Department of State Releases May 2015 Visa Bulletin

Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP.

Cutoff dates for EB-3 Philippines retrogress by six years and nine months, cutoff dates for EB-5 China retrogress by two years, cutoff dates in the EB-2 India category advance by seven and a half months, cutoff dates in the EB-2 China advance by 14 months, cutoff dates for EB-3 China advance by four months, and cutoff dates for EB-3 for the Rest of the World advance by three months.

The US Department of State (DOS) has released its May 2015 Visa Bulletin. The Visa Bulletin sets out per-country priority date cutoffs that regulate the flow of adjustment of status (AOS) and consular immigrant visa applications. Foreign nationals may file applications to adjust their statuses to that of permanent residents or to obtain approval of immigrant visas at a US embassy or consulate abroad, provided that their priority dates are prior to the respective cutoff dates specified by the DOS.

What Does the May 2015 Visa Bulletin Say?

The May 2015 Visa Bulletin shows an advancement of seven and a half months for the EB-2 India category. EB-3 cutoff dates for the worldwide category will advance by three months, the EB-2 cutoff dates for China will advance by 14 months, the EB-3 cutoff dates for China will advance by four months, and the EB-3 cutoff dates for the Philippines will retrogress by six years and nine months. In addition, the EB-5 cutoff dates for China retrogress by two years.

The cutoff date for F2A applicants in all categories will advance by one month in May.

EB-1: All EB-1 categories will remain current.

EB-2: The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to India will advance to April 15, 2008. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to China will advance to June 1, 2012. The EB-2 category for all other countries will remain current.

EB-3: The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to India will advance by one week to January 15, 2004. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to China will advance by four months to May 1, 2011. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to Mexico and the worldwide category will advance by three months to January 1, 2015. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to the Philippines will retrogress by six years and nine months to July 1, 2007.

EB-5: The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-5 category chargeable to China will retrogress by two years. The cutoff dates for applicants in the EB-5 category chargeable to the worldwide category remain current.

The relevant priority date cutoffs for foreign nationals in the EB-2 category are as follows:

China: June 1, 2012 (forward movement of 427 days)
India: April 15, 2008 (forward movement of 227 days)
Mexico: Current
Philippines: Current
Rest of the World: Current

The relevant priority date cutoffs for foreign nationals in the EB-3 category are as follows:

China: May 1, 2011 (forward movement of 120 days)
India: January 15, 2004 (forward movement of 7 days)
Mexico: January 1, 2015 (forward movement of 92 days)
Philippines: July 1, 2007 (retrogression of 2,649 days)
Rest of the World: January 1, 2015 (forward movement of 92 days)

The relevant priority date cutoffs for foreign nationals in the EB-5 category are as follows:

China: May 1, 2013 (retrogression of 730 days)
Rest of the World: Current

Developments Affecting the EB-2 Employment-Based Category

Mexico, the Philippines, and the Rest of the World 
The EB-2 category for applicants chargeable to all countries other than China and India has been current since November 2012. The May Visa Bulletin indicates no change to this trend. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to all countries other than China and India may continue to file AOS applications or have applications approved through May 2015.

China 
The April Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of April 1, 2011 for EB-2 applicants chargeable to China. The May Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of June 1, 2012, reflecting forward movement of 14 months. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to China with a priority date prior to June 1, 2012 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in May 2015.

India 
The April Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of September 1, 2007 for EB-2 applicants chargeable to India. In May, the cutoff date for EB-2 applicants chargeable to India advances by seven and a half months to April 15, 2008. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to India with a priority date prior to April 15, 2008 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in May 2015.

Developments Affecting the EB-3 Employment-Based Category

China 
The April Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of January 1, 2011 for EB-3 applicants chargeable to China. In May, the cutoff date for EB-3 applicants chargeable to China advances by four months to May 1, 2011. This means that applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to China with a priority date prior to May 1, 2011 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in May 2015.

India 
The April Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of January 8, 2004. The May Visa Bulletin will advance slightly, with a cutoff date of January 15, 2004, an advancement of one week. This means that EB-3 applicants chargeable to India with a priority date prior to January 15, 2004 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in May 2015.

The Philippines 
The April Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of October 1, 2014. The May Visa Bulletin will retrogress by six years and nine months, with a cutoff date of July 1, 2007. This means that only EB-3 applicants chargeable to the Philippines with a priority date prior to July 1, 2007 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in May 2015.

Rest of the World 
The April Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of October 1, 2014 for EB-3 applicants chargeable to the worldwide category. The May Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of January 1, 2015, reflecting forward movement of three months. This means that applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to the worldwide category with a priority date prior to January 1, 2015 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in May 2015.

Developments Affecting the F2A Family-Sponsored Category

The April Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of July 8, 2013 for F2A applicants from Mexico. The May Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of August 8, 2013, reflecting forward movement of one month. This means that applicants from Mexico with a priority date prior to August 8, 2013 will be able to file AOS applications or have applications approved in May 2015.

The April Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of August 1, 2013 for F2A applicants from all other countries. The May Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of September 1, 2013, reflecting forward movement of one month. This means that F2A applicants from all other countries with a priority date prior to September 1, 2013 will be able to file AOS applications or have applications approved in May 2015.

Developments in the Coming Months

Regarding the retrogression of visa numbers for EB-5 China, the DOS notes that “It is extremely likely that this category will remain subject to a cut-off date indefinitely.”

Regarding the retrogression of visa numbers for EB-3 Philippines, the DOS notes that “This cut-off date had also been advanced very rapidly in an effort to generate sufficient demand to fully utilize all available numbers. The current rate of increase in demand has required the retrogression of this cut-off date for the month of May, in an attempt to hold number use within the annual limit for this preference category.”

F2A Family-Sponsored Category

  • The cutoff date in the F2A category will likely advance by three to four weeks per month.

Employment-Based Second Preference Category

  • The worldwide category will likely remain current.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-2 China category will likely advance by three to six weeks per month.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-2 India category will likely advance by four to six months.

Employment-Based Third Preference Category

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 worldwide category will most likely be adjusted in the coming months as demand increases.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 China category is expected to advance by three to six weeks per month.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 India category will advance up to two weeks.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 Mexico category will remain at the worldwide date.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 Philippines category will advance slightly. Increased demand in this category may result in adjustments to the cutoff date later in the fiscal year.

How This Affects You

Priority date cutoffs are assessed on a monthly basis by the DOS, based on anticipated demand. Cutoff dates can move forward or backward or remain static. Employers and employees should take the immigrant visa backlogs into account in their long-term planning and take measures to mitigate their effects. To see the May 2015 Visa Bulletin in its entirety, please visit the DOS website.

ARTICLE BY

Modest Changes Announced in March Visa Bulletin

Greenberg Traurig

The Department of State’s March Visa Bulletin announced only a few modest changes in employment-based visa processing. Most significantly, the EB-3 subcategory for professionals and skilled workers will advance by six months for “All Other Countries,” with priority dates moving up from Jan. 1, 2014, to June 1, 2014. This brings adjudications under this subcategory just shy of eight months of being current.

Additionally, Indian nationals seeking classification under the EB-2 preference category will rejoice at the 16-month advancement announced for March, moving from Sept. 1, 2005, up to Jan., 1, 2007. Even with this considerable jump, the government is still virtually experiencing a “delay” of eight years. Priority dates for Chinese nationals under EB-2, in comparison, only advanced six months to Sept. 1, 2010.

Processing of petitions under the EB-5 immigrant investor program continue to be current for the time being, however, the possibility of visa retrogression for Chinese nationals remains a looming specter, as Greenberg Traurig reported on an earlier EB-5 Insights blog.

EB Category

All Other Countries

China

India

EB-1

Current

Current

Current

EB-2

Current

9/1/2010

1/1/2007

EB-3 (prof. & skilled workers)

6/1/2014

10/22/2011

1/1/2004

EB-3 (other workers)

6/1/2014

8/15/2005

1/1/2004

EB-5

Current

Current

Current

OF

Department of State Releases February 2015 Visa Bulletin

Morgan Lewis logo

Cutoff dates in the EB-2 India category advance by six and a half months, cutoff dates in EB-3 for the Rest of the World advance by five months, cutoff dates for China advance by six months, and EB-3 China is still ahead of EB-2 China.

The U.S. Department of State (DOS) has released its February 2015 Visa Bulletin. The Visa Bulletin sets out per-country priority date cutoffs that regulate the flow of adjustment of status (AOS) and consular immigrant visa applications. Foreign nationals may file applications to adjust their statuses to that of permanent residents or to obtain approval of immigrant visas at a U.S. embassy or consulate abroad, provided that their priority dates are prior to the respective cutoff dates specified by the DOS.

What Does the February 2015 Visa Bulletin Say?

The February 2015 Visa Bulletin shows an advance of six and a half months for the EB-2 India category. EB-3 cutoff dates for the worldwide category will advance by five months, and the EB-3 cutoff dates for China will advance by six months.

The cutoff date for F2A applicants from all countries will advance slightly in February.

EB-1: All EB-1 categories will remain current.

EB-2: The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to India will advance to September 1, 2005. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to China will advance toMarch 15, 2010. The EB-2 category for all other countries will remaincurrent.

EB-3: The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to India will advance by seven days to December 22, 2003. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to China will advance by six months to September 1, 2011, which remains ahead of the cutoff date for EB-2 China. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to the Philippines, Mexico, and the worldwide category will advance by seven months to January 1, 2014.

The relevant priority date cutoffs for foreign nationals in the EB-3 category are as follows:

China: September 1, 2011 (forward movement of 184 days)
India: December 22, 2003 (forward movement of 7 days)
Mexico: January 1, 2014 (forward movement of 214 days)
Philippines: January 1, 2014 (forward movement of 214 days)
Rest of the World: January 1, 2014 (forward movement of 214 days)

Developments Affecting the EB-2 Employment-Based Category

Mexico, the Philippines, and the Rest of the World

The EB-2 category for applicants chargeable to all countries other than China and India has been current since November 2012. The February Visa Bulletin indicates no change to this trend. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to all countries other than China and India may continue to file AOS applications or have applications approved through February 2015.

China

The January Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of February 1, 2010 for EB-2 applicants chargeable to China. The February Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of March 15, 2010, reflecting forward movement of 45 days. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to China with a priority date prior to March 15, 2010 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in February 2015.

India

The cutoff date for EB-2 applicants chargeable to India advances by six and a half months to September 1, 2005. This means that only applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to India with a priority date prior to September 1, 2005 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in February 2015.

Developments Affecting the EB-3 Employment-Based Category

China

The January Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of March 1, 2011. The February Visa Bulletin shows a cutoff date of September 1, 2011, an advancement of six months. This means that applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to China with a priority date prior to September 1, 2011 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in February 2015.

India

The January Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of December 15, 2003. The February Visa Bulletin will advance slightly, with a cutoff date ofDecember 22, 2003. This means that EB-3 applicants chargeable to India with a priority date prior to December 22, 2003 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in February 2015.

Rest of the World

The January Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of June 1, 2013 for EB-3 applicants chargeable to the worldwide category. The February Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of January 1, 2014, reflecting forward movement of 214 days. This means that applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to the worldwide category with a priority date prior to January 1, 2014 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in February 2015.

Developments Affecting the F2A Family-Sponsored Category

The January Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of February 22, 2013 for F2A applicants from Mexico. The February Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of April 22, 2013, reflecting forward movement of 59 days. This means that applicants from Mexico with a priority date prior to April 22, 2013 will be able to file AOS applications or have applications approved in February 2015.

The January Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of April 15, 2013 for F2A applicants from all other countries. The February Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of May 8, 2013, reflecting forward movement of 23 days. This means that F2A applicants from all other countries with a priority date prior to May 8, 2013 will be able to file AOS applications or have applications approved in February 2015.

Developments in the Coming Months

As noted in last month’s alert, the DOS Visa Office predicts the following movement in the next three months:

F2A Family-Sponsored Category

  • The cutoff date in the F2A category will likely advance by three to four weeks per month.

Employment-Based Second Preference Category

  • The worldwide category will likely remain current.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-2 China category will likely advance by three to six weeks per month.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-2 India category will likely advance by four to six months.

Employment-Based Third Preference Category

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 worldwide category will continue to advance rapidly for the next several months. Demand is expected to increase significantly, at which point, the cutoff dates will be adjusted accordingly.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 China category is expected to advance rapidly in the next few months. Demand is expected to increase and may result in adjustments to the cutoff date within the next six months.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 India category will advance up to two weeks.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 Mexico category will remain at the worldwide date.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 Philippines category will remain at the worldwide date. Increased demand in this category may result in adjustments to the cutoff date later in the fiscal year.

How This Affects You

Priority date cutoffs are assessed on a monthly basis by the DOS, based on anticipated demand. Cutoff dates can move forward or backward or remain static. Employers and employees should take the immigrant visa backlogs into account in their long-term planning and take measures to mitigate their effects. To see the February 2015 Visa Bulletin in its entirety, please visit the DOS website.

ARTICLE BY

OF

Department of State Releases January 2015 Visa Bulletin

Cutoff dates in the EB-2 India category remain severely backlogged, cutoff dates in EB-3 for the Rest of the World advance by seven months, cutoff dates for China advance by nine months, and EB-3 China is still ahead of EB-2 China.

The U.S. Department of State (DOS) has released its January 2015 Visa Bulletin. The Visa Bulletin sets out per-country priority date cutoffs that regulate the flow of adjustment of status (AOS) and consular immigrant visa applications. Foreign nationals may file applications to adjust their statuses to that of permanent residents or to obtain approval of immigrant visas at a U.S. embassy or consulate abroad, provided that their priority dates are prior to the respective cutoff dates specified by the DOS.

What Does the January 2015 Visa Bulletin Say?

The January 2015 Visa Bulletin shows no change in the cutoff date for the EB-2 India category. EB-3 cutoff dates for the worldwide category will advance by seven months, and the EB-3 cutoff dates for China will advance by nine months.

The cutoff date for F2A applicants from all countries will advance slightly in January.

EB-1: All EB-1 categories will remain current.

EB-2: The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to India will remain at February 15, 2005. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to China will advance to February 1, 2010. The EB-2 category for all other countries will remain current.

EB-3: The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to India will advance by 14 days to December 15, 2003. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to China will advance by nine months to March 1, 2011, which remains ahead of the cutoff date for EB-2 China. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to the Philippines, Mexico, and the worldwide category will advance by seven months to June 1, 2013.

The relevant priority date cutoffs for foreign nationals in the EB-3 category are as follows:

China: March 1, 2011 (forward movement of 273 days)
India: December 15, 2003 (forward movement of 14 days)
Mexico: June 1, 2013 (forward movement of 213 days)
Philippines: June 1, 2013 (forward movement of 213 days)
Rest of the World: June 1, 2013 (forward movement of 213 days)

Developments Affecting the EB-2 Employment-Based Category

Mexico, the Philippines, and the Rest of the World

The EB-2 category for applicants chargeable to all countries other than China and India has been current since November 2012. The January Visa Bulletin indicates no change to this trend. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to all countries other than China and India may continue to file AOS applications or have applications approved through January 2015.

China

The December Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of January 1, 2010 for EB-2 applicants chargeable to China. The January Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of February 1, 2010, reflecting forward movement of 31 days. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to China with a priority date prior to February 1, 2010 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in January 2015.

India

The cutoff date for EB-2 applicants chargeable to India remains at February 15, 2005. This means that only applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to India with a priority date prior to February 15, 2005 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in January 2015.

Developments Affecting the EB-3 Employment-Based Category

China

The December Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of June 1, 2010. The January Visa Bulletin shows a cutoff date of March 1, 2011, an advancement of nine months. This means that applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to China with a priority date prior to March 1, 2011 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in January 2015.

India

The December Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of December 1, 2003. The January Visa Bulletin will advance slightly, with a cutoff date of December 15, 2003. This means that EB-3 applicants chargeable to India with a priority date prior to December 15, 2003 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in January 2015.

Rest of the World

The December Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of June 1, 2012 for EB-3 applicants chargeable to the worldwide category. The January Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of November 1, 2012, reflecting forward movement of 153 days. This means that applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to the worldwide category with a priority date prior to November 1, 2012 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in January 2015.

Developments Affecting the F2A Family-Sponsored Category

The December Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of January 1, 2013 for F2A applicants from Mexico. The January Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of February 22, 2013, reflecting forward movement of 43 days. This means that applicants from Mexico with a priority date prior to February 22, 2013 will be able to file AOS applications or have applications approved in January 2015.

The December Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of March 22, 2013 for F2A applicants from all other countries. The January Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of April 15, 2013, reflecting forward movement of 21 days. This means that F2A applicants from all other countries with a priority date prior to April 15, 2013 will be able to file AOS applications or have applications approved in January 2015.

Developments in the Coming Months

As noted in last month’s alert, the DOS Visa Office predicts the following movement in the next three months:

F2A Family-Sponsored Category

  • The cutoff date in the F2A category will likely advance by three to five weeks per month.

Employment-Based Second Preference Category

  • The worldwide category will likely remain current.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-2 China category will likely advance by three to five weeks per month.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-2 India category will likely remain unchanged.

Employment-Based Third Preference Category

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 worldwide category will continue to advance rapidly for the next several months. Demand is expected to increase significantly, at which point, the cutoff dates will be adjusted accordingly.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 China category is expected to advance rapidly in the next few months. Demand is expected to increase and may result in adjustments to the cutoff date by February 2015.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 India category will advance little, if at all.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 Mexico category will remain at the worldwide date.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 Philippines category will remain at the worldwide date. Increased demand in this category may result in adjustments to the cutoff date later in the fiscal year.

How This Affects You

Priority date cutoffs are assessed on a monthly basis by the DOS, based on anticipated demand. Cutoff dates can move forward or backward or remain static. Employers and employees should take the immigrant visa backlogs into account in their long-term planning and take measures to mitigate their effects. To see the January 2015 Visa Bulletin in its entirety, please visit the DOS website.

ARTICLE BY

Department of State Releases December 2014 Visa Bulletin

Morgan Lewis

The Bulletin shows that cutoff dates in the EB-2 India category remain severely backlogged, cutoff dates in EB-3 for the Rest of the World and China advance by five months, and EB-3 China is now ahead of EB-2 China.

The U.S. Department of State (DOS) has released its December 2014 Visa Bulletin. The Visa Bulletin sets out per-country priority date cutoffs that regulate the flow of adjustment of status (AOS) and consular immigrant visa applications. Foreign nationals may file applications to adjust their statuses to that of permanent residents or to obtain approval of immigrant visas at a U.S. embassy or consulate abroad, provided that their priority dates are prior to the respective cutoff dates specified by the DOS.

What Does the December 2014 Visa Bulletin Say?

The December Visa Bulletin shows no change in the cutoff date for the EB-2 India category. EB-3 cutoff dates for the Rest of the World and China will advance by five months.

The cutoff date for F2A applicants from all countries will advance slightly in December.

EB-1: All EB-1 categories will remain current.

EB-2: The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to India will remain at February 15, 2005. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to China will advance to January 1, 2010. The EB-2 category for all other countries will remain current.

EB-3: The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to India will advance by seven days to December 1, 2003. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to China will advance by five months to June 1, 2010, which is now ahead of the cutoff date for EB-2 China. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to the Philippines, Mexico, and the Rest of the World will advance by five months to November 1, 2012.

The relevant priority date cutoffs for foreign nationals in the EB-3 category are as follows:

China: June 1, 2010 (forward movement of 152 days)

India: December 1, 2003 (forward movement of 7 days)

Mexico: November 1, 2012 (forward movement of 153 days)

Philippines: November 1, 2012 (forward movement of 153 days)

Rest of the World: November 1, 2012 (forward movement of 153 days)

Developments Affecting the EB-2 Employment-Based Category

Mexico, the Philippines, and the Rest of the World

The EB-2 category for applicants chargeable to all countries other than China and India has been current since November 2012. The December Visa Bulletin indicates no change to this trend. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to all countries other than China and India may continue to file AOS applications or have applications approved through December 2014.

China

The November Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of December 8, 2009 for EB-2 applicants chargeable to China. The December Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of January 1, 2010, reflecting forward movement of 23 days. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to China with a priority date prior to January 1, 2010 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in December 2014.

India

The cutoff date for EB-2 applicants chargeable to India remains at February 15, 2005. This means that only applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to India with a priority date prior to February 15, 2005 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in December 2014.

Developments Affecting the EB-3 Employment-Based Category

China

The November Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of January 1, 2010. The December Visa Bulletin remains unchanged, with a cutoff date of June 1, 2010. This means that applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to China with a priority date prior to June 1, 2010 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in December 2014.

India

The November Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of November 22, 2003. The December Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of December 1, 2003, reflecting forward movement of seven days. This means that EB-3 applicants chargeable to India with a priority date prior to December 1, 2003 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in December 2014.

Rest of the World

The November Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of June 1, 2012 for EB-3 applicants chargeable to the Rest of the World. The December Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of November 1, 2012, reflecting forward movement of 153 days. This means that applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to the Rest of the World with a priority date prior to November 1, 2012 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in December 2014.

Developments Affecting the F2A Family-Sponsored Category

The November Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of September 22, 2012 for F2A applicants from Mexico. The December Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of January 1, 2013, reflecting forward movement of 75 days. This means that applicants from Mexico with a priority date prior to January 1, 2013 will be able to file AOS applications or have applications approved in December 2014.

The November Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of March 1, 2013 for F2A applicants from all other countries. The December Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of March 22, 2013, reflecting forward movement of 21 days. This means that F2A applicants from all other countries with a priority date prior to March 22, 2013 will be able to file AOS applications or have applications approved in December 2014.

Developments in the Coming Months

As noted in last month’s alert, the DOS Visa Office predicts the following movement in the next three months:

F2A Family-Sponsored Category

  • The cutoff date in the F2A category will likely advance by three to five weeks per month.

Employment-Based Second Preference Category

  • The worldwide category will likely remain current.
  • The cutoff date in the EB-2 China category will likely advance by three to five weeks per month.
  • The cutoff date in the EB-2 India category will likely remain unchanged.

Employment-Based Third Preference Category

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 worldwide category will continue to advance rapidly for the next several months. Demand is expected to increase significantly, at which point, the cutoff dates will be adjusted accordingly.
  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 China category is expected to advance rapidly in the next few months. Demand is expected to increase and may result in adjustments to the cutoff date by February 2015.
  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 India category will advance little, if at all.
  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 Mexico category will remain at the worldwide date.
  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 Philippines category will remain at the worldwide date. Increased demand in this category may result in adjustments to the cutoff date later in the fiscal year.

How This Affects You

Priority date cutoffs are assessed on a monthly basis by the DOS, based on anticipated demand. Cutoff dates can move forward or backward or remain static. Employers and employees should take the immigrant visa backlogs into account in their long-term planning and take measures to mitigate their effects. To see the December 2014 Visa Bulletin in its entirety, please visit the DOS website.

ARTICLE BY

OF

Department of State Releases November 2014 Visa Bulletin

Morgan Lewis

The bulletin shows slight forward movement in all employment-based preference categories, with the exception of the EB-2 India category, which will remain unchanged.

The U.S. Department of State (DOS) has released its November 2014 Visa Bulletin. The Visa Bulletin sets out per-country priority date cutoffs that regulate the flow of adjustment of status (AOS) and consular immigrant visa applications. Foreign nationals may file applications to adjust their statuses to that of permanent residents or to obtain approval of immigrant visas at a U.S. embassy or consulate abroad, provided that their priority dates are prior to the respective cutoff dates specified by the DOS.

What Does the November 2014 Visa Bulletin Say?

The November Visa Bulletin shows retrogression of more than four years in the cutoff date for the EB-2 India category.

The cutoff date for F2A applicants from all countries will advance slightly in October.

EB-1: All EB-1 categories will remain current.

EB-2: The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to India will retrogress by more than four years to February 15, 2005.The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to China will advance by 23 days to December 8, 2009. The EB-2 category for all other countries will remain current.

EB-3: The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to India will advance by seven days to November 22, 2003. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to China will advance by nine months to January 1, 2010, once again moving ahead of the cutoff date for EB-2 China. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to the Philippines, Mexico, and the worldwide category will advance by eight months to June 1, 2012.

The relevant priority date cutoffs for foreign nationals in the EB-3 category are as follows:

China: January 1, 2010 (forward movement of 275 days)
India: November 22, 2003 (forward movement of 7 days)
Mexico: June 1, 2012 (forward movement of 244 days)
Philippines: June 1, 2012 (forward movement of 244 days)
Rest of the World: June 1, 2012 (forward movement of 244 days)

Developments Affecting the EB-2 Employment-Based Category

Mexico, the Philippines, and the Rest of the World

The EB-2 category for applicants chargeable to all countries other than China and India has been current since November 2012. The November Visa Bulletin indicates no change to this trend. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to all countries other than China and India may continue to file AOS applications or have applications approved through November 2014.

China

The October Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of November 15, 2009 for EB-2 applicants chargeable to China. The November Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of December 8, 2009, reflecting forward movement of 23 days. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to China with a priority date prior to December 8, 2009 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in November 2014.

India

Throughout September and October, the cutoff date for EB-2 applicants chargeable to India was May 1, 2009. The November Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of February 15, 2005, reflecting a retrogression of more than four years. This means that only applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to India with a priority date prior to February 15, 2005 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in November 2014.

The cutoff date in the EB-2 India category had advanced rapidly in recent months through the use of “otherwise unused” employment-based visa numbers prescribed by section 202(a)(5) of the Immigration and Nationality Act. The DOS’s Visa Office had warned that continued forward movement of this cutoff date could not be guaranteed and that increased demand in this category would require the retrogression of the cutoff date in order to hold number use within the fiscal year 2015 annual limit.

Developments Affecting the EB-3 Employment-Based Category

China

The October Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of April 1, 2009 for EB-3 applicants chargeable to China. The November Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of January 1, 2010, reflecting forward movement of 275 days. This means that applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to China with a priority date prior to January 1, 2010 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in November 2014.

India

The October Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of November 15, 2003 for EB-3 applicants chargeable to India. The November Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of November 22, 2003, reflecting forward movement of seven days. This means that EB-3 applicants chargeable to India with a priority date prior to November 22, 2003 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in November 2014.

Rest of the World

The October Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of October 1, 2011 for EB-3 applicants chargeable to the worldwide category. The November Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of June 1, 2012, reflecting forward movement of 244 days. This means that applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to the worldwide category with a priority date prior to June 1, 2012 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in November 2014.

Developments Affecting the F2A Family-Sponsored Category

The October Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of July 22, 2012 for F2A applicants from Mexico. The November Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of September 22, 2012, reflecting forward movement of 62 days. This means that applicants from Mexico with a priority date prior to September 22, 2012 will be able to file AOS applications or have applications approved in November 2014.

The October Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of February 1, 2013 for F2A applicants from all other countries. The November Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of March 1, 2013, reflecting forward movement of 28 days. This means that F2A applicants from all other countries with a priority date prior to March 1, 2013 will be able to file AOS applications or have applications approved in November 2014.

Developments in the Coming Months

The DOS Visa Office predicts the following movement in the next three months:

F2A Family-Sponsored Category

  • The cutoff date in the F2A category will likely advance by three to five weeks per month.

Employment-Based Second Preference Category

  • The worldwide category will likely remain current.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-2 China category will likely advance by three to five weeks per month.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-2 India category will likely remain unchanged.

Employment-Based Third Preference Category

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 worldwide category will continue to advance rapidly for the next several months. Demand is expected to increase significantly, at which point, the cutoff dates will be adjusted accordingly.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 China category is expected to advance rapidly in the next few months. Demand is expected to increase and may result in adjustments to the cutoff date by February 2015.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 India category will advance little, if at all.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 Mexico category will remain at the worldwide date.

  • The cutoff date in the EB-3 Philippines category will remain at the worldwide date. Increased demand in this category may result in adjustments to the cutoff date later in the fiscal year.

How This Affects You

Priority date cutoffs are assessed on a monthly basis by the DOS, based on anticipated demand. Cutoff dates can move forward or backward or remain static. Employers and employees should take the immigrant visa backlogs into account in their long-term planning and take measures to mitigate their effects. To see the November 2014 Visa Bulletin in its entirety, please visit the DOS website.

Copyright © 2014 by Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP. All Rights Reserved.

November Visa Bulletin Confirms Fears of Significant Retrogression for EB-2 India

Greenberg Traurig Law firm

The Department of State released its November Visa Bulletin today. It is a mixture of good news and really bad news. The good news is that the EB-2 and EB-3 categories for all countries, except for India, continue to experience forward movement. Worldwide, EB-2 availability remains current and EB-3 availability advanced to June 1, 2012. China also experienced forward movement, with EB-2 advancing to December 8, 2009, and EB-3 advancing to January 1, 2010.

The really bad news in the Visa Bulletin relates to visa availability for India. As expected, EB-2 availability for India retrogressed by more than four years, from May 1, 2009, to February 15, 2005. EB-3, however, advanced by one week to November 22, 2003.

The Visa Bulletin also contains projections for future months. Visa availability in the EB-1 (all countries) and EB-2 (worldwide) categories are expected to remain current over the coming months. EB-3 worldwide availability is expected to experience rapid forward movement for the next several months. For China, EB-2 availability is projected to increase by three to five weeks per month, and rapid forward movement is also expected in the EB-3 category, with potential retrogression in February. India is not expected to have any forward movement in the EB-2 or EB-3 categories.

In short, individuals from India face a bleak outlook in green card availability over the next few months, while the future is brighter for individuals from all other countries.

EB   Category

Worldwide

China

India

EB-1

Current

Current

Current

EB-2

Current

12/08/2009

02/15/2005

EB-3

06/01/2012

01/01/2010

11/22/2003

©2014 Greenberg Traurig, LLP. All rights reserved.
ARTICLE BY

OF

Department of State Releases October 2014 Visa Bulletin

The bulletin shows slight forward movement in all employment-based preference categories, with the exception of the EB-2 India category, which will remain unchanged.

The U.S. Department of State (DOS) has released its October 2014 Visa Bulletin. The Visa Bulletin sets out per-country priority date cutoffs that regulate the flow of adjustment of status (AOS) and consular immigrant visa applications. Foreign nationals may file applications to adjust their statuses to that of permanent residents or to obtain approval of immigrant visas at a U.S. embassy or consulate abroad, provided that their priority dates are prior to the respective cutoff dates specified by the DOS.

What Does the October 2014 Visa Bulletin Say?

The October Visa Bulletin shows moderate advancement of the cutoff dates in all of the employment-based categories other than EB-2 India, which will remain unchanged from September because of significant demand in this category.

The cutoff date for F2A applicants from all countries will advance slightly in October.

EB-1: All EB-1 categories will remain current.

EB-2: The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to India will remain unchanged at May 1, 2009. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to China will advance by 38 days to November 15, 2009. The EB-2 category for all other countries will remain current.

EB-3: The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to India will advance by seven days to November 15, 2003. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to China will advance by 151 days to April 1, 2009. The cutoff date for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to the Philippines, Mexico, and the worldwide category will advance by six months to October 1, 2011.

The relevant priority date cutoffs for foreign nationals in the EB-3 category are as follows:

China: April 1, 2009 (forward movement of 151 days)
India: November 15, 2003 (forward movement of seven days)
Mexico: October 1, 2011 (forward movement of 183 days)
Philippines: October 1, 2011 (forward movement of 183 days)
Rest of the World: October 1, 2011 (forward movement of 183 days)

Developments Affecting the EB-2 Employment-Based Category

Mexico, the Philippines, and the Rest of the World

The EB-2 category for applicants chargeable to all countries other than China and India has been current since November 2012. The October Visa Bulletin indicates no change to this trend. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to all countries other than China and India may continue to file AOS applications or have applications approved through October 2014.

China

The September Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of October 8, 2009 for EB-2 applicants chargeable to China. The October Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of November 15, 2009, reflecting forward movement of 38 days. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to China with a priority date prior to November 15, 2009 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in October 2014.

India

The September Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of May 1, 2009 for EB-2 applicants chargeable to India. The October Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of May 1, 2009, reflecting no movement. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to India with a priority date prior to May 1, 2009 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in October 2014.

The September Visa Bulletin indicated that the use of potentially “otherwise unused” employment-based visa numbers prescribed by section 202(a)(5) of the Immigration and Nationality Act had allowed the cutoff date in the EB-2 India category to advance rapidly in recent months. The September Bulletin warned that continued forward movement of this cutoff date could not be guaranteed. The October Visa Bulletin indicates no movement of the cutoff date in the EB-2 India category in October in order to regulate demand. It further notes that increased demand will require the retrogression of the cutoff date, possibly in November, to hold number use within the fiscal year 2015 annual limit.

Developments Affecting the EB-3 Employment-Based Category

China

The September Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of November 1, 2008 for EB-3 applicants chargeable to China. The October Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of April 1, 2009 reflecting forward movement of 151 days. This means that applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to China with a priority date prior to April 1, 2009 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in October 2014.

India

The September Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of November 8, 2003 for EB-2 applicants chargeable to India. The October Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of November 15, 2003, reflecting forward movement of seven days. This means that EB-3 applicants chargeable to India with a priority date prior to November 15, 2003 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in October 2014.

Rest of the World

The September Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of April 1, 2011 for EB-3 applicants chargeable to the worldwide category. The October Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of October 1, 2011, reflecting forward movement of 183 days. This means that applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to the worldwide category with a priority date prior to October 1, 2011 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in October 2014.

Developments Affecting the F2A Family-Sponsored Category

The September Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of April 22, 2012 for F2A applicants from Mexico. The October Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of July 22, 2012, reflecting forward movement of 91 days. This means that applicants from Mexico with a priority date prior to July 22, 2012 will be able to file AOS applications or have applications approved in October 2014.

The September Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of January 1, 2013 for F2A applicants from all other countries. The October Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of February 1, 2013, reflecting forward movement of 31 days. This means that F2A applicants from all other countries with a priority date prior to February 1, 2013 will be able to file AOS applications or have applications approved in October 2014.

How This Affects You

Priority date cutoffs are assessed on a monthly basis by the DOS, based on anticipated demand. Cutoff dates can move forward or backward or remain static. Employers and employees should take the immigrant visa backlogs into account in their long-term planning and take measures to mitigate their effects. See the October 2014 Visa Bulletin in its entirety at the DOS website.

ARTICLE BY

OF

October Visa Bulletin – Some Gains in the EB-3 Category, but Near Future Bleak for EB-2 India

Greenberg Traurig Law firm

The Department of State released its October Visa Bulletin today.  On a positive note, the EB-2 category for Chinese nationals has made a five week gain, from October 8, 2009 to November 15, 2009; and the EB-3 category for skilled workers/professionals for Chinese nationals has jumped five months, from November 1, 2008 to April 1, 2009.  The EB-3 category will advance six months for nationals of “all other countries” from April 1, 2011 to October 1, 2011; whereas it will only move forward a week for Indian nationals from November 8, 2003 to November 15, 2003.  Elsewhere, the EB-2 category for Indian nationals remains at May 1, 2009 and, unfortunately, this category is likely to retrogress over the next several months because of a spike in demand.  This is grim reading for Indian nationals who account for a large percentage of highly-skilled workers seeking permanent residence in the United States.  Indeed, based on current retrogression dates for Indians in the EB-3 category, priority dates are moving forward one week every month, which translates to a wait time of more than forty years.

Employment Based Category

All Other Countries

China

India

Mexico

Philippines

EB-1

Current

Current

Current

Current

Current

EB-2

Current

10/08/2009

05/01/2009

Current

Current

EB-3 Skilled Workers/Professionals

04/01/2011

11/01/2008

11/08/2003

04/01/2011

04/01/2011

EB-3 Other Workers

04/01/2011

07/22/2005

11/08/2003

04/01/2011

04/01/2011

 

ARTICLE BY

 
OF 

Department of State Releases September 2014 Visa Bulletin

Morgan Lewis logo

The bulletin shows continued forward movement in the EB-2 India category while the cutoff dates in most other employment-based categories remain unchanged.

The U.S. Department of State (DOS) has released its September 2014 Visa Bulletin. The Visa Bulletin sets out per-country priority date cutoffs that regulate the flow of adjustment of status (AOS) and consular immigrant visa applications. Foreign nationals may file applications to adjust their statuses to that of permanent residents or to obtain approval of immigrant visas at a U.S. embassy or consulate abroad, provided that their priority dates are prior to the respective cutoff dates specified by the DOS.

What Does the September 2014 Visa Bulletin Say?

After several months of significant movement in both directions, the September Visa Bulletin shows no movement in any of the employment-based categories other than continued forward movement in the EB-2 India and EB-3 Philippines categories. Such continued forward movement in the EB-2 India category cannot be guaranteed; once significant demand in this category occurs, the cutoff date is likely to once again retrogress.

The cutoff date for F2A applicants from all countries will advance significantly in September.

EB-1: All EB-1 categories will remain current.

EB-2: The cutoff date of January 22, 2009 for applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to India will advance by slightly more than three months to May 1, 2009. The cutoff date of October 8, 2009 for applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to China will remain unchanged. The EB-2 category for all other countries will remain current.

EB-3: The cutoff date of November 8, 2003 for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to India will remain unchanged. The cutoff date of November 1, 2008 for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to China will also remain unchanged. The cutoff date of June 1, 2010 for applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to the Philippines will advance by 10 months to April 1, 2011. The cutoff date of April 1, 2011 for applicants chargeable to Mexico and the Rest of the World will remain unchanged.

The relevant priority date cutoffs for foreign nationals in the EB-3 category are as follows:

China: November 1, 2008 (no movement)
India: November 8, 2003 (no movement)
Mexico: April 1, 2011 (no movement)
Philippines: April 1, 2011 (forward movement of 10 months)
Rest of the World: April 1, 2011 (no movement)

Developments Affecting the EB-2 Employment-Based Category

Mexico, the Philippines, and the Rest of the World

The EB-2 category for applicants chargeable to all countries other than China and India has been current since November 2012. The September Visa Bulletin indicates no change to these categories. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to all countries other than China and India may continue to file AOS applications or have applications approved through September 2014.

China

The August Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of October 8, 2009 for EB-2 applicants chargeable to China. The September Visa Bulletin indicates no change to this cutoff date. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to China with a priority date prior to October 8, 2009 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in September 2014.

India

The August Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of January 22, 2009 for EB-2 applicants chargeable to India. The September Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of May 1, 2009, reflecting forward movement of 99 days. This means that applicants in the EB-2 category chargeable to India with a priority date prior to May 1, 2009 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in September 2014.

The September Visa Bulletin notes that the use of potentially “otherwise unused” employment-based visa numbers prescribed by section 202(a)(5) of the Immigration and Nationality Act has allowed the cutoff date in the EB-2 India category to advance rapidly in recent months. The Visa Bulletin warns that continued forward movement of this cutoff date in upcoming months cannot be guaranteed, and no assumptions should be made until the dates are formally announced. Once there is a significant increase in demand in this category, it will be necessary to retrogress the cutoff date, possibly as early as November, to hold numbers within the fiscal year 2015 annual limit. 

Developments Affecting the EB-3 Employment-Based Category

China

The August Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of November 1, 2008 for EB-3 applicants chargeable to China. The September Visa Bulletin indicates no change to this cutoff date. This means that only applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to China with a priority date prior to November 1, 2008 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in September 2014.

India

The August Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of November 8, 2003 for EB-2 applicants chargeable to India. The September Visa Bulletin indicates no change to this cutoff date. This means that only EB-3 applicants chargeable to India with a priority date prior to November 8, 2003 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in September 2014.

Rest of the World

The August Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of April 1, 2011 for EB-3 applicants chargeable to the Rest of the World. The September Visa Bulletin indicates no change to this cutoff date. This means that only applicants in the EB-3 category chargeable to the Rest of the World with a priority date prior to April 1, 2011 may file AOS applications or have applications approved in September 2014.

Developments Affecting the F2A Family-Sponsored Category

The August Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of March 15, 2011 for F2A applicants from Mexico. The September Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of April 22, 2012, reflecting forward movement of 404 days. This means that applicants from Mexico with a priority date prior to April 22, 2012 will be able to file AOS applications or have applications approved in September 2014.

The August Visa Bulletin indicated a cutoff date of May 1, 2012 for F2A applicants from all other countries. The September Visa Bulletin indicates a cutoff date of January 1, 2013, reflecting forward movement of 245 days. This means that worldwide, F2A applicants with a priority date prior to January 1, 2013 will be able to file AOS applications or have applications approved in September 2014.

How This Affects You

Priority date cutoffs are assessed on a monthly basis by the DOS, based on anticipated demand. Cutoff dates can move forward or backward or remain static. Employers and employees should take the immigrant visa backlogs into account in their long-term planning and take measures to mitigate their effects. To see the September 2014 Visa Bulletin in its entirety, please visit the DOS website.

ARTICLE BY

 
OF