Who Needs Labor Certification: The Act requires that
labor certifications be obtained for persons immigrating
under the 2nd (professionals with advanced degrees
and persons with exceptional ability) and 3rd (skilled
workers, professionals and other workers) employment-based
categories.
Concurrent filing of I-140 and I-485
Effective July 31, 2002, INS has published an interim
rule allowing the
concurrent filing of I-140 immigrant petitions and I-485 adjustment of
status applications. Under the proposed rule, applications for
employment authorization and advance parole will also be accepted.
LIFE Act : Adjustment of Status Under Revived Section
245(i)
Alien labor certification programs are designed to
assure that the admission of aliens to work in this
country on a permanent or temporary basis will not
adversely affect the job opportunities, wages and working
conditions of U.S. workers. With few exceptions, these
five programs are jointly administered by the U.S.
DOL Employment and Training Administration and the
State Employment Security Agencies (SESAs).
The employment-based preferences
are as follows:
* The employment-based 1st preference
is divided into three categories: aliens with
extraordinary ability, outstanding professors and
researchers, and certain multinational executives
and managers.
* The employment-based 2nd preference
is divided into two categories: aliens who are members
of the professions holding advanced degrees, or aliens
of exceptional ability in the sciences, arts or business.
* The employment-based 3rd preference
is divided into three categories: skilled workers,
professionals, and other workers.
* The employment-based 4th preference
is for religious workers including ministers of religion;
professionals working in religious vocations or occupations;
and other workers in religious vocations or occupations
that work for US nonprofit religious organizations
or at nonprofit religious organizations affiliated
with qualified religious denominations.
* The employment-based 5th preference
(investment visa) is for those aliens who have invested,
or are actively investing capital in a new commercial
enterprise in the United States which will create
full-time positions for not fewer than 10 qualifying
employees. The amount of the investment must be at
least one million dollars, unless the investment
is in a targeted employment area, in which case the
investment can be $500,000.
EMPLOYMENT BASED RESIDENCY AND
OFFERS OF EMPLOYMENT: There are five
(5) immigrant visa categories available to aliens
who wish to come to the United States for the
principal purpose of employment. These are known
as the employment-based 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and
5th preference categories. This section will
discuss the first three of these categories.
The 4th employment-based category, religious
workers, is discussed later. The 5th employment-based
category, permanent resident investors, is also
discussed later.
The vast majority of persons obtaining
permanent residence in the United States through
employment do so in one of the first three employment-based
categories. The employment-based 1st preference,
also known as the priority worker category, is divided
into three groups. Preference category EB1(1) is
for aliens with extraordinary ability. This is an
alien with a level of expertise showing that the
person is one of that small percentage who has risen
to the very top of endeavor. The petition filed for
an alien of extraordinary ability must be accompanied
by proof that the alien has sustained national or
international acclaim and that his or her achievements
have been recognized in the field of expertise. The
regulations set forth the type of documentation that
must be submitted as proof of this achievement.
Neither an offer of employment in
the United States nor a labor certification is needed
for this classification; however, the petition must
be accompanied by clear proof that the alien is coming
to the United States to continue work in expertise.
Preference category EB1(2) is
for those aliens who are outstanding professors and
researchers, and who have an offer of employment
from a prospective United States employer. A labor
certification is not needed for this classification.
A petition for an outstanding professor
or researcher must be accompanied by proof that the
professor or researcher is recognized internationally
as outstanding in the academic field specified in
the petition. The regulations set forth what type
of proof must be submitted to meet these criteria.
The EB1(3) category is for certain
multinational executives and managers. These are
persons who have been admitted to the United States
to work in, and who are currently working in, managerial
or executive positions with the same international
corporations or organizations which they were continuously
employed as managers or executives outside the United
States for at least one out of the three years before
they were admitted; and aliens outside the United
States who will be engaged in the United States in
managerial or executive positions with the same international
corporations or organizations which they have been
continuously employed as managers or executives outside
the United States for at least one of the immediately
preceding three years. The terms manager and executive
are more thoroughly defined in the regulations. It
should be noted that these provisions provide for
a waiver of the labor certification requirement.
To qualify for this waiver, the US business must
have been in operation and doing business for at
least one year before the filing of the waiver application.
As stated above, no labor certification is needed
for this classification; however, the prospective
employer in the United States must furnish a job
offer as a statement that shows that the alien is
to be hired in the United States in a managerial
or executive capacity. Such letter must clearly describe
the duties to be done by the alien.
The employment-based 2nd preference
category(EB2)is for aliens who are members
of the professions holding advanced degrees, or aliens
of exceptional ability. Advanced degree means
any United States academic or professional degree
or a foreign equivalent degree above that of baccalaureate.
The United States baccalaureate degree or a foreign
equivalent degree followed by at least five (5) years
of progressive experience in a specialty occupation
shall be considered the equivalent of a master's
degree.
Exceptional ability
in the sciences, arts, or business means a level
of expertise greatly above that ordinarily encountered
in the sciences, arts, or business. Profession
means one of the occupations listed in Section
101(a)(32) of the Act, as well as any occupation
for which a United States baccalaureate degree
or its foreign equivalent is the minimum requirement
for entry into the occupation. The regulations set
forth the type of documentation needed to establish
that the alien has the required degree or that the
alien is of exceptional ability in the sciences,
arts, or business. Every petition under this classification
must be accompanied by an individual labor certification
from the Department of Labor, or the Immigration
Service may exempt the requirement of a job offer,
and of a labor certification, for aliens of exceptional
ability in the sciences, arts, or business if such
an exemption would be in the national interest. To
apply for this exemption the alien must submit weighty
proof to support the claim that such exemption would
be in the national interest.
The employment-based 3rd preference
category (EB3) is divided into three areas: skilled
workers, professionals, and unskilled workers.
A "skilled worker" means an
alien who is capable, at the time of petitioning
for the classification, of performing skilled labor
(calling for at least two (2) years training or experience),
not of a temporary or seasonal nature, for which
qualified workers are not available in the United
States. Relevant post-secondary education may be
considered as training for this provision.
"Professional" means a
qualified alien who holds at least a United States
baccalaureate degree or a foreign equivalent degree
and who is a member of the professions.
"Other worker" (unskilled)
means a qualified alien who is capable, at the time
of petitioning for the classification, of performing
unskilled labor (needing less than two (2) years
training or experience), not of a temporary or seasonal
nature, for which qualified workers are not available
in the United States.
Every petition under the employment-based
3rd preference category must be accompanied by an
individual labor certification from the Department
of Labor. In addition, the alien must submit documentation
to support his or her claim to the education and
/or experience requirements of the labor certification.
NOTE: It is extremely important to
try to classify the alien as a skilled, versus an
unskilled worker. The approval time for a skilled
worker application may take only one to two years,
while an unskilled worker application may take ten
years for final approval, because of the different
waiting lists for each category.
To qualify for a labor certification,
the alien needs a US employer who is willing to file
an application on his or her behalf. The application
is filed with the Labor Department in the area where
the alien will be employed. The Labor Department
regulations are quite lengthy, and often cumbersome.
They require that the employer advertise the position
sought in a professional journal, or for a period
of three (3) consecutive days in a local newspaper
of general circulation. In addition, a notice of
the job opportunity must be posted at the employer's
place of business, and the job must be listed with
the proper office of the state employment service.
The purpose of this recruitment effort
is to establish whether there is any US worker qualified
and available for the position, and that the wage
being offered the alien is the "prevailing wage" for
that type of position in that area of the country.
If US workers are qualified and available, or if
the offered wage is too low, the Department of Labor
will not approve the application for a labor certification.
If the application is approved, a
labor certification is issued, and the employer may
then file a petition with the immigration service
to classify the beneficiary in the proper employment
category. If the application is denied, the employer
may file an appeal to the Board of Alien Labor Certification
Appeals in Washington, DC.
Each of the above EB1, EB2, and EB3
petitions must be filed on immigration form I-140,
Petition for Immigrant Worker. This must be filed
with the Immigration Service Center that has jurisdiction
over the alien's intended employment. The documentation
needed to be submitted with the petition is outlined
in the regulations.
PERMANENT RESIDENT INVESTORS
The employment-based 5th preference
category, also known as employment- creation visas,
is available to those investors who have invested,
or are investing, lawfully obtained capital in a
new commercial enterprise employing at least 10 full-time
US workers. The amount of the investment must be
at least one million dollars, unless the investment
is to be in a targeted employment area, in which
case the investment need only be five hundred thousand
dollars.
To qualify as an immigrant investor,
the alien must invest in a new commercial enterprise.
This can be done by starting a new business; by purchasing
and restructuring a new business; by expanding and
substantially changing the net worth or number of
employees in a business; or by investing in a troubled
business, so that there is a forty percent increase
in the net worth or in the number of employees of
the business.
Commercial enterprise means any for-profit
activity formed for the conduct of lawful business
including, but not limited to, a sole proprietorship,
partnership, holding company, joint venture, corporation,
business trust, or other entity which may be publicly
or privately owned. This definition includes a commercial
enterprise consisting of a holding company and its
wholly owned subsidiaries, if such subsidiary is
engaged in a for-profit activity formed for the ongoing
conduct of a lawful business.
Capital means cash, equipment, inventory,
other tangible property, cash equivalents, and indebtedness
secured by assets owned by the alien entrepreneur,
provided that the alien entrepreneur is personally
and primarily liable and that the assets of the new
commercial enterprise upon which the petition is
based are not used to secure any of the indebtedness.
All capital shall be valued at fair market value
in United States dollars. Assets acquired, directly
or indirectly, by unlawful means (such as criminal
activities) shall not be considered capital for purposes
of the Act.
To qualify in the EB5 category, the
investment must create full-time employment for at
least 10 US citizens, lawful permanent residents,
or other immigrants lawfully authorized to be employed
in the United States. While an investor may employ
his family members in the new enterprise, the spouse
and children do not count toward the 10-employee
minimum. Employee means an individual who provides
services or labor for the new commercial enterprise
and who receives wages or other remuneration directly
from the new commercial enterprise. This definition
does not include independent contractors. Full- time
employment means employment of a qualifying employee
by the new commercial enterprise in a position that
requires a minimum of 35 working hours per week.
As stated previously, the investment
must be $1 million unless the investment is in what
is known as a "targeted area." A "target area" is
defined as a rural area or an area that has experienced
high unemployment. An area not within a metropolitan
statistical area or the outer boundary of any city
or town having a population of 20,000 or more is
considered a rural area. The Department of Commerce
of each state publishes a list of its targeted areas,
and should be contacted in order to obtain a copy.
The actual evidence required to establish
the amount and type of investment is quite substantial,
and is outlined in great detail in the regulations.
In order to deter investor/employment
creation visa fraud, the law provides for a two-year
conditional permanent residence status. If, at the
end of two years, no fraud is found in the petition
process, the conditions will be removed and permanent
residence will be granted.
A petition for employment creation
aliens is filed on immigration form I- 526, Immigrant
Petition for Alien Entrepreneur. This petition must
be filed with the immigration service center having
jurisdiction over the place of the proposed investment.
When the petition is approved, the alien, together
with the spouse and unmarried minor children, will
file their applications for immigrant visas at a
US consulate if they are outside of the United States,
or will file for adjustment of status with the Immigration
Service if they are in the United States and eligible
for adjustment of status.
OTHER METHODS FOR PERMANENT
RESIDENCE-- RELIGIOUS WORKERS/VISA LOTTERY/REGISTRY/LULAC/CSS
CASES
This section will discuss additional
ways of obtaining permanent residence in the United
States. One way is under the employment-based 4th
preference category (EB4), which is for religious
workers. A petition under this preference category
may be filed by or for an alien, who (either abroad
or in the United States) for at least the two years
preceding the filing of the petition has been a member
of a religious denomination that has a bona fide
nonprofit religious organization in the United States.
The alien must be coming to the United States solely
for carrying on the vocation of a minister of that
religious denomination, working for the organization
at the organization's request in a professional capacity
in a religious vocation or occupation, or working
at a religious vocation or occupation for the organization
or a bona fide organization which is affiliated with
a religious denomination and is exempt from taxation
as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3)
of the Internal Revenue Code, at the request of the
organization. All three types of religious workers
must have been performing the vocation, professional
work, or other work continuously (either abroad or
in the United States) for at least the two-year period
immediately preceding the filing of the petition.
(NOTE: Petitions for religious professionals and
other religious workers must be filed on or before
September 30, 2000.)
A petition for a religious worker
is filed on immigration form I-360, and is filed
with the immigration service center that has jurisdiction
over the area where the alien will be employed. When
the petition is approved, the alien, with the spouse
and unmarried minor children, can file their applications
for immigrant visas with a US consul if they are
outside the United States, or they can file for adjustment
of status with the immigration service if they are
in the United States and are eligible for adjustment
of status.
Another method for getting permanent
residence is through the diversity, or visa lottery
program, also known as the DV-1 program. Each year
55,000 visas are allocated on a random basis to persons
who might not otherwise be eligible to obtain permanent
residence in the United States. An alien shall be
eligible to compete for consideration for visa issuance
during a fiscal year only if he or she is a native
of a low-admission foreign state, as decided by the
Attorney General, for the fiscal year in question;
and if he or she has at least a high school education
or its equivalent or, within the five years preceding
the date of application for a visa, has two years
of work experience in an occupation needing at least
two years training or experience.
The application process is held once
a year. No more than one petition may be submitted
by, or for, any alien for consideration during any
single fiscal year. If two or more petitions for
any single fiscal year are submitted by, or for,
any alien, then all such petitions shall be void
and the alien shall not be eligible for consideration
for visa issuance during the fiscal year in question.
Any alien eligible for consideration
shall file his or her petition with the Department
of State according to the instructions in the application
notice. These instructions can be somewhat complicated
and confusing. However, our web site does provide
a complete applications package that explains in
detail the entire application process including a
sample completed application form. We also provide
you with detailed instructions on where and when
to file the application, as it must be received by
the State Department within a very specific time
frame. We also provide full instructions on the high
school and prior employment requirements.
Registry is a provision in
section 249 of the Immigration and Nationality Act.
It provides that a person may be granted permanent
residence in the United States if he or she can prove
that they have resided in this country continuously
since before January 1, 1972. Departures from the
United States during this time will not prevent permanent
residence as long as they are not so lengthy as to
be an abandonment of residence.
To qualify for registry, the alien
must show that he or she is a person of good moral
character, is not inadmissible to the US as a criminal,
procurer, subversive, narcotics law violator, or
alien smuggler, and must not be ineligible for citizenship.
The application is filed on immigration form I-485,
with biographic form G-325A, photographs, proper
filing fees for the application and fingerprints,
and proof that the person has resided continuously
in the United States since before 1972. No medical
exam is needed.
If the application is approved, the
alien is granted lawful permanent residence status
from the date of the interview. If the application
is denied, the applicant may renew the application
for registry in removal proceedings before an immigration
judge.
The LULAC and CSS programs:
In 1986, the Congress of the United States passed
an amnesty law allowing aliens who had resided continuously
and illegally in the United States, without interruption
since before January 1, 1982, to apply for permanent
residence status. However, one of the law's provisions
provided that the application had to be filed before
November 6, 1988. The immigration service refused
to accept applications from those persons who had
left the United States before or during the required
period, though they had later reentered the United
States to again assume an unlawful status in this
country. Some of these denied applicants filed suit
in federal court seeking the right to file their
applications, although the time for filing had by
that time passed. The courts in California, in the
LULAC and CSS cases, agreed with the aliens, and
allowed them to file their applications late. The
immigration service has appealed these decisions,
and these appeals have gone as high as the US Supreme
Court. The Supreme Court sent the cases back to the
lower courts for them to consider the issues again.
Meanwhile, these aliens have work authorization,
and they may get permission to travel outside the
United States for emergency reasons, however, they
do not have permanent residence status, and their
future chance of success looks grim.
The immigration service has filed
motions to dismiss these cases, relying on the Supreme
Court decision, as well as the recently enacted Immigration
Act of 1996, and a decision on these motions is now
undecided. If the courts finally reject the aliens'
cases, these groups (totaling nearly 400,000 persons)
will be left in an unlawful status in the United
States. Since their outlook is not good, many legal
advocates suggest that they seek some other method
of getting lawful status in the United States.