亚太裔「传统月」为何是5月? 历史上有2 关键日子




亚太裔「传统月」为何是5月? 历史上有2 关键日子

世界新闻网

5/16/2022

亚太裔传统月定在5月,有两个关键的日子:5月7日与5月10日。1843年5月7日,第一批日本移民抵达美洲大陆;1869年5月10日,太平路铁路竣工,2万名华工开荒者铸造了这条横贯美国的铁路。(Getty Images)

每年5月是亚裔美国人和太平洋岛民传统月(Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month)民众通过各式各样的活动来庆祝亚太裔美国人的成就和贡献。下面是亚裔美国人及太平洋岛民大事记。

亚太裔关键的5月大事纪。(记者韩杰 美编邱士娟)

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亚裔是美成长最快族群 华人490万最多 印度裔收入最高

世界新闻网

5/02/2022

全美亚太裔传统月5月展开。亚太裔华人占最多人数。图为来自不同地区的移民在纽约市宣誓入籍。(Getty Images)

根据有线电视新闻网(CNN)配合亚太裔传统月特别报导,亚裔是美国人口成长最迅速的族群,经常被归类在笼统的单一标签底下,其实亚裔社群的历史、文化背景非常多元,家族根源可追溯到数十个国家,大多数亚裔民众住在东西两岸,高达三分之一亚裔住在加州。亚裔更是所有族裔当中收入差异最大的,印度裔家庭年收入中位数为12万7000元位居榜首,缅甸裔家庭年收入中位数4万6000元殿后。

长期居种族暴力受害者

报导指出,美国建国初期便有亚裔人出现,但长久以来却饱受「少数族裔模范生」(model minority)刻板印象之苦,也是种族暴力的受害者。专家指出,近几年出现的最新一波反亚偏见(anti-Asian bias),导因是许多美国人对亚裔族群的历史缺乏认识,加上新冠疫情期间各种仇外言论散布。




「亚裔美国人」(Asian American)一词最早出现于1968年,一名柏克莱加大(University of California Berkeley)研究生以这个词汇定义在政治及社会运动中争取权益的华裔、韩裔、日裔以及菲律宾裔美国民众。

7月4日国庆日即将来临,拜登2日在白宫东厢参加21名新公民的入籍仪式。(欧新社)

华裔、印裔、菲裔3大社群

人口普查局(US. Census Bureau)数据显示,目前美国约有2200万亚裔美国人,约占总人口7%。过去数十年来,在联邦政府及社运团体的分类里,亚裔通常与太平洋岛国族裔(Pacific Islanders)合并考虑,太平洋岛国族裔包括夏威夷原住民、萨摩亚人、关岛原住民或查摩洛人(Chamorro)。全美约有150万太平洋岛国族裔。

华裔、印度裔及菲律宾裔是亚裔人口当中的三大社群,但没有单一社区在亚裔人口当中居绝大多数。统计显示,目前美国华裔约有490万人,印度裔约430万人,菲律宾裔则约400万人。太平洋岛国族裔则以全美约有89万2000人的玻里尼亚人居多数。




全美亚太裔华人占最多人数。图为拜登总统2021年1月21日就职当天,华府国家大草坪上插遍国旗。(美联社)

三分之一亚裔住在加州

绝大多数亚裔人口住在加州、纽约州、德州及夏威夷州四州,全美三分之一亚裔则以加州为家,其中加州洛杉矶郡(Los Angeles County)有着高比例的华裔居民,菲裔、韩裔、日裔及印度裔社区规模也颇为可观。

非营利机构丕优研究中心(Pew Research Center)研究发现,从经济角度分析,亚裔是美国所有族裔社群当中收入差异最大的,在收入排行榜名列前茅者的收入,约为排行榜最后收入的10.7倍。相较于非洲裔、西语裔及白种人,亚裔虽然平均教育程度最高,但亚裔民众之间收入却出现天壤之别,有些民众从事白领工作,也有民众在低薪产业服务。




全美亚太裔传统月5月展开。亚太裔华人占最多人数,但亚太裔内族裔繁多,多元化。 (路透)

印裔12.7万收入数高、台湾10.2万元第二

亚裔当中收入最高的是拥有大学学历、25岁以上的印度裔美国人及台湾裔美国人,家庭年收入中位数分别为12万7000元及10万2000元,接下来依次为家庭年收入中位数的10万元的菲裔美国人、家庭年收入中位数的9万4000元的印尼美国人、家庭年收入中位数的8万8000元的巴基斯坦裔美国人、家庭年收入中位数同为8万5000元的华裔美国人及日裔美国人、家庭年收入中位数的7万7000元的韩裔美国人。

智库机构「移民政策研究所」(Migration Policy Institute)估计,目前大约150万无证移民为亚裔,其中约有半数来自印度或中国;来自印度的近47万,来自中国的约40万。

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工作移民绿卡 6.65万名额作废 14.1万亲属移民名额转入

世界新闻网

4/16/2022

受到川普执政时期移民规定趋严影响,加上疫情期间人手短缺导致作业耽搁,2021会计年度约有6万6500个工作移民(employment-based,EB)绿卡名额并未使用。(Getty Images)

受到川普执政时期移民规定趋严影响,加上疫情期间人手短缺导致作业耽搁,2021会计年度约有6万6500个工作移民(employment-based,EB)绿卡名额并未使用。

国务院本周公布数据显示,2021会计年度约有26万2000个工作移民绿卡名额可用,但受疫情期间各种防疫规定限制,加上人手不足,使得美国驻外大使馆及领事馆处理绿卡申请时遭遇挑战。

美国公民暨移民服务局(U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services,USCIS)发言人说,工作移民绿卡申请案是移民局优先处理的工作项目。


Healthcare Certification and ESL Programs



统计数据显示,2021会计年度亲属移民(family-based,FB)绿卡名额共计有22万6000个,其中有14万1000个名额并未使用。

根据规定,工作移民绿卡名额若未使用便将失效作废,但未获使用的亲属移民绿卡名额则可纳入下一个会计年度工作移民绿卡名额。2022会计年度将于9月30日截止。

国务院指出,2022会计年度工作移民绿卡名额共计约有28万个。外籍人士拿到绿卡后,便取得在美生活及工作的永久居留权。原本持有客工签证(guest worker visas)的外籍人士拿到绿卡后,则可更换雇主。绝大多数工作移民绿卡申请是由国土安全部旗下的公民暨移民服务局审理,亲属移民绿卡申请主要则由国务院处理。



过去几个月间,国会议员曾尝试推动法案,让前一个会计年度没有使用的绿卡名额,可以留待下一个会计年度使用,但最后立法便未成功。众院司法委员会推动的众院第3648号草案(H.R. 3648)近来颇有进展,提案内容为取消各个国家工作移民绿卡名额上限,因为这项措施导致某些国家的绿卡申请案出现塞车。提案内容也同意为绿卡申请案遭到延误的申请人放宽旅行限制,并对于更换工作提供更多弹性空间。

公民暨移民局为了加快工作移民绿卡申请案的审理脚步,已根据不同地区办公室、服务中心的工作量展开资源调度,并且尽可能重复使用生物识别资讯(biometric information),同时依照风险评估结果为某些申请人取消面试要求。

统计显示,2021年1月间,移民局未拆封的签证申请案约有100万件,但到同年7月已在处理。

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A STEM Daycare Academy


USCIS Announces New Actions to Reduce Backlogs, Expand Premium Processing, and Provide Relief to Work Permit Holders

Release Date: 03/29/2022

WASHINGTON— Today, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services is announcing a trio of efforts to increase efficiency and reduce burdens to the overall legal immigration system. USCIS will set new agency-wide backlog reduction goals, expand premium processing to additional form types, and work to improve timely access to employment authorization documents. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and resource constraints resulting from the prior administration, USCIS inherited a significant number of pending cases and increased processing times. Through today’s actions by the Biden administration, USCIS is acting to reduce these caseloads and processing times, while also ensuring that fair and efficient services are available to applicants and petitioners.

“USCIS remains committed to delivering timely and fair decisions to all we serve,” said USCIS Director Ur M. Jaddou. “Every application we adjudicate represents the hopes and dreams of immigrants and their families, as well as their critical immediate needs such as financial stability and humanitarian protection.”

Reducing Processing Backlogs

To reduce the agency’s pending caseload, USCIS is establishing new internal cycle time goals this month. These goals are internal metrics that guide the backlog reduction efforts of the USCIS workforce and affect how long it takes the agency to process cases. As cycle times improve, processing times will follow, and applicants and petitioners will receive decisions on their cases more quickly. USCIS will increase capacity, improve technology, and expand staffing to achieve these new goals by the end of FY 2023.



The agency’s publicly posted processing times show the average amount of time it took USCIS to process a particular form – from when the agency received the application until a decision was made on the case. Internally, USCIS monitors the number of pending cases in the agency’s workload through a metric called “cycle times.” A cycle time measures how many months’ worth of pending cases for a particular form are awaiting a decision. As an internal management metric, cycle times are generally comparable to the agency’s publicly posted median processing times. Cycle times are what the operational divisions of USCIS use to gauge how much progress the agency is, or is not, making on reducing our backlog and overall case processing times.

new cycle time goals


Expanding Premium Processing

Today the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced a final rule that aligns premium processing regulations with the Emergency Stopgap USCIS Stabilization Act. The rule codifies premium processing fees and adjudication timeframes provided by Congress.

Premium processing is an expedited adjudication service now available only to petitioners filing a Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker, and to certain employment-based immigrant visa petitioners filing a Form I-140, Immigrant Petition for Alien Workers. This final rule expands the categories of forms ultimately eligible for premium processing services, including Form I-539, Application to Extend/Change Nonimmigrant StatusForm I-765, Application for Employment Authorization; and additional classifications under Form I-140.

USCIS intends to begin implementing, through a phased approach, premium processing availability of Form I-539, Form I-765 and Form I-140 in fiscal year 2022. USCIS will also adhere to the congressional requirement that the expansion of premium processing must not cause an increase in processing times for regular immigration benefit requests.



USCIS plans to begin this phased implementation process by expanding premium processing eligibility to Form I-140 filers requesting EB-1 immigrant classification as a multinational executive or manager, or EB-2 immigrant classification as a member of professions with advanced degrees or exceptional ability seeking a national interest waiver.

Improving Access to Employment Authorization Documents

USCIS continues to make progress toward a temporary final rule currently named “Temporary Increase of the Automatic Extension Period of Employment Authorization and Documentation for Certain Renewal Applicants.”

In recent months, USCIS has begin streamlining many EAD processes, including extending validity periods for certain EADs and providing expedited work authorization renewals for healthcare and childcare workers. The temporary final rule aims to build on this progress and to ensure certain individuals will not lose their work authorization status while their applications are pending.

A full list of prior actions USCIS has taken to reduce processing times and the agency’s pending caseload is available on our website.

Last Reviewed/Updated: 03/29/2022

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FY 2023 H-1B Cap Initial Registration Period Opens on March 1

Release Date: 01/28/2022

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services today announced that the initial registration period for the fiscal year 2023 H-1B cap will open at noon Eastern on March 1 and run through noon Eastern on March 18, 2022. During this period, prospective petitioners and representatives will be able to complete and submit their registrations using our online H-1B registration system.

USCIS will assign a confirmation number to each registration submitted for the FY 2023 H-1B cap. This number is used solely to track registrations; you cannot use this number to track your case status in Case Status Online.



Prospective H-1B cap-subject petitioners or their representatives are required to use a myUSCIS online account to register each beneficiary electronically for the selection process and pay the associated $10 H-1B registration fee for each registration submitted on behalf of each beneficiary. Prospective petitioners submitting their own registrations (U.S. employers and U.S. agents, collectively known as “registrants”) will use a “registrant” account. Registrants will be able to create new accounts beginning at noon Eastern on Feb. 21.

Representatives may add clients to their accounts at any time, but both representatives and registrants must wait until March 1 to enter beneficiary information and submit the registration with the $10 fee. Prospective petitioners or their representatives will be able to submit registrations for multiple beneficiaries in a single online session. Through the account, they will be able to prepare, edit, and store draft registrations prior to final payment and submission of each registration.



If we receive enough registrations by March 18, we will randomly select registrations and send selection notifications via users’ myUSCIS online accounts. We intend to notify account holders by March 31.

An H-1B cap-subject petition, including a petition for a beneficiary who is eligible for the advanced degree exemption, may only be filed by a petitioner whose registration for the beneficiary named in the H-1B petition was selected in the H-1B registration process.

Last Reviewed/Updated: 01/28/2022

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How to Make an Expedite Request

ALERT: If you are a healthcare worker

ALERT: If you are a healthcare worker

If you are a healthcare worker

  • Who has a pending Employment Authorization Document (EAD) renewal application (Form I-765, Application for Employment Authorization); and
  • Whose EAD expires within 30 days or less, or has already expired:

Call the USCIS Contact Center at 800-375-5283 (TTY 800-767-1833) to request expedited processing of your EAD based on your circumstance as a healthcare worker with an EAD that will expire within 30 days or has already expired. To determine whether you are a qualifying healthcare worker, see this DHS advisory memorandum (“Healthcare / Public Health” section, pages 7-9) (PDF). Be prepared to provide evidence of your profession or current employment as a healthcare worker. If the evidence you provide is not sufficient, we may not accommodate your request for expedited processing of your Form I-765. Expedited processing means only that USCIS will process the application faster.



In General

You may ask USCIS to expedite adjudication of a benefit request (such as an application or petition) for an immigration benefit.

USCIS:

  • Considers all expedite requests on a case-by-case basis;
  • May require additional documentation to support a request; and
  • Has the sole discretion to decide whether to accommodate a request.

Because granting an expedite request means that USCIS would adjudicate the requestor’s benefit ahead of others who filed earlier, we carefully weigh the urgency and merit of each expedite request. We may consider an expedite request if it meets one or more of the following criteria or circumstances:

  • Severe financial loss to a company or person, provided that the need for urgent action is not the result of the petitioner’s or applicant’s failure to:
    • Timely file the benefit request, or
    • Timely respond to any requests for additional evidence;


A company can demonstrate that it would suffer a severe financial loss if it is at risk of failing, losing a critical contract, or having to lay off other employees. For example, a medical office may suffer severe financial loss if a gap in a doctor’s employment authorization would require the medical practice to lay off its medical assistants.

Job loss may be sufficient to establish severe financial loss for a person, depending on the individual circumstances. For example, the inability to travel for work that would result in job loss might warrant expedited treatment. The need to obtain employment authorization by itself, without evidence of other compelling factors, does not warrant expedited treatment. In addition, severe financial loss may also be established where failure to expedite would result in a loss of critical public benefits or services.

  • Emergencies and urgent humanitarian reasons;

In the context of an expedite request, humanitarian reasons are those related to human welfare. Examples may include, but are not limited to, illness, disability, extreme living conditions, death in the family, or a critical need to travel to obtain medical treatment in a limited amount of time. An emergency may include an urgent need to expedite employment authorization for healthcare workers during a national emergency such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Additionally, an expedite request may be considered under this criterion in instances where a vulnerable person’s safety may be compromised due to a breach of confidentiality if there is a delay in processing the benefit application. A benefit requestor’s desire to travel for vacation does not, in general, meet the definition of an emergency.

  • Nonprofit organization (as designated by the Internal Revenue Service) whose request is in furtherance of the cultural or social interests of the United States;

A nonprofit organization seeking to expedite a beneficiary’s benefit request must demonstrate an urgent need to expedite the case based on the beneficiary’s specific role within the nonprofit in furthering cultural or social interests (as opposed to the organization’s role in furthering social or cultural interests). Examples may include a medical professional urgently needed for medical research related to a specific social U.S. interest (such as the COVID-19 pandemic or other socially impactful research or project) or a university professor urgently needed to participate in a specific and imminent cultural program. Another example is a religious organization that urgently needs a beneficiary’s specific services and skill set to continue a vital social outreach program. In such instances, the religious organization must articulate why the respective beneficiary is specifically needed, as opposed to pointing to a general shortage alone.

  • U.S. government interests (such cases identified as urgent by federal agencies such as the U.S. Department of Defense, U.S. Department of Labor, National Labor Relations Board, Equal Opportunity Commission, U.S. Department of Justice, U.S. Department of State, U.S. Department of Homeland Security, or other public safety or national security interests); or


U.S. government interests may include, but are not limited to, cases identified as urgent by other government agencies, including labor and employment agencies, and public safety or national security interests.

For expedite requests made by a federal agency, involving other public safety or national security interests, the national interest need must be immediate and substantive. If the need for the action is not immediate, expedited processing is not warranted. A substantive need does not mean that a delay would pose existential or irreversible consequences to the national interests but rather that the case at hand is of a scale or a uniqueness that requires immediate action to prevent real and serious harm to U.S. interests.

Expedite requests from government agencies (federal, state, or local) must be made by a senior-level official of that agency. If the request relates to employment authorization, the request must demonstrate that the need for a person to be employment-authorized is mission-critical and goes beyond a general need to retain a particular worker or person. Examples include, but are not limited to, a noncitizen victim or witness cooperating with a federal, state, or local agency who is in need of employment authorization because the respective agency is seeking back pay or reinstatement in court proceedings.

  • Clear USCIS error.

Not every circumstance that fits in one of these categories will result in expedited processing.



For more information, see USCIS Policy Manual, Volume 1, Part A, Public Services, Chapter 5, Requests to Expedite Applications or Petitions [1 USCIS-PM A.5].

You can generally request expedited processing by calling the USCIS Contact Center at 800-375-5283 (TTY 800-767-1833) or by asking Emma after you have obtained a receipt notice.  (You can access Emma by clicking on the Ask Emma icon on the top right of this page). The USCIS Contact Center will not be able to refer the expedite request to the appropriate office without a receipt number.

When you call to request expedited processing, the USCIS Contact Center creates and forwards a service request to the office with jurisdiction over your application or petition. After receiving the service request, the reviewing office may request additional documentation to support expedited processing. A decision on an expedite request is not an approval or a denial of the underlying benefit request. The expedite decision simply informs the requestor whether USCIS will take the benefit request out of date order and issue a decision (approval or denial) faster than the normal processing time.

In accordance with the criteria above, note specific handling procedures in the following circumstances:

Adoptions

See the USCIS Adoption Contact Information webpage for information on how to make expedite requests for adoption cases.



Appeals

Requests for expedited processing of appeals may be included with the appeal. Expedite requests included with the appeal will be reviewed by the office that issued the decision.

For appeals filed with the Administrative Appeals Office (AAO), any expedite request made after the appeal submission should be mailed or faxed directly to AAO. See AAO’s Processing Requests and Contacting the AAO pages for more information.

Regardless of whether the expedite request is submitted with the appeal or afterward, the expedite request should include:

  • A cover letter clearly marked “EXPEDITE REQUEST”; and
  • Documentary evidence supporting the request for expedited processing of the appeal.

Requests for expedited processing of appeals filed with the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) should follow the BIA expeditious handling procedures.

Applications for Asylum

Requests for expedited processing on asylum applications should be directed to the office with jurisdiction over the asylum application. See the Affirmative Asylum Interview Scheduling page for more information.



Benefit Requests Pending Outside the United States

Send requests for expedited processing of applications for refugee status to the Resettlement Support Center handling the case abroad. For more information, see the USCIS Questions and Answers: Refugees page.

Send requests for expedited processing of humanitarian parole for beneficiaries located outside of the United States to the Humanitarian Affairs Branch. For more information, see the Humanitarian or Significant Public Benefit Parole for Individuals Outside the United States page.

For all other immigration benefit requests pending with USCIS offices located outside the United States, you may request expedited processing by submitting a written request, along with any supporting documentation, directly to the USCIS office with the benefit request.

For contact information for USCIS offices located outside the United States, see the USCIS International Immigration Offices page. Requests for expedited processing on matters pending with Department of State (DOS) should follow DOS expeditious handling procedures.

Last Reviewed/Updated: 01/25/2022

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USCIS Provides Clarifying Guidance for O-1 Petitions with a Focus on STEM Fields

Release Date 01/21/2022

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services today issued policy guidance clarifying how it evaluates evidence to determine eligibility for O-1A nonimmigrants of extraordinary ability, with a focus on petitions filed for individuals in science, technology, engineering, or math (STEM) fields, as well as how USCIS determines whether an O-1 beneficiary’s prospective work is within their area of extraordinary ability or achievement.

Individuals of extraordinary ability in the sciences, education, business, or athletics may be eligible for O-1A classification. The new update provides examples of evidence that may satisfy the O-1A evidentiary criteria and discusses considerations that are relevant to evaluating such evidence, with a focus on the highly technical nature of STEM fields and the complexity of the evidence often submitted.



The update also emphasizes that, if a petitioner demonstrates that a particular criterion does not readily apply to their occupation, they may submit evidence that is of comparable significance to that criterion to establish sustained acclaim and recognition, and it provides examples of possible comparable evidence that may be submitted in support of petitions for beneficiaries working in STEM fields.

In addition, the update explains that when evaluating whether an individual of extraordinary ability is coming to work in their “area of extraordinary ability,” officers will focus on whether the prospective work involves skillsets, knowledge, or expertise shared with the occupation(s) in which the individual garnered acclaim.

Visit the Policy Manual for Comment page to comment on this update. For more information, see the policy manual update (PDF, 363.79 KB).

Last Reviewed/Updated: 01/21/2022

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USCIS Updates Guidance on National Interest Waivers

Release Date 01/21/2022

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services today announced updated guidance on adjudicating requests for “National Interest Waivers” regarding job offer and labor certification requirements for certain advanced degree professionals and individuals of exceptional ability. This includes discussing the unique considerations for persons with advanced degrees in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) fields and entrepreneurs.

Consistent with this Administration’s goal of removing barriers to legal immigration under President Biden’s Executive Order 14012, Restoring Faith in Our Legal Immigration Systems and Strengthening Integration and Inclusion Efforts for New Americans, USCIS is clarifying how the national interest waiver can be used by STEM graduates and entrepreneurs, as well as the significance of letters from governmental and quasi-governmental entities. The updated guidance also serves to promote effective and efficient processing of benefits consistent with the executive order.



An employer seeking to hire a noncitizen must generally obtain a permanent labor certification from the Department of Labor that proves there are no qualified U.S. workers for the position they are seeking and that their employment will not adversely affect similarly employed U.S. workers. The noncitizen may, however, seek a waiver of a job offer, and of the labor certification, if it is in the interest of the United States.

Individuals seeking a national interest waiver must show evidence of an advanced degree or exceptional ability and must also meet three factors that USCIS uses to determine, in its discretion, whether it is in the national interest that USCIS waive the requirement of a job offer, and thus the labor certification. The three factors USCIS considers for a national interest waiver are whether:



  • The person’s proposed endeavor has both substantial merit and national importance;
  • The person is well positioned to advance the proposed endeavor; and
  • It would be beneficial to the United States to waive the job offer and thus the permanent labor certification requirements.

Those seeking a national interest waiver may self-petition using Form I-140, Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker

This guidance, contained in Volume 6 of the Policy Manual, is effective immediately. The guidance contained in the Policy Manual is controlling and supersedes any related prior guidance.

Visit the Policy Manual for Comment page to comment on this update. 

Last Reviewed/Updated: 01/21/2022

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USCIS Conducts Third Random Selection from Previously Submitted FY 2022 H-1B Cap Registrations

Release Date 11/19/2021

We recently determined that we needed to select additional registrations to reach the fiscal year (FY) 2022 H-1B numerical allocations, including the advanced degree exemption. On Nov. 19, we selected from among previously submitted electronic registrations using a random selection process. The petition filing period based on registrations selected on Nov. 19 will begin on Nov. 22, 2021, and close on Feb. 23, 2022. Individuals with selected registrations will have their myUSCIS accounts updated to include a selection notice, which includes details about when and where to file. 

In July 2021, we conducted a second random selection from among properly submitted electronic registrations for the FY 2022 H-1B numerical allocations. The petition filing period based on registrations selected in July ended on Nov. 3, 2021. 

We conducted an initial selection in March 2021. The initial filing period for those with selected registrations for FY 2022 was from April 1, 2021, through June 30, 2021. Per regulation, we take into account historical data related to approvals, denials, revocations, and other relevant factors to calculate the number of registrations needed to meet the H-1B numerical allocations for a given fiscal year. Only those petitioners with selected registrations for FY 2022 are eligible to file H-1B cap-subject petitions. 



An H-1B cap-subject petition must be properly filed at the correct service center and within the filing period indicated on the relevant registration selection notice. Online filing is not available for H-1B petitions. Petitioners filing H-1B petitions must do so by paper and must include a printed copy of the applicable registration selection notice with the FY 2022 H-1B cap-subject petition. 

Registration selection only indicates that petitioners are eligible to file H-1B cap-subject petitions; it does not indicate that the petition will be approved. Petitioners filing H-1B cap-subject petitions, including those petitions eligible for the advanced degree exemption, must still submit evidence and establish eligibility for petition approval based on existing statutory and regulatory requirements.

For more information, visit the H-1B Cap Season page. 

Last Reviewed/Updated: 11/19/2021

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Employment authorization implemented for Hong Kong residents covered under Deferred Enforced Departure

By Berry Appleman & Leiden LLP

10/20/2021

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) provided information today on how Hong Kong residents covered by Deferred Enforced Departure (DED) apply for employment authorization.

Key Points:

  • DED and employment authorization for noncitizens covered by DED for Hong Kong is effective from Aug. 5, 2021, through Feb. 5, 2023, except for noncitizens who:
    • Have voluntarily returned to Hong Kong or the People’s Republic of China (PRC) after Aug. 5, 2021.
    • Have not continuously lived in the U.S. since Aug. 5, 2021.
    • Are inadmissible under the Immigration and Nationality Act.
    • Have been convicted of any felony or two or more misdemeanors in the U.S.
    • Are subject to extradition.
    • Are considered a present danger to public safety or have potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences for the U.S. if they remain in the country.
  • USCIS said Wednesday that Hong Kong residents can apply for an Employment Authorization Document by submitting a completed Form I-765, Application for Employment Authorization.

Additional Information: Eligibility requirements for Hong Kong residents who are covered by DED are based on the terms described in the President Joe Biden’s directive and any relevant requirements established by the Department of Homeland Security. The full USCIS announcement can be found here.

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USCIS Implements Employment Authorization for Individuals Covered by Deferred Enforced Departure for Hong Kong Residents

Release Date: 10/20/2021

Eligible Hong Kong Residents May Apply for EADs and Travel Authorization

WASHINGTON — U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) today issued a Federal Register notice with information on how to apply for employment authorization for eligible Hong Kong residents covered under the president’s Aug. 5 memorandum directing Deferred Enforced Departure (DED) for 18 months, through Feb. 5, 2023.

DED for Hong Kong residents applies only to certain eligible Hong Kong residents who were present in the United States as of Aug. 5, 2021; who have continuously resided here since that date; and who meet other eligibility criteria described in the president’s memorandum. For purposes of this DED policy, Hong Kong residents are individuals of any nationality, or without nationality, who have met the requirements and been issued a Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) passport, a British National Overseas passport, a British Overseas Citizen passport, a Hong Kong Permanent Identity Card, or an HKSAR Document of Identity for Visa Purposes.



There is no application for DED. Eligibility requirements for Hong Kong residents who are covered under DED are based on the terms described in the president’s directive and any relevant implementing requirements established by the Department of Homeland Security.

Eligible Hong Kong residents may apply for an Employment Authorization Document by submitting a completed Form I-765, Application for Employment Authorization. Eligible Hong Kong residents covered by the president’s DED memorandum may also receive travel authorization. Individuals must file Form I-131, Application for Travel Document, for advance parole if they wish to travel based on DED.

For more information on USCIS and its programs, please visit uscis.gov or follow us on TwitterInstagramYouTubeFacebook and LinkedIn.

Last Reviewed/Updated: 10/20/2021

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USCIS Extends Flexibility for Responding to Agency Requests

Release Date: 09/24/2021

In response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services is extending the flexibilities it announced on March 30, 2020, to assist applicants, petitioners and requestors who are responding to certain:

  • Requests for Evidence;
  • Continuations to Request Evidence (N-14);
  • Notices of Intent to Deny;
  • Notices of Intent to Revoke;
  • Notices of Intent to Rescind;
  • Notices of Intent to Terminate regional centers; and
  • Motions to Reopen an N-400 Pursuant to 8 CFR 335.5, Receipt of Derogatory Information After Grant.

In addition, USCIS will consider a Form I-290B, Notice of Appeal or Motion, or Form N-336, Request for a Hearing on a Decision in Naturalization Proceedings (Under Section 336 of the INA), if:

  • The form was filed up to 60 calendar days from the issuance of a decision we made; and
  • We made that decision anytime from March 1, 2020, through Jan. 15, 2022


Notice/Request/Decision Issuance Date:

This flexibility applies to the above documents if the issuance date listed on the request, notice or decision is between March 1, 2020, and Jan. 15, 2022, inclusive.

Response Due Date:

USCIS will consider a response to the above requests and notices received within 60 calendar days after the response due date set in the request or notice before taking any action. Additionally, we will consider a Form N-336 or Form I-290B received up to 60 calendar days from the date of the decision before we take any action.

Please visit uscis.gov/coronavirus for USCIS updates.

Last Reviewed/Updated: 09/24/2021

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USCIS Extends Evidence of Status for Conditional Permanent Residents to 24 Months with Pending Form I-751 or Form I-829

Release Date: 09/03/2021

Starting Sept. 4, 2021, USCIS is extending the time that receipt notices can be used to show evidence of status from 18 months to 24 months for petitioners who properly file Form I-751, Petition to Remove Conditions on Residence, or Form I-829, Petition by Investor to Remove Conditions on Permanent Resident Status. We are making the change from 18 to 24 months to accommodate current processing times for Form I-751 and Form I-829, which have increased over the past year.

Conditional permanent residents who properly file Form I-751 or Form I-829 will receive a receipt notice that can be presented with their Form I-551, Permanent Resident Card (also known as a Green Card), as evidence of continued status for up to 24 months past the expiration date on their Green Card, while their case remains pending with USCIS.



Additionally, we will issue new receipt notices to eligible conditional permanent residents who properly filed their Form I-751 or Form I-829 before Sept. 4 and whose cases are still pending. Those receipt notices will also serve as evidence of continued status for 24 months past the expiration date on their Green Card.

As a reminder, conditional permanent residents who plan to be outside of the United States for a year or more should apply for a reentry permit by filing Form I-131, Application for Travel Document, before leaving the country. For more information on International Travel as a Permanent Resident, see our Green Card page.

Last Reviewed/Updated: 09/03/2021

Source: https://www.uscis.gov/news/alerts/uscis-extends-evidence-of-status-for-conditional-permanent-residents-to-24-months-with-pending-form