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Legal Immigration and Family
Equity Act (LIFE Act)
FINAL SUMMARY
REAUTHORIZES SECTION 245(i) UNTIL APRIL 30,
2001
Under the LIFE Act, the “grandfather”
clause of Section 245(i) is extended from January 14, 1998
until April 30, 2001. As a result, any beneficiary of an immigrant
visa petition or labor certification application filed before
April 30, 2001 will be able to apply for adjustment of status
under Section 245(i) if necessary.
However, for any applications filed after January 14,
1998 (but before April 30, 2001) the applicant must prove
they were physically present
in the United States on the date of the enactment of the
LIFE Act (December 21, 2000) in order to be eligible
for Section 245(i) adjustment of status.
CREATES A NEW TEMPORARY VISA FOR SPOUSES
AND MINOR CHILDREN OF LEGAL PERMANENT RESIDENTS AWAITING AN
IMMIGRANT VISA
In order to address the severe backlogs on the
availability of visas for families, the LIFE Act
provides a remedy for the spouses and minor children of legal
permanent residents. Under current law, because these individuals
are intending immigrants, there is no way for them to legally
come to the United States, even for a short visit. By creating
a new “V” visa, the law grants some family members
a legal status and work authorization in the United States.
- New “V” Visa: Allows the spouses
and minor children of lawful permanent residents (the Family
2A category only) who have been waiting more than 3 years
for a green card, to enter the United States and be granted
work authorization. In order to qualify the spouse or child
must meet the following criteria:
- A green card petition was filed on or before
enactment of the law. The sponsoring permanent
resident must already have filed a green card petition
for the spouse or minor child with the INS as of the
date that the LIFE Act became law (December
21, 2000).
- Must have been waiting at least 3 years.
The petition must either have been pending with the
INS for three years or more or, if the petition has
been approved, the spouse or minor child must have been
waiting at least three years for their “turn”
in the green card line.
- Waiver of Grounds of Inadmissibility and
Adjustment of Status. The law provides that periods in the
United States in unauthorized status will not prevent someone
from obtaining a V visa (§212(a)(9)(B) shall not apply).
The law also would allow individuals already in the
United States to apply to “adjust status” to
the new V category, even if they are in the United States
unlawfully (§212(a)(6)(A), (7), and (9)(B) shall not apply).
With the reinstatement of Section 245(i), V visa holders
will be eligible to adjust their status to legal permanent
resident under that section.
CREATES A NEW TEMPORARY STATUS FOR SPOUSES
OF U.S. CITIZENS AWAITING AN IMMIGRANT VISA
In order to address the severe backlogs on the
processing of petitions for family members, the LIFE
Act creates a remedy for the spouses of United States
citizens who are outside of the United States and waiting
for the approval of an immigrant petition.
Any minor children who are seeking to accompany the
spouse are also provided protection.
By expanding the eligibility for a K visa, the new
law will allow the spouse of a U.S. citizen to enter the United
States and obtain work authorization while waiting for the
petition to be approved.
- Expansion of Fiancée Temporary Visa Category.
The bill expands the use of the “K” visa, which
currently allows fiancées of U.S. citizens to enter the
United States for the purposes of getting married, to be
used by spouses of U.S. citizens who are already married
and are waiting outside of the United States for the approval
of their immigrant visa petitions.
Any minor children who are accompanying the spouse
can be included in the petition. In order to qualify the
spouse and minor children must meet the following criteria:
- An immigrant visa petition must be previously
filed. The law requires that the U.S. citizen file an
immigrant petition before a visa can be issued to the
spouse abroad. The K visa will allow the spouse abroad
to enter the U.S. and await the approval of the petition.
- Recipient of the K visa must be outside
of the United States. The law only authorizes the visa
to be issued by a consular officer outside of the United
States. There is no provision to “adjust status”
for someone already in the United States in an unlawful
status.
- The K visa petition must be filed in the
United States. The petition for the K visa must be filed
in the United States by the U.S. citizen spouse.
- If marriage occurs outside of the U.S.,
the K visa must be issued by the consulate where the
marriage occurred. Where the marriage to the U.S. citizen
occurred outside of the United States, the statute says
that, at the time of admission, the alien must have
“a valid non-immigrant visa issued by a consular
officer in the foreign state in which the marriage was
concluded.”
- Available to current and future applicants.
The bill provides that this new K status is available both
to individuals with currently pending green card petitions
and future applicants.
- Work Authorization. Current law provides
that K visa holders are permitted to work in the United
States. This
provision would apply to these new K nonimmigrants as well.
ALLOWS FOR THE ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS OF CERTAIN
LATE LEGALIZATION CLASS MEMBERS
Who Is Eligible for Relief:
- The
LIFE Act makes some modifications to the provisions
of the 1986 amnesty (Section 245A of the INA) and provides
an opportunity to apply for this relief only to those people
who were part of certain class action lawsuits against the
INS for their improper handling of the 1986 amnesty program.
To qualify a person must prove that he or she:
- Filed
a written claim, before October 1, 2000, for class membership
in CSS v. Meese, LULAC v. Reno, or INS v. Zambrano (three of the various
class action lawsuits filed against the INS for their
improper handling of the 1986 amnesty program).
- Entered
the United States before January 1, 1982 and resided continuously
in the United States in an unlawful status through May 4,
1988.
- Was
continuously physically present in the United Sates beginning
on November 6, 1986 and ending on May 4, 1988 (brief, casual
and innocent absences will not interrupt a finding of continuous
physical presence).
- Files
an application for adjustment of status with the Attorney
General within one year of the date on which the Attorney
General issues final regulations to implement the new law.
The Attorney General is required to issue those regulations
within 120 days after enactment.
- Has
not been convicted of any felony or three or more misdemeanors,
has not assisted in the persecution of any person (on account
of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership
in a particular social group), and is registered or registering
under the Military Selective Service Act (if required
to do so under that Act).
- Is
not inadmissible to the United States as an immigrant. The Attorney General may (for humanitarian
purposes, to assure family unity, or when it is in the public
interest) waive any of the grounds of inadmissibility except
those relating to criminals, drug offenses, security grounds,
and public charge grounds. In addition, the Attorney General
may grant a waiver of the grounds of inadmissibility related
to aliens seeking admission after previous removal and aliens
present after previous immigration violations.
- Is able to pass the naturalization exam (relating
to an understanding of basic civics and the ability speak,
read, and write ordinary English), or show that they are
satisfactorily pursuing a course of study (recognized by
the Attorney General) to achieve such an understanding of
English and civics.
Relief Granted Under the Law:
- Eligible
applicants will apply directly for permanent residence,
rather than for temporary resident status.
- The
Attorney General is required to establish a process under
which an alien who has become eligible to apply for adjustment
of status as a result of the enactment of this law and who
is not physically present in the United States may apply
for such adjustment from outside of the country.
- Applicants
who submit a prima facie application under this law are
entitled to a stay of deportation, work authorization, and
permission to travel while their application is pending.
- The
limitation on judicial review under IIRAIRA (Section 377)
will not apply to applicants under these modifications and
they will be entitled to the same review allowed by the
1986 laws.
- Newly
legalized persons will not be disqualified from receiving
certain public welfare assistance. (Under the original Section
245A applicants were disqualified from certain assistance
for 5 years after their application was filed).
However, they may still be subject to restrictions
bases on the 1996 Welfare Reform Law.
- The confidentiality provisions of Section
245A (that generally prevent the information submitted on
the application from being used for any purposes except
criminal prosecution) will apply, except that information
submitted by an applicant under the new law may be used
in proceedings to rescind an adjustment of status.
GRANTS PROTECTION FROM DEPORTATION AND WORK
AUTHORIZATION TO THE SPOUSES AND CHILDREN OF LATE LEGALIZATION
APPLICANTS
Consistent with laws passed in 1990 to protect
the family of legalization applicants who were already in
the United States, the LIFE Act prevents the
deportation of the spouses and minor children of a person
who is applying for late legalization under the new law. Also
consistent with prior laws, these family members are eligible
for work authorization
Who
Is Eligible for Relief: To be
eligible for benefits a person must prove that he or she is:
- The
spouse or unmarried child of a person who is eligible for
adjustment of status as a result of the late legalization
provisions of the LIFE Act.
- Entered
the United States before December 1, 1988 and resided in
the United States on that date.
- Has
not been convicted of a felony or three or more misdemeanors
in the United States, has not assisted in the persecution
of any person (on account of race, religion, nationality,
political opinion or membership in a particular social group),
or is otherwise not a danger to the community of the United
States.
Relief Granted Under the Law:
- Eligible people will be protected from deportation
for violations of status in the United States but will continue
to be deportable for other grounds of deportation,
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