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Updates

USCIS Updates Series of Immigration Forms

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Last week, USCIS made a series of updates to key forms. Forms included in this series of updates include the following:

  • Form I-865, the Sponsor’s Notice of Change of Address form. New edition dated 07/17/15.
  • Form I-601A, the Application for Provisional Unlawful Presence Waiver form. New edition dated 07/08/15.
  • Form I-212, the Application for Permission to Reapply for Admission into the United States After Deportation or Removal form. New edition dated 06/30/15.
  • Form I-90, the Application to Replace Permanent Resident Card form. New edition dated 06/30/15.
  • Form I-612, the Application for Waiver of the Foreign Residence Requirement form (under Section 212(e) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, as Amended). New edition dated 06/22/2015.
  • Form G-884, Return of Original Documents. New edition dated 06/15/15. You can use previous editions of this form.

 

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Updates

Certain DACA Recipients May Be Required to Return EADs Immediately

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USCIS informs DACA recipients that there is a three-year work permit recall that applies to some people who have received a card after the February 16, 2015, court order. If you received a letter or were contacted by USCIS regarding the recall of certain three-year work permits, you are required to immediately return your three-year work permit, which is also known as an Employment Authorization Document (EAD), to your local USCIS office.

If you fail to return your EAD, USCIS will terminate your DACA status and all employment authorizations connected to that status, effective July 31, 2015.

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Updates

USCIS Clarifies Candidate Eligibility to Modify Oath of Allegiance

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New guidance provided by USCIS clarifies eligibility requirements for modification of the Oath of Allegiance. Reciting the Oath of Allegiance is part of the naturalization process. As part of the oath, candidates for citizenship typically declare that they will ‘bear arms on behalf of the United States’ and ‘perform noncombatant services in the Armed Forces of the United States’ when required by law.

Candidates may be eligible to exclude these two clauses in certain instances. A candidate may be eligible to exclude the clauses based on religious training and belief, or conscientious objection arising from a deeply held moral or ethical reason. The candidate is not required to belong to a specific church or religion, follow a particular theology or belief or have had specific religious training to qualify. The candidate may submit, but is not required to provide, an attestation from a religious or similar organization, as well as other evidence to establish his or her eligibility.

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Updates

USCIS Completes Processing of Petitions Not Selected for FY16 H-1B Program

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USCIS announced last week that it has completed processing the return of fiscal year 2016 H-1B cap-subject petitions that were not selected in its computer-generated random selection process. USCIS had previously announced on May 4, 2015, that it had completed data entry of all selected cap-subject petitions.
Any applicant who submitted an H-1B cap-subject petition between April 1 and April 7, 2015, and has not yet received a receipt notice or returned petition by July 20, 2015, should contact USCIS directly.

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Updates

Customs and Border Protection Starts Enhanced Mobile Testing of Biometric Data at Atlanta Airport

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U.S. Customs and Border Protection has started testing a new, enhanced mobile device to collect biometric data from a small set of foreign national air travelers leaving the U.S. at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport. Officers of CBP will compare biometric data collected via this handheld device to the biometric data collected when the foreign traveler entered the U.S.

“CBP is relentless in its pursuit of new and innovative technology that will assist officers in their efforts to provide national security and efficiently facilitate trade and travel through our nation’s ports of entry,” said Office of Field Operations Assistant Commissioner Todd Owen. “Thorough testing will ensure that we deploy the right technology in a way that enhances security, protects privacy and improves the process.”

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Global Pinoy

Obama to Use Parole Power to Reunite Family Members of WWII Veterans

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On July 15, 2015, the White House report on “Modernizing and Streamlining our Immigration System for the 21st Century” was released to the public. One of the major recommendations in the report is the use of the “parole” power to reunite family members with the Filipino World War II veterans. What is the nature of this parole power? Who will possibly benefit from this recommendation?

In the early 90s, thousands of Filipino veterans filed petitions for their family members. The purpose for filing the petitions is for the veterans to be reunited with their adult children.

Unfortunately, with only 226,000 a year limit on the number of family based petitions, there are 4.2 million approved petitions that are in the pipeline and awaiting for the priority dates to become current. Unlike other new immigrants who file their petitions for their children, the Filipino veterans were in their late 70s and early 80s when they were granted naturalization. The opportunity to apply for U.S. citizenship was only given to them through the enactment of the Immigration Nationality Act of 1990. Since they are elderly petitioners and with the lengthy petitioning process, it is not surprising that the   veteran dies before the priority date of the family petition becomes current. When the petitioner dies, the petition dies as well resulting in loss of opportunity for the beneficiary child to immigrate to the United States. This is often the sad plight of most Filipino veterans and their families.

President Obama issued a Memorandum in December 2014 seeking comments from various agencies and groups on ways to improve the immigration system. To address the predicament of veterans being separated from their family, a group of veterans’ advocates and the Asian Americans Advancing Justice sent a detailed memorandum to the interagency task forced charged with recommending areas of improvement in the legal system. One of the recommendations is for President Obama to exercise his power to parole children of World War II veterans who are waiting in the backlog to live and work in the United States while they await for their immigrant visas.

Parole refers to an official permission for an otherwise inadmissible non-U.S. citizen to legally enter the United States temporarily. This includes those required to have a visa to visit or immigrate to the United States who are unable to obtain one, either due to ineligibility, inadmissibility or urgent circumstances that make it impractical to apply for one.

The Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security has the sole discretionary authority to parole a non-U.S. citizen into the United States temporarily for urgent humanitarian reasons or for a significant public benefit. In the recently released White House report, the recommendation is for DHS to create a parole program for family members of Filipino veterans who wish to provide support and care to their Filipino veteran parents who are U.S. citizens or green card holders. The regulation to implement this program has not yet been published but the decisions to parole clearly will be made on a case-by-case basis.

(Atty. Lourdes S. Tancinco may be reached at law@tancinco.com, facebook.com/tancincolaw, tancinco.weareph.com/old or (02)721-1963)

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Updates

USCIS Resumes Accepting Premium Processing Applications for H-1B Extensions of Stay

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On July 13, 2015, USCIS resumed accepting requests for premium processing for all H-1B extension of stay petitions. Premium processing requests for Form I-129, the Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker, extension of stay petitions received by USCIS prior to July 13, 2015 will be rejected.

USCIS previously announced on May 19, 2015, that it would suspend premium processing for Form I-129 H-1B extension of stay requests from May 26, 2015, to July 27, 2015. This temporary suspension allowed USCIS to implement the Employment Authorization for Certain H-4 Dependent Spouses final rule in a temply manner.

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Global Pinoy

The Minor Child and the Opportunity for a “Following to Join” Visa

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The process for petitioning minor children by green card holder parents is not as expeditious compared to petitions filed by U.S. citizen parents. Minor children of green card holders fall under the second preference category and may be issued visas at a later time depending on the movement of priority dates. To avoid waiting for several years until the priority date becomes current, the minor children may travel to the United States by applying for the  “following to join” visa. How can a minor child apply for this visa and what are its limitations?

Jose, a lawful permanent resident, petitioned Mariana as a single daughter over 21 years old. Mariana is not married but she has two children David and Joanna from her live-in partner, Mark. When Mariana’s visa became current, she immigrated to the United States alone. The children remained in the Philippines to finish high school and stayed with Mark until Mariana was financially capable of supporting the children. Mariana has been in the United States for five years and wants her children, now ages 17 and 19, to come to the United States.  However, Jose recently passed away. Can the children still qualify as following-to-join derivatives on Mariana’s petition by her father, or does she need to file new petitions for her children?

Derivative Children

In general, minor children of green card holders under the age of 21 qualify as “derivative” children/beneficiaries and have the same priority date as the principal applicant or the person who was originally petitioned. These derivative beneficiaries exist in cases where there is an original petition under any of the preference categories listing the children as beneficiaries of the principal applicant. Derivative means that the minor children are included in the principal applicant’s original petition. If the derivative children decide not to travel with their green card holder parent to the United States within 6 months, they will be eligible for following-to-join benefits at a future time.

There is no time limit to following-to-join but there are specific instances that will bar them from receiving following to join visas as derivatives. If the child ages-out or marries before immigrating, the child is no longer eligible and the original applicant, now the green card holder parent, will need to file a new petition for the child and establish a new priority date. The parent must remain a lawful permanent resident and must remain eligible for the same preference category in order for the children to be eligible for following-to-join benefits. If the parent becomes a US citizen, the following-to-join benefits for the minor children are lost. Furthermore, if the parent entered the United States as single, with minor children, and later marries before the children follow-to-join, the children are not eligible to immigrate because the principal beneficiary is no longer in the same preference category.

In Mariana’s case, her children still qualify as following-to-join derivative children despite the death of the petitioner because they are under the age of 21 and Mariana is still a lawful permanent resident and unmarried.  Even though Mariana’s father passed away, the children are eligible for following-to-join benefits because the factors establishing the benefits still exist. The option to apply for a ‘following to join’ visa will always be a better option than re-filing a fresh new petition under the second preference.

(Atty. Lourdes S. Tancinco may be reached at law@tancinco.com, tancinco.weareph.com/old , facebook/tancincolaw, or at 02-721-1963)

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Updates

USCIS Creates New Spanish-Language Resources

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The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced that new resources are now available in Spanish. USCIS describes these changes as, “strengthening its commitment to the Spanish-speaking community.”

The new resources include a USICS Facebook page in Spanish, a Twitter account in Spanish and a blog called USCIS Compás. The blog will include general news as well as feature stories relevant to the Hispanic community.