Author: Harry J. Joe.
USCIS Approves P-1 Visa Petition for Professional eSports Team
AUTHOR: Robert Neale.
Occasional Glitches with I-94 Electronic Records
While Customs and Border Protection (CBP) announced that it stopped issuing I-94 arrival/departure cards on May 21, 2013 (instead, the foreign passport is stamped and the entry is recorded electronically; the record can be accessed online), some land ports of entry still issue actual I-94 cards. Despite the new system, foreign nationals have reported being unable to find the I-94 electronic record online.
Given the issues with the new electronic I-94 system, employees should track each entry into the United States. Records should be kept of the following:
- Date of Admission
- Land/Sea/Air
- Name of Port of Entry
- Date of Departure
Employees print their I-94 card as soon as they enter. If they cannot locate the electronic I-94, they should try following these tips:
- Switch the last name and first name in the online form, in case the names were reversed in the system. (Some countries, such as Indonesia, put first name, last name on the passport, rather than the more standard last name, first name, so the name might be recorded incorrectly in the system.)
- Check the name on the visa. If the name is different from the one on the passport, use the name on the visa.
- Check the passport number on the visa. If it is different from the current passport, use the one that is on the visa.
- Compare the visa class designation on the visa with the one written on the stamp. For example, if an E-3 beneficiary has “E-3D” on the visa and “E-3” written by the stamp, the system might have recorded one or the other. So, you may need to try both.
If the record is still not found within two weeks of admission, the employer’s HR representative or immigration counsel should be asked to assist in locating the record. Jackson Lewis has contacts at CBP who can help locate the missing I-94.
Why USCIS Will Be Contacting Your Employees
On July 1, 2013, USCIS announced its latest “customer service enhancement” to E-Verify. If an employee voluntarily provides his or her email address on the Form I-9, E-Verify will notify the employee directly of a Tentative Non- Confirmation (TNC) at the same time it notifies the employer. Given that E-Verify monitors how an employer complies in a timely manner with its contractual obligations to the Government, employers must review their standard operating procedure to ensure it does not run afoul of the law.
Comprehensive Immigration Reform Bill under Fire
Despite decisive passage of S. 744, Border Security, Economic Opportunity, and Immigration Modernization Act of 2013, on June 27, 2013 by a 68-32 vote in the Senate, recent exhortations from former President George W. Bush to “recognize the benefits immigrants make to our country” and to “keep a benevolent spirit” in the reform debate, and a Congressional Budget Office report projecting a significant benefit to the U.S. economy ($700 billion over 10 years) should the bill become law, prospects for passage have dimmed. Following a closed-door session by House of Representatives Republicans on July 10, House Leader John Boehner (R-OH) released a statement (joined by Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA), Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), Conference Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA), Homeland Security Committee Chairman Michael McCaul (R-TX), and Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte (R-VA)), sounding a distinct note of caution and wariness.
Federal Agencies to Cooperate To Increase Prosecutions for Immigration Related Unfair Employment Practices and Unfair Labor Practice Charges
AUTHOR: Harry J. Joe.
NLRB Back Pay Denial for Undocumented Workers
On July 10, 2013, the Second Circuit, applying the Supreme Court’s ruling in Hoffman Plastics, denied back pay to undocumented bakery workers who were terminated for participating in protected labor activities. The Court rejected the argument that the matter should be distinguished from Hoffman Plastics since the petitioners committed no fraud in obtaining employment. Unlike the employee in Hoffman Plastics, in this case they did not submit false I-9 documentation to the employer. The Court found that the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA) was intended to prohibit formation of employment relationships with undocumented workers. The former employees’ lack of fraud does not alter the need to effectuate the statutory purpose, and the question of whether the employees or the employer violated IRCA is inconsequential under the Hoffman back pay prohibition. The Court, however, remanded the case to NLRB on the question of whether a conditional order of reinstatement should have been granted in the event the former employees could provide proper IRCA documentation. The Court said that the employer may still be subject to IRCA sanctions, so it is not getting a free pass for those violations even if it escapes a back pay award. See decision at link below:
Good Faith Not a Defense to Substantive I-9 Violations
AUTHOR: Harry J. Joe.
U.S. Supreme Court Reviews Yet Another Arizona Statute Addressing Immigration
The U.S. Supreme Court has taken another swipe at an Arizona statute that addresses the State’s response to illegal immigration. In Arizona v. Intertribal Council of Arizona, Inc., No. 12-71 (June 17, 2013), the Court invalidated part of Arizona’s voter registration law, which required applicants to submit documentary evidence of citizenship when registering to vote in federal elections by mail.
DHS’s Implementation of Supreme Court Ruling on Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA)
Following the U.S. Supreme Court’s release of its decision in United States v. Windsor, No. 12-307 (June 26, 2013), DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano issued an updated statement confirming that “President Obama [had] directed federal departments to ensure the decision and its implication for federal benefits for same-sex legally married couples are implemented swiftly and smoothly.” She said, “To that end, effective immediately, I have directed U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to review immigration visa petitions filed on behalf of a same-sex spouse in the same manner as those filed on behalf of an opposite-sex spouse.”