Saturday, January 28, 2012

The January 6, 2012, DHS Announcement about Planned Changes to Processing for Unlawful Presence Waivers

Frequently Asked Questions
What was announced on January 6?
DHS announced on January 61 that it will be issuing new regulations for how unlawful
presence waivers will be processed for certain immediate relatives of U.S. citizens who
are filing immigrant visa applications abroad. Specifically, the new procedure will allow
these individuals to file for a provisional unlawful presence waiver in the U.S. If
approved, they will still have to depart the U.S. to undergo visa processing and an
interview at a U.S. consulate abroad. To receive a provisional waiver, they will still need
to show that a lengthy bar from the U.S. would cause their U.S. citizen spouse or parent
“extreme hardship.”
What is the current process and why is the change necessary?
Currently, many relatives of U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents face
unnecessary and dangerous bureaucratic hurdles when they apply for lawful permanent
residence (“green card”). In order to be granted permanent residence, these applicants
are required to travel to a U.S. consulate in their home country to be interviewed and wait
for the visa to be processed. But departure from the U.S. triggers a 3- or 10-year bar to
re-entry for many applicants—specifically those who have been unlawfully present in the
U.S. for more than 180 days.
Individuals subject to this re-entry bar may apply for a waiver (using DHS Form I-601;
see 8 U.S.C. 1182(a)(9)(B)(v)) so that they do not have to face years of separation from
their family. To qualify, they must demonstrate that their U.S citizen or permanent
resident spouse or parent would experience “extreme hardship” if the waiver is not
granted. But under the current process, individuals can only apply for the waiver in the
home country, after having had an initial interview at the consulate. The decision on the
waiver often takes weeks, months or even years to be completed. Meanwhile, families
are separated, and the spouses and children of U.S. citizens and lawful permanent
residents are forced to endure potentially dangerous situations in the home country until
the waiver is granted and they can return to the U.S.
Immigration law provides that U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents can apply for
“green cards” for their foreign-born spouses and children. But the lengthy delays and
risks in the current waiver procedure discourage many family members from completing
1 Notice will be published in the Federal Register on January 9.
AILA InfoNet Doc. No. 12010620. (Posted 1/6/12)
AILA FAQs Page 2 of 3
January 6, 2012 DHS Waiver Procedure Announcement
the process of legal immigration. Family members have been assaulted or killed while
waiting for waivers to be reviewed.
What will the new process be?
The new procedure will allow certain immediate relatives of U.S. citizens apply for
waivers of the unlawful presence bars while remaining in the U.S. If the individual is
found eligible, USCIS will grant a provisional waiver. He or she will still have to depart
the U.S. and visit a U.S. consulate abroad to apply for an immigrant visa. During the
immigrant visa interview, the consular officer will make the finding of inadmissibility
based on unlawful presence and apply the provisional waiver. If other grounds of
inadmissibility are found, the individual would need to submit another waiver
application, if eligible, while abroad. In many cases, the provisional waiver will reduce
the wait period abroad and the separation from the applicant’s family by several months
or years.
Individuals will still need to meet the extreme hardship standard established in existing
law to obtain a waiver. The January 6 notice states that USCIS does not intend to modify
the standard.
Who will be able to use the new process?
As announced in the January 6 notice, the new regulation will change the application
process only for immediate relatives whose U.S. citizen spouse or parent would suffer
extreme hardship if the bar is not waived.
Who is left out of the new process?
According to the January 6 notice, the new process will not apply to family members of
lawful permanent resident petitioners. It will also not include immediate relatives if their
qualifying relative for the hardship waiver is not a U.S. citizen spouse or parent. These
individuals will still need to apply under the existing procedure (departing the country
first and applying for the waiver while abroad). There is no valid reason not to apply the
same procedure to these individuals whose spouses and children face the same
bureaucratic delays, obstacles and dangers when required to wait abroad for their waiver
adjudications.
The new procedure will apply only to individuals who are subject to the 3- and 10-year
bars for unlawful presence. Individuals who are subject to other grounds of
inadmissibility are not affected under the new process and will still have to depart the
U.S. before applying for any waiver.
When will the new regulations and process be implemented?
The new provisional waiver procedure has not yet taken effect. The notice issued on
January 6 announces the government’s intent to issue a proposed regulation at a future
date. Next, DHS will issue a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that will include a
proposed regulation governing the waiver process and will invite public comment. The
notice states that the new waiver process will not be implemented until a final rule is
issued and the change becomes effective.
AILA InfoNet Doc. No. 12010620. (Posted 1/6/12)
AILA FAQs Page 3 of 3
January 6, 2012 DHS Waiver Procedure Announcement
What should current and prospective waiver applicants do at this time?
The January 6 announcement has not changed anything in the current waiver procedure.
The notice discourages the filing of applications for provisional waivers and states that
such requests will be rejected. The new procedure will not take effect until a final
regulation is issued.
Once the new procedure takes effect, individuals with pending applications for unlawful
presence waivers will not qualify under the new procedure.
Individuals with a waiver application in process, or contemplating an application, may
wish to consult with an attorney before filing, paying a fee or leaving the country, in
order to explore the best alternative at this time.
What is the cost for applying for a waiver under the new procedure?
The January 6 announcement does not mention a change in the application fee for filing a
waiver application (Form I-601). The current fee is $585.
How will the new procedure improve government efficiency? Under the current
procedure, waiver applications are filed by individuals who have departed the U.S. and
are applying at U.S. consulates abroad. However, those waiver applications are not
adjudicated by the U.S. consulate. Instead, they are forwarded to USCIS. Wait times for
processing waivers can be months or years. Processing these applications in the U.S. will
save government resources at the consulates and reduce the costs of shifting cases back
and forth between government agencies.
AILA InfoNet Doc. No. 12010620. (Posted 1/6/12)

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