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United States Immigration Options 2006. Gamiño Law Offices, LLC 1055 White Rock Avenue Waukesha, WI 53186. US IMMIGRATION LAWS. ***WE CAN HELP YOU OBTAIN A VISA TO ENTER THE UNITED STATES***. US Immigration Laws: Getting a visa to legally enter the US. Immigrant visas (Green Cards)
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United States Immigration Options2006 Gamiño Law Offices, LLC 1055 White Rock Avenue Waukesha, WI 53186
US IMMIGRATION LAWS • ***WE CAN HELP YOU OBTAIN A VISA TO ENTER THE UNITED STATES***
US Immigration Laws: Getting a visa to legally enter the US • Immigrant visas (Green Cards) • Right to live and work anywhere in the US • Valid for 10 years and then you can renew • Called a “legal permanent resident” (LPR) • First, you need an approved visa petition • Then, you need your “priority date” to become current • **WE CAN HELP OBTAIN & RENEW YOUR LPR**
(1) Family Based Visa Petition (2) Employment Based Visa Petition Immigrant Visas (Green Cards)- Most common ways
Immigrant Visas- Priority Numbers If you are overseas, you cannot become a green card holder until after you receive an immigrant visa to enter the US If you are in the US, you cannot get a green card until your “priority date”/ “visa number” the date that • Your relative or employer filed a visa petition for you • AND **that dateappears on the State Department’s chart**
Immigrant Visas ***All people who want to become LPRs must wait for an immigrant visa number to become available according to the preference categories • Preference Categories- a numerical limitation on the type of immigrant visas that are available for family and employment immigration.
Immigration Visas- Number of Visas Available (Example based on July 2006) • FAMILY-SPONSORED PREFERENCES • “Immediate Relatives” of US Citizens (Spouse of Citizen, Parent of Citizen who is older than 21, Child under 21) NO WAITING FOR VISA NUMBER • First : Unmarried Sons and Daughters of Citizens: 23,400 plus any numbers not required for fourth preference. • Second : Spouses and Children, and Unmarried Sons and Daughters of Permanent Residents: 114,200, plus the number (if any) by which the worldwide family preference level exceeds 226,000, and any unused first preference numbers: • A. Spouses and Children: 77% of the overall second preference limitation, of which 75% are exempt from the per-country limit; • B. Unmarried Sons and Daughters (21 years of age or older): 23% of the overall second preference limitation. • Third : Married Sons and Daughters of Citizens: 23,400, plus any numbers not required by first and second preferences. • Fourth : Brothers and Sisters of Adult Citizens: 65,000, plus any numbers not required by first three preferences.
Family Immigrant Visas- Availability (Example based on July 2006)
Family Based Petitions • Who is eligible? Related or engaged to a US Citizen • Spouse • Married son or daughter • Unmarried son or daughter (including divorced or widowed) • Child • Brother • Sister • Engaged to be married
Family Based Petitions B. Related to an LPR (1) spouse (2) child (under age 21) (3) unmarried sons or daughters (of any age)
Family Based Petitons • Does Not Include: • Aunt or Uncle • Niece or nephew • Cousins • Grandparents OF US CITIZENS • Does Not Include • Siblings • Parents or • Fiances OF LPRs (GREEN CARD HOLDERS)
Immediate Relatives of Citizens • Nowaiting for visa “priority date” • Includes • Spouse of Citizen • Parent of Citizen who is older than 21 • Child under 21 **Average wait for green card is 2-12 months
Family Based- 1st Preference • Unmarried sons or daughters of US Citizens • Must be over 21 and not married • (If they were under 21 they would be considered Immediate Relatives) • Average Waits • Worldwide- 6 years • China- 6 years • India- 6 years • Mexico- 14 years • Phillipines-15 years
Family Based-2nd Preference • 2A-Spouses of LPRs and their and unmarried children under 21 yrs old • Average Wait • Worldwide 7 years • 2B unmarried children of LPRs over 21 yrs old • Average Waits: Worldwide, China and India 10 yr wait • Mexico- 15 yr wait • Philippines- 10 year wait
Family Based 3rd Preference • Married children of Citizens • Sons • Daughters • Average Waits • Worldwide, China and India 8 years • Mexico- 12 years • Philippines- as many as 17 years
Family 4th Preference • Brothers of Citizens • Sisters of Citizens • Only citizens over 21 can petition for brothers and sisters • Average Waits: • Worldwide and China- 11 years • India- 12 years • Mexico- 13 years • Philippines- 23 years
What can affect your family preference category? • Marriage of son or daughter over 21 of a citizen 1st 3rd preference • Marriage of child of citizen under 21 Immediate Relative 3rd preference • Divorce of child changes 3rd immediate relative or 1st preference • Child turns 21, Immediate relative 1st preference • LPR petitioner becomes a citizen 2nd 1st or Immediate relative
Petitioning for Parents • You must be at least 21 to petition for your parents • You must be a citizen to petition for your parents • If you were born and raised to married parents you can petition for your parents as immediate relatives
Petitioning for Parents • If your mother was not married to your father when you were born and her maiden name appears on your birth certificate you can file for her and give a copy of your birth certificate when you file for her
Petitioning for Parents • If your biological father did not marry your mother you have to provide some evidence of your relationship such as • Blood test • Proof of financial support • Photographs of your relationship
Petitioning for Parents • You can petition for your step-parent if their marriage to your biological parent occurred before your 18th birthday • You can petition for your adopted parent if you were adopted before age 16
Petitioning for Your Child • As a US citizen or an LPR (green card holder) you can get a green card for your child • A US Citizen for a child < 21 (immediate relative) • A US Citizen for an unmarried child > 21 (1st preference) • A US Citizen for a married child > 21 (3rd preference) • LPR for an unmarried child < 21 (2A preference) • LPR for unmarried child > 21 (2B preference)
Petitioning for Your Child • DEFINITION OF CHILD • Child of Married Parents • Mother and father married before birth of child • Child of Unmarried Parents • Prove parent-child relationship through mother • Need birth certificate with name of mother and child • Prove parent-child relationship through father • Must show biological father • Must show there was a father-child relationship • “Legitimated” Child of Married Parents • Parents got married before child turned 18 • Stepchild • Marriage between biological and step parent must occur before child turns 18 • Adopted Child • Child must have been adopted before age 16 • Child lived w/adopting parents at least 2 years before petition was filed
Parent must file a “visa petition” to prove to the immigration authorities that his/her children are truly and legally his/hers Then child must submit a green card application and attend an interview to prove that they are otherwise eligible for permanent residence Petitioning for Your Child
Petitioning for Your Sibling • ***IF YOU ARE A CITIZEN WE CAN HELP YOU PETITION FOR YOUR BROTHER OR SISTER***
Petitioning for Your Sibling • WHO IS A SIBLING? • Legitimate sibling • Same mother and father • Citizen must be at least 21 • Half-sibling • Same process as full blooded sibling • Step-sibling • Biological parent must have married step-parent before sibling’s 18th birthday • Adopted sibling • Adoption occurs before 16th birthday of adopted sibling • Spouse and minor children < 21- visa privilege extended to them
EMPLOYMENT-BASED PETITIONS • We can help your employer petition you for permanent residency!
Employment Based Visas- Who qualifies? • 1st Preference- people of extraordinary ability • 2nd preference- advanced degrees and people of exceptional ability • 3rd preference- skilled and unskilled workers and those with a Bachelor’s degree • 4th preference- special and religious workers • 5th preference- entrepreneurs
Immigrant Visas- Number available (Example based on July 2006) • EMPLOYMENT-BASED PREFERENCES • First : Priority Workers: 28.6% of the worldwide employment-based preference level, plus any numbers not required for fourth and fifth preferences. • Second : Members of the Professions Holding Advanced Degrees or Persons of Exceptional Ability: 28.6% of the worldwide employment-based preference level, plus any numbers not required by first preference. • Third : Skilled Workers, Professionals, and Other Workers: 28.6% of the worldwide level, plus any numbers not required by first and second preferences, not more than 10,000 of which to "Other Workers". Schedule A Workers : Employment First, Second, and Third preference Schedule A applicants are entitled to up to 50,000 “recaptured” numbers. • Fourth : Certain Special Immigrants: 7.1% of the worldwide level. • Fifth : Employment Creation: 7.1% of the worldwide level, not less than 3,000 of which reserved for investors in a targeted rural or high-unemployment area, and 3,000 set aside for investors in regional centers
Employment Immigrant Visas- Availability (Example based on July 2006)
Employment Based Petitions • “NONPRIORITY JOBS” (2nd and 3rd preference) • REQUIRE A LABOR CERTIFICATION • WE CAN HELP YOUR EMPLOYER OBTAIN A LABOR CERTIFICATION • Jobs requiring Graduate degrees • Professionals without graduate degrees • Factory workers • Plumbers • Domestic workers • Carpenters • Landscapers
Employment Based Petitions • LABOR CERTIFICATION- a finding by theDepartment of Labor that there are not enough qualified US workers in the location where the alien will perform a job and that the employment of the alien will not adversely affect the US labor market • MUST SHOW: • (1) foreign worker must prove he or she is qualified either by training, education or experience • (2) Employer must prove that it is financially able to pay the wage for the job
Employment Based Petitions • Labor Certifications • Department of Labor must approve the employment of an alien • Employer must prove: • Job being offered to the alien is otherwise open to US residents • There are no unnecessary conditions placed on the position • The wage offered is at least the prevailing wage in the community
Employment Petitions • Special Categories • Religious Workers • Medical doctors licensed in the US and worked in the US since 1978
Priority Workers • Extraordinary ability • Science • Arts • Sports • Computing • Acclaimed in at least one country other than your own • Outstanding professors and researchers • Corporate executives and managers
Professionals and People with exceptional ability Advanced Degrees (MA or Ph.D) At least 5 years of progressively responsible experience after graduating Acclaimed and recognized in your own country Need a labor certification
Skilled Workers • Professionals without advanced degrees • College degree • Less than 5 years experience • Skilled workers • At least 2 years of training and experience • Permanent job
Unskilled workers • Called “schedule B” • If you want to obtain a schedule B employment visa your employer needs a labor certification to show that • there are no citizens or LPRs available to do that job and that • hiring the applicant would not adversely affect the wages of US citizens and LPRs similarly situated
Live-In Domestic Workers • Need offer of employment • Family must show business need---that the work you do requires another person to help 24 hours with either the kids or an ailing parent • Show that no member of the family is able to perform the job while you are not home • Family must submit proof afford wage offered • Family must show there was no one else available • REQUIREMENT- 6 years of education and 3 months paid experience as live-in household worker
Religious Workers • No Labor cert required • Must have job offer • Who qualifies? • Member or Minister of Religious Denomination • With recognized creed, form of worship, history, places of worship and standard system of training • Bona fide group in the US • Non profit standing in the US • Must have been paid to engage in full time religious vocation or professional work • Requiring college degree or equivalent • In a religious organization for at least 2 years before applying for an immigrant visa • You must have been offered a position by the US religious affiliate to work in “a religious vocation, profession or occupation” • Minister, priest, brother, nun, monk, religious instructors, counselors, cantors, catechists, religious hospitals, translators, missionaries or broadcasters
NONIMMIGRANT VISAS • IF YOU DO NOT QUALIFY FOR LPR, THEN WE CAN HELP YOU GET A NONIMMIGRANT VISA • Nonimmigrant visas (NIVs) • Right to stay in the US temporarily with limited rights • Rights to work, study, visit, conduct business • Rights vary depending on the NIV sought
Nonimmigrant Visas- Most Common • B-1- temporary business • B-2- temporary tourist • F-1 - students • H-1B- specialty occupation requiring bachelor’s degree (employer files) • H-2A- temporary agricultural workers (employer files) • H-2B- temporary workers for jobs for which there is a shortage of qualified American workers (employer files) • K-1- fiancé(e)s of US citizens coming to get married within 90 days of entry to US • R-1- religious occupations (employer files)
NONIMMIGRANT VISAS • WE CAN HELP YOU FILE FOR A RENEWAL, OR CHANGE, YOUR NIV STATUS IF • you were lawfully admitted into the United States with a nonimmigrant visa, • your nonimmigrant visa status remains valid, • and you have not committed any crimes that would make you ineligible • IT IS BEST TO FILE FOR AN EXTENTION OF NIV STATUS AT LEAST 45 DAYS BEFORE THE VISA WILL EXPIRE
NONIMMIGRANT VISAS • IF YOU FALL OUT OF STATUS DUE TO LATENESS OF FILING AN APPLICATION, WE CAN STILL HELP YOU EXTEND OR CHANGE YOUR STATUS IF YOU SHOW THAT: • (1) The delay was due to extraordinary circumstances beyond your control; • (2) The length of the delay was reasonable; • (3) You have not done anything else to violate your nonimmigrant status (such as work without USCIS approval); • (4) You are still a nonimmigrant (This means that you are not trying to become a permanent resident of the United States. There are some exceptions.); and • (5) You are not in formal proceedings to remove (deport) you from the country.
B-1 and B-2 visas • WE CAN HELP YOU BRING YOUR FRIENDS/FAMILY HERE FROM ABROAD • WE CAN ALSO HELP YOU APPLY FOR EXTENTIONS OF YOUR B VISA • If you are coming to the US as a visitor for a temporary business trip • Making investments • Buying goods • Attending seminars (up to 1 year stay) OR • If you are visiting the US temporarily as a tourist or for medical treatment • (usually a 6 month stay)
F-1 Student Visa • WE CAN HELP YOU OR YOUR FAMILY MEMBERS APPLY FOR THIS NIV • Must have been accepted at a school approved by the US government • Public and private colleges, vocational schools, some high school and middle school programs • Must pursue a full course of study • Example: 12 credits at a University a semester • Program must lead to a degree/diploma • Must have been accepted by the school before applying for the visa • Must have enough money to study full-time without working • Must prove that you intend to return to your home country when your program is over • Visa usually issued for the estimated length of time it will take to complete your proposed program of studies
H-1B “Temporary Specialty Worker” • WE CAN HELP YOUR EMPLOYER FILE FOR THIS NIV • College educated workers • Need job offer from a US employer • Must be coming to the US to perform services in a job requiring a college degree or equivalent work experience • Must be offered the prevailing wage for same geographic area for that type of job • Employer must have filed an attestation with the Department of Labor • (similar to a sworn declaration or written oath about the job)
H-1B Temporary Specialty Worker • WE CAN HELP YOUR EMPLOYER FILE FOR THIS NIV • Bachelor’s or higher degree “or the equivalent” • This means 3 years of specialized training and/or work experience for every year of college that you would have attended • “Specialty occupation” • This means that the position must require the skills of a highly educated person • H-1B visas can be extended for 3 years at a time for no longer than a total of 6 years
H-2B-Temporary Nonagricultural Worker • WE CAN HELP YOUR EMPLOYER FILE FOR THIS NIV FOR YOU • Skilled and unskilled • Must have job offer from US employer that is temporary or seasonal • Need a temporary labor certification (to show that no qualified US workers are available) • Show that you intend to return home after your visa expires • Can be first issued for a 1 year maximum • Can be allowed two 1 year extentions
H-2A- Temporary Agricultural Worker • We can help your agricultural employer file for this NIV for you: • US agricultural employer must first search for US workers throughout the entire region of the US in which the employer is based • Usually for large crews of foreign laborers at one time for a particular harvest • Will not be issued for foreign workers who are in the US illegally