Q&A’s published on the World Journal Weekly on August 30, 2020 1. Petitioning for My Parents in China.  How Difficult Will It Be for Them to Pass the Public charge Requirement? 2. What Will Happen to My Labor Certification Green Card Case Since I Was Born in Hong Kong and How Long Will it Take for Me to Immigrate? 3. Can I Apply for DACA Now That the Supreme Court Ruled That the Program Could Continue? 4. Can You Tell Me if It Will be Safe to Go Into USCIS Offices for Interviews When They Are Scheduled?

1. Petitioning for My Parents in China.  How Difficult Will It Be for Them to Pass the Public charge Requirement?

I just became a US citizen and want to apply for my parents in China. I am really concerned because I heard that the Trump administration is making it very hard for persons who do not have much income or assets to immigrate. Currently I am married with two children, and our income level (combined) for the past three years has been around $60,000 annually. We have a house with very little mortgage left on it, and about $25,000 in savings.

Mr. Lee answers,
Under normal circumstances, you would appear to have a good chance of immigrating your parents in the absence of outstanding disabilities on the part of your parents that would require much medical assistance by the government. The public charge rule which went into effect on February 24, 2020, places an onerous burden on petitioners and the people that they sponsor to show more and count a number of factors in deciding the admissibility of people under the rule. This rule during the time of pandemic has been dropped by the government after its recent loss in the District Court in New York. The Department of Homeland Security has issued a memorandum that as long as the ruling is in effect, USCIS will apply the old public charge guidance to any adjustment of status application adjudicated on or after July 29, 2020.  The Department of State is also complying with the court’s order and in the process of updating its guidance to consular officers on how to proceed. The situation, however, remains volatile. It remains to be seen whether the court’s ruling will stand and if so, how the public charge law will proceed after the time of pandemic. (I note that under the new public charge rule, you may still be able to immigrate your parents, but would likely have to show much more documentation to do it).

2. What Will Happen to My Labor Certification Green Card Case Since I Was Born in Hong Kong and How Long Will it Take for Me to Immigrate?

I work as a market research analyst under H-1B visa and I took up my employer’s offer to sponsor me for the green card last year because I am from Hong Kong and the company lawyer said that my case would take less than two years if everything went well. Now we hear that because Pres. Trump is mad at China, I am now assigned to China. What does that mean for my case? My priority date is November 2019 and my labor certification application was approved in May 2020. My I-140 petition is now pending with USCIS.

Mr. Lee answers,
On July 14, 2020, Pres. Trump issued Executive Order 13936, “Pres. Trump’s Executive Order on Hong Kong Normalization” which among other things would no longer treat Hong Kong as an area having its own immigration quota under US law and instead assign it under China’s immigration visa quota. The State Department is still reviewing the question of whether Hong Kong born individuals can be chargeable to mainland China legally, but that may very well be swept under the rug given the politics of the State Department and that the Secretary is very much in the president’s corner. Currently for the month of August 2020, the visa bulletin final action dates show that China EB-2 for cases requiring an advanced degree or a bachelor’s +5 years experience is only up to cases filed before January 15, 2016, and for cases under EB-3 requiring a baccalaureate degree or two years experience up to February 15, 2017, one year more advanced. It is difficult to know how long it will take for your case under the China quota to become current given the vagaries of immigrant visa counting and the underuse of the numbers in this fiscal year, but given the more advanced state of EB-3, you may wish to file a petition under that category if you have not already done so.

3. Can I Apply for DACA Now That the Supreme Court Ruled That the Program Could Continue?

I qualified in all respects for DACA except that I was not yet 15, the minimum age for applying, when they stopped accepting new applications. I have been continuously in the US since June 15, 2007; was physically present in the country on June 15, 2012; had no lawful status on June 15, 2012; have not committed any crimes; and am still in high school. If I put in a new application at this time, what will happen to it?

Mr. Lee answers,
The Supreme Court decision preserved DACA a in a 5-4 decision in June 2020 as Chief Justice Roberts did not believe that the government had followed legal procedure in trying to stop the program. Although Pres. Trump said in a TV interview on the Hispanic channel Telemundo that he could give a path to citizenship for the Dreamers, his administration has done exactly the opposite in a pending case, Casa de Maryland v. US DHS in which it said last week that new applications would neither be granted nor rejected, and instead held in a bucket pending a policy consideration by DHS; and the last word was a July 28, 2020, memorandum in which DHS said that it would reject all pending and future initial requests, reject all pending and future applications for advance parole for DACA members absent exceptional circumstances, and shorten DACA renewals from two years to one year. This is likely not the final answer, but you may wish to wait and see what happens before putting in a new application at this time.

4. Can You Tell Me if It Will be Safe to Go Into USCIS Offices for Interviews When They Are Scheduled?

I am being petitioned for by my US citizen mother for the green card. I, my wife, and our two kids are here under my H-1B visa. Our priority date finally cleared, and we were scheduled for an adjustment of status interview at the immigration office in April that was canceled because of the pandemic. Now I hear that Immigration will begin to reschedule all the canceled interviews beginning in August. We are very nervous because I and my wife have medical conditions and are scared of catching the coronavirus. Will we be safe in going to the interview?

Mr. Lee answers,
One of the discouraging things that one hears about USCIS these days is its constant complaint that it is running out of money, needs to raise fees, and obtain funding from Congress. The latest is that it will furlough up to 70% of its workforce at the end of August if it has not received relief from Congress. That being the case, the agency probably does not have adequate funding to maintain complete office safety. I doubt that the agency has the ability to wipe down surfaces including chairs and bathrooms every couple hours or the personnel to enforce social distancing in elevators, escalators, hallways, and waiting rooms. You can do a few things to protect yourself such as maintaining your family’s social distance from others; bringing sanitary wipes to clean your own seats; wearing masks and gloves; bringing your own pens, etc. The agency has said that it will space out interviews, mark off seats to maintain distancing, put plexiglass barriers between officers and the public, provide face coverings from people who come without face coverings, and be flexible on rescheduling missed appointments. Hopefully that and other improvements that it may make before your interview along with your own safety precautions will protect you and everyone else with whom you come into contact.

 

Q&A’s published on Lawyers.com and the Epoch Times on August 21, 2020 1. Can I Request I-485 to be Joint? 2. If I Get Paid $12.50/hr with 40 Hours a Week, Is This Enough to Bring My Girlfriend to the USA from Philippines? 3. Can You Get Married in the US Even If You Are Still Legally Married in the Philippines? 

1. Can I Request I-485 to be Joint?

We file I-130 a week ago for my wife. We get the I-797c notices I have been reading around and it state it most case the I-485 can be requested to joint to the I-130. I just want to know if I can go ahead and send I-485 even thou I 130 is pending.

Mr. Lee answers:
As you have the I-797C receipt notice, you are able to use that to file an I-485 adjustment of status application to permanent residence for your wife at this time if you are a US citizen and she entered the country legally. You would attach a copy of the I-797C receipt in the I-485 filing to show that the I-130 petition is pending. U.S.C.I.S. will process the I-485 and usually link the I-130 petition with the I-485 filing in time for the interview. 

2. If I Get Paid $12.50/hr with 40 Hours a Week, Is This Enough to Bring My Girlfriend to the USA from Philippines?

Mr. Lee answers:
$12.50 an hour with 40 hours a week or $26,000 per year may not be enough to convince a skeptical consular officer to issue a B-2 visiting visa. American consular officers like to be convinced that a visa applicant has enough support to visit the US without having to work. If your girlfriend or her family have monies of their own, she could show that to the consular officer as proof that she would not have to work in the US. Also if you have close relatives who are capable of giving an I-134 affidavit of support, that might help. She will also have to convince the consular officer that she intends to just visit and will return at the end of her stay.  

3. Can You Get Married in the US Even If You Are Still Legally Married in the Philippines? 

I knew somebody who came here as a J1 intern for a year. He is married legally in the Philippines and has a kid with that marriage. Now he is married to an American. Is it even legal? How can he get a permanent residency card in that situation?

Mr. Lee answers:
If a person is still legally married regardless of wherever that person was married, he or she would be committing bigamy by marrying another without having the marriage annulled or otherwise dissolved. U.S.C.I.S. would not approve a permanent residence application if it knew that the applicant was not free to marry the petitioner. 

Article: Fort USA Arises In The Gloaming

As published in the Immigration Daily on August 14, 2020

American forts were built in great numbers in the 1700s-1800s and contributed greatly to the westward expansion of the country. Regardless of how you look at the history of the nation and the number of wrongs committed in building America, one cannot argue that forts built along the way served to push expansion by placing troops within reasonable distance when called upon.

Now the American fort is rising in the twilight of these four years, but rather than for expansion, for the hermetical sealing of this country. In every way, the Trump administration has moved to wall off the nation from the rest of the world and to return to the cultural America of the 1950s, an era replete with discrimination, Jim Crow laws, and white supremacy.

To turn back the clock, the administration has done everything in its power to forcibly expel and discourage immigrants from staying; to encourage US citizen children to leave with their parents; to bar the admission of qualified immigrants and nonimmigrants; discourage citizenship applications; and push to revoke the citizenship status of numerous individuals. It has taken advantage of the pandemic to issue a series of exclusionary presidential proclamations in the name of public health concerns, while at the same time taking no steps to take control of the coronavirus spread and assigning that responsibility to the nation’s governors while sniping at them from the sidelines. Mr. Trump has also gotten the CDC to act as his henchman in further issuing rules restricting the entry of foreigners. The political games of this administration and the pandemic have played out according to Mr. Trump’s likes and dislikes such as derogatorily assigning the blame for US infection to China while ignoring the fact that the vast majority of US coronavirus cases originated from European travelers; not including a heavily infected Russia in the list of countries whose travelers are barred from the US; and arbitrarily allowing students from the Schengen area of Europe to come to the US despite their specific ban under presidential proclamation.

A whiter and “cleaner” America is the goal and the stopping and expulsion of immigrants has been an important part of the strategy. Fort America is about half complete with most of the border wall to be built, and other measures have been implemented to win the party of Trump and Trump another four years to complete the job through measures such as voter suppression, cost-cutting the Postal Service to handicap it from fulfilling its duty to handle mail-in ballots, discouraging undocumented immigrants from participating in the census thus affecting reapportionment of House seats, and even surreptitiously running Kanye West for president to siphon black votes from Joe Biden in key states.

It seems apparent that another four years of this administration will finish off whatever is left of immigration as we know it today. For the sake of a whiter America, this administration has ignored all evidence that immigrants have contributed much more in benefits than they have taken in public benefits; that they have revitalized blighted cities and towns; that they have stopped America from becoming an “aged” country that cannot support its Social Security system; that they commit far less crimes than the rest of the American populace; and that they have culturally benefited the country through their foods, traditions, and ideas. In the pandemic, many of them have saved American lives and sacrificed themselves as essential workers including doctors, nurses, EMT technicians, other hospital workers, researchers, farmworkers, meatpackers, grocery store workers, food delivery workers, etc.

The hermetical sealing of this country is also encasing America in a rusted suit of armor from which it cannot move and can only look on as the administration has ceded its dominance as the moral and physical leader of the planet. Whereas Russia has moved unimpeded in conflict zones and become the feared powerbroker in the Middle East, the US has done nothing but betray trusted allies in the region. Its stance on China has been that of a paper dragon doing little to stop China’s march to dominance over much of Asia and parts of Africa. Despite beefing up military spending and at one time surrounding himself with a phalanx of retired generals in important positions, Mr. Trump has hobbled the actions of the Armed Forces, making the US the weak man in the military community.

In the gloaming, the Republican Party’s visionary America’s Fort sits, with its non-colored inhabitants perpetually patrolling the ramparts against the outside world. One wonders what four more years will bring.

Q&A’s published on Lawyers.com and the Epoch Times on August 7, 2020 1. What is The Fastest Way to Move From F-1 to H-4/H4-EAD? 2. Asylum Denied and Placed in Removal Preceding. I Married a US Citizen and Had I-130 Interview. Can I Travel Abroad and Return Back? 3. If a Person Was Charged with Embezzlement and Served Jail Time Before Being Deported in 2008, Can He Return to the United States?

1. What is The Fastest Way to Move From F-1 to H-4/H4-EAD?

I am currently working on F1 STEM OPT extension which is expiring on 5th July, 2020 and my husband is on H1-B with an approved I-140 for green card. My H1-B was filed this year in premium but I haven’t heard if my application was picked in the lottery. If my application is not picked in the lottery this year, I will have to move to H4 and H4-EAD to continue working in the US. So, in my case, what will be the best and the fastest way to get converted to H4 and obtain a H4-EAD. I know I can file both together and go on a leave of absence at my job till I receive my EAD. And the estimated timeline for this might be 5-6 months. So is there any better way to move to H4 and H4-EAD with the least period of absence from my work. I was suggested to just re-enter US with a fresh H4 and then apply for EAD once I am in the country. But I don’t know if this will be faster and if it will work.

Mr. Lee answers: 
From our experience, we do not see too much benefit from your idea that you can receive a quicker adjudication of the H-4 EAD if you go outside to interview for the H-4 visa, enter the US, and then apply for the EAD alone instead of applying for both the change of status to H-4 and an employment authorization. U.S.C.I.S. accepts concurrent filings of both, and usually adjudicates the EAD application as soon as the H-4 is approved.  Also with the amount of time spent in applying for and receiving the H-4 visa overseas, there would likely not be much of a savings in time if any.

2. Asylum Denied and Placed in Removal Preceding. I Married a US Citizen and Had I-130 Interview. Can I Travel Abroad and Return Back?

I was denied asylum and placed in removal preceding, recently I married US Citizen and had my I-130 interview. Can I travel abroad and return back to my husband in US ( I mean if I apply for advanced parole)?

Mr. Lee answers: 
U.S.C.I.S. has a rule of not giving advance paroles to individuals in removal proceedings. Although the Board of Immigration Appeals had a ruling that departures under advance parole do not count as “entries”, that ruling did not touch upon persons under removal proceedings.  There is the danger that you would be seen as having removed yourself by leaving the US and face a bar on reentry to the country even if you somehow managed to obtain advance parole. 

3. If a Person Was Charged with Embezzlement and Served Jail Time Before Being Deported in 2008, Can He Return to the United States?

A family member was charged with embezzlement back in 2006 in CA. The said person then served time in prison and was deported either in 2008 or 2009. since it has been some years since then, if I was to start the process on applying for a green card on their behalf would it be worth it or would I be wasting my time

Mr. Lee answers:
Embezzlement is a crime involving moral turpitude at the very least and an aggravated felony at the worst if the amount embezzled exceeded $10,000 or the individual was sentenced to at least 1 year imprisonment. If there is to be a chance, there must be a petitioner capable of providing the basis upon which he can immigrate to the US, e.g. US citizen or permanent resident wife or child over the age of 21. He would also have to apply for a waiver of the crime, and so would have to have a spouse, parent, son or daughter who would suffer extreme hardship if the waiver application was turned down. Lacking those circumstances, you should not go forward.  Even with the elements in place, the chances of success are problematic.