Government Shutdown Avoided

Immigration Programs Teeter for Two More Months

Congress averted a government shutdown on Wednesday by a few hours through the passage of a continuing resolution. President Obama signed it that same day and the federal government will be funded until December 11. In March of this year, a similar storyline unfolded, and the budgetary battle was explicitly over funding the Department of Homeland Security and immigration matters.

The immigration news stemming from the continuing resolution is that the four programs that were set to sunset on September 30 have been extended until December 11. While each individual program had its own congressional bill authorizing a longer renewal period or even permanence, none of those were passed. The EB-5 program even had three competing bills that aimed to tweak and improve the program in different ways. The continuing resolution maintains the four programs – CONRAD 30, EB-5 Regional Center, Religious Non-Minister Workers, and E-Verify. That means those programs have another two months until their existence is in peril.

Congress and Immigration

Four Immigration Programs Will Expire September 30

Capitol Building

Congress returns from its summer recess today, and it is tasked with a litany of difficult decisions and issues. Part of its agenda over the next three weeks will be deciding whether to renew four immigration programs. Those include the EB-5 program, CONRAD 30, E-Verify, and the Religious Non-Ministers EB-4 program. Their vitality to the nation is probably dependent on perspective, but Congress is certain to discuss and contemplate these four programs, given the stakes involved.

The EB-5 program concerns millions of dollars of investment each year, especially now that the program has reached an apex in popularity. It is estimated that the program has generated over 5.2 billion dollars of investment and created 31,000 full time US jobs. One place this investment is going is to the renovation of the Pennsylvania Turnpike.

CONRAD30 allows individual states’ health departments to hire up to 30 international medical graduate doctors, so that instead of having to fulfill their two year home residency requirement on the J-1 visa, they are sent to rural and underserved medical areas for three full years.

The blog will provide updates on the four programs throughout the month. Congress has 22 days from today to decide whether to renew these programs or to let them sunset. Bills have been proposed, covering all four programs (EB-5 bills, CONRAD30, E-Verify, EB-4 Religious Workers.

September 30, 2015 is an important date for another reason. The Department of Homeland Security is the federal agency tasked with overseeing immigration in the United States. A congressional, presidential, and political battle in March of this year threatened a de-funding of the agency, but a last minute bill funded the agency until the end of the fiscal year (September 30). The prospect of a government shutdown may yet loom again.

Immigration Programs Expiring

Four Immigration Programs Expire Next Month

This week, we are going to cover four important immigration programs that have an expiration date of September 30, 2015. Immigration law in the United States is a collection of various programs. The buzzword after the 2012 elections was “comprehensive” immigration reform. The reality is that much of immigration is “piecemeal,” so that it is put together at different times for different reasons.

 

Congress returns from its summer recess on September 8, 2015. When it returns, there are three weeks to ensure that the EB-5 program, CONRAD 30, Religious Workers program, and E-Verify are renewed and continued. Congresspersons have proposed and sponsored bills to renew and even make these programs permanent.

 

We will keep updating the blog with the political machinations, efforts to renew the programs, and any developments throughout September. September 30 is a critical date in immigration for another reasons. The Department of Homeland Security is the federal agency charged with overseeing immigration in the United States. In March of this past year, after weeks of intense scrutiny and jockeying, Congress decided to fund DHS until September 30. DHS funding is sure to be another point of emphasis when Congress returns to session next week.

 

We will summarize each program, describe its purpose, and detail any future updates or changes to the programs.