DACA – February 18

The DACA Process

 

USCIS Will Start Accepting Expanded DACA Applications on February 18

DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) was established as a temporary relief measure for individuals who were brought to the United States as children and grew up in the US. President Barack Obama created the program through an executive order for the purpose because legislative efforts to create a DREAM Act had been stifled in Congress. A DREAM Act would allow for a path to citizenship for “dreamers,” individuals who had come to the United States as children and had continuous residence in America. Essentially, they were raised in the United States and had their entire lives in the country. DACA is only limited relief, as it provides for two years of deferred action against deportation and work authorization upon proving the seven criteria and prosecutorial discretion. This blog has covered DACA and the president’s executive actions with great interest, while hoping that meaningful immigration reform will be enacted.

Neither the DREAM Act nor comprehensive immigration reform have become bills and the president has responded with a series of executive orders that can offer temporary relief until congressional action is taken. The executive orders range from minor improvements in employment immigration to relief for millions of parents of US citizens and lawful permanent residents with the DAPA (Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents) program. Part of the executive order is the expansion of DACA, making it available for more individuals. The requirements have changed, so that the age restriction is removed and the date for continuous residence is January 1, 2010. Instead of two years of deferred action, like DAPA, it will grant three years for successful applicants.

Expanded DACA goes into effect on February 18. It requires a filing fee for the application and biometrics (fingerprints) and extensive proof to document continuous residence. USCIS and immigration groups have been warning potential applicants not to be fooled by impostors or fraudulent individuals who pose as legitimate attorneys. Notarios, as they are deemed, can harm immigrant applications immediately and also saddle applicants with negative future consequences.

DACA nor DAPA grants a Green Card, US citizenship, or even a pathway to either. The programs merely allow for individuals who are low-enforcement priorities (according to recent memos pursuant to the executive orders) to obtain temporary relief while permanent legislation is enacted for actual relief. Until the political process generates a meaningful result, the executive orders will have to make do.

INA in the Supreme Court

Supreme Court

The US Supreme Court on Wednesday heard arguments on whether the government is required to prove a connection between a drug possession conviction and a congressionally defined controlled substance for removal of a permanent resident under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). The INA is the immigration law of the land and it allows for removal of non-US citizens for violations pertaining to controlled substances. The case is Mellouli v. Holder. Mellouli is a lawful permanent resident of the US from Tuisia. He was convicted for possession of drug paraphernalia in Kansas, but it is not clear what that substance it is and whether it is controlled or not. Mr. Mellouli argued that the government cannot remove him without proving the connection between the conviction and substance. He was appealing because the US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit ruled that the conviction was covered under the INA.

 

Lawful permanent residents can be removed for any number of reasons. One of the benefits of US citizenship is a safeguard against removal. Permanent residents can be removed for drug convictions, aggravated felonies, among other crimes, even though they have legal status beyond just holding a visa. There are avenues for relief that can be argued for during removal proceedings. Famously, three permanent residents were removed for illicit group membership, despite having families of American citizens and being permanent residents for thirty years.

 

It is unknown when the Supreme Court will release its opinion of Mellouli v. Holder. We will be keeping an eye on this case, as it speaks on the important burden the government has in removing a non-citizen.

Happy Thanksgiving – Wood Immigration Law

Happy Thanksgiving!

 

Happy Thanksgiving !!

Thanksgiving is a quintessential American holiday, combining copious amounts of food, football, and family members into a one day celebration of gratitude and togetherness. Cutting across religious, racial, and cultural divisions, the holiday has been celebrated since the famed 1621 Plymouth feast between Native Americans and passengers of the Mayflower who had arrived in an unknown land. The feast celebrated a successful harvest and collaboration between the Natives and immigrant Europeans. The day was celebrated on all different days until President Franklin Roosevelt decreed that the fourth Thursday of November was Thanksgiving in 1939.

 

The Macy’s Parade and bottomless buffets of football and food boost the holiday’s fun qualities, but there is a deeper significance buttressing the holiday’s purpose and meaning. The story of Thanksgiving, even if slightly apocryphal, has multiple dimensions of resonance for us today, even a full four centuries later. Colonial America was rife with conflicts between the newly arriving Europeans and established Native Americans, who had created civilizations of their own for hundreds of years. Thanksgiving symbolizes harmonious interchange between the Native Americans and immigrant Europeans. As elementary schoolchildren are taught every year, the immigrant Europeans

 

had come from England via Holland, escaping religious persecution and an oppressive government. Their story resembles a modern day asylum, as they were fleeing extreme stress and strife to a country where they would be safe (and religion is a protected ground for asylum). The overall history of European immigration, settling, and expansion throughout the continent boded poorly for Native Americans, who were overwhelmed by settlement, wars, and diseases. However, the day of feasting that we now celebrate as Thanksgiving represents the promise of a bright, harmonious future between the various groups that make up the United States of America – whether they are generations of Americans whose grandparents entered through Ellis Island or newly minted Americans who are recent immigrants, lawful permanent residents, and citizens.

 

The Law Offices of Andrew Wood wishes you a Happy Thanksgiving.

Immigration Reform!

President Barack Obama Announces Executive Action on Immigration Reform

Barack Obama Announces Immigration Reform: Relief for Immigrants

Speaking (full speech) from the White House Thursday night, President Obama announced to the nation his plan to issue an executive order, taking a multi-faceted approach to the bevy of immigration issues facing the nation.

  • Additional resources for law enforcement personnel at border to apprehend better and return quicker.
  • Easier and faster for high skilled graduates to stay and contribute to businesses.
  • Responsibly deal with the millions of undocumented immigrants here already. Deportations of criminals up are 80%, so he will keep focus on criminals and gang members, not children and families. Prioritization is key.

As reported last week, Obama’s order will protect up to 4.5 million people from deportation. This is a minimal measure compared to the proposals and nearly passed laws (DREAM Act) that Congress has considered over the past eight years. Every president since Eisenhower in 1956 has granted relief to immigrants through executive action. The executive order does not change actual laws, but it re-directs executive agencies to shift their priorities. Here are some of the highlights:

  • Deferred Action for Parents (DAP): Following Deferred Action for Children (DACA), DAP will allow for parents of lawful permanent residents and US citizens continuously present since January 1, 2010 to apply for three years of deportation protection, following the successful completion of a background check and payment of back taxes.
  • Enforcement priorities: Suspected terrorists, convicted felons, convicted gang members, people apprehended at the border, people who have convicted of multiple or serious misdemeanors, and those who have failed to leave after a removal order from 1/1/2014 onward.
  • DACA is expanded to eliminate the age cap and include continuous residence since January 1, 2010. It will also be three years of protection.
  • The provisional waiver will be expanded to include children and spouses of lawful permanent residents.
  • Optional Practical Training (OPT) will be elongated for STEM graduates (Science Technology Engineering Mathematics). H4 visa holders will be able to receive work authorization. Entrepreneurs, investors, and researchers will be eligible for national interest waivers.

Congress has debated and postured over immigration reform intensely during the past two years. President Obama challenged the legislative body to pass comprehensive immigration reform. In the interim, these tweaks to the immigration system should repair some broken components and provide relief for millions of deserving immigrants.

The Law Offices of Andrew Wood is pleasantly encouraged by the president’s plan and his focus on immigration reform. Immigration attorneys, advocates, and DREAMers in Pittsburgh and the around the country have been pushing for action for years. Perhaps this is the opportunity for real improvement.