Permanent Residence

UPDATE: State Department changes the way it determines immigrant visa availability

News Release from Jewell & Associates, PC We previously posted here about unconfirmed reports of a possible change to the way the U.S. Department of State determines immigrant visa availability under the statutory system of preference categories and per-country quotas. These changes have now been confirmed in a post on the U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services website.

Instead of a single cut-off date for each country of chargeability in each preference category, the monthly State Department Visa Bulletin now provides two cut-off dates – one governing when an I-485 application to adjust status to permanent residence may be filed (“Dates for Filing Applications”) and one governing when a pending I-485 may be approved (“Application Final Action Dates”). This new system has been implemented in time for the October 2015 visa bulletin.

The net effect of this change is to make the benefits of a pending I-485 application – including portability of the permanent residence process under the American Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century Act of 2000 (AC21) – available to prospective immigrants sooner than under the prior system.

© Jewell & Associates, PC 2015

State Department may change the way it determines immigrant visa availability

News Release from Jewell & Associates, PC According to a news item posted online on September 3, 2015 by the National Law Review, there may soon be a change to the way the U.S. Department of State determines immigrant visa availability under the statutory system of preference categories and per-country quotas.  Instead of a single cut-off date for each country of chargeability in each preference category, the monthly State Department Visa Bulletin may begin providing two cut-off dates – one governing when an I-485 application to adjust status to permanent residence may be filed, and one governing when a pending I-485 may be approved.

The net effect would be to make the benefits of a pending I-485 application available sooner to prospective immigrants than under the current system.  We note that no official confirmation of this potential change has yet been provided.  We will report on further details as they become available.

© Jewell & Associates, PC 2015

Instructions for the 2016 Diversity Visa Lottery Program now available

News Release from Jewell & Associates, PC

The U.S. Department of State’s instructions for the 2016 Diversity Immigrant Visa Program (DV-2016) are now available. Entries for the DV-2016 program must be submitted electronically between October 1 and November 3, 2014.

There are no changes in eligibility this year. Eligibility requirements and entry instructions are on the U.S. Department of State’s DV lottery web site.

The congressionally mandated Diversity Immigrant Visa Program is administered annually by the Department of State under Section 203(c) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). This law provides for a class of immigrants known as diversity immigrants, with visas made available to persons from countries with historically low rates of immigration to the United States. For fiscal year 2016, 50,000 diversity visas will be available.

© Jewell & Associates, PC 2014

Instructions for the 2015 Diversity Visa Lottery Program now available

News Release from Jewell & Associates, PC

The U.S. Department of State’s instructions for the 2015 Diversity Immigrant Visa Program (DV-2015) are now available. Entries for the DV-2015 program must be submitted electronically between October 1 and November 2, 2013. Changes in eligibility this year: For DV-2015, natives of Nigeria are ineligible. Eligibility requirements and entry instructions are on the U.S. Department of State’s DV lottery web site: http://travel.state.gov/visa/immigrants/types/types_1322.html.

The congressionally mandated Diversity Immigrant Visa Program is administered annually by the Department of State under Section 203(c) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). This law provides for a class of immigrants known as diversity immigrants, with visas made available to persons from countries with historically low rates of immigration to the United States. For fiscal year 2015, 55,000 diversity visas will be available.

© Jewell & Associates, PC 2013

Instructions for the 2013 Diversity Visa Lottery Program now available

News Release from Jewell & Associates, PC – September 16, 2011 The U.S. Department of State’s instructions for the 2013 Diversity Immigrant Visa Program (DV-2013) are now available. Entries for the DV-2013 program must be submitted electronically between October 4, 2011 and November 5, 2011. Changes in eligibility this year: For DV-2013, natives of South Sudan and Poland are now eligible for selection, while Bangladesh natives are now ineligible. Eligibility requirements and entry instructions are on the U.S. Department of State’s DV lottery web site, http://tinyurl.com/3wa75.

The congressionally mandated Diversity Immigrant Visa Program is administered annually by the Department of State under Section 203(c) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). This law provides for a class of immigrants known as diversity immigrants, with visas made available to persons from countries with historically low rates of immigration to the United States. For fiscal year 2013, 50,000 diversity visas will be available.

© Jewell & Associates, PC 2011

Green Card Lottery entrants can check status online through June 30, 2012

News Release from Jewell & Associates, PC – July 21, 2011 Now through June, 30, 2012, entrants in the DV-2012 Diversity Visa Lottery may check the status of their entries through the Department State’s Entry Status Check on the State Department’s Electronic Diversity Visa website. To find out if his/her entry was selected (i.e., if he/she “won” the green card lottery), an entrant must use the information on his/her DV-2012 confirmation page. Entry Status Check is the only means by which the Department of State will notify DV-2012 entrants of their selection.  Entry Status Check will give DV-2012 lottery winners instructions on how to proceed with their application for U.S. permanent residence, and will provide them with the date, time, and location of their immigrant visa interview.

For general information about the annual Diversity Visa Lottery, please visit the Department of State’s website.

© Jewell & Associates, PC 2011

USCIS to accept I-485s through August 17th

News Release from Jewell & Associates - July 17, 2007

We are delighted to report that the government has announced that it is withdrawing its July Visa Bulletin #108 and reverting to July Visa Bulletin #107, which makes all employment-based categories CURRENT for the rest of July (and in fact until August 17, 2007, to make up for the “lost” time created by the improvidently issued July Visa Bulletin #108).

This is a just and reasonable resolution to the recent controversy surrounding actions earlier this month by the U.S. Department of State (DOS) and U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services (USCIS) to overrule DOS’s July 2007 Visa Bulletin #107.  Under today’s announcement, regardless how recent the priority date (the filing date of an approved labor certification application or, in labor certification-exempt cases, the filing date of the I-140 immigrant petition), all employment-based immigrants may advance to the final stage of the green card process by filing their I-485 adjustment-of-status (AOS) applications with USCIS on or before Friday, August 17, 2007 -- concurrently with the I-140 immigrant petition if the I-140 was not already filed.  Applicants whose I-485s were received at USCIS on or after July 2nd and have been held there pending resolution of the controversy do not need to re-file.  USCIS intends to accept those filings and process them.

© Jewell & Associates 2007

I-485 filings in July 2007

News Release from Jewell & Associates - July 2, 2007

As many readers are aware, the U.S. Department of State (DOS) published its July 2007 Visa Bulletin in mid-June, announcing that, for the month of July, all employment-based immigrant categories would be “current.” This meant that, regardless how recent the priority date (the filing date of an approved labor certification application or, in labor certification-exempt cases, the filing date of the I-140 immigrant petition), all employment-based immigrants could advance to the final stage of the green card process by filing their I-485 adjustment-of-status (AOS) applications with USCIS in July -- concurrently with the I-140 immigrant petition if the I-140 was not already filed.  DOS’s stated purpose in opening up all categories for the month of July was to generate “increased demand” for immigrant visas that could be granted before the end of the government’s fiscal year on September 30, 2007.  The U.S.’s immigration scheme allows for 140,000 employment-based immigration visas (green cards) to be approved each year.  The Department of Homeland Security, through its immigration agency USCIS, was thought to have approved only a fraction of the 140,000 green cards allowed, so DOS’s response was to make all categories “current” for July in order to bring more approvable applications into the system before the end of the fiscal year.

It is unprecedented for DOS to revise a published Visa Bulletin, but this morning DOS placed its July Visa Bulletin in the “archives” section of their web site and announced that, because USCIS claims it has suddenly approved 60,000 green card applications in the past month, DOS will allocate no more visa numbers this fiscal year.  DOS does not say so explicitly, but the implied message is that DOS believes USCIS will come close to approving all 140,000 green cards for FY-2007, so there is now no need to let more applicants into the system in July.  USCIS then followed up with its own announcement today, stating that it will reject all I-485s received today and afterwards, in all employment-based immigrant categories.  This does not affect the filing of I-140s, which will still be accepted.  It is only the I-485s USCIS is rejecting, and apparently in all employment-based immigrant categories for all countries of birth and all priority dates.

It is notable that the USCIS announcement today appears to contravene USCIS’s own regulation at 8 CFR Section 245.1(g)(1), which states:

(g) Availability of immigrant visas under section 245 and priority dates --

(1) Availability of immigrant visas under section 245. An alien is ineligible for the benefits of section 245 of the Act unless an immigrant visa is immediately available to him or her at the time the application is filed. If the applicant is a preference alien, the current Department of State Bureau of Consular Affairs Visa Bulletin will be consulted to determine whether an immigrant visa is immediately available. An immigrant visa is considered available for accepting and processing the application Form I-485 is the preference category applicant has a priority date on the waiting list which is earlier than the date shown in the Bulletin (or the Bulletin shows that numbers for visa applicants in his or her category are current). An immigrant visa is also considered immediately available if the applicant establishes eligibility for the benefits of Public Law 101-238. Information concerning the immediate availability of an immigrant visa may be obtained at any Service office.

Many applicants’ I-485s (with I-140s if applicable) arrived at USCIS today.  Others will be delivered tomorrow or later in the week or month.  Other would-be applicants have chosen to pursue their I-140s, but to hold off on filing their I-485s until there is a clear signal from the government that the I-485s will be accepted.  We do not believe that any of these approaches is wrong or potentially harmful.   USCIS will simply keep and process any I-140s it receives, and will return all I-485s for re-filing later.  In view of this, filing the I-485 may seem a wasted effort.  On the other hand, it is possible that the government will be sued in a class action law suit over its recent actions.  In that case, individuals who attempted to file I-485s and had them rejected or returned may have stronger claims to benefit from a favorable result in the law suit.

© Jewell & Associates 2007

Concurrent filing of I-140s and I-485s now accepted by INS

News Release from Jewell & Associates

In an interim rule published in the Federal Register today (67 FR 49561 7/31/02), the INS announced that it is no longer necessary for the beneficiaries of EB-1, EB-2 and EB-3 immigrant petitions (also called I-140 petitions) to wait for INS approval of the I-140 before filing their I-485 applications to adjust status to permanent residence.   Effective immediately, I-140s and I-485s may be filed concurrently, provided that a visa number is immediately available, i.e., the beneficiary’s “priority date” is current.  I-485s may also be filed based on I-140s that are pending with INS, provided that a visa number is immediately available.

An I-485 application filed pursuant to this new rule may be accompanied by an application for an Employment Authorization Document (EAD) and an application for an interim travel permit (advance parole, or A/P).  The principal applicant’s spouse and children may also file their I-485s (including EAD and A/P applications) under the new rule.

As a practical matter, the new rule should decrease the time it takes to obtain permanent residence based on employment, and will allow the spouse and children of employment-based permanent residence applicants to work in the U.S. sooner than they could under prior rules.

© Jewell & Associates 2002