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Immigration
Success Story
Recently
this office was hired by James a 23 year old young man to
process his Labor Certification. The client was presently
illegal in the USA and believed that unless a new law was
passed he could not legalize and get a greencard. After
interviewing him we learned that in 2001 his father filed
an Immigration case. Ultimately his father’s case was
never approved. It turned out that because the father’s
case was filed in 2001 and James was under 21 years old he
was covered or "grandfathered" under an older
law called 245i. This law allowed James to obtain his
greencard. The following is how we succeeded.
First
we filed a Labor Certification
Labor
Certification is a process whereby an Employer applies
with the Labor Department for Certification that hiring a
particular immigrant will not displace or cause an
American to lose a job. If the Labor Department agrees
that an American job will not be lost the case is approved
or certified by the Labor Department and the Employer
files a Petition and Greencard for the Immigrant with the
Immigration Service.
To
many immigrants the traditional labor certification
process was unappealing because it took years for an
approval or certification. Historically, a labor
certification would take at least two years. Only after
the labor certification approval could an immigrant file
for a green card with the Immigration Service and obtain a
work permit, social security number and Drivers License.
For the vast majority of immigrants the length of the
process was just too long to wait and many decided not to
proceed.
Newly
created PERM regulations seem like a blessing in that
labor certifications are typically approved in just a few
months! The new labor certification process
("PERM") was implemented March 28, 2005. The
processing time under this new regulation is 45-90 days
for the labor certification process, the first step in the
three-step green card process.
After
the Labor Department has approved the case it is submitted
to the Immigration Service along with a work permit
application, a petition and a greencard application. In
the event that the immigrant was out of status or illegal
the employer would first file the petition alone which
would allow for the renewal of a Florida Drivers License.
We have found that many who are illegal choose to complete
this process simply in order to obtain a Florida Drivers
License.
What
does this fast process mean for Immigrants and how did
James benefit?
By
far the most important aspect of this regulation is the
speed by which an immigrant can be approved. Think it
through. Assume the Labor Department takes 90 days for an
approval. Also assume it takes your attorney 60 days to
prepare the case. You are looking at 5 months for a PERM
labor certificate approval. Just after the approval you
file the work permit, petition and possibly greencard.
Work permits are processed by the Immigration Service in
90 days or less. This assumes you are still in legal
status with a valid I-94 card. If you are not in legal
status you can still file the PERM labor certificate and
be approved. You can also file the petition and have that
approved. Note that with the petition you can obtain a
Florida Drivers License.
Even
though James was illegal he was covered by 245i because of
his father’s old case. Therefore after his labor
certificate (PERM) was approved we applied for his work
permit and greencard. James has received his work permit,
social security card and drivers license. We expect to
receive James’ greencard shortly.
Conclusion
245i
is a law which allows illegal immigrants with, expired
I-94 cards, to pay a $1000 penalty and be excused from
being illegal and working without permission. Although
245i expired in 2001 tens of thousands of immigrants are
grandfathered or covered under this law for the rest of
their lives. You may be one of them!
To
be covered you must have had a petition (family case,
religious case, or employment case) or labor certification
filed for you prior to April 30, 2001. It is not necessary
that the case ever have been approved, just filed. Believe
it or not even if the case was not filed for you but for
your spouse or parents you still may be covered by 245i.
Consult with a lawyer if you, your spouse or your parent
filed a case before April of 2001.
About
the Author
Shayne
Epstein is an immigration lawyer in private practice in
Pompano Beach, Florida representing clients throughout the
USA. |