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The 10 Things Trump Has Done Without Legislation

February 15, 2018/in News /by ABIL

In the year since President Trump’s inauguration there have been consistent attacks on immigration, according to the Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers (ABIL). ABIL lawyers Cyrus Mehta and Greg Siskind have narrowed down these attacks to 10, and also provided practice pointers on how to assist.

In a January 25 teleconference, ABIL lawyers Cyrus Mehta and Greg Siskind discussed 10 things that President Trump has done without legislation to target legal and undocumented immigration in the county. Radical immigration reform was a major focus of Trump’s campaigning and remained under fire with consistent attacks in the first year of his presidency.

The 10 attacks include:

  1. Termination of Temporary Protected Status for several countries’ nationals
  2. Termination of the DACA program
  3. Imposing new, unwritten and unlawful requirements into the H-1B program
  4. Ignoring prior decisions of the agency when deciding new cases
  5. The continued enforcement of the Travel Ban
  6. The expected revocation of work cards for spouses of H-1B workers with pending green card applications
  7. Expected new restrictions on the ability of Immigration Judges to administratively close cases
  8. The new requirement to conduct in person interviews for all employment-based green card applications
  9. Punishing nationals of countries disfavored by the Trump Administration
  10. Changes to the Foreign Affairs Manual further restricting the ability to change visas within the US.

In the teleconference, Mehta and Siskind discuss the list, how certain legislation came to be and evolved, and also offer practice pointers on how immigration lawyers can assist.

RECORDING OF THE DISCUSSION

PRESS RELEASE

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ABIL Member Kuck Baxter Immigration Commercial Nominated for an Emmy

January 20, 2018/in News /by ABIL

Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers member, Kuck Baxter Immigration, LLC, was nominated for an Emmy for their commercial, “¡Estamos contigo!,” meaning, “we are with you.” The commercial is a production of PA Media Marketing Group, LLC.

Kuck Baxter Immigration, LLC out of Atlanta was recently nominated for an Emmy for their January 2018 commercial, “¡Estamos contigo!” The commercial, in Spanish, emphasizes the firm’s commitment to stand beside their clients and to defend their rights no matter their nationality is. The video is accessible on the firm’s YouTube channel.

The attorneys of Kuck Baxter hold decades of immigration experience and specialize in employment-based and family-based immigration. The firm also helps in cases of asylum, refugees and TPS; removal and deportation; citizenship and naturalization; waivers and pardons; and federal court cases.

PRESS RELEASE

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ABIL Members Note Immigration Threats for Employers in 2018

January 03, 2018/in News /by ABIL

Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers (ABIL) attorneys have published an article addressing possible immigration threats and opportunities for employers and employees in 2018. The article assesses the political landscape after a turbulent 2017 during which the Trump administration made a multitude of anti-immigration policy changes.

The country’s immigration system was targeted heavily in 2017 by President Trump and supporters who hold negative views on foreigners entering the country. Among other anti-immigration promises couched in national security terms, the President promised to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border and force Mexico to pay for it. Arrests of non-criminal immigration violators arrests also spiked, totaling almost 32,000 in the first eight months of Trump’s term. According to ABIL attorneys, these threats will continue in 2018.

In the coming year employers and employees will have to navigate many new complexities in the immigration system. An overall animosity toward immigrants will also impact the administration’s decision-making. Attorneys have seen arbitrary and unpredictable denials, a 45% increase in requests for more information on H-1B petitions for skilled workers, and an overall increase in vetting of immigration applications. Two other major threats for 2018 include possible fundamental changes to the H-1B program and potential new requirements for F and M visas for students.

ABIL attorneys offer recommendations to navigate the threats in the article, accessible HERE.

PRESS RELEASE

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ABIL Members Offer Tips for Employers to Prepare for Increased ICE Raids and I-9 Audits

January 03, 2018/in News /by ABIL

The Trump administration has held true to its October 2017 promise to quadruple workplace raids, executing multiple raids across the country in just the first four months of this year. ABIL attorneys offer several tips to prepare employees as immigration raids continue to increase through 2018.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) carried out the largest workplace raid in a decade on April 5 at a Tennessee meatpacking plant. ICE has promised to quadruple workplace audits this year. To prepare employers for increased raids, investigations, and employer sanctions audits, attorneys from the Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers (ABIL) offer the following tips:

  1. If an ICE officer is conducting a site visit to obtain I-9 records but is not executing a search warrant, you have the right to three days’ notice before turning over the documents. Do not waive that right.
  2. You have the right to deny ICE agents or any other accompanying law enforcement officers permission to access non-public areas of your property absent a valid warrant that covers them. Do not waive that right.
  3. Do not allow ICE to access your facility without a judicial warrant. An administrative warrant by ICE is not the same as a warrant signed by a court.
  4. Train your staff who are likely to be the first ones to encounter an ICE agent. They should request a copy of the officer’s credentials, such as a badge and business card, disclose no information, and direct all inquiries and requests for site access to the company’s immigration compliance officer.
  5. Do not produce your I-9s without making a copy.
  6. If you are audited or raided, call your immigration legal counsel immediately.
  7. Start now by doing an internal/external audit with independent auditors.
  8. Move to a legitimate (not self-created) electronic I-9 system.
  9. Consider enrolling in E-Verify (https://www.e-verify.gov).

PRESS RELEASE

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Threats, Opportunities for Employers in 2018

December 20, 2017/in News /by ABIL

After a tumultuous, difficult year in 2017 with respect to immigration and border issues, attorneys from the Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers (ABIL) shared their thoughts on what employers can expect in 2018. Below is a summary of their responses and reports from the field.

Where Things Stand Now

The Trump administration appears to be attempting to keep various campaign promises on immigration and border enforcement that mesh with the President’s (and his supporters’) overall dim view of foreign people entering the United States. Before he was elected, President Trump made a wide range of anti-immigration promises couched in national security terms. Those promises included, among other things, building a massive wall along the southern border and making Mexico pay for it; immediately deporting undocumented migrants; barring Muslims from entering the United States; “extreme vetting” of immigrants; and creating a “deportation force.” The President has waffled on Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) “Dreamers,” verbally expressing his support and understanding of their plight and then canceling the DACA program with an exhortation for Congress to handle it.

Executive orders issued since his inauguration have included various entry/travel bans, limits on refugees, and threats to sanctuary cities to pull their federal funding. The first travel ban on people entering from several predominantly Muslim countries was announced seven days after his inauguration with no apparent advance process, discussion, preparation, warning, or guidance to the Department of Homeland Security. The result was chaos and protests at airports. Various court challenges and subsequent travel bans ensued.

Arrests for “noncriminal immigration violators” are up, with 31,888 noncriminal arrests during the first eight months of the Trump administration, according to U.S. Customs and Immigration Enforcement. On the other hand, deportations have actually decreased by about 14,000 this year, reports say, but Attorney General Jeff Sessions has called for a “concerted effort” by immigration courts to speed up processing of pending immigration cases.

Concerns for 2018

Current concerns for 2018 include:

  • Animosity of the administration toward immigrants: “This is leaching into all areas of USCIS adjudications and the attitude of [U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents toward] travelers with a bona fide legal basis for entry,” one attorney reported. “They will do as they please right now until challenged,” said another.
  • Creeping arbitrariness and unpredictability: Attorneys report clients being held up at the border or turned away in some cases due to considerations that do not seem to be based in law or regulation. Denials are being issued in some cases filed by employers on behalf of professionals that previously would have been considered routine. Some agents of the federal government appear to believe it is now open season on cracking down, and to be acting accordingly. Officers are no longer required to defer to previous decisions when extensions are requested. An attorney reported an example of such decision-making: a “perfectly clean” request for a three-year L-1 worker was approved without an RFE for one year because “she is an employee at will, so only one year is allowed.” Another attorney reported similar treatment for Trade NAFTA clients at certain ports of entry. A third attorney said, “To me the top threat is something that affects everything we do—it is the sense (which is not universal but permeates the ranks) inside [the Departments of Homeland Security and State] that they have impunity and are not bound by the rule of law. Unless and until employers adopt a long-term view and sue—as opposed to the short-term approach of just refiling and hoping for a better result—the agencies are right.”
  • More and more demands for additional documents, interviews, and requests for evidence (RFEs): Among other things, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) is reportedly considering mandatory interviews for all applications to renew or replace green cards (Forms I-90). Interviews for petitions to remove conditions on residence for certain married couples (I-751) are already a “nightmare.” USCIS is phasing in interviews for adjustment of status applications based on employment, including for some who have already filed their applications. Executive orders are requiring visa applications and adjudications to be reviewed for compliance with “extreme vetting” and “Buy American/Hire American” policies, for both initial petitions and extensions. There has been a sharp uptick (45% compared to last year, according to USCIS) in RFEs on H-1B visa petitions for skilled workers.
  • Massive backlogs and delays in applications and petitions increasing as a result of the greater scrutiny, in some cases leading to disruptions in travel, work, and study plans.
  • Attorneys’ fees increasing as a result of the additional work.
  • An overall “brain drain” and reduction in quality employees as immigration decreases, deportations increase, and more and more people leave the United States for Canada or other countries perceived to be friendlier to immigration, or never apply to enter the United States in the first place.
  • Arbitrary caps on H-2B workers and lack of a returning worker exemption.
  • A lack of visa categories for unskilled workers who are not temporary (which constitutes about 75% of the entire workforce).
  • Denials of advance parole renewal requests filed by green card applicants if they leave the country.
  • Stress on employers as they find it harder to fill important positions in a timely manner or are accused of not wanting to hire U.S. workers when in some cases there are simply not enough U.S. workers qualified and available to take the jobs.
  • Stress on clients, including would-be immigrants and their families; family separation; stress on attorneys.
  • Travel restrictions on people from certain countries based on a new ban issued in September that the Supreme Court allowed to be put into effect while appeals run their course.
  • Ending temporary protected status for some (e.g., Nicaraguans and Haitians), and making it harder to designate or extend such status in the future.
  • A planned removal of the regulation allowing certain H-4 spouses of H-1B nonimmigrants to obtain employment authorization documents (EADs), with a notice of proposed rulemaking scheduled for February 2018. This is expected to result in lost filing fees and labor turnover costs for employers with workers on H-4 EADs.
  • A proposed electronic registration program for H-1B petitions subject to numerical restrictions, with a notice of proposed rulemaking considered for February 2018, along with possible further restrictions on H-1B visas.
  • A proposal to make it more difficult to obtain a J-1 waiver.
  • Privacy issues: As of the middle of fiscal year 2017, approximately 30,000 travelers had their electronic devices searched at the border or at ports of entry. This was three times the number searched in 2015.

Future Concerns

In addition to those noted above, future concerns include:

  • A planned revision (not yet described) of the definition of Specialty Occupation for H-1B workers and additional requirements for H-1B wages, with a notice of proposed rulemaking scheduled for October 2018.
  • Proposed new requirements for F and M students with respect to the practical training period, to include increased oversight of schools and participating students, with a notice of proposed rulemaking scheduled for October 2018.

Hopeful Signs

Although no one has a crystal ball and things look bleak overall for the foreseeable future on the immigration front, there are a few positive indications on the horizon. For example, according to reports, after conferring with President Trump, leaders in Congress are seriously considering introducing a measure in January 2018 to allow DACA “Dreamers” to stay in the United States. As of September 4, 2017, there were 689,821 people with valid DACA status in the country. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) was quoted in late December following a meeting with President Trump: “He wants to make a deal. He wants to fix the entire system.”

Also reportedly under serious consideration is meaningful EB-5 reform legislation, such as the Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act, which would allow some EB-5 investors to obtain immigrant visas more quickly because their place in the waiting line would no longer depend on the nation of chargeability. And USCIS began accepting applications again under the International Entrepreneur Rule in December, albeit temporarily while the agency drafts a notice of proposed rulemaking to quash it permanently.

Otherwise, some court challenges are either already working their way through the system (e.g., on the latest travel ban) or may be filed in the future.

Recommendations

In general, ABIL recommends that employers and employees consider:

  • Allowing much more time than before for the application/petition process. Posted processing times are not reliable. Several additional months may be required if there is an RFE or an unanticipated additional security check or other problem.
  • Filing a mandamus action in federal court to compel the agency to act if a case experiences extreme processing delays.
  • Not leaving the United States in the short term if status is in any way uncertain.
  • Contacting your ABIL attorney for advice and help in specific situations.
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ABIL Welcomes New Immigration Decision for National Interest Waiver Green Card Applicants

January 13, 2017/in News /by ABIL

One way to obtain a green card is to file a national interest waiver (NIW) application. Foreign nationals can qualify if they can show their work is in the national interest. There are two significant advantages to this immigration strategy: 1) a foreign national can self-petition rather than having to be sponsored by an employer; and 2) the submission is made directly to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), thereby avoiding the normal recruitment and advertising requirements of the labor certification application process through the Department of Labor. Despite its advantages, however, immigration examiners have operated under vague guidance on NIW adjudication standards.

The Administrative Appeals Office of USCIS (AAO) recently issued a precedent decision called Matter of Dhanasar that revises and expands the grounds for pursuing an NIW-based green card. This decision supersedes a previous 1998 decision called Matter of New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT).

Under the NYSDOT framework, a NIW case required fulfillment of 3 prongs: 1) the foreign national’s endeavor is national in scope; 2) the foreign national’s work is “intrinsically meritorious;” and 3) factors in the case outweigh the need to test the U.S. labor market through the labor certification application process. While prongs 1-2 were relatively straightforward, prong 3 led to uneven and at times contradictory NIW adjudications.

The improved analytical framework spelled out by the AAO in Matter of Dhanasar states: 1) the foreign national’s proposed endeavor has both substantial merit and national importance; 2) the foreign national is well-positioned to advance the proposed endeavor; and 3) on balance, it would be beneficial to the United States to waive the job offer and the labor certification application requirement.

This new analytical approach creates a clearer framework for adjudicating NIW cases. This decision implicitly recognizes that a broader range of endeavors by foreign nationals can contribute to the national welfare, which creates greater latitude for examiners to approve NIW cases that can establish “potential prospective impact” rather than concrete, existing results.

The Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers believes this new framework for NIW cases opens the door to permanent residence for an expanded range of foreign nationals, including junior scientists, postdoctoral scholars, and biomedical researchers; entrepreneurs involved in job creation; academic physicians; certain advanced-level graduate students, particularly those engaged in the STEM disciplines; certain artists operating at a national level; and a wide range of other professionals who contribute (or even prospectively contribute) to the national welfare.

PRESS RELEASE

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The Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers Supports Entrepreneurial Immigrants Such As Chobani’s Founder

November 03, 2016/in News /by ABIL

The United States has always prided itself as a nation of immigrants. ABIL believes that there has been disturbing rhetoric against immigrants and refugees in the current presidential election season. This has been exemplified in racist taunts and epithets against Hamdi Ulukaya, a Turkish immigrant of Kurdish descent, who is the founder of the highly successful Chobani business that makes Greek yogurt and employs about 2,000 people, some of whom are refugees. Chobani’s annual yogurt sales are $1.5 billion. According to a recent New York Times article, false stories have been published by right wing news outlets like Brietbart News and WND claiming that Mr. Ulukaya wants “to drown the United States in Muslims.” Some articles have also drawn a connection, again falsely, between Chobani hiring refugees and a spike in tuberculosis. This has led to unfortunate calls on Facebook and Twitter to boycott Chobani.

The Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers, better known as ABIL, condemns such xenophobic attacks against a successful immigrant entrepreneur who has created jobs in the United States. It is already difficult for a foreign entrepreneur to obtain legal status in the United States under the current broken immigration system, and to then be successful and create thousands of jobs. Mr. Ulukaya is a shining example of an immigrant entrepreneur who has overcome these obstacles to benefit the United States. “Foreign born entrepreneurs like Mr. Ulukaya must be welcomed rather than attacked in such a shameful and despicable manner,” ABIL’s President Steve Garfinkel stated. “These attacks go against the grain of what America represents – a nation that has always welcomed those to its shores who wish to better themselves and contribute to the country.”

Regardless of one’s party affiliation, ABIL strongly advocates that all immigrants be respected for the benefits they bring to the United States, whether as entrepreneurs or as hard working employees. ABIL also calls for urgent reform of the immigration system that can tap into the talents of more immigrants like Mr. Ulukaya who bring growth and prosperity to America.

PRESS RELEASE

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ABIL Submitted Comments to USCIS on the International Entrepreneur Rule

October 17, 2016/in News /by ABIL

On October 17, 2016, ABIL submitted comments to the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services on the International Entrepreneur Rule.

Download

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ABIL Submitted Comments on DOJ’s Proposed Regulation regarding Antidiscrimination

October 13, 2016/in News /by ABIL

On October 13, 2016, ABIL submitted comments to the Department of Justice on the proposed rulemaking entitled “Standards and Procedures for the Enforcement of the Immigration and Nationality Act.”

Download

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Prestigious Ranking Services Name Many Members of the Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers as Top Immigration Attorneys

September 03, 2016/in News /by ABIL

While immigration policy remains a topic of heated controversy in the presidential contest, the three most prestigious peer-review journals recently announced their annual ratings of the best immigration lawyers. All rating services agree that one group stands above the rest. Attorneys in the Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers, better known as ABIL, have received far more than the lion’s share of the top rankings — many more than the world’s largest immigration specialty firms.

Based on interviews by researchers who canvassed clients, in-house legal counsel, human resource professionals, and knowledgeable immigration lawyers, here are the findings of the three most respected rating services: Who’s Who Legal includes eight ABIL members in its “North American Corporate Immigration Lawyers” list of the ten “Most Highly Regarded” immigration lawyers; Chambers & Partners names 21 members of ABIL among their select U.S. immigration-law practitioners; and Legal 500 identifies seven ABIL members among the 37 leading US and UK immigration attorneys.

“Rarely does an alliance of lawyers achieve such predominance in a single practice area, especially in a field as complex and dysfunctional as immigration law,” said Angelo Paparelli, ABIL’s founder and past president. “Although ABIL is honored that so many of our lawyers have been recognized,” said Sharon Mehlman, ABIL’s President, “the real value flows to potential clients who can more easily identify the ‘best of the best.’”

“Immigration law is a mystery and a mastery of obfuscation and the lawyers who can figure it out are worth their weight in gold,” a former federal immigration official, Karen Kraushaar, once observed. Although the problems with the U.S.’s broken immigration system are now more perplexing than ever, at least the challenge of identifying extraordinarily talented immigration lawyers has been greatly simplified.

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News

  • BRAZIL: Accepting Work Authorization Applications Thorugh New Digital Certificate System
  • News from the Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers Vol. 15, No. 9D • September 22, 2019
  • News from the Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers Vol. 15, No. 9C • September 15, 2019
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