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July 8, 2010

Family-Based Visas Going Unused

As an immigration lawyer, I regularly advise green-card holders how long it will take to sponsor their spouse, their brother, or their child for a green card. The U.S. immigration law has several categories under which a U.S. citizen, or a U.S. permanent resident (green card holder), can sponsor a close relative. All but one of these categories (the category including the spouse, child, or parent of a U.S. citizen), is subject to annual numerical limitation. The annual limitation for worldwide family immigration in 2010 is 226,000. This numerical limitation is determined annually by the U.S. State Department, in accordance with U.S. immigration law.

Because more than 226,000 family-based visa applicants wish to immigrate annually, a queue is formed in each of the family-based categories. Applicants are assigned a "priority date" that serves as their place holder in the queue. The priority date is the date that a sponsoring family member submitted the immigrant visa petition. So if a permanent resident submitted a visa petition for their spouse on April 1, 2001, the priority date for the spouse is April 1, 2001. Applicants can then view where the queue currently is by reviewing the State Department's Visa Bulletin, published monthly.

As an example, an excerpt from the July 2010 Visa Bulletin is below. The family-based immigration chart is at the bottom of the first page, and continues onto the second page. Category "2A" is the category for spouses and children of permanent residents. Under the "All Chargeability Areas Except Those Listed" column, the current priority date for category 2A is July 1, 2008. This means that if a permanent resident submitted a petition for their spouse or child before July 1, 2008, the spouse and child could now apply to immigrate to the U.S. So for persons that fall within the category of 'spouse and/or child of permanent resident", the overall timing will be around two years. The rest of the family-based chart shows some queues going back into the 1990's, and even 1989 for one category. For persons in those categories, the amount of time it takes from when their sponsor submits an application until the benefiiary can actually apply for an immigrant visa, can be up to twenty years.

Excerpt July 2010 Visa Bulletin

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October 23, 2009

Green Card Bill Passes for Widows of U.S. Citizens

This week the U.S. Congress headed towards a new immigration law that would allow spouses of U.S. citizens to continue, or even begin the green card process, even if their U.S. citizen spouse has passed away. To date, the United States Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS) has taken the harsh approach that if the U.S. citizen petitioner died, the pending green card application died as well. This harsh approach resulted in tragic consequences of widows facing deportation after the death of their spouse. The bill Congress passed this week would allow surviving spouses to apply for a green card for themselves and their children, regardless of when their spouse died or how long they were married. President Obama is expected to sign it into law.

Immigration law provides for the foreign national spouse of a U.S. citizen to apply for a green card based on being married to a U.S. citizen. When the marriage is less than two years old, the foreign national receives a "conditional" green card. Shortly before the two-year anniversary of obtaining the "conditional" green card, the couple files a joint petition to remove the "condition". If the couple is no longer married or cannot submit a petition jointly, the foreign national spouse may still be able to submit the petition under various exceptions. This "conditional" green card process is supposed to help prevent and discover sham marriages, or marriages entered into primarily to obtain a green card. Entering into a sham marriage for a green card is a federal crime that can result in a prison term and fines.

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