Showing posts with label hardship waivers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hardship waivers. Show all posts

Thursday, February 23, 2012

USCIS Currently Not Accepting Waiver Applications For Extreme Hardship (I-601)

United States Customs and Immigration Services (USCIS) issued a notification that it is not accepting waiver applications (I-601) for extreme hardship to United States citizens on behalf of immigrants in the United States without documentation or unlawfully at this time.  USCIS stated that it intended to publish a final regulation proposal in the next several months to allow citizen spouses or parents to receive a provisional waiver of the unlawful presence bars before leaving the United States.  Once comments are received and if the proposed rule is published in the Federal Register,  USCIS will likely implement the provisional waiver program.  Until that time, all applications for provisional waivers will be returned.


Glickman Turley's experienced attorneys represent individuals on a wide range of immigration matters, as well as other legal issues. Please contact our attorneys if you wish to discuss representation on immigration mattersreal estate purchase and salescondominium associationscriminal defensenon-profit law, civil litigation, business litigationbusiness law, probate matters including wills, powers of attorney, health care proxy, same-sex parent adoptionsguardianshipsanimal law, or LGBT legal matters.

Friday, January 6, 2012

New Immigration Proposal for Undocumented Immigrants

The Wall Street Journal reported that the Obama administration has proposed a rule that would permit certain undocumented immigrants to remain in the United States while they apply for hardship waivers.

The law currently forces illegal immigrants who wish to apply for green cards to return to their home countries before they can apply for legal status. Once the individual leaves the United States, he or she is barred from returning for at least 3 to 10 years, leaving many families separated for long periods of time.

Under the new proposal, an undocumented immigrants would be able to apply for a provisional waiver while they are still in the United States. Obtaining the waiver will reduce the amount of time an undocumented immigrant must remain abroad in his or her home country while applying for a visa. No action is needed by Congress to enact the rule as "President Obama is making greater use of executive power to overcome congressional resistance to his policy goals," according to a report by the LA Times.

The WSJ interviewed Nancy Kuznetsov, vice president of American Families United, who said "[the proposal] is a wonderful humane change." The article noted that the proposal will likely garner praise from the Latino community, a key constituency in the upcoming 2012 election.

Glickman Turley's experienced attorneys represent individuals on a wide range of immigration matters, as well as other legal issues. Please contact our attorneys if you wish to discuss representation on immigration mattersreal estate purchase and salescondominium associationscriminal defensenon-profit law, civil litigation, business litigationbusiness law, probate matters including wills, powers of attorney, health care proxy, same-sex parent adoptionsguardianshipsanimal law, or LGBT legal matters.