Categories
Updates

FAQs on Trump’s Proclamation Suspending Immigration

Share this:

President Trump issued a proclamation “Suspending Entry of Immigrants Who Present Risk to the U.S. Labor Market During the Economic Recovery Following the COVID-19 Outbreak.” This proclamation became effective on April 23, 2020 and will expire 60 days from its effective date.

1. Who is covered by the Proclamation?
The ban applies to any individual seeking to enter the United States as an immigrant who is outside of the United States on April 23, 2020 and does not have a valid immigrant visa on the effective date, and is not in possession of a valid travel documents (such as a transportation letter, boarding foidl or advance parole document) effective on or after the date of the temporary suspension.

Those severely affected are those outside the United States who are immigrant applicants.

2. Who are exempt from the suspension of immigration?
Among others, these are the categories of individuals who are not affected by the Proclamation:

  • Those adjusting status in the United States.
  • Green card holders or immigrant visa holders at the time of the proclamation. If an individual is already in possession of an immigrant visa or green card before the Proclamation, they can still travel back to the United States.
  • Those with temporary travel documents can still enter the U.S. Examples are individuals in possession of transportation letters issued by the U.S. Embassy, re-entry permits and advance parole issued by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)
  • Health care workers, professionals and other essential medical workers alleviating the effects of COVID-19 are exempt
  • Temporary visa holders such as tourists, student visa holders and working visa holders. They can still enter the U.S. if their visas are still valid.
  • Minor children (below 21 years old) and spouses of U.S. citizens may still continue to be processed for their immigrant visas and travel to the U.S.

3.  A tourist visa holder plans to visit his U.S. citizen parent during this pandemic, will he still be allowed to enter the United States?
Yes. As long as the tourist visa is still valid, the traveler may still enter the United States as tourist visa holders are non-immigrant visa holders that are not covered by the Proclamation.

4. Are other non-immigrant visas such as student visa holders or those with working visas still allowed to enter?
Yes. As long as the student visa and working visa holders have valid visas, they will still be considered and permitted to enter the United States. For those with working visas, considering the COVID-19 pandemic, they have to make sure that they still have jobs from their U.S. employers to avoid the technicality of having the working visa be declared void. This refers to working visas that are employer specific such as the professional H1B visas.

5. A beneficiary of an approved visa petition was issued a printed immigrant visa on his passport after an interview with the consular officer at the U.S. Embassy. He was not able to enter travel to the U.S. yet and now wants to plan on going to the U.S. He is afraid that the Trump Proclamation will apply to him and would result in his inability to travel to the U.S. Will this individual be prevented from entering the United States because of the Proclamation?
No. The Proclamation does not affect those who are in possession of immigrant visas. Although he has not received his actual green card, he is considered to have gone through a completed process for him to be considered as an immigrant visa holder, hence, he can travel to the United States.

6. If the individual who was issued an immigrant visa by the U.S. Embassy is not ready to travel to the United States during this COVID-19 pandemic, will he risk losing his immigrant visa by revocation?
No. Valid immigrant visas issued before the proclamation and that were not used for travel will not be revoked under this Proclamation. This was confirmed by the Department of States.

7. An adjustment of status applicant left the United States for a temporary visit abroad, will this adjustment applicant be able to return with his advance parole document ?
Yes. An advance parole is considered as a travel document not covered by the Proclamation, hence this individual may travel back to the U.S. using his advance parole document.

8. A lawful permanent resident plans to file a visa petition for his minor children, will he be permitted to file a visa petition with the USCIS?
Yes, lawful permanent residents may still file for visa petitions on behalf of their minor children. What the Proclamation prohibits is the issuance of visas for these individuals. The proclamation exempts only minor children and spouses of U.S. citizens.

9. A visa petition was approved for a parent of a U.S. citizen. The parent was already interviewed before the Proclamation effectivity date of April 23, 2020 but no visa has been issued yet. Can this parent follow up on the issuance of his visa and travel to the United States?
No. Clearly under the Proclamation, parents of U.S. citizens who have not been issued visas or are not in possession of visas and may not be allowed to immigrate for 60 days from April 23, 2020. They are covered by the Proclamation and are not exempt from the ban.

10. Following up on question number 9, what if the parent of a U.S. citizen has a valid tourist visa, can he travel on a tourist visa?
While tourist visas are not covered by the Proclamation, an immigrant visa applicant especially one who was already interviewed by the consular officer may risk being denied entry to the U.S. not based on the Proclamation but as an intending immigrant.

Categories
Updates

Congress Introduces Bills Adding More Visas for Foreign Nurses and Doctors

Share this:

The “Healthcare Workforce Resilience Act” was introduced in the House on May 8, 2020 and in the Senate (S.3599) on May 5, 2020 to help address the healthcare shortage in the United States which has become critical during the COVID-19 pandemic. If passed into law, it would cut waiting time for nurses and doctors with approved visa petitions. In summary, it will:

  1. Authorize the recapturing of 25,000 immigrant visas for provisional nurses and 15,000 immigrant visas for physicians.
  2. Visas will be issued according to priority dates regardless of the per country limitations
  3. The Department of States (through the U.S. Embassies) and the Department of Homeland Security (through the USCIS) to expedite the processing of their visas

This proposed legislation will allow nurses with approved immigrant visas and physicians with approved immigrant petitions to come to the United States and work in hospitals and medical facilities where there is a shortage of nurses or unfilled positions. This is the reason also why one of the provisions requires the petitioners of the approved petition must attest that in hiring the professional nurse a U.S. worker has not or will not be displaced.

Categories
Updates

What Trump’s Latest Proclamation Suspending Immigration Means to Our Families?

Share this:

President Trump issued a proclamation “Suspending Entry of Immigrants Who Present Risk to the U.S. Labor Market During the Economic Recovery Following the COVID-19 Outbreak.” This proclamation became effective on April 23, 2020 and will expire 60 days from its effective date and may be continued.

Coverage and Exemptions

Those severely affected are those outside the United States who are immigrant applicants. It does not affect those adjusting status in the United States. There are several exemptions to the Proclamation, among these categories are:

  1. Green card holders or immigrant visa holders at the time of the proclamation. If an individual is already in possession of an immigrant visa or green card before the Proclamation, they can still travel back to the United States.
  2. Those with temporary travel documents can still enter the U.S. Examples are individuals in possession of transportation letters issued by the U.S. Embassy, re-entry permits and advance parole issued by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)
  3. Health care workers, professionals and other essential medical workers alleviating the effects of COVID-19 are exempt
  4. Temporary visa holders such as tourists, student visa holders and working visa holders. They can still enter the U.S. if their visas are still valid.
  5. Minor children (below 21 years old) and spouses of U.S. citizens may still continue to be processed for their immigrant visas and travel to the U.S.

Families of Immigrants Severely Affected

There are three categories of family members adversely impacted by this Proclamation.

First on the list are the parents of U.S. citizens and preference categories beneficiaries of petitions filed by green card holders and U.S. citizens.

The parents of U.S. citizens should have been considered as immediate relatives of U.S. citizens and should have been included in the exemption. The goal of the proclamation as stated is to protect U.S. workers, but how are parents of U.S. citizens a threat or in competition with U.S. workers?On the contrary ,should they not be immigrating right now to allow them to assist in caring for their grandchildren especially during this time of COVID-19 pandemic? U.S. citizens parents, with minor children who are still in school, are shuffling between engaging in essential work (such as the health care workers)or work from home and taking care of their children’s online schooling. The presence of a grandparent or any additional member of the family will be beneficial to a typical immigrant household.

Second category of those affected are families of U.S. citizens who are adults, married or unmarried, their siblings and families of lawful permanent residents who are spouses, minor or adult unmarried children. This group of visa applicants will have their visa processing outside the U.S.suspended as a result of this Proclamation. But take note that these are the relatives who have waited for many years, some for more than 2 decades, to be reunited with their families. Considering the lengthy delay before visas become available, the majority of the petitioners are now elderly citizens. It is these elderly U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents who actually need the company of their adult children during this COVID-19 epidemic. Depriving them family reunification at a critical time when they are needed most is certainly detrimental given the importance of family to the immigrants.

The third and last category of immigrants affected are the minor children who are aging out. The Child Status Protection Act (CSPA) may protect certain minor children from aging out but several categories of aging out children may not qualify under the CSPA. With the Proclamation suspending immigration of those in the preference categories, minor children who aged out will be rendered ineligible as minor children or derivative minor children. There will be no protection from them while the Proclamation is in effect resulting in prolonged separation from their lawful permanent resident parents.

Trump has always targeted these families of immigrants and U.S. citizens in his proposals to limit immigration. He has found a ‘convenient’ time to implement his intended policy in the guise of protecting U.S. workers. If it is indeed to protect U.S. workers, why are there more family based immigrants affected over employment based workers who are already in the United States? There is no valuable national interest in suspending family reunification. We are in critical times, the priorities should be focused on directly addressing the COVID-19 crisis and not in weakening our family support system.

(Atty. Lourdes S. Tancinco is an immigrant advocate and legal counsel based in San Francisco CA. She is the principal and co-founder of Tancinco Law Offices and may be reached at law@tancinco.com, tancinco.weareph.com/old, facebook/tancincolaw, or at 1-888-930-0808)

 

Categories
Updates

Bad News for Immigrants Seeking to Enter the U.S.: Trump Issues Executive Order Today

Share this:

President Trump issued today a proclamation “Suspending Entry of Immigrants Who Present Risk to the U.S. Labor Market During the Economic Recovery Following the COVID-19 Outbreak.”

This proclamation is effective at 11:59 pm (ET) on April 23, 2020. The proclamation will expire 60 days from its effective date and may be continued.

Per the proclamation, the suspension and limitation on entry pursuant to section 1 of this proclamation applies to individuals who are green card “applicants” and who:

  1. are outside the United States on the effective date of this proclamation;
  2. do not have an immigrant visa that is valid on the effective date of this proclamation; and
  3. do not have an official travel document other than a visa (such as a transportation letter, an appropriate boarding foil, or an advance parole document) that is valid on the effective date of this proclamation or issued on any date thereafter that permits him or her to travel to the United States and seek entry or admission.

The proclamation includes several exemptions:

  1. spouses and minor children of American citizens;
  2. health care workers (eg. doctors, nurses);
  3. EB5 foreign investors;
  4. people with already-approved valid green cards.

According to President Trump, the Executive Order is purportedly aimed to protect U.S. workers who lost their jobs as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, and the restrictions could later be amended or extended if necessary.

Categories
Updates

Trump to Sign Executive Order to Suspend Immigration for 60 Days

Share this:

On Monday night, Trump tweeted that he will be signing an Executive Order that will temporarily suspend immigration to the United States. As of Tuesday, April 21, 2020, Trump said in his press conference that those affected are those seeking immigrant visas or green cards including spouses of American citizens and those entering based on employment based immigrant visas. It will not block from entering students, tourists or those on temporary work visas.

The actual Executive Order has not been released or signed as of this writing and we cannot provide you the details of this new rule. Our office will be monitoring this situation and will update you as quickly as possible on this development.

Categories
Updates

U.S. Taxpayer with Non-resident Spouse/Child Not Eligible to Receive Stimulus Check

Share this:

The U.S. Congress enacted a $2 trillion economic stimulus package on March 27 that allowed most Americans to receive stimulus payments of up to $1,200, as a way to put money directly in the pockets of families struggling to manage the economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic.

Several families have recently noticed that their stimulus payments have already been deposited directly to their account. But not every taxpayer is eligible to receive a stimulus payment. First, eligible individuals must have social security numbers and not tax identification numbers (ITIN). But even those taxpayers with social security numbers are still not receiving their stimulus checks because of limited eligibility. What could have resulted in the denial of their stimulus payments?

Jointly Filing With Non-resident or Immigrant with No Social Security Number

The Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES)Act strictly requires social security numbers before a stimulus check is deposited to the taxpayers bank account. However, if the eligible taxpayer with a social security number filed a joint tax return with a spouse who only has an Individual Tax Identification Number (ITIN) or filed a tax return with a qualifying dependent child who only has ITIN, no stimulus check will be given by the government. Adopted children and military families are exempt from this rule.

To illustrate how this rule applies: A U.S. citizen filed a joint tax return with his spouse who only has ITIN , no stimulus payment will be granted. The same will apply if there are dependent children who only have ITIN.

Another example, generally, non-U.S. citizens with social security numbers like H1B visa holders are eligible for the stimulus payments. But if these H1B visa holders have H-4 spouses and minor children with only ITIN,and their tax returns show or declare these H4s as dependents, no stimulus payment will be received.

Since it is the CARES Act rule to exclude mixed families with either unauthorized or non-immigrant visa holders with ITIN only, millions of U.S. citizens will not receive their stimulus payments considering the number of unauthorized immigrants in the United States.

(Atty. Lourdes S. Tancinco is an immigrant advocate and legal counsel based in San Francisco CA. She is the principal and co-founder of Tancinco Law Offices and may be reached at law@tancinco.com, tancinco.weareph.com/old, facebook.com/tancincolaw, or at 1-888-930-0808)

Categories
Updates

Tancinco Law FAQS on the Stimulus Payment

Share this:

1.  Who are the U.S. Taxpayers Eligible to Receive Stimulus Payments?

  • U.S. Citizens, Lawful Permanent Residents
    Generally, U.S. citizens and green card holders have social security numbers and if they meet the income threshold, they are eligible to receive stimulus checks.
  • “Resident Aliens” with Social Security Numbers
    These are the non U.S. citizens and non green card holders who qualify as resident aliens.

2. Who qualifies as a resident alien?

Non-U.S. citizens are considered nonresident aliens unless they meet one of two tests set forth by the IRS: the green card test or the substantial presence test.

I. Green Card Test: Lawful permanent residents of the United States are considered resident aliens if they were lawful permanent residents at any time during the calendar year. This is known as the “green card” test. Lawful permanent residents continue to have U.S. resident status under this test unless they voluntarily renounce and abandon their status in writing to the USCIS, their immigrant status is administratively terminated by the USCIS, or their immigrant status is judicially terminated by a U.S. federal court.

II. Substantial Presence Test: To meet this test, an individual must have been physically present in the United States for a designated minimum threshold period outlined by the IRS. One must be physically present in the United States (U.S.) on at least: (1)31 days during the current year, and (2) 183 days during the 3-year period that includes the current year and the 2 years immediately before that, counting:

  • All the days individual was present in the current year, and
  • 1/3 of the days you were present in the first year before the current year, and
  • 1/6 of the days you were present in the second year before the current year.

Not all non-immigrants can meet the substantial presence test. Those allowed to meet this test are H-1B, L1, O1 and TN. And the following individuals are exempt and may not meet this test: F, J, M or Q visa holders.

3. What Is Income Threshold to Receive a Stimulus Payment?

  • Individuals with adjusted gross income of $99,000 or less
  • Head of Households with adjusted gross income of $112,500
  • Married Joint Filers with adjusted gross income of $150,000

4. How much is the Stimulus Payment?

I. Full Payment

A one time payment of $1200 for Individuals with adjusted gross income up to $75,000 or,
A one time payment of $2400 for Married Joint Filers with adjusted gross income up to $150,000

Individuals can also receive an additional $500 for each eligible child under the age of 17.

II. Reduced payment
Reduced Stimulus payment based on the following calculation:

For individuals whose gross income is more than $75,000 and not exceeding $99,000

The stimulus payment is reduced by $5 for every $100 of adjusted gross income (AGI) above $75,000 for individuals, $112,500 for heads of households, and $150,000 for married joint filers.
The amount is completely phased-out for single tax filers with adjusted gross incomes exceeding $99,000, $146,500 for head of household filers with one child, and $198,000 for joint filers with no children.

5. Where does the IRS base the adjusted gross income for purposes of calculating the stimulus payment?

The stimulus payment is to be automatically advanced to eligible individuals in 2020 based on their 2019 federal income tax return. For eligible individuals who did not file a 2019 return, the rebate is to be automatically advanced based on 2018 tax return information.

6. May non-taxpayers who are SSI recipients receive stimulus payments?

Individuals receiving Supplemental Security Income or SSI will receive the stimulus payment in the same way they receive their monthly checks either through direct deposit, debit card or paper check SSI recipients with qualifying dependents must register these dependents with the IRS portal, otherwise no need to register to receive the stimulus payment.

Other individuals who will also receive their stimulus payments automatically include those receiving Social Security retirement, disability (SSDI), or survivor benefits, as well as Railroad Retirement benefits.

(This FAQ is prepared by Atty. Lourdes S. Tancinco, an immigrant advocate and legal counsel based in San Francisco CA. She is the principal and co-founder of Tancinco Law Offices and may be reached at law@tancinco.com, tancinco.weareph.com/old, facebook.com/tancincolaw, or at 1-888-930-0808)

Categories
Updates

Tancinco Law COVID-19 Critical Resource List

Share this:

Guide to Important Links Related to Immigration & Critical COVID-19 Resources
(Updated 04/17/2020)

U.S. Department of Homeland Security
https://www.dhs.gov/coronavirus/coronavirus-news-updates

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
https://www.uscis.gov/about-us/uscis-response-covid-19

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
https://www.ice.gov/coronavirus

U.S. Embassy Manila
https://ph.usembassy.gov/covid-19-information/

U.S. Department of Justice: Immigration Courts
https://www.justice.gov/eoir/eoir-operational-status-during-coronavirus-pandemic

Critical Resources for Foreign Students/Schools
https://www.nafsa.org/about

Primary Federal Government for General Information
https://www.coronavirus.gov/

Critical Information from Different U.S.Agencies in Response to COVID-19
https://www.usa.gov/coronavirus

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Information
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus

U.S. Department of Labor
https://www.dol.gov/coronavirus

U.S. Department of Labor, Unemployment Insurance Information
https://www.dol.gov/coronavirus/unemployment-insurance

U.S. Department of Labor, Family Leave Information
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/fmla/pandemic

U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA)
https://www.sba.gov/disaster-assistance/coronavirus-covid-19

U.S. Treasury Information on the CARES Act
https://home.treasury.gov/policy-issues/cares

U.S. Internal Revenue Services (IRS)
https://www.irs.gov/coronavirus/economic-impact-payments

 

Filipino Community Resources

Bayanihan Equity Center, San Francisco CA
https://www.sfbec.org/
(415)255-2347

Filipino Bar Association of Northern California
http://fbanc.org/
(415) 484 2209 EDD Form Assistance

Categories
Updates

Can Visas be Denied on Public Charge Grounds if an Applicant Receives Stimulus Check?

Share this:

COVID-19 pandemic has affected the economy severely and millions have lost their jobs as a result. Those who have lost their jobs are not just U.S. citizens but also green card holders, DACA recipients or those who are lawfully in the United States in valid non-immigrant status such as the H1B visa holders.

On March 27, 2020, President Trump signed into law the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, a $2 trillion dollar economic recovery package. The package offers relief to state and local governments, individuals, small and large businesses, and hospitals affected by the 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

Those who lost their jobs may apply for unemployment benefits from the States and, on top of that, those eligible may also apply for a $600/week supplemental unemployment benefit. There is also a Stimulus check – a one-time check of $1,200 for those whose income is 75k or lower.

Those who apply for unemployment benefits and a one-time Stimulus check of $1,200 would require the applicant to have a social security number and must not have a dependent family member who does not have a social security number.

For those who are lawfully in the United States in non-immigrant status and have valid social security number, will they risk denial of immigrant visa if they get this stimulus check or the supplemental unemployment benefit from the Federal government?

This is for those who will be applying in the future for green card status. Public charge as defined in the statute as “[a]ny Federal, State, local, or tribal cash assistance for income maintenance (other than tax credits),” “Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP),” “Section 8 Housing Assistance under the Housing Choice Voucher Program,” “Section 8 Project-Based Rental Assistance,” “Medicaid,” or “Public Housing under section 9 of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937.” At first glance, it would seem that CARES Act payments fall within the “Federal, State, local, or tribal cash assistance for income maintenance” public benefit category.

The recovery rebates are structured as automatically advanced tax credits to be disbursed by the Treasury Department. The DHS final rule on inadmissibility on public charge grounds is clear that tax credits are not taken into account for the purpose of a public charge determination.

The same rule applies to unemployment benefits. Unemployment insurance payments are not generally taken into consideration by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for purposes of making a public charge determination. As DHS explained in its final rule on inadmissibility on public charge grounds, “DHS would not consider federal and state retirement, Social Security retirement benefits, Social Security Disability, post secondary education, and unemployment benefits as public benefits under the public charge inadmissibility determination as these are considered to be earned benefits through the person’s employment and specific tax deductions.”