Law Offices of Carl Shusterman - US Immigration Law Offices of Carl Shusterman - US Immigration
SHUSTERMAN'S IMMIGRATION UPDATE
(April 1997)



Law Offices of Carl Shusterman
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Learn how to benefit from United States immigration laws and procedures from a former INS Attorney (1976-82) with over 30 years of experience.

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CONTENTS:

1. May 1997 State Department Visa Bulletin

2. Latest Processing Times for INS and Labor Department

3. INS Ruling Extends Time to Obtain Green Cards in U.S.

4. INS/EOIR Issues Regulations Implementing 1996 Law

5. Bilingual Immigration-Related Web Site: "HelloChina"

6. Immigration Trivia Quiz: Immigrant Academy Award Winner

7. 1997 Federal Poverty Income Guidelines

8. USDA List of Areas Fully Medically Served To Date

9. Health Care Workers: Clarification of the New Law

10. Answer to the Immigration Trivia Quiz


1. May 1997 State Department Visa Bulletin

On April 7, the State Department posted the May 1997 Visa Bulletin on the Web. Most of the Family categories moved forward six weeks or less. One exception was the Mexican 4th preference category (brothers and sisters of U.S. citizens) which moved forward three months.

The Employment categories remained "current" (no backlogs) except for the unskilled category which advanced two weeks to April 1, 1990. The India 3rd preference category advanced two months to April 1, 1995.

For an explanation of what the categories, dates and symbols listed below mean, see

http://www.shusterman.com/family.html

and

http://www.shusterman.com/employmt.html

For the State Department's official version, complete with information about the movement of family, employment and lottery numbers, see

http://travel.state.gov/visa_bulletin.html (Link is no longer operational.)

FAMILY CATEGORIES

Categories Worldwide India Mexico Philippines
1st 4-08-96 4-08-96 2-01-93 7-18-86
2A 3-01-93 3-01-93 6-22-92 3-01-93
2B 4-08-91 4-08-91 4-08-91 4-08-91
3rd 2-22-94 2-22-94 4-15-88 12-22-85
4th 11-01-86 3-01-85 2-08-86 12-22-77



EMPLOYMENT CATEGORIES

Categories Worldwide India Mexico Philippines
1st Current Current Current Current
2nd Current Current Current Current
3rd Current 4-01-95 Current Current
Unskilled 4-01-90 4-01-90 4-01-90 4-01-90
4th Current Current Current Current
5th Current Current Current Current

2. Latest Processing Times for INS and Labor Department

Most immigration applications and petitions must be submitted to one of the following INS Regional Service Centers: (1) Laguna Niguel, California; (2) Lincoln, Nebraska; (3) Dallas, Texas; and (4) St. Albans, Vermont.

The lists containing the waiting times of each center include each state served by the center and any foreign offices within the center's jurisdiction.

The service centers periodically issue lists of their processing times for various types of applications. Our web page contains the latest list issued by each service center.

Warning: Processing times may appear faster on the official lists than they are in reality.

To see how fast (or slow) your service center is processing a particular type of petition or application, see

http://www.shusterman.com/toc-sc.html

You can also click above to check the processing times of your local INS District Office, your Department of Labor Regional Office and your State Employment Service Agency. These waiting times are compiled by volunteer attorneys and are usually posted two to three months after the fact.

3. INS Ruling Extends Time to Obtain Green Cards in U.S.

April 1st has come and gone, and you still don't have a green card. You may have a temporary visa, an employment card, and maybe you have nothing at all. Is there still time to qualify for a green card, or is it too late? Thanks to a new ruling by the INS's General Counsel's office, thousands of persons who would otherwise have run out of time can still obtain permanent residence in the U.S.

Remember when people who had overstayed their visas used to have to go back to their home countries in order to get their green cards? I bet you don't know anyone (in their right mind!) who has done this during the past two years.

Why not? Because in October 1994, Congress passed a law allowing visa overstayers and others who qualified for green cards to have their interviews in the U.S. if they paid a fine. I remember that during the first two weeks when that law went into effect, our law firm alone submitted over 120 applications for green cards for persons who otherwise would have had to return home.

The problem is that the fine law, called "section 245(i)" by immigration lawyers, is set to expire on September 30, 1997. And for the past six months, INS officials have told immigration lawyers that if their clients didn't receive their green cards before September 30, 1997, they would not be able to adjust status in the U.S. if they overstayed their status in the U.S.

So what's the big deal? Lawyers would simply have to advise their clients to go home to obtain their green cards, right? The problem is that another section of the new law (called the "entitlement bars" by the immigration lawyers) says that if you are unlawfully present in the U.S. for 180 days or one year after April 1, 1997, and you depart the U.S., you are barred from returning to the U.S. for three years or ten years, respectively.

Because of this, lawyers have been madly rushing to submit applications for adjustment of status for their clients who have qualified for green cards. However, INS backlogs vary widely from city to city. While in some cities, it is possible to get a green card interview in three or four months, in cities like Los Angeles, the wait is approximately 15 months.

A visa overstayer who filed for adjustment of status in Los Angeles today would be lucky to be interviewed until late in 1998. In fact, even if that person had submitted their application before the enactment of the new law, their interview would not occur until Christmas of 1997. With a few exceptions, there simply is no way to beat the September 30, 1997 deadline.

I just returned (today) from a week in Washington, D.C. meeting with INS and other governmental officials, and I have some very good news. The INS has now decided that as long as a person's application for a green card under section 245(i) is submitted prior to September 30, 1997, it doesn't matter when their interview is scheduled or when their application is approved. They are still covered by the benefits of section 245(i)!

So is it too late to get a green card? Not at all, even if you entered the U.S. without inspection, violated your status or overstayed. If your priority date is reached by September, submit your application for adjustment of status (and don't forget your $1,000 fine and applicable filing fees) before September 30, 1997 and you can still take advantage of section 245(i).

Congress may not renew section 245(i), so submitting your application on October 1, 1997 may be too late. If you are qualified, you need to act quickly!

4. INS/EOIR Issues Regulations Implementing 1996 Law

Most sections of the 1996 Immigration Law did not become effective until April 1, 1997. The INS and the EOIR (the Immigration Courts) issued proposed regulations to implement certain sections of the law in January 1997.

On March 6, 1997, the two agencies published interim final regulations. These regulations which should be read by all immigration attorneys and insomniacs can be found at

http://www.shusterman.com/3697regs.html

or at 62 Federal Register 44 starting at page 10312.

Warning: The regulations consists of over 80-pages of small print. The agencies responded to 124 comments, and make only a small number of changes to the proposed regulations.

Some good news in the area of asylum appears in the regulations. The regulations provide that "the one-year period (in which aliens may apply for asylum) shall be calculated from the date of the alien's last arrival in the United States or April 1, 1997." Effectively, this means that the last date upon which an alien who arrives in the U.S. on or before April 1, 1997 may submit a Request for Asylum is April 1, 1998. The law provides that this deadline may be waived where "extraordinary circumstances" exist. The regulations provide examples of "extraordinary circumstances", one of which is ineffective assistance of counsel.

Persons wishing to submit written comments regarding the interim regulations may do so on or before July 7, 1997. Comments must be submitted, in triplicate, to the Director, Policy Directives and Instructions Branch, Immigration and Naturalization Service, 425 I Street, NW, Room 5307, Washington, DC 20536. To insure proper handling, please reference INS number 1788-96 on your correspondence.

5. Bilingual Immigration-Related Web Site: "HelloChina"

Websurfers who are Chinese, or who are interested in things Chinese, will delight in "HelloChina" produced by MCI Telecommunications, Inc. The fare ranges from food to culture to, no surprise, immigration.

Our law firm has been working with the MCI folks for several months to create a partially bilingual site which includes: (1) a 10-Q&A FAQ; (2) a Bulletin Board and (3) a place where netizens can get their immigration questions answered in a generalized fashion.

The FAQ is especially noteworthy in that it can be read either in English, in traditional Chinese characters ("Big 5") or in simplified Chinese characters ("GB") used in mainland China.

To read the FAQ in Chinese, you will need special software to decode the strange-looking ASCII characters which appear on your monitor. We solved this problem by downloading a free demo version of Chinese Partner 4.0 which can be found at

http://www.twinbridge.com

The FAQ allows you to understand the process of obtaining a temporary or permanent visa, U.S. citizenship, to view the State Department's Visa Bulletin, and even gives hints on how to avoid deportation.

If you are interested in reading about U.S. immigration laws and procedures in Chinese, check out "HelloChina" at

http://www.mci.com/international/chinese/immigration.shtml (Link is no longer operational.)

Other MCI web sites with immigration sections include:

HelloIndia at http://www.mci.com/international/english/immigration.shtml (Link is no longer operational.)

HelloKorea at http://www.mci.com/international/korean/immigration.shtml (Link is no longer operational.)

and ConexionLatina at http://www.mci.com/international/spanish/immigration.shtml (Link is no longer operational.)

6. Immigration Trivia Quiz: Immigrant Academy Award Winner

Born in Vienna, Austria, this Hollywood director won the Academy Award for Best Director twice. He directed such legends as Marlon Brando, Meryl Streep, Jessica Tandy and Ava Gardner in their big-screen debuts.

He directed the Hollywood's classic western "High Noon", resurrected Frank Sinatra's flagging career by directing him to an Academy Award in "From Here to Eternity" and directed the great historical drama "A Man for All Seasons".

Last month, just prior to the Academy Awards, this distinguished immigrant to the U.S. and Great Britain died a few weeks short of his 90th birthday.

Can you name him?

See answer in Topic #10.

7. 1997 Federal Poverty Income Guidelines

The new immigration law requires that most immigrants who are sponsored by a family member or by a business owned in significant part by a family member is excludable unless the petitioner or any person who accepts liability together with the petition signs an affidavit of support in the form of a legally- enforceable binding contract.

For more information regarding these requirement, see

http://www.shusterman.com/aff-supp.html

The sponsor(s) must be able to demonstrate that their income is sufficient to support themselves, their dependents and the sponsored immigrants at a level equal to at least 125% of the federal poverty guidelines.

The federal government has issued the 1997 poverty guidelines, and to save you the trouble, we have done the math to bring the totals up to 125%. The following table provides the relevant numbers adjusted for family size, with special columns for persons residing in Alaska and Hawaii:

125% of the Federal Annual Poverty Guidelines for 1997

Size of Family Unit      Alaska     Hawaii     All Other States




1....................... $12,338    $11,338    $9,863
2.......................  16,588     15,250    13,263
3.......................  20,838     19,163    16,663
4.......................  25,088     23,075    20,063
5.......................  29,338     26,988    23,463
6.......................  33,588     30,900    26,863
7.......................  37,838     34,813    30,263
8.......................  42,088     38,725    33,663
ALASKA: for family units with more than eight members, add $4,250 for each additional family member.
HAWAII: for family units with more than eight members, add $3,913 for each additional family member.
ALL OTHER STATES: for family units with more than eight members, add $3,400 for each additional family member.

8. USDA List of Areas Fully Medically Served To Date

(*Additions) Every month, things seem to get more complicated for IMGs seeking waivers of the two-year home residency requirement.

Last month, we posted the December 31, 1996 issue of the Federal Register containing the latest list of Health Professional Shortage Areas. See

http://www.shusterman.com/hpsa.html

When the USDA approves physicians to work in a HPSA and determines that the area is no longer medically underserved, it removes the particular county from the HPSA list. When a physician leaves one of these areas, it is again added to the list. What follows is a partial list of counties designated by the USDA as fully medically served (as of March 26, 1997):

ALABAMA: Bullock, Conecuh, Covington, Dallas, Greene, Hale

ARIZONA: Graham, La Paz, Pima, *Santa Cruz

ARKANSAS: Desha, *Lawrence, *Logan, Monroe, Phillips, Prairie, *Randolph, Sharp, Snow Lake, St. Francis

CALIFORNIA: Biggs/Gridley/LiveOak, Brawley/Calipatria-Westmoreland, Colusa, Corcoran, Delano/McFarland, *El Centro, Happy Camp, Imperial, *Kem, Kings, *Lake Arrowhead, Needles/Topock, Palo Verde/Blythe, Red Bluff, *Riverside, San Bernardino, Siskiyou, Sutter, Tehama, Tuolumne

COLORADO: Prowers, Saguache

DELAWARE: Middletown-Odessa

FLORIDA: Bradford, *Calhoun, *Collier, Gadsden, *Holmes, *Jackson, Levy, Liberty, *Martin, Monroe, Okeechobee, Osceola, *Pasco, *Polk, Putnam, Taylor, Union, Washington

GEORGIA: *Brooks, Hart, *Jefferson, Johnson, *Mitchell, Putnam, Toombs, Turner

ILLINOIS: Carroll, *Cass, Cumberland, De Witt, Iroquois, *Jersey, Johnson, *Macoupin, *Madison, *Massac, *Ogle, Vermillion, Warren, Wayne, White

INDIANA: Pike, Randolph, *Scott, Starke, Sullivan, *Vermillion

IOWA: *Black Hawk, Boone, Calhoun, Fremont, Greene, Hamilton, Kossuth, Mills, O'Brien, Webster

KANSAS: Cheyenne, Cloud, Ellsworth, *Keamy, Kiowa, Osage, Osborne, *Pawnee, Phillips, Rawlins, *Stevens

KENTUCKY: Carroll, Edmonson, Gallatin, Livingston, Ohio, Owen, Spencer, *Todd

LOUISIANA: Allen, *Avoyelles, Beauregard, Concordia, East Carroll, Jackson, Lincoln, *Livingston, *Morehouse, *Rapides (Long Regional Medical Center), Sabine, St. Helena, *St. Landry, *St. Mary, West Carroll

MAINE: Bar Harbor, Franklin, Hancock, Jay/Livermore Falls, Jonesport, Kennebec, Lincoln, Oxford, Piscataquis, Sagadahoc, Skowhegan, Somerset, Washington

MARYLAND: Dorchester, Somerset

MASSACHUSETTS: *Franklin

MICHIGAN: Alcona, Alpena, *Arenac, *Bay, Cass, Cheboygan, Chippewa, Clare, Deckerville/Sandusky, Delta, Dickinson, Dowagiac, East Iasco City, Gogebic, Gratiot, Harbor Beach, Hillsdale, Huron, *Iasco, Iron, Lenawee, Menominee, Montcalm, Ogemaw, Oscoda, Roscommon, Sanilac, Southern Montcalm, West Branch

MINNESOTA: Crookston, Elbow Lake/Dalton, Lyon, Otter Tall, Pipestone, *Polk, Tyler/Lake Benton.

MISSISSIPPI: *Amity, *Bolivar, Clairborne, *Forrest, *Hinds, Holmes, *Humphreys, Jefferson, *Jones, *Madison, Newton, Scott, *TateWayne, *Walthal, *Washington, Yazoo

MISSOURI: *Andrew, Chariton, *Crawford, *Grundy, *Pike, *Reynolds, Ripley, Taney, Texas

MONTANA: *Daniels, Roosevelt

NEBRASKA: Brown, *Harlan, Kimball, Rock

NEW HAMPSHIRE: Berlin, *Coos, Sullivan

NEW MEXICO: Curry, Luna, McKinley, Roosevelt

NEW YORK: Camden, Canton-Pottsdam Malone, Clinton, *Erie, Franklin, *Genesee, Greene, Jefferson, Lewis, Liberty, Malone, *Oneida, *Oswego, St. Lawrence, Sullivan, West Winfield

NORTH CAROLINA: *Bertie, Bladen, Caswell, Pender, *Robeson, Warrenton, Washington

NORTH DAKOTA: Emmons

OHIO: *Hardin

OKLAHOMA: *Adair, Atoka, Beaver, Coal, *Dewey, *Harmon, Haskell, Kiowa, Le Flore, Lincoln, *Pottawatomie, *Roger Mills, *Sequoyah, Washita

SOUTH CAROLINA: Abbeville, Barnwell, *Colleton, Marlboro

TENNESSEE: Hardeman, *Haywood, Hickman, Lauderdale

TEXAS: Anderson, Aransas, *Atascosa, Bastrop, Bee, Blanco, Brazoria, *Brooks, *Chambers, Delta, Dimmit, *El Paso, *Gonzales, Grimes, *Hale, *Jackson, Karnes, Kendall, Kent, *Knox, La Salle, *Limestone, Madison, Medina, *Milam, Moore, Newton, Polk, Robertson, Staff, Walker, Ward, Wheeler, Willacy

VIRGINIA: Halifax/South Boston, Page

WASHINGTON: Central Grant, Grant, *Pacific, Walla Walla, *Yakima

WISCONSIN: *Clark, E. Marinette/S., Iron, *Juneau, Marinette, Menominee, *Monroe, *Oconto, Oconto/Oconto Falls, *Sawyer, Sparta

WYOMING: *Carbon

9. Health Care Workers: Clarification of the New Law

Topic #9 of last month's edition of SHUSTERMAN'S IMMIGRATION UPDATE discussed section 343 of the new immigration law relating to the immigration of health care workers.

To view INS's January 28, 1997 memorandum on this subject, see

http://www.shusterman.com/hcw.html

Perhaps due to the complexity of the subject, this memo raises as many questions as it answers. Therefore, on February 20, I wrote a letter to the INS requesting clarification of various issues regarding the immigration of health care workers. See my letter at

http://www.shusterman.com/hcw2.html

Readers of SHUSTERMAN'S IMMIGRATION UPDATE will be among the first to be able to read INS's reply to my letter.

10. Answer to the Trivia Quiz

Fred Zinnemann, an immigrant who arrived in the U.S. between the two world wars. Mr. Zee, as he was dubbed by his older crew members, also directed Shirley Jones and Gordon McRae in the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical "Oklahoma!" (1955), Edward Fox in the screen adaption of the Fredrick Forsyth's thriller "The Day of the Jackal" (1973) and Jane Fonda and Vanessa Redgrave in the drama "Julia" (1977).

Many critics have commented that this year's Oscar winner for "Best Film" "The English Patient" was done in the Zinnemann style. His films emphasized the human dilemma, not action or special effects.

Carl Shusterman
April 9, 1997

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