorizations. Were
DHS to reach the numerical limit,
prospective migrants would no longer
be eligible for this process, which serves
as a meaningful alternative to irregular
migration. DHS anticipates that we
would then see increased irregular
migration of Venezuelans.
Accordingly, the Secretary has
removed the 24,000 numerical limit on
travel authorizations and replaced it
with a monthly limit of 30,000 travel
authorizations in the aggregate spread
across this process and the separate and
independent Parole Process for Cubans,
Parole Process for Haitians, and Parole
Process for Nicaraguans (as described in
separate notices published concurrently
in today’s edition of the Federal
Register). This change gives DHS the
flexibility to continue the process for
Venezuelans, thereby providing more
certainty to the public and supporting
partners. It also preserves the flexibility
to extend or terminate the process, as
the circumstances warrant. DHS will
continue to evaluate this monthly limit
and make adjustments if needed over
time.
10 Id.
11 The Secretary authorized the changes following
considerations reflected in the Secretary’s decision
memorandum dated December 22, 2022. See
Memorandum for the Secretary from the Under
Secretary for Strategy, Policy, and Plans, Acting
Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border
Protection, and Director of U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services, Updates to the Parole Process
for Certain Venezuelan Nationals (Dec. 22, 2022).
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B. Updated Eligibility Criteria
Following the GOM’s independent
decision to accept returns of
Venezuelans, DHS began expelling
Venezuelans who are encountered after
entering the United States without
authorization, pursuant to the Title 42
public health Order. Currently, a
Venezuelan (or qualifying immediate
family member) is ineligible to
participate in the parole process if,
among other things, they crossed
irregularly into the United States after
October 19, 2022—regardless of whether
they were expelled, ordered removed, or
departed voluntarily.12
After the Title 42 Order ceases to be
in effect, DHS will resume Title 8
immigration processing of all
individuals, including Venezuelans.
Pursuant to Title 8, noncitizens who
have entered the United States without
authorization may be permitted to
voluntarily depart pursuant to
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA)
240B, 8 U.S.C. 1229c, may be permitted
to voluntarily withdraw their
application for admission pursuant to
INA 235(a)(4), 8 U.S.C. 1225(a)(4), or
may be ordered removed, regardless of
whether Title 42 remains in effect.
Individuals continue to be generally
ineligible for consideration for parole
pursuant to this process if they have
crossed into the United States without
authorization between POEs along the
SWB since October 20, 2022. There will
now be the following exception:
individuals who have crossed without
authorization into the United States
after December 20, 2022, and have been
permitted a single instance of voluntary
departure pursuant to INA 240B, 8
U.S.C. 1229c, or withdrawal of their
application for admission pursuant to
INA 235(a)(4), 8 U.S.C. 1225(a)(4), will
remain eligible to participate in the
parole process. If such an individual
crossed without authorization between
POEs along the SWB from October 20,
2022 through December 20, 2022, they
would remain ineligible to participate
and the exception would not apply.
Permitting Venezuelan nationals to
voluntarily depart or withdraw their
application for admission one time and
still be considered for parole through
the process will reduce the burden on
DHS personnel and resources that
would otherwise be required to obtain
and execute a final order of removal.
This includes reducing strain on
detention and removal flight capacity,
officer resources, and reducing costs
associated with detention and
monitoring.
12 87
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The Secretary has also approved a
conforming change to provide that a
Venezuelan national who is a
permanent resident or dual national of
any country or holds refugee status in
any country other than Venezuela
remains eligible to be considered for
parole under this process if DHS
operates a similar parole process for
nationals of that other country. All other
eligibility requirements described in the
October 19, 2022 Notice remain the
same.
These changes are responsive to our
multilateral commitments to address
irregular migration throughout the
Hemisphere. In this case, the United
States is making two changes to this
process that will support our
commitment to creating additional
lawful pathways. For its part, the GOM
has made an independent decision to
accept the return or removal, including
under Title 8, of Venezuelan nationals
who bypass this new process and enter
the United States without authorization.
The United States’ continued operation
of this process is contingent on the
GOM’s independent decision in this
regard.
C. Scope, Termination, and No Private
Rights
The Secretary retains the sole
discretion to terminate the Parole
Process for Venezuelans at any
point.The number of travel
authorizations granted under this
process shall be spread across this
process and the separate and
independent Parole Process for Cubans,
Parole Process for Haitians, and Parole
Process for Nicaraguans (as described in
separate notices published concurrently
in today’s edition of the Federal
Register), and shall not exceed 30,000
each month. Each of these processes
operates independently, and any action
to terminate or modify any of the other
processes will have no bearing on the
criteria for or independent decisions
with respect to this process.
This process is being implemented as
a matter of the Secretary’s discretion. It
is not intended to and does not create
any rights, substantive or procedural,
enforceable by any party in any matter,
civil or criminal.
14 5
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IV. Regulatory Requirements
U.S.C. 553(b)(A); see also id. 553(d)(2).
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U.S.C. 553(a)(1).
U.S.C. 553(b)(B).
16 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(A); id. 553(d)(2).
17 Lincoln v. Vigil, 508 U.S. 182, 197 (1993)
(quoting Chrysler Corp. v. Brown, 441 U.S. 281, 302
n.31 (1979)).
18 5 U.S.C. 553(a)(1).
19 See Dallas Morning News, Ahead of Title 42′s
end, U.S.-Mexico negotiations called ‘intense,’
‘round-the-clock’ https://www.dallasnews.com/
news/2022/12/13/ahead-of-title-42s-end-us-mexiconegotations-called-intense-round-the-clock/, Dec.
13, 2022 (last viewed Dec. 14, 2022).
15 5
A. Administrative Procedure Act
The October 19 Federal Register
Notice describing this process explained
that this process is exempt from noticeand-comment rulemaking requirements
because (1) the process is a general
statement of policy,13 (2) the process
13 5
pertains to a foreign affairs function of
the United States,14 and (3) even if
notice-and-comment were required,
DHS would for good cause find that the
delay associated with implementing
these changes through notice-andcomment rulemaking would be
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest because of the need for
coordination with the GOM, and the
urgent border and national security and
humanitarian interests in reducing and
diverting the flow of irregular
migration.15 The changes described in
this Notice are amenable to immediate
issuance and implementation for the
same reasons.
First, these changes relate to a general
statement of policy,16 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.’’ 17 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.’’
Second, even if these changes were
considered to be a legislative rule that
would normally be subject to
requirements for notice-and-comment
rulemaking and a delayed effective date,
these changes—like the implementation
of the process itself—pertain to a foreign
affairs function of the United States, as
described in the October 19 notice, and
are directly responsive to ongoing
conversations with, and requests from,
foreign partners.18 Specifically, the
GOM has urged the United States to
consider lifting the 24,000 limit,19
which would allow more Venezuelans
to participate in and engage the process
and further disincentivize irregular
migration, enhancing the security of
both of our borders. Delaying
implementation of these changes to
conduct notice-and-comment
rulemaking would directly implicate the
GOM’s independent decision to accept
returns, including under Title 8
processes, and produce undesirable
international consequences. Absent
these changes, DHS would soon reach
the 24,000 cap and GOM would no
longer accept the returns of Venezuelan
nationals. Thus, without these changes,
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1281
DHS would no longer have the ability to
return Venezuelan nationals to Mexico,
and the Venezuela process would no
longer be viable. That would then, in all
likelihood, lead to another surge in
migration of Venezuelan nationals
throughout the hemisphere and to our
border.
Finally, even if notice-and-comment
and a delayed effective date were
required, DHS would for good cause
find that the delay associated with
implementing these changes through
notice-and-comment rulemaking would
be impracticable and contrary to the
public interest because of the need for
coordination with the GOM, and the
urgent border and national security and
humanitarian interests in reducing and
diverting the flow of irregular
migration.20 As noted above, absent
immediate action, there is a risk that
DHS meets the 24,000 cap, which would
in turn cause the GOM to no longer
accept the returns of Venezuelan
nationals and end the success of the
parole process to date at reducing the
number of Venezuelan nationals
encountered at the border.
B. 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 involves three collections of
information, as follows.
In connection with the process for
Venezuelans, OMB has previously
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. OMB has
recently approved a new collection,
Form I–134A, Online Request for
Consideration to be a Supporter and
Declaration of Financial Support (OMB
control number 1615–NEW). This new
collection will now be used for the
Venezuela parole process and is being
revised in connection with this notice,
including by increasing the burden
estimate. 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.
OMB has also previously approved an
emergency request under 5 CFR 1320.13
for a revision to an information
20 See
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5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B); id. 553(d)(3).
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collection from CBP entitled Advance
Travel Authorization (OMB control
number 1651–0143). In connection with
the changes described above, CBP is
making further changes under the PRA’s
emergency processing procedures at 5
CFR 1320.13, including increasing the
burden estimate. OMB has approved the
emergency request for a period of 6
months. Within the next 90 days, CBP
will immediately begin normal
clearance procedures under the PRA.
More information about these
collections can be viewed at
www.reginfo.gov.
Alejandro N. Mayorkas,
Secretary of Homeland Security.
The Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) hereby gives notice that
pursuant to the authority vested in the
Administrator, under Executive Order
12148, as amended, Jeffrey L. Jones, of
FEMA is appointed to act as the Federal
Coordinating Officer for this major
disaster.
The following areas of the State of
West Virginia have been designated as
adversely affected by this major disaster:
[FR Doc. 2023–00253 Filed 1–5–23; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 9110–09–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Federal Emergency Management
Agency
[Internal Agency Docket No. FEMA–4678–
DR; Docket ID FEMA–2022–0001]
West Virginia; Major Disaster and
Related Determinations
Federal Emergency
Management Agency, DHS.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This is a notice of the
Presidential declaration of a major
disaster for the State of West Virginia
(FEMA–4678–DR), dated November 28,
2022, and related determinations.
DATES: The declaration was issued
November 28, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dean Webster, Office of Response and
Recovery, Federal Emergency
Management Agency, 500 C Street SW,
Washington, DC 20472, (202) 646–2833.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice is
hereby given that, in a letter dated
November 28, 2022, the President
issued a major disaster declaration
under the authority of the Robert T.
Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency
Assistance Act, 42 U.S.C. 5121 et seq.
(the ‘‘Stafford Act’’), as follows:
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SUMMARY:
I have determined that the damage in
certain areas of the State of West Virginia
resulting from severe storms, flooding,
landslides, and mudslides during the period
of July 12 to July 13, 2022, is of sufficient
severity and magnitude to warrant a major
disaster declaration under the Robert T.
Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency
Assistance Act, 42 U.S.C. 5121 et seq. (the
‘‘Stafford Act’’). Therefore, I declare that such
a major disaster exists in the State of West
Virginia.
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In order to provide Federal assistance, you
are hereby authorized to allocate from funds
available for these purposes such amounts as
you find necessary for Federal disaster
assistance and administrative expenses.
You are authorized to provide Public
Assistance in the designated areas and
Hazard Mitigation throughout the State.
Consistent with the requirement that Federal
assistance be supplemental, any Federal
funds provided under the Stafford Act for
Public Assistance and Hazard Mitigation will
be limited to 75 percent of the total eligible
costs.
Further, you are authorized to make
changes to this declaration for the approved
assistance to the extent allowable under the
Stafford Act.
McDowell County for Public Assistance.
All areas within the State of West Virginia
are eligible for assistance under the Hazard
Mitigation Grant Program.
The following Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance Numbers (CFDA) are to be used
for reporting and drawing funds: 97.030,
Community Disaster Loans; 97.031, Cora
Brown Fund; 97.032, Crisis Counseling;
97.033, Disaster Legal Services; 97.034,
Disaster Unemployment Assistance (DUA);
97.046, Fire Management Assistance Grant;
97.048, Disaster Housing Assistance to
Individuals and Households In Presidentially
Declared Disaster Areas; 97.049,
Presidentially Declared Disaster Assistance—
Disaster Housing Operations for Individuals
and Households; 97.050, Presidentially
Declared Disaster Assistance to Individuals
and Households—Other Needs; 97.036,
Disaster Grants—Public Assistance
(Presidentially Declared Disasters); 97.039,
Hazard Mitigation Grant.
Deanne Criswell,
Administrator, Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
[FR Doc. 2023–00177 Filed 1–6–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111–23–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Federal Emergency Management
Agency
[Internal Agency Docket No. FEMA–4677–
DR; Docket ID FEMA–2022–0001]
South Carolina; Major Disaster and
Related Determinations
Federal Emergency
Management Agency, DHS.
AGENCY:
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ACTION:
Notice.
This is a notice of the
Presidential declaration of a major
disaster for the State of South Carolina
(FEMA–4677–DR), dated November 21,
2022, and related determinations.
DATES: The declaration was issued
November 21, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dean Webster, Office of Response and
Recovery, Federal Emergency
Management Agency, 500 C Street SW,
Washington, DC 20472, (202) 646–2833.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice is
hereby given that, in a letter dated
November 21, 2022, the President
issued a major disaster declaration
under the authority of the Robert T.
Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency
Assistance Act, 42 U.S.C. 5121 et seq.
(the ‘‘Stafford Act’’), as follows:
SUMMARY:
I have determined that the damage in
certain areas of the State of South Carolina
resulting from Hurricane Ian during the
period of September 25 to October 4, 2022,
is of sufficient severity and magnitude to
warrant a major disaster declaration under
the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and
Emergency Assistance Act, 42 U.S.C. 5121 et
seq. (the ‘‘Stafford Act’’). Therefore, I declare
that such a major disaster exists in the State
of South Carolina.
In order to provide Federal assistance, you
are hereby authorized to allocate from funds
available for these purposes such amounts as
you find necessary for Federal disaster
assistance and administrative expenses.
You are authorized to provide Individual
Assistance and Public Assistance in the
designated areas and Hazard Mitigation
throughout the State. Consistent with the
requirement that Federal assistance be
supplemental, any Federal funds provided
under the Stafford Act for Public Assistance,
Hazard Mitigation, and Other Needs
Assistance under section 408 will be limited
to 75 percent of the total eligible costs.
Further, you are authorized to make
changes to this declaration for the approved
assistance to the extent allowable under the
Stafford Act.
The time period prescribed for the
implementation of section 310(a),
Priority to Certain Applications for
Public Facility and Public Housing
Assistance, 42 U.S.C. 5153, shall be for
a period not to exceed six months after
the date of this declaration.
The Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) hereby gives notice that
pursuant to the authority vested in the
Administrator, under Executive Order
12148, as amended, Kevin A. Wallace,
Sr., of FEMA is appointed to act as the
Federal Coordinating Officer for this
major disaster.
The following areas of the State of
South Carolina have been designated as
adversely affected by this major disaster:
E:\FR\FM\09JAN1.SGM
09JAN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 5 (Monday, January 9, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 1279-1282]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-00253]
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DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
Implementation of Changes to the Parole Process for Venezuelans
ACTION: Notice
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SUMMARY: This notice announces that the Secretary of Homeland Security
(Secretary) has authorized updates to the Parole Process for
Venezuelans that was initiated in October 2022. The Venezuela process
provides a safe and orderly pathway for certain individuals to seek
authorization to travel to the United States to be considered for
parole at an interior port of entry, contingent on the Government of
Mexico (GOM) making an independent decision to accept the return or
removal of Venezuelan nationals who bypass this new process and enter
the United States without authorization. Pursuant to this notice, the
Secretary has removed the limit of 24,000 total travel authorizations
and replaced it with a monthly limit of 30,000 travel authorizations
spread across this process and the separate and independent Parole
Process for Cubans, Parole Process for Haitians, and Parole Process for
Nicaraguans (as described in separate notices published concurrently in
today's edition of the Federal Register). The Secretary also has
updated the eligibility criteria for the Venezuela process by including
an exception that will enable Venezuelans who cross without
authorization into the United States at the Southwest Border (SWB) and
are subsequently permitted a one-time option to voluntarily depart or
voluntarily withdraw their application for admission to maintain
eligibility to participate in this parole process. DHS believes that
these changes are needed to ensure that the Venezuela process continues
to deliver the already-realized benefits of reducing the number of
Venezuelan nationals crossing our border without authorization and the
surge in migration throughout the hemisphere and channels migrants into
a safe and orderly process that enables them to enter the United States
without making the dangerous journey to the SWB.
DATES: DHS will begin using the Form I-134A, Online Request to be a
Supporter and Declaration of Financial Support, for this process on
January 6, 2023. DHS will apply the changes to the process beginning on
January 6, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Daniel Delgado, Acting Director,
Border and Immigration Policy, Office of Strategy, Policy, and Plans,
Department of Homeland Security, 2707 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave. SE,
Washington, DC 20528-0445; telephone (202) 447-3459 (not a toll-free
number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background--Venezuelan Parole Process
On October 19, 2022, DHS published a Federal Register Notice
describing a new effort to address the high number of Venezuelans
encountered at the SWB.\1\ Since the announcement of that process,
Venezuelans who have not availed themselves of the process, and instead
entered the United States without authorization, have been expelled to
Mexico pursuant to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Title 42 public health Order or, if not expelled, processed for removal
or the initiation of removal proceedings.
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\1\ 87 FR 63507 (Oct. 19, 2022).
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Once the Title 42 public health Order is lifted, DHS will no longer
expel noncitizens to Mexico, but rather all noncitizens will be
processed pursuant to DHS's Title 8 immigration authorities. The United
States' continued operation of this process will continue to be
contingent on the GOM's independent decision to accept the return of
removal of individuals, including under Title 8 authorities.
Eligibility To Participate in the Process
As described in the October 19 Federal Register Notice, the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) implemented 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 financial support, such as
housing and other needs; 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, Mexico, or Panama after October
19, 2022. Venezuelan nationals also are generally ineligible if they
are a permanent resident or dual national of any country or hold
refugee status in any country other than Venezuela, though per the
conforming change described below, they will now remain eligible to be
considered for parole under this process if DHS operates a similar
parole process for nationals of that other country. Only those who meet
all specified criteria 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. The process
originally limited the number of Venezuelans who could receive travel
authorization to 24,000.
II. Assessment of Venezuela Parole Process to Date
The success of the Venezuela process demonstrates that combining a
clear and meaningful consequence for unauthorized entry along the SWB
with a significant incentive for migrants to wait where they are and
use a lawful process to come to the United States can change migratory
flows. Within a week of the October 12, 2022 announcement of that
process, the number of Venezuelans encountered at the SWB fell from
over 1,100 per day to under 200 per day, and as of the week ending
December 4, to an average of 86 per day.\2\ The new process and
accompanying consequence for unauthorized entry also led to a
precipitous decline in Venezuelan irregular migration \3\ throughout
the Western Hemisphere. The number of Venezuelans attempting to enter
Panama through the Dari[eacute]n was down from 40,593 in October 2022
to just 668 in November.\4\ DHS provided the new parole process for
Venezuelans who are backed by supporters in the United States to come
to the United States by
[[Page 1280]]
flying to interior POEs--thus obviating the need for them to make the
dangerous journey to the SWB. Meanwhile, the GOM for the first time
made an independent decision to accept the returns of Venezuelans who
crossed the SWB without authorization pursuant to the Title 42 public
health Order, which imposed a consequence on Venezuelans who sought to
come to the SWB rather than avail themselves of the newly announced
parole process. With the vast majority of those encountered returned to
Mexico, fewer releases have freed up DHS resources that would otherwise
be used to process these individuals; this has also reduced the number
of individuals state and local governments, as supported by civil
society, have had to receive and assist.
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\2\ Office of Immigration Statistics (OIS) analysis of data
pulled from CBP Unified Immigration Portal (UIP) December 5, 2022.
Data are limited to USBP encounters to exclude those being paroled
in through ports of entry.
\3\ In this notice, irregular migration refers to the movement
of people into another country without authorization.
\4\ Servicio Nacional de Migraci[oacute]n de Panam[aacute],
Irregulares en Tr[aacute]nsito Frontera Panam[aacute]-Colombia 2022,
https://www.migracion.gob.pa/images/img2022/PDF/IRREGULARES_%20POR_%20DARI%C3%89N_NOVIEMBRE_2022.pdf (last viewed
Dec. 11, 2022).
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The effects have been felt throughout the Western Hemisphere, not
just in the United States. Thousands of Venezuelans who had already
crossed the Dari[eacute]n have flown back to Venezuela on voluntary
flights organized by the governments of Mexico, Guatemala, and Panama,
as well as civil society.\5\ Other migrants who were about to enter the
Dari[eacute]n have turned around and headed back south.\6\ Still others
who were intending to migrate north are staying where they are to apply
for this lawful process, rather than make the dangerous journey to the
SWB.\7\
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\5\ La Prensa Latina Media, More than 4,000 migrants voluntarily
returned to Venezuela from Panama, https://www.laprensalatina.com/more-than-4000-migrants-voluntarily-returned-to-venezuela-from-panama/, Nov. 9 2022 (last viewed Dec. 8, 2022).
\6\ Voice of America, U.S. Policy Prompts Some Venezuelan
Migrants to Change Route, https://www.voanews.com/a/us-policy-prompts-some-venezuelan-migrants-to-change-route/6790996.html, Oct.
14, 2022 (last viewed Dec. 8, 2022).
\7\ Axios, Biden's new border policy throws Venezuelan migrants
into limbo, https://www.axios.com/2022/11/07/biden-venezuela-border-policy-darien-gap, Nov. 7 2022 (last viewed Dec. 8, 2022).
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DHS has seen strong interest in this parole process. As of December
27, 2022, DHS had authorized travel for more than 15,700 Venezuelan
beneficiaries, already more than half of the available number of travel
authorizations.\8\ Of those authorized to travel to the United States,
more than 10,600 have arrived and been paroled into the country.\9\
More than 3,600 of those Venezuelans who have flown into the United
States and were paroled through this process arrived from Colombia;
another 2,300 came from Venezuela, 1,500 from Mexico, and 3,100 from
other countries. Those figures show that the process is reaching both
people in Venezuela and Colombia before they seek to irregularly
migrate, and those who are displaced in transit countries, like
Mexico.\10\
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\8\ Department of Homeland Security, Daily Venezuela Report,
Dec. 27, 2022.
\9\ Id.
\10\ Id.
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III. Changes
Given the early success of the process, the Secretary has
authorized two changes to the process to ensure its continued
viability, particularly as DHS prepares for an eventual transition from
Title 42 processing to full Title 8 processing at the border.\11\
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\11\ The Secretary authorized the changes following
considerations reflected in the Secretary's decision memorandum
dated December 22, 2022. See Memorandum for the Secretary from the
Under Secretary for Strategy, Policy, and Plans, Acting Commissioner
of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, and Director of U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services, Updates to the Parole Process
for Certain Venezuelan Nationals (Dec. 22, 2022).
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A. Removal of the 24,000 Limit on Travel Authorizations and Replacement
With a 30,000 Monthly Limit Spread Across Separate and Independent
Parole Processes
The process announced in the October 19 Federal Register Notice was
subject to a numerical limit. Demand for the Venezuela process has far
exceeded the 24,000 limit set in the first Federal Register Notice. In
just two months of operation, DHS received thousands of applications
from supporters and has already approved well more than half of the
available travel authorizations. Were DHS to reach the numerical limit,
prospective migrants would no longer be eligible for this process,
which serves as a meaningful alternative to irregular migration. DHS
anticipates that we would then see increased irregular migration of
Venezuelans.
Accordingly, the Secretary has removed the 24,000 numerical limit
on travel authorizations and replaced it with a monthly limit of 30,000
travel authorizations in the aggregate spread across this process and
the separate and independent Parole Process for Cubans, Parole Process
for Haitians, and Parole Process for Nicaraguans (as described in
separate notices published concurrently in today's edition of the
Federal Register). This change gives DHS the flexibility to continue
the process for Venezuelans, thereby providing more certainty to the
public and supporting partners. It also preserves the flexibility to
extend or terminate the process, as the circumstances warrant. DHS will
continue to evaluate this monthly limit and make adjustments if needed
over time.
B. Updated Eligibility Criteria
Following the GOM's independent decision to accept returns of
Venezuelans, DHS began expelling Venezuelans who are encountered after
entering the United States without authorization, pursuant to the Title
42 public health Order. Currently, a Venezuelan (or qualifying
immediate family member) is ineligible to participate in the parole
process if, among other things, they crossed irregularly into the
United States after October 19, 2022--regardless of whether they were
expelled, ordered removed, or departed voluntarily.\12\
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\12\ 87 FR 63507 (Oct. 19, 2022).
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After the Title 42 Order ceases to be in effect, DHS will resume
Title 8 immigration processing of all individuals, including
Venezuelans. Pursuant to Title 8, noncitizens who have entered the
United States without authorization may be permitted to voluntarily
depart pursuant to Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) 240B, 8 U.S.C.
1229c, may be permitted to voluntarily withdraw their application for
admission pursuant to INA 235(a)(4), 8 U.S.C. 1225(a)(4), or may be
ordered removed, regardless of whether Title 42 remains in effect.
Individuals continue to be generally ineligible for consideration
for parole pursuant to this process if they have crossed into the
United States without authorization between POEs along the SWB since
October 20, 2022. There will now be the following exception:
individuals who have crossed without authorization into the United
States after December 20, 2022, and have been permitted a single
instance of voluntary departure pursuant to INA 240B, 8 U.S.C. 1229c,
or withdrawal of their application for admission pursuant to INA
235(a)(4), 8 U.S.C. 1225(a)(4), will remain eligible to participate in
the parole process. If such an individual crossed without authorization
between POEs along the SWB from October 20, 2022 through December 20,
2022, they would remain ineligible to participate and the exception
would not apply. Permitting Venezuelan nationals to voluntarily depart
or withdraw their application for admission one time and still be
considered for parole through the process will reduce the burden on DHS
personnel and resources that would otherwise be required to obtain and
execute a final order of removal. This includes reducing strain on
detention and removal flight capacity, officer resources, and reducing
costs associated with detention and monitoring.
[[Page 1281]]
The Secretary has also approved a conforming change to provide that
a Venezuelan national who is a permanent resident or dual national of
any country or holds refugee status in any country other than Venezuela
remains eligible to be considered for parole under this process if DHS
operates a similar parole process for nationals of that other country.
All other eligibility requirements described in the October 19, 2022
Notice remain the same.
These changes are responsive to our multilateral commitments to
address irregular migration throughout the Hemisphere. In this case,
the United States is making two changes to this process that will
support our commitment to creating additional lawful pathways. For its
part, the GOM has made an independent decision to accept the return or
removal, including under Title 8, of Venezuelan nationals who bypass
this new process and enter the United States without authorization. The
United States' continued operation of this process is contingent on the
GOM's independent decision in this regard.
C. Scope, Termination, and No Private Rights
The Secretary retains the sole discretion to terminate the Parole
Process for Venezuelans at any point.The number of travel
authorizations granted under this process shall be spread across this
process and the separate and independent Parole Process for Cubans,
Parole Process for Haitians, and Parole Process for Nicaraguans (as
described in separate notices published concurrently in today's edition
of the Federal Register), and shall not exceed 30,000 each month. Each
of these processes operates independently, and any action to terminate
or modify any of the other processes will have no bearing on the
criteria for or independent decisions with respect to this process.
This process is being implemented as a matter of the Secretary's
discretion. It is not intended to and does not create any rights,
substantive or procedural, enforceable by any party in any matter,
civil or criminal.
IV. Regulatory Requirements
A. Administrative Procedure Act
The October 19 Federal Register Notice describing this process
explained that this process is exempt from notice-and-comment
rulemaking requirements because (1) the process is a general statement
of policy,\13\ (2) the process pertains to a foreign affairs function
of the United States,\14\ and (3) even if notice-and-comment were
required, DHS would for good cause find that the delay associated with
implementing these changes through notice-and-comment rulemaking would
be impracticable and contrary to the public interest because of the
need for coordination with the GOM, and the urgent border and national
security and humanitarian interests in reducing and diverting the flow
of irregular migration.\15\ The changes described in this Notice are
amenable to immediate issuance and implementation for the same reasons.
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\13\ 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(A); see also id. 553(d)(2).
\14\ 5 U.S.C. 553(a)(1).
\15\ 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B).
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First, these changes relate to a general statement of policy,\16\
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.'' \17\ 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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\16\ 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(A); id. 553(d)(2).
\17\ 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 these changes were considered to be a legislative
rule that would normally be subject to requirements for notice-and-
comment rulemaking and a delayed effective date, these changes--like
the implementation of the process itself--pertain to a foreign affairs
function of the United States, as described in the October 19 notice,
and are directly responsive to ongoing conversations with, and requests
from, foreign partners.\18\ Specifically, the GOM has urged the United
States to consider lifting the 24,000 limit,\19\ which would allow more
Venezuelans to participate in and engage the process and further
disincentivize irregular migration, enhancing the security of both of
our borders. Delaying implementation of these changes to conduct
notice-and-comment rulemaking would directly implicate the GOM's
independent decision to accept returns, including under Title 8
processes, and produce undesirable international consequences. Absent
these changes, DHS would soon reach the 24,000 cap and GOM would no
longer accept the returns of Venezuelan nationals. Thus, without these
changes, DHS would no longer have the ability to return Venezuelan
nationals to Mexico, and the Venezuela process would no longer be
viable. That would then, in all likelihood, lead to another surge in
migration of Venezuelan nationals throughout the hemisphere and to our
border.
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\18\ 5 U.S.C. 553(a)(1).
\19\ See Dallas Morning News, Ahead of Title 42's end, U.S.-
Mexico negotiations called `intense,' `round-the-clock' https://www.dallasnews.com/news/2022/12/13/ahead-of-title-42s-end-us-mexico-negotations-called-intense-round-the-clock/, Dec. 13, 2022 (last
viewed Dec. 14, 2022).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, even if notice-and-comment and a delayed effective date
were required, DHS would for good cause find that the delay associated
with implementing these changes through notice-and-comment rulemaking
would be impracticable and contrary to the public interest because of
the need for coordination with the GOM, and the urgent border and
national security and humanitarian interests in reducing and diverting
the flow of irregular migration.\20\ As noted above, absent immediate
action, there is a risk that DHS meets the 24,000 cap, which would in
turn cause the GOM to no longer accept the returns of Venezuelan
nationals and end the success of the parole process to date at reducing
the number of Venezuelan nationals encountered at the border.
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\20\ See 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B); id. 553(d)(3).
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B. 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 involves three
collections of information, as follows.
In connection with the process for Venezuelans, OMB has previously
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. OMB has recently approved a new
collection, Form I-134A, Online Request for Consideration to be a
Supporter and Declaration of Financial Support (OMB control number
1615-NEW). This new collection will now be used for the Venezuela
parole process and is being revised in connection with this notice,
including by increasing the burden estimate. 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.
OMB has also previously approved an emergency request under 5 CFR
1320.13 for a revision to an information
[[Page 1282]]
collection from CBP entitled Advance Travel Authorization (OMB control
number 1651-0143). In connection with the changes described above, CBP
is making further changes under the PRA's emergency processing
procedures at 5 CFR 1320.13, including increasing the burden estimate.
OMB has approved the emergency request for a period of 6 months. Within
the next 90 days, CBP will immediately begin normal clearance
procedures under the PRA.
More information about these collections can be viewed at
www.reginfo.gov.
Alejandro N. Mayorkas,
Secretary of Homeland Security.
[FR Doc. 2023-00253 Filed 1-5-23; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 9110-09-P