OUTSIDE THE BOX THINKING, DELIVERING CUTTING EDGE SOLUTIONS!

The Board of Alien Labor Certification Appeals (BALCA) recently affirmed the final determination of a Certifying Officer (CO) denying labor certification (LC) for an alien worker for the position of “Dental Assistant.”

The employer filed a LC which was accepted for processing on January 16, 2007. ETA Form 9089 indicated that the job required a high school education and twenty-four (24) months of experience in the job offered. The CO issued an Audit Notification letter indicating that the O*Net indicates that one (1) year of experience is normal for the occupation and specifically directed the Employer to establish business necessity for its two (2) year requirement. The Employer responded to the Audit Notification but failed to address the business necessity issue. Thereafter the CO issue a denial letter, the Employer responded by requesting reconsideration and submitted a letter regarding why two (2) years experience was required for the position. The CO issued a letter of reconsideration indicating that the new letter constituted new evidence that was not in the record at the time that the application was filed and on which the denial was based.

PERM Regulation 20 C.F.R. § 656.20(b) controls and it provides that when an application is audited, the audit procedure specifies that a substantial failure by the employer to provide required documentation will result in that application being denied. In the instant case, the CO’s Audit Notification specifically requested that the Employer document the business necessity for its two (2) year experience requirement. BALCA stated that the failure to address the business necessity was clearly a substantial failure to provide documentation required by the audit notification. In addition, the regulations governing motions for reconsideration provided that the request for reconsideration may not include evidence not previously submitted.

The Department of State has released its latest Visa Bulletin.

The February 2010 Visa Bulletin still shows employment based third preference (EB-3) visas as oversubscribed while the employment based second preference (EB-2) is current for all areas of chargeability except for China and India.

Already applied in EB3, thinking about filing in EB2…if you are eligible, contact MVP Law Group toll free at 1-800-447-0796.

MVP Law Group is currently offering the following special for FY2011 Cap Subject H-1B petitions – complete an H-1B questionnaire and send all requested documents to our office by February 28, 2010 and save $150.00.

Our normal legal fees are $1500.00 plus an administrative fee of $150.00 per petition.

Act Now, Don’t Delay! Contact our office today!

The Administrative Appeals Office (AAO) Processing Times were released on December 31, 2009 with processing dates as of December 2, 2009

If you filed an appeal, please review the links below to determine the applicable processing time associated with your particular case.

Administrative Appeals Office

Now that all of the new H-1B visas for the 2010 Fiscal Year have been allocated, What options do Employers who are looking to hire Foreign National Professionals have?

Here are some creative solutions to this problem:

O-1 Visa

The United States Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS) has received sufficient H-1B petitions to reach the statutory cap of 65,000 for FY2010.

New H-1B Petitions filed after December 21, 2009 seeking an employment start date in FY2010 will be rejected by USCIS. Furthermore, the Service will apply a computer-generated random selection process to all petitions that were eligible and received on December 21, 2009.

Stay posted for H-1B filing specials for the FY2011 H-1B CAP!

The United States Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS) has updated the count of H-1B petitions received and counted towards the 65,000 cap.

As of December 15, 2009, 64,200 H-1B cap subject non-immigrant visa petitions have been filed with the USCIS.

USCIS will continue to accept both cap-subject petitions and advanced degree petitions until a sufficient number of H-1B petitions have been received to reach the statutory limits, taking into account the fact that some of these petitions may be denied, revoked, or withdrawn.

Processing Time reports for all of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS) Service Centers were released on December 16, 2009 with processing dates as of October 31, 2009.

If you filed a petition with one of the Service Centers, please review the links below to determine the applicable processing time associated with your particular case.

California Service Center

Contact Information