Immigration Bureau Law Office

Immigration Bureau Law Office immigration law office

09/14/2024

From SPACE - Classical Violin Performance by Polaris Dawn astronaut Sarah Gillis and various musicians at locations around the world. Space X and Elon are awe inspiring! Great illustration of what CREATIVE entrepreneurs do compared to government run programs.

H1b Transfer to New Employer- TIPS for EMPLOYEES!
05/05/2022

H1b Transfer to New Employer- TIPS for EMPLOYEES!

Tips for smooth processing of H1b visa applications at theUSCIS, including H1b Transfers. The Trump Administration tightened thingsup. These are tips for suc...

R.I.P Ian McDonald, sweet fellow and lovely client and founder member of the iconic band FOREIGNER!
02/11/2022

R.I.P Ian McDonald, sweet fellow and lovely client and founder member of the iconic band FOREIGNER!

McDonald’s family revealed that the multi-instrumentalist, 75, passed away on Wednesday (Feb. 9) surrounded by family at home in New York — from cancer, according to his son.

10/07/2021

200,000 wasted green cards by Biden Admin that could have been used by people LEGALLY waiting in LINE for years :(

The Biden Administration Let Over 200,000 Green Cards Go to Waste This Year
by Walter Ewing
The Biden administration failed to issue more than 200,000 permanent resident visas (or green cards) that were allotted in fiscal year 2021 for immigrants sponsored by U.S. employers or family members.

Roughly 150,000 visas for family-based immigrants and as many as 80,000 visas for employment-based immigrants had gone unused by September 30, which was the last day of the 2021 fiscal year.

This falls drastically short of the total number of green cards—675,000—that the government can issue each year. Out of this total, 480,000 visas are reserved for “family preference” immigrants; 140,000 for employment-based immigrants; and 55,000 for Diversity Visa lottery winners.

This marks the second year in a row that over 100,000 family-preference visas have gone unused. In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic caused U.S. embassies and consulates abroad to close, which temporarily halted immigrant visa processing. In addition, the Trump administration used the pandemic as a pretext to implement a ban on the issuing of many immigrant visas. As a result, 122,000 family-preference visas went unused and were added to the 2021 cap on employment-based visas, which raised the total to 262,000.

Embassies and consulates have reopened since then, and the Biden administration lifted Trump’s immigrant visa ban. The increase in the number of employment-based visas actually presented a rare opportunity for the administration to make a sizeable dent in the massive backlog of cases.

But the Biden administration was unable to speed up processing sufficiently to meet the 2021 cap on either family- or employment-based immigrant visas. Continued budget challenges and mismanagement at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services further hurt the administration’s chances of hitting the mark.

The 150,000 unused family-preference visas have been added to the fiscal year 2022 cap on employment-based visas, bringing the total to 290,000. But the unused employment-based visas from fiscal year 2021 will remain lost without Congressional action.

The federal government’s repeated failure to meet the annual caps on immigrant visas is worsening the backlog of green card applications. As of 2020, there were more than 9 million green card applicants stuck in the backlog—about 7.5 million on the family-based side and 1.6 million on the employment-based side.

A major reason the backlogs are so large is the per-country cap on immigration. Under current immigration law, the number of immigrants from any one country cannot be greater than 7% of the total number of immigrants who come to the United States in a single year. This arbitrary cap doesn’t account for the strong social and economic relationships that the United States has with certain countries.

For instance, the 7% cap does not come close to meeting the demand from U.S. citizens and Lawful Permanent Residents who want to bring family members from Mexico to the United States. The cap also doesn’t accommodate the demand among U.S. employers for skilled workers from India. As a result, family-based green card applicants from Mexico and employment-based green card applicants from India face wait times of many years before a permanent visa becomes available to them.

As of October 2021, many family-based applicants from Mexico have been waiting for more than 20 years. Many employment-based applicants from India have been waiting between seven and 10 years.

If the slow pace of green card processing continues, immigrants will likely see their wait times soar in the years ahead. Congress needs to act before more people lose available green cards and the backlogs worsen.

This post originally appeared on Immigration Impact Reprinted with permission.

About The Author
Walter Ewing is an Editor and Writer at the American Immigration Council. Walter has authored numerous reports for the Council, including The Criminalization of Immigration in the United States (co-written in 2015 with Daniel Martinez and Ruben Rumbaut), which received considerable press attention. He has also published articles in the Journal on Migration and Human Security, Society, the Georgetown Journal of Law and Public Policy, and the Stanford Law and Policy Review, as well as a chapter in Debates on U.S. Immigration, published by SAGE in 2012. Walter holds a Ph.D. in Anthropology from the City University of New York (CUNY).

05/20/2021

delighted to report that we just broke a record- a new H1b was just approved 15 days after we filed it- without even using premium processing! YAY!!

05/20/2021

As the population ages and people have fewer children, newcomers are needed to fill jobs and pay taxes. That's especially true in slow-growing Iowa.

The Trump Administration is creating an invisible wall slowing down and sometimes stopping legal immigration. Request fo...
03/12/2019

The Trump Administration is creating an invisible wall slowing down and sometimes stopping legal immigration. Request for evidence are on the rise by many-fold and denials are also on the increase for all Visa categories.

We provide legal assistance for both nonimmigrants (temporary) and immigrants (permanent / 'green cards') based on employment, international trade, investments and based on immediate family ties including love & then marriage to a U.S. Citizen. We also guide clients in obtaining U.S. Citizenship fro...

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