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Department of Homeland Security Finalizing Plan to Collect Fingerprints or Eye Scans from International Travelers Exiting the U.S.

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The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is finishing up its
proposal to collect either fingerprints or eye scans from all
international travelers at U.S. airports as the travelers leave the
U.S. This new plan, which would be in effect in two years, would enable
the U.S. government to track the 35 million international visitors that
leave the country each year, including visitors who may have overstayed
their visas. DHS expects the proposal will be submitted to the White
House for review and approval by next month.

The proposal has caused concern, especially from those in the airline
industry. Originally, the program would have required airlines to pay
for the majority of the costs of the program; however, DHS now says it
may remove that requirement. The program is expected to cost between $1
and $2 billion over a ten year period; a large portion of the costs
will most likely now be paid by taxpayers and international travelers.
Additionally, the program would not track international visitors
leaving the U.S. at land borders, because of additional costs and
associated delays in commerce and transactions. Eighty percent of
international travelers depart the U.S. from land borders.

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USCIS Posts Update of the Amount of H-1B Petitions Received

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USCIS recently posted an update of the amount of H-1B petitions the
federal agency has received. As of October 25, 2009, roughly 52,800
H-1B cap-subject petitions and 20,000 H-1B petitions that qualify for
the advanced degree cap exemption have been filed with USCIS. A total
of 65,000 H-1B visas are available for this fiscal year under the
current annual cap limitations. USCIS comments that it will continue to
accept cap-subject and advanced degree petitions until it has received
enough H-1B petitions to fulfill the limits posed by regulations.

In previous years, USCIS received large amounts of H-1B petitions. In
many cases the agency stopped accepting these petitions days or weeks
after the initial acceptance date. This year, however, due to the
economic recession, the amount of filed petitions is much lower. On
April 17, 2009, in their first public notification about this year’s
H-1B program, USCIS announced they had received roughly 43,000 H-1B
petitions and 20,000 that qualified for the advanced degree cap
exemption.

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USCIS Posts Video to Explain Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) Program

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USCIS launched a new video on its Web site this week that provides a
review of the federal agency’s Systematic Alien Verification for
Entitlements (SAVE) program. The new video, available online at
www.uscis.gov/SAVE, describes the process of immigration status
verification and, additionally, provides information about how federal,
state and local agencies (that provide benefits) can apply for
participation in the SAVE program.

SAVE is a program that helps benefit-granting agencies determine an
applicant’s immigration status. SAVE ensures that only applicants with
a verifiable immigration status receive federal, state, or local public
benefits and licenses. SAVE checks applicants’ immigration status
against millions of recorded federal database records. Over 300
agencies have enrolled in the SAVE program, to date.

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Updates

USCIS Extends Grace Period for Previous Versions of Form G-28

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The USCIS form G-28, the Notice of Entry of Appearance as Attorney or
Accredited Representative, was updated by USCIS on April 22, 2009. At
that time, the form contained an ‘N’ designation; this means that no
previous editions of the form will be accepted. However, USCIS has
decided to extend the grace period for accepting previous versions of
Form G-28, while it continues to refine the current version of the
form.

USCIS expects to complete the revision of its current form shortly.
Until that time, the federal agency will not reject filings submitted
with older versions of the form.

The April 22 version of Form G-28 is available for download at the following URL:

http://www.uscis.gov/USCIS/New%20Structure/2nd%20Level%20(Left%20Nav%20Parents)/Forms%20-%202nd%20Level/Forms%20Static%20Files/g-28.pdf