245(i): A Matter of Family Unity and
Common Sense
THE ISSUE: Section 245(i) was a vital
provision of U.S. immigration law, allowing immigrants on the
brink of becoming permanent residents to apply for their green
cards in the United States, rather than returning to their home
countries to apply. Congress allowed Section 245(i) to expire in
November 1997, while also providing relief for some immigrants
already in the United States. That provision covers only those
immigrants who were eligible for permanent resident status under
Section 245(i), and who had filed preliminary paperwork with INS
and/or the Department of Labor before January 14, 1998. Congress
should fully restore Section 245(i) because it is pro-family,
pro-business, fiscally prudent, and makes sense.
BACKGROUND: Section 245(i) was
available to immigrants sponsored by close family members
residing in the U.S., or employers who could not find necessary
U.S. workers. Immigrants applying for permanent residence
under Section 245(i) were eligible for their green cards, but
were unable to obtain them in the U.S. because they were not in a
legal nonimmigrant status. (This can happen due to a technical
visa problem, or because of INS delays. It can happen without the
immigrants knowledge.) People applying under Section
245(i) are screened for criminal offenses, health problems, the
potential of becoming a public charge, fraud, misrepresentation,
and all other grounds of inadmissibility. The issue is not
whether these individuals are eligible to become permanent
residents they are, but rather from where
they can apply. Finally, each applicant had to pay a $1,000
processing fee, thereby generating revenue for the INS at
no cost to taxpayers.
For many immigrants who were out of status,
the sunset of Section 245(i) means that they have had to leave
behind their families and jobs and spend years outside of the
United States. Without Section 245(i), people fully eligible to
become green card holders can be barred from returning to the
U.S. for three to ten years.
Since the expiration of Section 245(i), INS
has suffered major deficits in its adjudication funding,
resulting in backlogs in all types of applications, including
naturalization and immigrant visa petitions. The State
Department (whose consular posts have to process these cases in
the absence of Section 245(i)) already are understaffed and
under-funded for this task.
CURRENT STATUS: H.R. 1841, introduced
by Representatives Luis Gutierrez (D-IL) and Connie Morella
(R-MD), and S. 2668, introduced by Senators Bob Graham (D-FL) and
Gordon Smith (R-OR) would fully restore Section 245(i)
thereby allowing immigrants on the brink of becoming permanent
residents to remain in the U.S. while the INS processes their
applications. H.R. 1841 would give no special rights or
status to people. Applicants must still demonstrate that
they are eligible for a green card based on a family relationship
or a sponsoring employer.
ADVOCATE'S POSITION: Advocates
strongly support H.R. 1841 and S. 2668. Immigrants on the brink
of becoming permanent legal residents should be able to file
their green card applications from within the United States,
rather than having to travel back to their home countries and
possibly face draconian consequences that would prevent them from
returning to America for years. Restoring Section 245(i) is
pro-family, pro-business, fiscally prudent, and a matter of
common sense. Section 245(i) allows immigrants with close family
members here in the United States to remain with their families
while applying for legal permanent residence; allows businesses
to retain valuable employees; and provides INS with millions in
annual revenue, at no cost to taxpayers. Advocates urge Congress
to fully restore Section 245(i).