According to the agencies, they hope to be able to turn around 98% of cases within 30 days and the remaining 2% within 90 days. They plan on achieving this by June 2009. In the mean time, the agencies hope to meet the following completion goals:
May 2008 - Process all name checks pending three years or more
July 2008 - Process all name checks pending two years or more
November 2008 - Process all name checks pending more than one year
February 2009 - Process all name checks pending more than six months
June 2009 - Meet the time frames noted above
Download uscis_news_release_plan_to_eliminate_fbi_name_check_backlog_20080402.pdf
Posted at 09:25 PM | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack (0)
USCIS AND FBI ANNOUNCE PLAN TO ELIMINATE SECURITY CLEARANCE BACKLOGSAccording to the agencies, they hope to be able to turn around 98% of cases within 30 days and the remaining 2% within 90 days. They plan on achieving this by June 2009. In the mean time, the agencies hope to meet the following completion goals:
May 2008 - Process all name checks pending three years or more
July 2008 - Process all name checks pending two years or more
November 2008 - Process all name checks pending more than one year
February 2009 - Process all name checks pending more than six months
June 2009 - Meet the time frames noted above
Download uscis_news_release_plan_to_eliminate_fbi_name_check_backlog_20080402.pdf
Posted at 09:25 PM | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack (0)
April 03, 2008This is one of the stranger immigration stories in the news today. Remember REAL ID, the mandate passed by Congress in 2005 that largely creates a national ID card by requiring all states to make extremely expensive changes to their drivers licenses to make it impossible for people illegally in the US to get driving privileges? Apparently, many states didn't like being told to spend all that money and not be reimbursed by Washington. Now DHS is saying that they're going to pretend that the states are all going along even though many are telling DHS they have no intention of ever complying.
Posted at 08:17 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
April 04, 2008OK, here are FAQs on the new OPT rule, E-Verify, a complete list of qualifying STEM professions and the full text of the OPT rule. I'll consider the two FAQs to be works in progress so please post questions in the comments and I'll consider them for inclusion in revised versions of the articles. Finally, note that in my original posting of STEM professions, I did not redact out "99 - other" professions and have done so now.
Download ead_extension_faq.pdf
Posted at 09:07 PM | Permalink | Comments (41) | TrackBack (0)
STEM PROFESSIONSI'm still working on the FAQ, but here's a question and document you may find helpful given some of the questions you're posting. The CIP is hundreds of pages long, but I've extracted the relevant pages and redacted out professions not qualifying. So every occupation on the attached lists will qualify as a STEM profession.
What are STEM professions?
STEM stands for science, technology, engineering and math. USCIS will refer to a “STEM Designated Degree Program List” that is based on the US Department of Education’s “Classification of Instructional Programs” (CIP) 2000 report which can be found online at http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2002165 .
According to USCIS, the list of degrees includes those degrees in the following fields:
Actuarial Science. NCES CIP Code 52.1304
Computer Science: NCES CIP Codes 11 .xxxx (except Data Entry/Microcomputer Applications, NCES CIP Codes 11.06xx)
Engineering: NCES CIP Codes 14.xxxx
Engineering Technologies: NCES CIP Codes 15.xxxx
Biological and Biomedical Sciences: NCES CIP Codes 26.xxxx
Mathematics and Statistics: NCES CIP Codes 27.xxxx
Military Technologies: NCES CIP Codes 29.xxxx
Physical Sciences: NCES CIP Codes 40.xxxx
Science Technologies: NCES CIP Codes 41.xxxx
Medical Scientist (MS, PhD): NCES CIP Code 51.1401
Posted at 06:19 PM | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)
MY SUMMARY OF THE OPT RULEFolks - Given the extremely important news from today on OPT extensions, I'm rushing to put together a detailed FAQ which I will try and upload this evening. So stay tuned. On the E-Verify questions, I've already put together what I think is one of the most complete articles on the subject and have updated it a few posts ago. Note the rule is nearly 50 pages so this is why I can't get this up faster.
Posted at 01:47 PM | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)
THE ABCS OF E-VERIFYSuddenly employers have a powerful new incentive to use E-Verify given the shortage of H-1B visas that force many F-1 students to leave the country upon conclusion of their training programs. F-1 students who work for employers using E-Verify will get 29 months of training instead of just 12. This means two extra chances at the H-1B lottery and more time to get green card applications processed as a method of potentially bypassing the H-1B process all together or at least minimizing the gap in time someone may need to spend abroad.
I've just finished the manuscript for a book I've written on employer compliance and have included a chapter on E-Verify. Because the interest in E-Verify will likely spike as a result of this rule, I've decided to publish the E-Verify chapter online now rather than wait. So here goes. Also, some of you may not know that I blog on employer compliance (including the E-Verify subject) at http://immcomp.blogspot.com.
Posted at 01:34 PM | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack (0)
USCIS RELEASES RULE EXTENDING F-1 PRACTICAL TRAINING TO 29 MONTHSBut before you jump for joy, this only applies if you have an employer using E-Verify and you must be in a profession in the sciences, technology, engineering or math. This will potentially give a big boost to the electronic verification system and I'll have much more to present on E-Verify soon.
The other major news from the rule is a new cap gap provision that grants an automatic two month work and travel extension for those in F-1 status who are waiting on an H-1B October 1st start date.
I'll be covering this important news in greater depth over the weekend so check back. In the mean time, here's the USCIS press release.
Posted at 11:39 AM | Permalink | Comments (12) | TrackBack (0)
EXTENSION BILLS ADVANCE IN HOUSEThe House Judiciary Committee voted through the four immigration bills I mentioned earlier this week. The bills extended the special immigration religious worker, J-1 physician waiver, EB-5 regional center investor programs and also allow for extensions of P-1 visas beyond five years for athletes.
Posted at 05:51 AM | Permalink | Comments (9) | TrackBack (0)
April 05, 2008USC - You'll be glad to know my Immigrant of the Day hiatus is over. I needed a break for a few weeks from the feature and now am ready to resume.
And what better way than by featuring Cameroon native Luc Richard Mbah a Moute, the star player for the UCLA Bruins who will take the court in San Antonio in a few hours to compete against the University of Memphis for a spot in Monday's NCAA Championship game. He's already won the Freshman of the Year honors in the highly competitive PAC 10 conference.
Moute is not just basketball royalty, by the way. According to his Wikipedia biography, he's a prince in his native village of Bia Messe.
By the way, while I wish Moute well in his basketball career, I'll be rooting against him tonight. I'm a resident of Memphis, Tennessee and will, of course, pull for the home team in their game tonight. Go Tigers!
Posted at 09:24 AM | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
MESSAGE TO USCIS: FIX E-VERIFY BEFORE COURTS SHUT IT DOWNYesterday, USCIS changed the equation in their effort to get America's employers to use E-Verify. As the H-1B program continues to grow more and more useless as demand for the visa far outstrips supply, companies are faced with the unpleasant choice of simply doing without needed global talent or moving operations overseas where protectionist immigration policies are not an issue. Now they are being offered the ability to nearly triple the amount of time they can employ American-educated foreign students in the STEM professions (science, technology, engineering and math). And this may be enough extra time to be able to get the worker an H-1B visa or even a green card. The catch - the employer must participate in the E-Verify electronic employment verification system in order to have access to these talent workers.
Why is this a catch? After all, employers typically looking at hiring STEM workers are not the companies one would associate with hiring illegally present workers. Why would they balk at E-Verify? There's one big reason - it's lack of accuracy. Naturalized US citizens are a particularly big problem for E-Verify. USCIS was not required to electronically store data on naturalized citizens until 1996 and while the agency has attempted to move the paper records into their databases, the process is far from complete and perfect.
DHS has commissioned the Westat research organization to periodically report on the E-Verify program. Its most recent report released last September has some extremely disturbing data. Nearly 1 in 10 naturalized US citizens show up in E-Verify as being illegally present immigrants, a rate that is 30 times higher than for US-born citizens.
This wouldn't be a serious problem if workers could easily correct false positives and didn't have to worry about losing a job in the mean time. Unfortunately, the government can take months - sometimes more than a year - to resolve a problem and employers are forced to fire the employee. The LA Times reported on this very problem just yesterday. This is obviously very bad news for a worker. But it becomes a nightmare scenario for the worker when most employers start using the system. In effect, the worker faces long term unemployment as one employer after another refuses to hire him or her despite the fact that the person is a US citizen.
We'll start to see this soon in Arizona, the first state that has mandated all employers use E-Verify. Right now, only 15% of employers are using the system, but that number is rapidly expanding. And with yesterday's announced rule, some industries that heavily use H-1B workers will likely start rapidly signing up for E-Verify. This could spell serious trouble for the unlucky citizens caught in this mess. This is even more scary when one thinks of millions of people trying to fix problems at the same time (especially if the no-match rule comes in to force at the same time). Why would we believe that USCIS and the Social Security Administration are prepared to handle the onslaught of requests to resolve false positives when they can't handle the relatively small demand they currently face?
There is a solution. Give workers who seek to dispute an E-Verify finding a window of time to lodge a request to resolve the nonconfirmation finding - perhaps 30 days - and then protect the worker from termination while the dispute is being resolved. Employers may not be thrilled about potentially having to later terminate an employee who turns out not to be authorized to work, but my guess is that they'll judge this a better trade off than losing the services of someone who is a good fit for the company. They will also appreciate the protection from liability associated with continuing to employ the worker.
Some may say that this form of protection will simply protect illegally present workers who would be able to continue working while the dispute is resolved. But this does not fit with reality. Employers who have received no-match letters over the years will tell you that as soon as an illegally present worker learns that the government believes they may be here illegally, the worker takes off. They are not looking to be picked up by ICE agents and deported. The workers who stick around and attempt to resolve an E-Verify nonconfirmation are overwhelmingly going to be people that have a legitimate claim to work.
If the voice of reason doesn't work with DHS, however, a judge is inevitably going to shut down E-Verify. There is a CLEAR constitutional problem with a system that is statistically proven to discriminate - and at a high rate - against citizens born abroad. And once innocent US citizens start to lose their jobs in big numbers, you can bet there will be a national class action lawsuit.
The amount of money that could be wasted if E-Verify is shut down would be enormous and the government's legitimate efforts to enforce immigration laws would face a colossal setback if the courts ended the program. DHS can head this off with the type of change I'm suggesting.
Posted at 02:13 PM | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
SOY HOMBRE
This has been an emotional week here in my hometown of Memphis. The world's attention was focused on a relatively modest building on a quiet street downtown that was the site of one of the saddest events of the 20th century - the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King. On the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the assassination, presidential candidates, civil rights movement legends, the children of the slain leader and ordinary folks from around the world gathered at the Lorraine Motel here to commemorate the day. The building has quite appropriately been transformed into the wonderful National Civil Rights Museum, well worth the visit to Memphis (though it's the house of another king that draws most tourist to our city).
Two years ago this week I blogged from the National Civil Rights Museum when supporters of immigration rallied here in Memphis (as groups around the country did on that day). The link between the struggle of immigrants and the civil rights struggle in this country is long standing and I was pleased to see the Soy Hombre signs yesterday during the anniversary march here in Memphis.
For those of you not familiar with the details of the King assassination, MLK was in Memphis supporting striking sanitation workers. The working conditions of those workers was abysmal and after two workers were killed by a malfunctioning trash compressor, the workers decided that was the last straw. Aside from the tragedy that led to the end of the strike, the workers are also remembered today for the picket signs they carried that read "I am a Man". The simple point they conveyed was that they were human beings who deserved to be treated with basic dignity.
Immigrants carrying the Spanish translation of that sign, "Soy Hombre" are also asking for nothing else than to be treated as human beings. Anti-immigrant groups have tried to dehumanize the illegally present immigrant population with much success. Yesterday's commemoration in Memphis was a little reminder of another era where man's inhumanity to his fellow man left a permanent scar on the country.
Posted at 06:49 PM | Permalink | Comments (6) | TrackBack (0)
April 07, 2008I posted the YouTube links to the nominees last week. You can see the wnners here.
Posted at 03:12 PM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
CHERTOFF: FIRST WE BRING THE PUBLIC TO THEIR KNEES AND THEN WHEN THEY BEG FOR MERCY....Well, that's basically the current immigration policy of the country. Enforce to the point that the economy is falling apart and then have Congress finally create a workable guest worker program. And, by the way, we can deal with those twelve million people illegally here when Americans are feeling generous. Really, this is what he said in a roundtable with bloggers:
As we become more and more successful with enforcement we're going to see more and more stories like the one in the paper, The New York Times, today about the tomato farm that's going out of business because they can't get workers. And so we're going to have to then offer people who are no longer using illegal workers some legal way to satisfy their labor needs. And that's why I think Congress will have to turn to expanding and streamlining the temporary worker program beyond what we've been able to do administratively. I think that will be the next step. I think those two things are inevitable.
The last piece will be what do you do with the 12 million who are here -- the 11 million people who are here. And I think that's the hardest nut to crack and the -- you know, once we establish the other pieces of this, the public will have to decide whether they are -- how do they balance the humanitarian concerns, the respect for the rule of law, and the practical realities in order to deal with this population. So that's my best estimate of how it's going to turn out. Now, over what period of time? I can't tell you. But I think that in the end at least we've begun to really deal with the problem seriously, and that's a good thing; that's a good thing.
Posted at 03:02 PM | Permalink | Comments (9) | TrackBack (0)
IMMIGRANT OF THE DAY: TRACY ULLMAN - ACTRESS/COMEDIENNE
British-born Tracy Ullman has been a favorite of mine ever since her brilliant sketch comedy show on Fox, The Tracy Ullman Show, aired in the 1980s. Ullman's show was one of the first shows on the new network. Aside from the live sketches, Ullman's show includes cartoon shorts for The Simpsons. The Simpsons was spun off in to a separate series and is still running 19 years later.
Ullman has had a busy career in the years since and regularly appears on television and in film playing a hilarious cast of characters (both men and women). The Tracy Takes On series on HBO was a hit for the network in the 1990s. Now she is jumping to rival network Showtime for a new show entitled Tracy Ullman's State of the Union. Ullman announced plans for the new show shortly after becoming a US citizen in late 2006.
Ullman has won numerous awards for her work including a Golden Globe and several Emmys.
Posted at 08:29 AM | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
April 08, 2008Posted at 03:59 PM | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)
USCIS: H-1B CAP HITNo surprise that the main 65,000 cap has been hit. What is more of a surprise (though not a big one) is that the 20,000 master's cap has been hit for people with advance degrees from US institutions. USCIS has not released word on the actual number of cases received yet.
Posted at 03:02 PM | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
SPEAKING OF NUMBER CRUNCHINGThe Department of State has released dozens of different statistical reports on consular processing. Analyze away!
Posted at 09:51 AM | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack (0)
SAVE BILL WOULD COST $40 BILLIONPosted at 09:08 AM | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)
IMMIGRANT OF THE DAY: TAKEO KANADE - ROBOTICS PIONEER
Japanese-born Takeo Kanade is one of the country's foremost researchers in the area of computerized vision and has been the Director of the famous Robotics Insittute at Carnegie Mellon University. If you want to see an interesting application of his research, check out the demonstration of CBS' Eye Vision, used to give a 360 degree feel to coverage of sporting events. You can find a very cool demonstration of this virtualized reality software from the 2001 Super Bowl. Dr. Kanade is now working on a variety of other interesting projects including developing a vision-guided robotic helicopter, improving face recognition technologies, and a variety of projects related to incorporating computerized vision in to medical procedures.
A hat tip to reader Sid for today's suggestion.
Posted at 08:49 AM | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
About The Author
Greg Siskind is a partner in Siskind Susser's Memphis, Tennessee, office. After graduating magna cum laude from Vanderbilt University, he received his Juris Doctorate from the University of Chicago. Mr. Siskind is a member of AILA, a board member of the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, and a member of the ABA, where he serves on the LPM Publishing Board as Marketing Vice Chairman. He is the author of several books, including the J Visa Guidebook and The Lawyer's Guide to Marketing on the Internet. Mr. Siskind practices all areas of immigration law, specializing in immigration matters of the health care and technology industries. He can be reached by email at gsiskind@visalaw.com
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