If 2017 is any indication, the new year will bring a fresh cascade of changes—both announced and unannounced, anticipated and unanticipated—in the business immigration landscape. Few, if any, of these changes are expected to be good news for U.S. businesses and the foreign workers they employ.
In 2017, while much of the news media focused on the Trump Administration’s draconian changes to practices and policies that affected the undocumented—including ending the DACA Dreamer program, shutting down Temporary Protected Status for citizens of countries ravished by war and natural disaster, and aggressively enforcing at the southern border and in “sensitive” locations such as churches, courthouses and homeless shelters—relatively less attention has been paid to the steady, incremental erosion of rights and options for legal immigrants, particularly those who are sponsored for work by U.S. employers, under the Administration’s April 2017 “Buy American/Hire American” executive order. There is no doubt that such restrictions to the legal immigration system will continue to cause business uncertainty and disruption in 2018. Here’s what to expect.
H-1B Workers Will Continue to Be Targeted
According to the Department of Homeland Security’s ("DHS's") 2018 regulatory plan, H-1B employers, H-1B employees and their family members could be dramatically affected by new regulations. The plan, in conjunction with the “Hire American” executive order, proposes to:
- Require pre-registration and pre-selection for companies that wish to sponsor new H-1B workers. Although selection criteria are unknown at this time, a similar Notice of Rulemaking was published in March 2011 (but never finalized) that called for random selection. We do not yet know to what extent, if at all, the new rule will track the old proposal.
- Redefine the term, “specialty occupation,” so that only “the best and brightest foreign nationals” qualify. We do not know how “best and brightest” will be measured, or how the standards for “specialty occupation,” which apply to the H-1B job, not the individual employee, will be applied to achieve the stated goal.
- Redefine the terms “employment” and “employer-employee relationship,” which are pivotal to the H-1B category, in order to “protect U.S. workers and wages.” We have no further information at this time, but can reasonably predict that this proposal will affect third-party placements, contracted resources and staffing agencies.
- Eliminate work permits for the spouses of H-1B workers. If an H-1B employee is well into a green card process based on employer sponsorship, current law allows the spouse to apply for a work permit, a provision that mainly helps Indian and Chinese nationals, who have a wait list of up to 10 years before green cards are issued. Spouses of H-1B workers in other nationalities get work permits or green cards much faster, often within a year or two.
- End the widely used 1-year and 3-year extensions that enable H-1B workers to keep their jobs past the normal 6-year limit, while green card processes are underway—another provision that primarily helps those who are stuck on years-long waiting lists (not listed in DHS’s regulatory agenda, but reported by several outlets).
Additional H-1B changes that occurred in 2017 and are likely to continue include:
- Under “Hire American” and, specifically this seemingly innocuous phrase, “ensure that H-1B visas are awarded to the most-skilled or highest-paid,” we expect ongoing challenges to employers who file for entry level professionals. In the 2017 H-1B filing cycle, U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services (“USCIS”) sent thousands of Requests for Evidence proposing that entry level jobs could not qualify for H-1Bs, despite absolute clarity under current law and regulations—not to mention decades of USCIS practice—that salary is irrelevant to the “specialty occupation” analysis, as long as job duties require preparation at least at the baccalaureate level.
- Under a March 2017 USCIS policy memo, we expect challenges to employers who file for Computer Programmers, particularly when pay scale is at the lower end and duties are described as “complex” or “unique.”
- Under an August 2017 USCIS policy memo defining “affiliate” and “subsidiary,” we expect new challenges to employers who claim exemption from the “ACWIA” training fee by virtue of employee head count.
The Welcome Mat for Foreign Students Will Be Rolled Up
DHS’s regulatory agenda also proposes “comprehensive reform” to practical training programs that allow foreign students to obtain paid work in their academic fields after graduation—a pathway that can lead to H-1B status and eventually green card sponsorship by U.S. employers who find their services valuable. Immigration & Customs Enforcement is widely expected to end “STEM OPT” eligibility, a 2015 provision that extended the normal 1 year of practical training to 3 years for graduates in STEM fields who work for employers enrolled in E-Verify. Ironically, the agenda also promotes measures to incentivize E-Verify use by more U.S. employers, which this very provision has done.
Employment-based Green Card Eligibility Will Be Reduced
The “Hire American” executive order cryptically mentions a legal provision that makes permanent foreign workers inadmissible to the United States without a valid labor certification, and vows to “rigorously enforce“ it in order to “create higher wages and employment rates” for U.S. workers. Operated by the Department of Labor’s (“DOL’s”) Employment and Training Administration, the labor certification program requires an employer to prove that no qualified U.S. worker is available for a sponsored job and that employing the foreigner will not adversely affect wages and working conditions for U.S. workers.
DOL’s 2018 regulatory agenda does not mention changes to labor certification or other foreign-worker programs. However, DHS’s agenda proposes to revamp how USCIS officers judge whether an alien will become a “public charge,” defined as becoming “primarily dependent” on government help for income maintenance. By regulation, the public charge ground of inadmissibility has never been applied to employer-sponsored immigrants, unless the individual or a family member has an ownership stake in the company. While it is unclear how “Hire American” may alter this provision, the Administration could, for example, require a certain education or salary level (even above DOL’s prevailing wage determination that is a prerequisite for labor certification) as proof that an immigrant is not likely to become a public charge. The Trump Administration could also broaden the list of public benefits that make immigrants inadmissible (or deportable, after a green card is granted). That list does not currently include, for example, school lunch programs, government financial aid for college, public health services such as immunizations and testing or treatment for communicable diseases, public housing benefits or utility assistance programs. If such changes are implemented, they will have a sweeping effect on large numbers of legal immigrants, including those who are sponsored by their employers.
Other Visa Categories Will Be Constrained and Scrutinized
Based on adjudications and processing trends we have seen in 2017, we anticipate all of the following to be features of 2018 business immigration:
- J-1 Summer Work/Travel Visas: Many U.S. companies employ young people as summer interns under this program. In January 2017, the State Department expanded its 2011 and 2012 changes to the program by further limiting the types of positions that are eligible, the role of foreign and domestic third-party agencies in placing individuals with companies, and other changes.
- TN Visas: In April 2017, the Administration announced it would not unilaterally withdraw from NAFTA, but would renegotiate the treaty. During renegotiations, we expect DHS to continue restricting eligibility under NAFTA’s Professional Series List, where possible to do so. We have already seen the definition of economists diminished to exclude financial analysts and other financial occupations.
- Advance Parole Denials: In August 2017, without notice, USCIS began denying advance parole (travel permission) for all applicants who travel while the Form I-131 application is pending. Previously, applicants who maintained underlying H-1 or L-1 status were not subject to advance parole denial.
- Extensions of Status: In October 2017, USCIS announced it would no longer defer to prior approvals in most categories (H-1B, L-1A, L-1B, O-1A, O-1B, TN, etc.), even when the same employer files an extension for the same worker in the identical job at the same location. Previously, the agency did defer to prior approvals if there was no material change, unless approving the first petition was “clear error” on the agency’s part. Ending this deference effectively makes every filing an “initial” petition, with the same high bar for approval as if the agency had never seen the same set of facts before, and effectively preserves the agency’s seemingly infinite use of “discretion” to challenge even clearly approvable filings.
- Site Visits: On-site visits by government inspectors to the workplaces of both H-1B and L-1 workers ramped up in 2017 and are expected to increase further. Our clients have reported site visits even for employees who entered in blanket L-1 status, which involves no individual filing with USCIS. In early 2014, when USCIS’s Fraud Detection and National Security Directorate announced that its site visits would expand to include the L-1 category, employees who entered on blanket L-1 visas were explicitly excluded because USCIS had no way to identify or track them at that time. That may no longer be the case, and employers may experience blanket L surveillance and inspection in 2018, in addition to the more common visits after an H-1B or L-1 petition has been approved by USCIS.
Hunton & Williams’ Immigration Practice will continue to monitor and report on these and other changes to law, regulation, policy and practice that may affect U.S. businesses and their employees in 2018 and beyond.
- Counsel
Suzan’s practice focuses exclusively on immigration and nationality law. Suzan represents businesses and individuals in administrative proceedings before the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, U.S. Customs and ...
Search
Recent Posts
Categories
- Advertising & Marketing
- Bankruptcy
- Class Action
- Competition/Antitrust
- Consumer Protection
- Corporate Governance
- Environmental
- General
- Health Care
- Insurance
- IP
- Labor and Employment
- Mergers & Acquisitions
- Patent Infringement
- Patents
- Privacy & Cybersecurity
- Product Liability
- Real Estate
- Regulatory
- Regulatory
- Technology & E-Commerce
Tags
- 29 C.F.R. § 785.48
- 396-r
- 3D Printer
- 3D Printing
- A. Todd Brown
- A.S. Research (ASR)
- Aaron P. Simpson
- Advertisers
- Advertising
- Advertising Claims
- Advertising Idea
- Agency Guidance
- AI
- AI Interviewing Platforms
- Algorithmic Accountability Act
- Align
- Americans with Disabilities Act
- Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
- Andrea DeField
- Ann Marie Buerkle
- Annual Reports
- anti-aging
- Anti-Discrimination
- APEX Agreement
- Arbitration
- Arbitration Agreements
- Arizona
- Arkansas
- Arthritis
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence (AI)
- Asbestos
- Assembly Bill 51 (AB 51)
- ATDS
- Australia
- Auto-renewals
- automatic telephone dialing system (ATDS)
- Automobile
- Automotive Body Parts Association (ABPA)
- Back to Work Emergency Ordinance
- biased endorsements
- Biden Administration
- Biometric Data
- Biometric Information
- Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA)
- BIPA
- Bitcoin
- Blockchain
- Board Diversity Disclosure
- Boards of Directors
- Bonuses
- Braille
- Branding
- Breach
- Breach of Contract
- Business Interruption Loss
- Businessowner’s Insurance
- California
- California Assembly Bill 2011
- California Employment Laws
- California Fair Employment and Housing Act
- California False Claims Act
- California Labor Code
- California Senate Bill 6
- California’s Unfair Competition Law
- CAMS
- Canada
- Cannabis
- CBD
- CBP
- CCPA
- Celebrity Endorsers
- Center for Disease Control (CDC)
- CFIUS
- CGL
- Chatbot
- Children’s Advertising
- Children’s Advertising Review Unit
- Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA)
- China
- Christopher J. Dufek
- Christopher W. Hasbrouck
- Christy Kiely
- Class Action
- Class Actions
- Clawback
- Click-to-Cancel
- Climate Change
- clinical trials
- Collective Action
- Colorado
- Commercial General Liability
- Commercial Leasing
- Commodity Futures Trading Commission
- Compliance
- Congress
- Connecticut
- Consent
- Consent Order
- Consumer Data
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
- Consumer Fraud
- consumer loyalty program
- Consumer Product Safety Act
- Consumer Products
- Consumer Products Safety Commission (CPSC)
- Consumer Protection
- Consumer Review Fairness Act of 2016 (CRFA)
- Consumer Reviews
- Contamination
- Contract Law
- Controlled Substance Act
- Cookware
- COPPA
- Copyright
- Coronavirus/COVID-19
- Corp Fin
- Corporate Governance
- Corporate Sustainability
- Counterfeit Goods
- Counterfeit Goods Seizure Act of 2019
- CPRA
- CPSA
- CPSC
- Crack House Statute
- CRFA
- Cryptocurrency
- CSPA
- Cuba
- Currency
- Customs and Border Protection
- Cyber Coverage
- D&O
- D&O policies
- D. Andrew Quigley
- Damages
- Data Breach
- Davidson
- Deceptive Advertising
- DEI
- Delaware
- DEP
- Department of Justice
- Department of Labor
- Development Impact Fee
- Digital Assets
- digital currency
- Disclosures
- Distribution
- Division of Corporation Finance
- Dodd-Frank
- DOJ
- DOL
- Duty to Defend
- Duty to Indemnify
- e-liquid products
- Eddie Bauer
- EEOC
- Electric Vehicles
- Eleventh Circuit
- Emily Burkhardt Vicente
- Employee Rights
- Endorsement
- Endorsement Guides
- Endorsement Notice
- Endorsements
- endorser monitoring requirements
- Enforcement
- Environmental Protection Agency
- Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
- EPA
- Epidemic
- ESG
- ESG Disclosure
- EU Regulation
- European Union
- European Unitary Patent
- EV Charging
- Exceptions
- Exclusions
- Exercise Machines
- Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)
- FAA
- Fair Labor Standards Act
- Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)
- fair use
- False Advertising
- False Advertising Claims
- False Advertising Law
- False Claims Act
- Family Leave Policies
- FCC
- FCRA
- FDA
- Federal Arbitration Act (FAA)
- Federal Communications Commission
- Federal District Court
- Federal Trade Commission
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
- FFDCA
- FIFRA
- Fifth Circuit
- Fireworks
- First Amendment
- Fixing America’s Surface Transportation (FAST) Act
- Florida
- Florida House of Representatives (HB 963) and Florida Senate (SB 1670)
- Florida Legislature
- FLSA
- FLSA/Wage & Hour
- food delivery
- Food Safety
- Form 10-K
- Formaldehyde Standards for Composite Wood Products Act of 2010
- fractional interests
- Franchise
- Frederic Chang
- Free Trials
- FTC
- FTC Act
- Gavin Newsom
- GDPR
- General Liability
- Geoffrey B. Fehling
- Georgia
- Gift Cards
- GoodRx
- Gramm-Leach-Bliley (GLB) Act
- Green
- Green Guides
- Greenhouse Gas
- Gun Safety
- Hart-Scott-Rodino
- Hart-Scott-Rodino (HSR)
- hashtag
- Hawaii
- Health Care
- Health Claims
- Hedge Fund
- HIPAA
- hoverboards
- human capital
- Human Rights
- Illinois
- Illinois Artificial Intelligence Video Interview Act (the Illinois Act)
- Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA)
- Indiana
- Influencer Marketing
- Infringement
- initial public offerings (IPOs)
- Injury
- Insurance
- Insurance Loss
- Insurance Provider
- Intellectual Property
- Intellectual Property Licenses in Bankruptcy Act
- Interest Rate
- International
- International Trade Commission
- International Trade Commission (ITC)
- INVISALIGN
- Iowa
- IP
- Ireland
- IT
- ITC
- iTERO
- Katherine Miller
- Kurt A. Powell
- Kurt G. Larkin
- Labeling Rules
- Labor
- Labor Code Private Attorneys General Act of 2004 (PAGA)
- Labor Organizing
- Labor Unions
- Land Use
- Landlord
- Latin America
- Lautenberg Act
- Lawsuit Reform Alliance of New York (LRANY)
- Lead
- Lease
- Legislation
- Leveraged Loans
- Liability Insurance Policy
- Liberty Insurance Corporation
- Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Company
- LIBOR Discontinuation
- liquidity
- Litigation
- Live Chat
- Louisiana
- M&A
- Made in the USA
- Made in USA
- MagicSleeve
- Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act
- Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act (MMWA)
- Maine
- Malcolm C. Weiss
- Manufacturing
- Marketing Claims
- Maryland
- Massachusetts
- Matthew T. McLellan
- Maya M. Eckstein
- MD&A
- Medtail
- Membership cancellation
- Metaverse
- MeToo Movement
- Mexico
- Michael J. Mueller
- Michael S. Levine
- Minimum Wage
- Minnesota
- Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA)
- Misclassification
- Mislabeling
- Mission Product Holdings
- Missouri
- Mobile
- Mobile App
- Multi-Level Marketing Program (MLM)
- NAA
- NAD
- NASA
- National Advertising Division
- National Advertising Division (NAD)
- National Advertising Review Board
- National Products Inc.
- National Retail Federation
- Natural Disaster
- Nebraska
- Neil K. Gilman
- Network Outage
- Nevada
- New Jersey
- New York
- NHTSA
- NIL rights
- Ninth Circuit
- NLRA
- NLRB
- no-action request
- non-fungible token (NFT)
- North Carolina
- Obama Administration
- Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
- Occurrence
- Office of Labor Standards Enforcement
- Ohio
- Oklahoma
- Online Cash Providers
- Online Retailer
- online reviews
- Opioids
- Oregon
- Overboarding
- Overtime
- Overtime Exemptions
- Ownership
- Packaging
- PAGA
- Pandemic
- Patent
- Patent Infringement
- Patents
- Paul T. Moura
- Pay Ratio
- pay-to-play rankings
- Penalty
- Pennsylvania
- Personal and Advertising Injury
- Personal Data
- Personal Information
- Personally Identifiable Information
- Pesticides
- PFAS
- Physical Loss or Damage
- Policy
- price gouging
- Privacy
- Privacy Guidelines
- Privacy Policy
- Privacy Protections
- Prohibition on Sale
- Property Insurance
- Property Rights
- Proposition 65
- Proxy Access
- proxy materials
- Proxy Statements
- Public Companies
- Purdue Pharma
- Randall S. Parks
- Ransomware
- real estate
- Recall
- Recalls
- Regulation
- Regulation S-K
- Restaurants
- Restrictive Covenants
- Retail
- Retail Development
- Retail Industry Leaders Association
- Retail Litigation Center
- Rounding
- Rulemaking
- Ryan A. Glasgow
- Sales Tax
- Scott H. Kimpel
- SD8 coins
- SEC
- SEC Disclosure
- Second Circuit
- Section 337
- Section 365
- Secure and Fair Enforcement Banking Act of 2019 (“SAFE Banking Act”)
- Securities
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
- security checks
- Senate
- Senate Data Handling Report
- Sergio F. Oehninger
- Service Contract Act (SCA)
- Service Provider
- SHARE
- Shareholder
- Shareholder Proposals
- Slogan
- Smart Contracts
- Social Media
- Social Media Influencers
- Software
- South Carolina
- South Dakota
- Special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs)
- State Attorneys General
- Store Closures
- Subscription Services
- Substantiation
- Substantiation Notice
- Supplier
- Supply Chain
- Supply contracts
- Supreme Court
- Sustainability
- Syed S. Ahmad
- Synovia
- Targeted Advertising
- Tax
- TCCWNA
- TCPA
- Technology
- Telemarketing
- Telephone Consumer Protection Act
- Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA)
- Tempnology LLC
- Tenant
- Tennessee
- Terms and Conditions
- Texas
- the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA)
- Thomas R. Waskom
- Title VII
- tokenization
- tokens
- Toxic Chemicals
- Toxic Substances Control Act
- Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)
- Trade Dress
- Trademark
- Trademark Infringement
- Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB)
- TransUnion
- Travel
- Trump Administration
- TSCA
- TSCA Title VI
- U.S. Department of Justice
- U.S. Department of Labor
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration
- U.S. House of Representatives
- U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
- Umbrella Liability
- Union
- Union Organizing
- United Specialty Insurance Company
- Unmanned Aircraft
- Unruh Civil Rights Act
- UPSTO
- US Chamber of Commerce
- US Customs and Border Protection (CBP)
- US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
- US International Trade Commission (ITC)
- US Origin Claims
- US Patent and Trademark Office
- US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO)
- US Supreme Court
- USDA
- USPTO
- Utah
- Varidesk
- Vermont
- Virginia
- volatile organic compound (VOC) emissions
- W. Jeffery Edwards
- Wage and Hour
- Walter J. Andrews
- Warranties
- Warranty
- Washington
- Washington DC
- Web Accessibility
- Weight Loss
- Wiretapping
- World Health Organization (WHO)
- Wyoming
- Year In Review
- Zoning Regulations
Authors
- Gary A. Abelev
- Alexander Abramenko
- Yaniel Abreu
- Syed S. Ahmad
- Nancy B. Beck, PhD, DABT
- Brandon Bell
- Fawaz A. Bham
- Michael J. “Jack” Bisceglia
- Jeremy S. Boczko
- Brian J. Bosworth
- Shannon S. Broome
- A. Todd Brown, Sr.
- Samuel L. Brown
- Tyler P. Brown
- Melinda Brunger
- Jimmy Bui
- M. Brett Burns
- Olivia G. Bushman
- Matthew J. Calvert
- María Castellanos
- Grant H. Cokeley
- Abigail Contreras
- Alexandra B. Cunningham
- Merideth Snow Daly
- Javier De Luna
- Timothy G. Decker
- Andrea DeField
- John J. Delionado
- Stephen P. Demm
- Mayme Donohue
- Nicholas Drews
- Christopher J. Dufek
- Robert T. Dumbacher
- M. Kaylan Dunn
- Frederick R. Eames
- Maya M. Eckstein
- Tara L. Elgie
- Clare Ellis
- Latosha M. Ellis
- Juan C. Enjamio
- Kelly L. Faglioni
- Ozzie A. Farres
- Geoffrey B. Fehling
- Hannah Flint
- Erin F. Fonté
- Kevin E. Gaunt
- Andrew G. Geyer
- Armin Ghiam
- Neil K. Gilman
- Ryan A. Glasgow
- Tonya M. Gray
- Aidan Gross
- Elisabeth R. Gunther
- Steven M. Haas
- Kevin Hahm
- Jason W. Harbour
- Jeffrey L. Harvey
- Christopher W. Hasbrouck
- Eileen Henderson
- Gregory G. Hesse
- Kirk A. Hornbeck
- Rachel E. Hudgins
- Jamie Zysk Isani
- Nicole R. Johnson
- Roland M. Juarez
- Suzan Kern
- Jason J. Kim
- Scott H. Kimpel
- Andrew S. Koelz
- Leslie W. Kostyshak
- Perie Reiko Koyama
- Torsten M. Kracht
- Brad Kuntz
- Kurt G. Larkin
- Tyler S. Laughinghouse
- Matthew Z. Leopold
- Michael S. Levine
- Ashley Lewis
- Abigail M. Lyle
- Maeve Malik
- Phyllis H. Marcus
- Eric R. Markus
- Brandon Marvisi
- John Gary Maynard, III
- Gray Moeller
- Reilly C. Moore
- Michael D. Morfey
- Ann Marie Mortimer
- Michael J. Mueller
- J. Drei Munar
- Marcus E. Nelson
- Matthew Nigriny
- Justin F. Paget
- Christopher M. Pardo
- Randall S. Parks
- Katherine C. Pickens
- Gregory L. Porter
- Kurt A. Powell
- Robert T. Quackenboss
- D. Andrew Quigley
- Michael Reed
- Shawn Patrick Regan
- Jonathan D. Reichman
- Kelli Regan Rice
- Patrick L. Robson
- Amber M. Rogers
- Natalia San Juan
- Katherine P. Sandberg
- Arthur E. Schmalz
- Daniel G. Shanley
- Madison W. Sherrill
- Kevin V. Small
- J.R. Smith
- Bennett Sooy
- Daniel Stefany
- Katherine Tanzola
- Javaneh S. Tarter
- Jessica N. Vara
- Emily Burkhardt Vicente
- Mark R. Vowell
- Gregory R. Wall
- Thomas R. Waskom
- Malcolm C. Weiss
- Holly H. Williamson
- Samuel Wolff
- Steven L. Wood
- Jingyi “Alice” Yao
- Jessica G. Yeshman