USCIS Issues Memorandum Directing Examiners NOT to Re-Judge Work Visa Extension Applications
In
response to complaints that the examiners have been denying non-immigrant status
extension applications based on facts previously found acceptable, William
Yates, the USCIS' Associate Director for Operations, has issued a field
memorandum directing officers to refrain from basic re-adjudications.
Many
of the cases that prompted the issuance of the memorandum were O-1 visa
extensions. O-1s are non-immigrant work visas approved for applicants with
extraordinary ability in fields like the sciences, the arts and athletics.
Applicants must prove their ability by presenting extensive documentation
including support letters, awards, publications, patents, etc. Until recently,
if O-1 status was approved by USCIS, extensions would routinely be granted. But
in the last two years, USCIS examiners have frequently denied O-1 extension
applications on the ground that the applicant failed to demonstrate they had
extraordinary ability.
The
policy memorandum from USCIS is intended specifically to address the situation
where there are no material changes in the underlying facts of the case. The
memorandum admits that examiners have been re-adjudicating O-1 cases "as a
matter of routine". The new memorandum directs examiners to give
"deference" to prior decisions on eligibility for a visa category.
Examiners
are permitted to re-adjudicate a petition only in three circumstances:
1.
When there was a material error in the original adjudication;
2.
A material change in the facts has occurred; and
3.
There is new information that adversely impacts the applicant's eligibility.
The
new changes should dramatically reduce the number of instances where an examiner
can properly deny an extension application. In most cases, they would
essentially have to accuse the first examiner of not doing there job properly,
something USCIS examiners may be loathe to do. And in O-1 cases, applicants'
credentials tend to improve as time goes on so showing that facts have changed
and an applicant is no longer extraordinary will be tougher.
The
memorandum does remind examiners, however, that applications may still be denied
on normal admissibility grounds (such as the applicant's failure to maintain
status in the US). In such cases, an applicant might be approved in a
"split" decision where classification in a category is approved, but
an applicant has to process a visa at a consulate rather than in the US visa a
change of status.
A Deputy Service Center Director must also now sign off on the denial of an extension application or even the issuance of a Request for Evidence. This will also likely dissuade an examiner from re-adjudicating the facts of a case.
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