Monday, July 16, 2007

The Mirage - Part 2

This supplements and analyzes the recent entry, "The Anatomy of a Mirage"

Reliable sources now indicate that in the weeks following the mid-June announcement of the July visa availability, the USCIS requested tens of thousands of immigrant visa numbers. It is undisputed that requests for some of these numbers were made on July 1 and 2 (during the month of July), so that numbers could then be (ahem!) “unavailable” for the month of July, thus enabling the USCIS to refuse to accept new applications “during” July. (Don’t claim you can’t understand this.) Instead of an orderly use of the visa slots as dictated by the Immigration and Nationality Act, what we have witnessed is a chaotic misuse of the procedures, for the convenience of the USCIS and to the detriment of the companies and people USCIS calls its “customers.”

How does an agency become so arrogant as to believe that the law exists only for its own convenience? One theory would be that there is a Bush (Cheney) "administration culture," a darker version of "corporate" cultures in our law firms and at our clients' companies. It is not coincidental that this Visa Bulletin-Gate would occur for the only time in 30 years under an administration where the VP can cynically claim to be part of the legislative branch to dodge the legal requirements that apply to the executive. It is easy to image how this shell game was plotted by senior USCIS officials: "We can just request all the numbers, and then try to catch up by using them later. Who is going to stop us? This system is so complicated that only an EB-2 Computer Scientist from India can understand it, and no one will be able to explain how this move is illegal. Now we won’t have all that extra work next month.”

Welcome to America (sometime in the future).

Sunday, July 8, 2007

The Anatomy of a Mirage

By Mark G. Murov

On July 2, 2007, the U.S. Department of State (DOS) issued an unprecedented “Revised Visa Bulletin” which informed us that the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) had by some means consumed so many immigrant visa slots in the preceding two weeks that there were no slots left for the remainder of the 2007 Fiscal Year, and that there would be no more filings of Applications for Adjustment of Status (Form I-485) until October 1, 2007.

Here are the links to the original July Visa Bulletin http://travel.state.gov/visa/frvi/bulletin/bulletin_3258.html, and the revised version
http://travel.state.gov/visa/frvi/bulletin/bulletin_3263.html

As previously explained in mid-June, the forward movement which created the “current” status for all employment-based immigrant visa categories for July was, in the first place, something of a “false positive.” The excessive demand for the limited number of slots was still there, and there were people in line for the final allocation of numbers. What was reported in mid-June was that the door would open for the month of July, and perhaps longer, and that a large number of persons could file and as a result become vested with the right to apply for and receive an Employment Authorization Documents (EAD) and Advance Parole (AP) travel documents, and to renew them as needed until the Lawful Permanent Residence (LPR or green card) is eventually granted. In addition, the opportunity to file the Application for Adjustment of Status by the principal alien would in due course create “portability” or the right to change jobs and retain his or her vested approvals (of the Application for Alien Labor Certification and immigrant visa petition).

The mechanics of the availability of these immigrant visa “numbers” (slots) are complex. However, what happened in the past two weeks is as follows: USCIS had not consumed as many slots (i.e., approved as many pending cases) as projected during the first three quarters of 2007 Fiscal Year. The DOS computer then directed the DOS to issue a report for July that slots were available to all who had reached the point of being able to file Applications for Adjustment of Status but for lack of a slot. The USCIS, realizing that it would be inundated with tens or hundreds of thousands of applications during the month of July, made an unprecedented push and approved a (reported) 60,000 pending applications in two weeks, thus consuming all of the remaining 2007 Fiscal Year slots for all categories, regardless of the “priority dates.”

Then, at USCIS’s request, the DOS issued a “Revised” Visa Bulletin (the only one I have seen in my 30 years in this field), thus enabling the USCIS to reject the Applications for Adjustment of Status which immigration lawyers had rushed to prepare and file.

Although everyone is annoyed and frustrated, this action by the agencies appears to be in keeping with the mechanics of the Immigration and Nationality Act, and in my view will not likely be overturned by a lawsuit. There are several aspects of these developments which are nonetheless very offensive:

First, the USCIS talks about “customer service” and we have never, ever, seen USCIS work so hard to approve cases to serve us as the customers. The push in this instance was self-serving, to avoid having more cases filed, and to delay filings until after the filing fees rise yet again on July 31 as scheduled. Additionally, without this push, those with reasonably good priority dates could have filed their Applications for Adjustment of Status during the 4th quarter months (July, August and September, 2007), and they will now have to wait until October. In addition, others whose cases are pending might have been actually approved during the 4th quarter and they will have to wait until at least October also.

Also annoying is the historical fact that one of the reasons for the existence of the huge backlog was that the agencies involved in these types of cases [the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) and the USCIS] had not cared about backlogs or customer service in 2001 through 2005, and thus permitted immigrant visa slots to die on the vine in those years. If those slots had been utilized when available, none of this would have occurred.

So, intended or not, events have resulted in a mirage appearing on June 14 and then, confusingly, disappearing on July 2, 2007 to the disappointment of all concerned. The only slight benefit was to those whose pending I-485 cases were finally approved a bit earlier than otherwise, but they had Employment Authorization Document (EAD) and Advance Parole (AP) travel documents and an early approval to them was of much less value than the filing opportunity would have been for those whose hopes were raised and then found themselves holding an empty bag.