U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services

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The proposed ‘hardship waiver’ change: How it would apply in real life

Photo by AFP/Getty Images

Mexican soldiers guard one of the entrances in July 2010 to the U.S. consulate in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, where undocumented Mexican nationals who marry U.S. citizens are typically sent to apply for green cards. Under current rules, many get stuck there long-term.

A proposed administrative tweak announced last week by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services could encourage many families of mixed immigration status who have found it impossible to solve their immigration problems to finally come out of the shadows.

The proposal concerns a longstanding rule affecting the undocumented spouses and children of U.S. citizens, many of whom are unable to adjust their status in the United States. They are, however, allowed return to their native countries in order to apply for a green card through what’s referred to as consular processing, applying at U.S. consulates such as the one in Ciudad Juarez.

The catch is that once they leave, depending on how long they’ve been in the U.S. illegally, they can be barred from returning for up to a decade. If they can prove the absence will cause “extreme hardship” to a U.S. citizen spouse, a waiver may be obtained to let them return sooner. But the waivers aren’t easy to obtain and the processing time is lengthy, from six months to easily two years depending on the country. If the waiver is not granted, they can be stranded abroad long-term. The risk of indefinite separation is so great that many families don’t risk it.

The proposed change, published Friday in the Federal Register, would streamline the waiver process, allowing people to apply on U.S. soil. The change wouldn’t necessarily make these waivers easier to obtain, but at least those seeking visas abroad would know before they go that they can return within a reasonable time, which USCIS says would be no more than a few weeks.

If the change goes through, how would it apply in real life among mixed-status families? Immigration attorney David Leopold, former president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, explains its practical applications and presents a case study in an informative Q&A.

M-A: Who would this proposed change help, and how?

Leopold: Under U.S. immigration law, a foreign national who remains in the U.S. unlawfully for more than 6 months, after entering illegally or overstaying a visa, is barred from readmission to the U.S. once he or she leaves. The law also does not generally permit noncitizens who have entered illegally from adjusting their status to lawful permanent residence (green card), even if they are married to a U.S. citizen.

This puts many would-be legal immigrants into a Catch-22: The noncitizen may be eligible for a green card because of the marriage but, to apply for it, he or she must leave the U.S. to appear at the U.S. embassy in his or her home country. Once the noncitizen departs the U.S., he or she is then barred from returning for up to 10 years unless he or she can obtain a family unity waiver, which requires a showing that the applicant’s U.S. citizen spouse will suffer extreme hardship.

Currently, applicants must apply for the family unity waiver abroad. The process can take months, even years. In the meantime, the family is separated and the applicant may be stuck waiting in a dangerous place, such as Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. The proposed procedural tweak will allow the applicant to apply for the waiver in the U.S. Once the waiver is granted, the applicant may then proceed abroad, apply for their immigrant visa, and return quickly to the U.S. and their family as a legal immigrant. This proposed rule does not change the law in any way. But by allowing for stateside waiver processing it protects American families and promotes legal immigration.

The processing change would apply to spouses and children of U.S. citizens. Practically speaking, though, it applies mainly to spouses because children don’t accrue unlawful presence until they each the age of 18. However, the law defines a child as an unmarried person under 21. Therefore, there will be children who will need to apply for the family unity waiver abroad, just not as many.

M-A: What is the criteria for “extreme hardship? How difficult is it to obtain the waiver, and realistically, how long does it take? 

Leopold: There are no set criteria for extreme hardship. It is a question of circumstances which involves a variety of factors, including economic hardship, emotional distress, physical hardship, etc.

For example, extreme hardship may be present where the U.S. citizen spouse suffers from a debilitating disease which can only be treated in the U.S., or the foreign spouse is the only caretaker or source of financial support. Each case is evaluated on its own facts. The law limits the showing of hardship in these circumstances to the spouse or parent of the immigrant; hardship to U.S. citizen children is not included in the law.

And there are no guarantees. Unless the applicant proves extreme hardship, which is something more than the pain of separation, the waiver will be denied.

In Mexico (where the majority of these applications are filed), the waiver process itself can take as long as 18 months to process.

M-A: So let’s look at a case study: U.S. citizen wife, Mexican citizen husband, two U.S. citizen kids. The husband has been here illegally more than a year and is subject to the readmission penalty. How would it work under existing rules, and how would it work under the proposed rules?

Leopold: Since he entered illegally, the husband cannot apply for his green card in the U.S., even though he is married to a U.S. citizen and the couple has two U.S. citizen children.

To apply for his immigrant visa, the husband will have to go to the U.S. consulate in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, which is considered by many to be the most dangerous city in the world not in a declared war zone. Once he departs the U.S.- he will be subject to a 10 year bar because he has been in the U.S. unlawfully for more than a year.

To get his immigrant visa, he will have to apply for a family unity waiver and show his U.S. citizen wife will suffer extreme hardship if he cannot return to his family in the U.S.  As stated, proving hardship will depend on his U.S. citizen wife’s circumstances.

Some of the factors that may apply are the state of her physical and mental health, her profession, the family’s particular economic circumstances, her family ties in the U.S., country conditions in Mexico, cultural considerations, and her Spanish language ability. Remember, hardship to the children doesn’t legally matter – but to the extent that hardship to the children may cause their U.S. citizen mother anxiety and pain or other hardship, it may be relevant.

The waiver process will likely take more than a year, during which time the husband will remain in Mexico, away from his family.

Under the proposed rule change, the husband will be able to apply for the family unity waiver in the U.S., before he departs to apply for his immigrant visa in Mexico. Therefore, once he gets to the U.S. consulate in Ciudad Juarez, his waiver will already have been granted, and he will be able to return to the U.S. (and his family) as a lawful permanent resident in a relatively short period of time.

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The proposed rule change for mixed-status families: What it does, doesn’t do

Screen shot from uscis.gov

This morning, the Obama administration announced a proposed change to the process for granting green cards to the undocumented spouses and parents of U.S. citizens, one intended to ease the long-term family separation endured by many as they wait abroad to re-enter legally.

It’s a big deal. Then again, at least in terms of scale, not quite as big as it might seem.

The proposal, posted this morning in the Federal Register, affects people who are applying for a waiver to the three- or ten-year re-entry bar for those who have been living in the U.S. illegally, but wish to adjust their status through immediate family. The existing rule – one that won’t change – is that most undocumented spouses and children of U.S. citizens who apply for a green card must return to their native countries to be processed, allowing them to then return legally.

But there’s a major catch. Once they leave, depending on how long they’ve been in the U.S. illegally, they can be barred from returning for up to a decade. The solution for some is to prove that the absence will cause “extreme hardship” to a citizen spouse. If they can, a waiver can be obtained to let them return sooner. But these waivers are difficult to obtain, making for long waits. If it’s not granted, the person waiting abroad can be stranded there for years, separated from loved ones and potentially draining the family’s resources. Even those who do eventually obtain waivers typically find themselves stuck abroad long-term, as they take months to process.

The proposed rule change would allow those seeking a hardship waiver to do so on U.S. soil, meaning they would know before they leave the country if they are approved. The idea would be, then, that people travel abroad to get their visas with a provisional waiver in hand, allowing them to return unimpeded within a few weeks and sparing them the prospect of getting stuck.

Those who do get stuck and can’t get a waiver to return are in for a long wait: Current immigration law punishes people who have been living in the U.S. illegally for at least six months with a readmission ban of three years. If they’ve been here illegally more than a year, they can’t come back legally for a decade.

Here’s what the proposed change will not do: “We do not anticipate that this will impact millions of people,” U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services director Alejandro Mayorkas said today in a telephone news conference, and he’s right. The proposal would not amend existing laws, nor make it easier to obtain a hardship waiver, granted only to about 17,000 people last year.

Obtaining a hardship waiver is no easy feat. First, the hardship must only be to a U.S. citizen spouse or parent, and U.S. citizen children don’t factor in. Second, the simple pain of separation is not considered hardship enough. The family must prove there is extreme economic, physical, psychological or other hardship to the citizen relative. And if foreign family members are inadmissible to the U.S. because of a criminal conviction, they can’t qualify.

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Who has had to wait the longest for a green card this month?

Nations with current longest waits for family-sponsored based immigrant visas: The priority dates shown are when applicants now up for processing filed their petitions. (Source: Visa Bulletin for May 2011, U.S. Department of State)

It’s the beginning of May, which means it’s time for another look at the U.S. State Department’s monthly Visa Bulletin. Each month the bulletin lists which categories of hopeful immigrants are up to receive immigrant visas, as well as who has been waiting the longest.

Little has changed since last month. Those who have been in line the longest, sponsored to come to the United State legally by their relatives, are hopeful immigrants from the Philippines. And the wait remains staggering: The ones who have waited the longest filed their petitions back in 1988.

Here are the top four categories of immigrants who have endured the longest waits:

1) Brothers and sisters of adult U.S. citizens from the Philippines, a wait of more than 23 years (petitions filed April 8, 1988).

2) Married sons and daughters of U.S. citizens from the Philippines, a wait of more than 19 years (petitions filed February 15, 1992)

3) Unmarried adult (21 and over) sons and daughters of U.S. legal permanent residents from Mexico, a wait of close to 19 years (petitions filed August 1, 1992)

4) Married sons and daughters of U.S. citizens from Mexico, a wait of close to 19 years (petitions filed November 15, 1992)

How it works: Each month, immigrant visas technically become available to those whose priority dates, i.e. the dates on which their petitions were filed, are listed in the visa bulletin. Being on the monthly priority date list is good news, of course, for those waiting. However, the dates are subject to change and often do. This means that some who thought their long wait was over must continue waiting.

The reason for these long waits is that every nation is allotted the same percentage from a pool of family and employer-based visas available each year, regardless of the demand from any individual nation. For those waiting in countries represented by large immigrant populations here – such as Mexico, the Philippines, China and India – there is an especially high demand for family reunification, and the wait for an immigrant visa can take a surprisingly long time.

It’s not unusual to see waits of close to 20 years or more by family members abroad being sponsored by relatives in the United States. Those in some countries, especially Mexico and the Philippines, must wait in a longer line than others. Long waits, though quite not as long, also apply to China and India: Siblings of U.S. citizens in those countries whose turn has come up have been waiting in line since 2000.

Immigrants defined as immediate relatives of U.S. citizens, such as spouses, parents, and children under 21, are exempt from the limits (although U.S.-born children of immigrants must be 21 in order to sponsor their parents, and penalties apply if the parents entered illegally). Other relatives must wait until their priority date comes up.

The entire Visa Bulletin for May 2011 can be viewed here.

Who has to wait the longest for a green card?

Source: Visa Bulletin for April 2011, U.S. Department of Stat

Nations with current longest waits for family-sponsored based immigrant visas: The priority dates shown are when applicants now up for processing filed their petitions.

A common question that comes up when discussing immigration, legal and illegal, is why it is more people don’t get “in line” for a green card. There is a line, indeed, for people who have immediate relatives in the United States and whose families have the resources to sponsor them. But depending on where these hopeful immigrants are coming from, it can be quite a wait.

It’s been since January that Multi-American featured its monthly post on the on the longest waits for green cards, and the line has budged little since. That month, the people who had endured the longest wait for an immigrant visa, the brothers and sisters of adult U.S. citizens from the Philippines, had been waiting an especially long time: 23 years, having filed their petitions in January 1988.

Siblings waiting in the Philippines are still the ones waiting the longest this month. According to the U.S. State Department’s monthly Visa Bulletin, those hopeful immigrants whose turn is up to receive a green card this month filed their petitions in March 1988. That’s back when there was no World Wide Web, people wore acid-wash and INXS and Guns N’ Roses topped the charts. That long ago.

The way it works: Each month, immigrant visas technically become available to those whose priority dates, i.e. the dates on which their petitions were filed, are listed in the visa bulletin. Here’s the list of those who have endured the longest waits this month:

1) Brothers and sisters of adult U.S. citizens from the Philippines, a wait of more than 23 years (petitions filed March 8, 1988).

2) Married sons and daughters of U.S. citizens from the Philippines, a wait of more than 19 years (petitions filed January 1, 1992)

3) Unmarried adult (21 and over) sons and daughters of U.S. legal permanent residents from Mexico, a wait of more than 18 years (petitions filed November 8, 1992)

4) Married sons and daughters of U.S. citizens from Mexico, a wait of more than 18 years (petitions filed October 22, 1992)

Being on the monthly priority date list for a green card is good news for those waiting, though the dates are subject to change and often do, meaning that some who thought their long wait was over must wait even longer.

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Immigrant soldiers: Record number naturalized in past year, most since 1955

Photo by U.S. Army Korea-IMCOM/Flickr (Creative Commons)

A military naturalization ceremony held at a U.S. Army base in South Korea, December 2008

In time for Veterans Day, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services announced yesterday that a record number of U.S. military personnel became citizens in fiscal year 2010, which ended Sept. 30. It is the largest number of foreign-born soldiers naturalized in 55 years. From the press release:

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) today announced that in fiscal year 2010 it granted citizenship to 11,146 members of the U.S. armed forces at ceremonies in the United States and 22 countries abroad. This figure represents the highest number of service members naturalized in any year since 1955.

This number is a 6 percent increase from the 10,505 naturalizations in fiscal year 2009 and a significant increase from the 7,865 naturalizations in fiscal year 2008. Since September 2001, USCIS has naturalized nearly 65,000 service men and women, including those serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Legal-resident soldiers, often referred to as “green card soldiers,” have grown in number in recent years, especially after a series of policy changes after September 11, 2001 intended to boost military ranks by making the military more attractive to immigrants. This included a 2002 presidential order allowing non-citizens serving in the military to apply for expedited citizenship.

Green card soldiers were among the first military casualties in Iraq, among them Marine Lance Corporal José Gutierrez of Lomita, an immigrant from Guatemala who died March 31, 2003. His remarkable story from Guatemala City orphan to Marine was chronicled in a 2006 documentary.

According to a recent Associated Press story, there were 16,966 non-citizens on active duty as of last May. The story profiled a Jamaican-born veteran in deportation proceedings; in spite of the ability to obtain expedited citizenship, those who have not yet naturalized are subject to deportation if they get into trouble with the law, not a problem for veterans who are U.S. citizens.