HR 4056 IH
106th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. R. 4056
To establish a system of registries of temporary agricultural
workers to provide for a sufficient supply of such workers and to
amend the Immigration and Nationality Act to streamline
procedures for the admission and extension of stay of
nonimmigrant agricultural workers, and for other purposes.
IN THE HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES
March 22, 2000
Mr. BISHOP introduced the following bill; which was referred
to the Committee on the Judiciary, and in addition to the
Committee on Education and the Workforce, for a period to be
subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for
consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction
of the committee concerned
A BILL
To establish a system of registries of temporary agricultural
workers to provide for a sufficient supply of such workers and to
amend the Immigration and Nationality Act to streamline
procedures for the admission and extension of stay of
nonimmigrant agricultural workers, and for other purposes.
- Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of America in
Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE; TABLE OF CONTENTS.
- (a) SHORT TITLE- This Act may be cited as the
`Agricultural Job Opportunity Benefits and Security Act
of 2000'.
- (b) TABLE OF CONTENTS- The table of contents of this Act
is as follows:
- Sec. 1. Short title; table of contents.
TITLE I--ADJUSTMENT TO LEGAL STATUS
- Sec. 101. Agricultural workers.
TITLE II--AGRICULTURAL WORKER REGISTRIES
- Sec. 201. Agricultural worker registries.
TITLE III--H-2A REFORM
- Sec. 301. Employer applications and assurances.
- Sec. 302. Search of registry.
- Sec. 303. Issuance of visas and admission of
aliens.
- Sec. 304. Employment requirements.
- Sec. 305. Program for the admission of temporary
H-2A workers.
TITLE IV--MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
- Sec. 401. Enhanced worker protections and labor
standards enforcement.
- Sec. 402. Bilateral commissions.
- Sec. 404. Determination and use of user fees.
- Sec. 405. Funding for startup costs.
- Sec. 406. Report to Congress.
- Sec. 407. Effective date.
SEC. 2. DEFINITIONS.
- (1) ADVERSE EFFECT WAGE RATE-
- (A) IN GENERAL- Except as provided in
subparagraph (B), the term `adverse
effect wage rate' means the rate of pay
for an agricultural occupation that is 5
percent above the prevailing rate of pay
for that agricultural occupation in an
area of intended employment, if the
prevailing rate of pay for the occupation
is less than the prior year's average
hourly earnings of field and livestock
workers for the State (or region that
includes the State), as determined by the
Secretary of Agriculture, provided no
adverse effect wage rate shall be more
than the prior year's average hourly
earnings of field and livestock workers
for the State (or region that includes
the State), as determined by the
Secretary of Agriculture.
- (B) EXCEPTION- If the prevailing rate of
pay for an activity is a piece rate, task
rate or group rate, and the average
hourly earnings of an employer's workers
employed in that activity, taken as a
group, are less than the prior year's
average hourly earnings of field and
livestock workers in the State (or region
that includes the State), as determined
by the Secretary of Agriculture, the term
`adverse effect wage rate' means the
prevailing piece rate, task rate or group
rate for the activity plus such an amount
as is necessary to increase the average
hourly earnings of the employer's workers
employed in the activity, taken as a
group, by 5 percent, or to the prior
year's average hourly earnings for field
and livestock workers for the State (or
region that includes the State)
determined by the Secretary of
Agriculture, whichever is less.
- (2) AGRICULTURAL EMPLOYMENT- The term
`agricultural employment' means any service or
activity that is considered to be agriculture
under section 3(f) of the Fair Labor Standards
Act of 1938 (29 U.S.C. 203(f)) or as agricultural
labor under section 3121(g) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986. For purposes of this
paragraph, agricultural employment in the United
States includes, but is not limited to,
employment under section 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of
the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a)).
- (3) ELIGIBLE- The term `eligible' as used with
respect to workers or individuals, means
individuals authorized to be employed in the
United States as provided for in section
274A(h)(3) of the Immigration and Nationality Act
(8 U.S.C. 1188).
- (4) EMPLOYER- The term `employer' means any
person or entity, including any farm labor
contractor and any agricultural association, that
employs workers.
- (5) H-2A EMPLOYER- The term `H-2A employer' means
an employer who seeks to hire one or more
nonimmigrant aliens described in section
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act.
- (6) H-2A WORKER- The term `H-2A worker' means a
nonimmigrant described in section
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act.
- (7) JOB OPPORTUNITY- The term `job opportunity'
means a specific period of employment provided by
an employer to a worker in one or more
agricultural activities.
- (8) PREVAILING WAGE- The term `prevailing wage'
means with respect to an agricultural activity in
an area of intended employment, the rate of wages
that includes the 51st percentile of employees in
that agricultural activity in the area of
intended employment, expressed in terms of the
prevailing method of pay for the agricultural
activity in the area of intended employment.
- (9) REGISTERED WORKER- The term `registered
worker' means an individual whose name appears in
a registry.
- (10) REGISTRY- The term `registry' means an
agricultural worker registry established under
section 201(a).
- (11) SECRETARY- The term `Secretary' means the
Secretary of Labor.
- (12) UNITED STATES WORKER- The term `United
States worker' means any worker, whether a United
States citizen or national, a lawfully admitted
permanent resident alien, or any other alien who
is authorized to work in the job opportunity
within the United States other than an alien
admitted pursuant to section 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a)
or section 218 of the Immigration and Nationality
Act, as in effect on the effective date of this
Act, or a nonimmigrant agricultural worker whose
status was adjusted under section 101(a).
- (13) WORK DAY- The term `work day' means any day
in which the individual is employed one or more
hours in agriculture.
TITLE I--ADJUSTMENT TO LEGAL STATUS
SEC. 101. AGRICULTURAL WORKERS.
- (1) IN GENERAL- The Attorney General shall adjust
the status of an alien agricultural worker who
qualifies under this subsection to that of an
alien lawfully admitted for nonimmigrant status
under section 101(a)(15) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act if the Attorney General
determines that the following requirements are
satisfied with respect to the alien:
- (A) PERFORMANCE OF AGRICULTURAL
EMPLOYMENT IN THE UNITED STATES- The
alien must establish that the alien has
performed agricultural employment in the
United States for at least 880 hours or
150 work days, whichever is lesser,
during the 12-month period prior to March
31, 2000.
- (B) APPLICATION PERIOD- The alien must
apply for such adjustment not later than
12 months after the effective date of
this Act.
- (i) IN GENERAL- The alien must
establish that the alien is
otherwise admissible to the
United States under section 212
of the Immigration and
Nationality Act, except as
otherwise provided under
subsection (d).
- (ii) WAIVER OF INELIGIBILITY FOR
UNLAWFUL PRESENCE- An alien who
has not previously been admitted
to the United States pursuant to
this section, and who is
otherwise eligible for admission
in accordance with clause (i),
shall not be deemed inadmissible
by virtue of section 212(a)(9)(B)
of that Act.
- (2) PERIOD OF VALIDITY OF NONIMMIGRANT STATUS-
- (A) IN GENERAL- The status granted in
paragraph (1) shall be valid for a period
of not to exceed 7 consecutive calendar
years, except that the alien may not be
present in the United States for more
than an aggregate of 300 days in any
calendar year.
- (B) EXCEPTION- The 300-day-per-year
limitation in subparagraph (A) shall not
apply to any period of validity of the
status of any alien who--
- (i) has established a permanent
residence in the United States
and has a minor child who was
born in the United States prior
to the date of enactment of this
Act who resides in the alien's
household; and
- (ii) performs agricultural
employment for not less than 240
days in a calendar year.
- (3) AUTHORIZED TRAVEL- During the period an alien
is in lawful nonimmigrant status granted under
this subsection, the alien has the right to
travel abroad (including commutation from a
residence abroad).
- (4) AUTHORIZED EMPLOYMENT- During the period an
alien is in lawful nonimmigrant status granted
under this subsection, the alien shall be granted
authorization to engage in the performance only
of agricultural employment in the United States
and shall be provided an `employment authorized'
endorsement or other appropriate work permit,
only for the performance of such employment. A
nonimmigrant alien under this subsection may
perform agricultural employment anywhere in the
United States.
- (5) TERMINATION OF NONIMMIGRANT STATUS- Except as
otherwise provided in paragraph (2), the Attorney
General shall terminate the status, and bring
proceedings under section 240 of the Immigration
and Nationality Act to remove, any nonimmigrant
alien under this subsection who failed during 3
prior calendar years to perform 1,040 hours or
180 work days, whichever is lesser, of
agricultural services in any single calendar
year.
- (6) RECORD OF EMPLOYMENT- Each employer of a
nonimmigrant agricultural worker whose status is
adjusted under this subsection shall--
- (A) provide a written record of
employment to the alien; and
- (B) provide a copy of such record to the
Immigration and Naturalization Service.
- (b) ADJUSTMENT TO PERMANENT RESIDENCE-
- (1) IN GENERAL- Except as provided in paragraph
(2), the Attorney General shall adjust the status
of any alien provided lawful nonimmigrant status
under subsection (a) to that of an alien lawfully
admitted for permanent residence if the Attorney
General determines that the following
requirements are satisfied:
- (A) QUALIFYING YEARS- The alien has
performed a minimum period of
agricultural employment in the United
States in each of 5 calendar years during
the period of validity of the alien's
adjustment to nonimmigrant status
pursuant to subsection (a). Qualifying
years under this subparagraph may include
nonconsecutive years.
- (B) MINIMUM PERIODS OF AGRICULTURAL
EMPLOYMENT-
- (i) IN GENERAL- Except as
provided in clause (ii), the
minimum period of agricultural
employment in any calendar year
is 1,040 hours or 180 work days,
whichever is lesser.
- (ii) EXCEPTION- An alien
described in subsection (a)(2)(B)
who remains in the United States
for more than 300 days in a
calendar year may only be
credited with satisfaction of the
minimum period of agricultural
employment requirement for that
year if the alien performed
agricultural employment in the
United States for at least 240
work days that year.
- (C) APPLICATION PERIOD- The alien applies
for adjustment of status not later than 6
months after completing the fifth year of
qualifying employment in the United
States.
- (2) GROUNDS FOR DENIAL OF ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS-
The Attorney General may deny adjustment to
nonimmigrant status and provide for termination
of the nonimmigrant status granted such alien
under subsection (a) if--
- (A) the Attorney General finds by a
preponderance of the evidence that the
adjustment to nonimmigrant status was the
result of fraud or willful
misrepresentation as set out in section
212(a)(6)(C)(i), or
- (B) the alien commits an act that (i)
makes the alien inadmissible to the
United States under section 212 of the
Immigration and Nationality Act, except
as provided under subsection (c)(2), or
(ii) is convicted of a felony or 3 or
more misdemeanors committed in the United
States.
- (3) TREATMENT OF ALIENS DEMONSTRATING PRIMA FACIE
CASE FOR ADJUSTMENT- Any alien who demonstrates a
prima facie case of eligibility for adjustment
under this subsection in accordance with
regulations promulgated by the Attorney General,
shall be considered a temporary resident alien
and, pending adjudication of an application for
permanent resident status under this subsection--
- (A) may remain in the United States and
shall be granted authorization to engage
in any employment in the United States;
and
- (B) shall become eligible for any
assistance or benefit to which a person
granted lawful permanent resident status
would be eligible on the date of
enactment of this Act.
- (4) GROUNDS FOR REMOVAL- Any nonimmigrant alien
under subsection (a) who does not apply for
adjustment of status under this subsection before
the expiration of the application period
described in paragraph (1)(C) is deportable and
may be removed.
- (5) NUMERICAL LIMITATION- In any fiscal year not
more than 20 percent of the number of aliens
obtaining nonimmigrant status under subsection
(a) may be granted adjustment of status under
this subsection. In granting such adjustment,
aliens having the greater number of work hours
shall be accorded priority. Any temporary
resident alien under paragraph (3) who does not
receive adjustment of status under this
subsection in a fiscal year by reason of the
limitation in this paragraph may continue to work
in any employment, and shall be credited with any
additional hours of agricultural employment
performed for purposes of being accorded priority
for adjustment of status.
- (c) APPLICATIONS FOR ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS-
- (A) WITHIN THE UNITED STATES- The
Attorney General shall provide that--
- (i) applications for adjustment
of status under subsection (a)
may be filed--
- (I) with the Attorney
General; or
- (II) with a qualified
designated entity
(designated under
paragraph (2)), but only
if the applicant consents
to the forwarding of the
application to the
Attorney General; and
- (ii) applications for adjustment
of status under subsection (b)
shall be filed directly with the
Attorney General.
- (B) OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES- The
Attorney General, in cooperation with the
Secretary of State, shall provide a
procedure whereby an alien may apply for
adjustment of status under subsection (a)
at an appropriate consular office outside
the United States. The Attorney General
shall prescribe regulations setting forth
procedures for notification of
immigration officials by the alien before
departing the United States.
- (C) TRAVEL DOCUMENTATION- The Attorney
General shall provide each alien whose
status is adjusted under this section
with a counterfeit-resistant document of
authorization to enter or reenter the
United States.
- (2) DESIGNATION OF ENTITIES TO RECEIVE
APPLICATIONS- For purposes of receiving
applications under subsection (a), the Attorney
General--
- (A) shall designate qualified voluntary
organizations and other qualified State,
local, community, farm labor
organizations, and associations of
agricultural employers; and
- (B) may designate such other persons as
the Attorney General determines are
qualified and have substantial
experience, demonstrated competence, and
traditional long-term involvement in the
preparation and submittal of applications
for adjustment of status under section
209 or 245 of the Immigration and
Nationality
Act, Public Law 89-732, or Public Law 95-145.
- (3) PROOF OF ELIGIBILITY-
- (A) IN GENERAL- An alien may establish
that the alien meets the requirement of
subsection (a)(1)(A) through government
employment records or records supplied by
employers or collective bargaining
organizations. The Attorney General shall
establish special procedures to properly
credit work in cases in which an alien
was employed under an assumed name.
- (B) DOCUMENTATION OF WORK HISTORY- (i) An
alien applying for adjustment of status
under subsection (a)(1) has the burden of
proving by a preponderance of the
evidence that the alien has worked the
requisite number of hours (as required
under subsection (a)(1)(A)).
- (ii) If an employer or farm labor
contractor employing such an alien has
kept proper and adequate records
respecting such employment, the alien's
burden of proof under clause (i) may be
met by securing timely production of
those records under regulations to be
promulgated by the Attorney General.
- (4) TREATMENT OF APPLICATIONS BY QUALIFIED
DESIGNATED ENTITIES- Each qualified designated
entity must agree to forward to the Attorney
General applications filed with it in accordance
with paragraph (1)(A)(ii) but not to forward to
the Attorney General applications filed with it
unless the applicant has consented to such
forwarding. No such entity may make a
determination required by this section to be made
by the Attorney General. Upon the request of the
alien, a qualified designated entity shall assist
the alien in obtaining documentation of the work
history of the alien.
- (5) LIMITATION ON ACCESS TO INFORMATION- Files
and records prepared for purposes of this section
by qualified designated entities operating under
this section are confidential and the Attorney
General and the Service shall not have access to
such files or records relating to an alien
without the consent of the alien, except as
allowed by a court order issued pursuant to
paragraph (6).
- (6) CONFIDENTIALITY OF INFORMATION-
- (A) IN GENERAL- Except as provided in
this paragraph, neither the Attorney
General, nor any other official or
employee of the Department of Justice, or
bureau or agency thereof, may--
- (i) use the information furnished
by the applicant pursuant to an
application filed under this
section, or the information
provided to the applicant by a
person designated under paragraph
(2)(B), for any purpose other
than to make a determination on
the application, including a
determination under subsection
(b)(3), or for enforcement of
paragraph (7);
- (ii) make any publication whereby
the information furnished by any
particular individual can be
identified; or
- (iii) permit anyone other than
the sworn officers and employees
of the Department or bureau or
agency or, with respect to
applications filed with a
designated entity, that
designated entity, to examine
individual applications.
- (B) CRIME- Whoever knowingly uses,
publishes, or permits information to be
examined in violation of this paragraph
shall be fined not more than $10,000.
- (7) PENALTIES FOR FALSE STATEMENTS IN
APPLICATIONS-
- (A) CRIMINAL PENALTY- Whoever--
- (i) files an application for
adjustment of status under this
section and knowingly and
willfully falsifies, conceals, or
covers up a material fact or
makes any false, fictitious, or
fraudulent statements or
representations, or makes or uses
any false writing or document
knowing the same to contain any
false, fictitious, or fraudulent
statement or entry, or
- (ii) creates or supplies a false
writing or document for use in
making such an application,
- shall be fined in accordance with title
18, United States Code, or imprisoned not
more than five years, or both.
- (B) EXCLUSION- An alien who is convicted
of a crime under subparagraph (A) shall
be considered to be inadmissible to the
United States on the ground described in
section 212(a)(6)(C)(i) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act.
- (d) WAIVER OF NUMERICAL LIMITATIONS AND CERTAIN GROUNDS
FOR INADMISSIBILITY-
- (1) NUMERICAL LIMITATIONS DO NOT APPLY- The
numerical limitations of sections 201 and 202 of
the Immigration and Nationality Act shall not
apply to the adjustment of aliens to lawful
permanent resident status under this section.
- (2) WAIVER OF CERTAIN GROUNDS OF INADMISSIBILITY-
In the determination of an alien's admissibility
under subsection (a)(1)(D), the following
provisions of section 212(a) of the Immigration
and Nationality Act shall not apply:
- (A) GROUNDS OF EXCLUSION NOT APPLICABLE-
The provisions of paragraphs (5) and
(7)(A) of section 212(a) shall not apply.
- (B) WAIVER OF OTHER GROUNDS-
- (i) IN GENERAL- Except as
provided in clause (ii), the
Attorney General may waive any
other provision of section 212(a)
in the case of individual aliens
for humanitarian purposes, to
assure family unity, or when it
is otherwise in the public
interest.
- (ii) GROUNDS THAT MAY NOT BE
WAIVED- The following provisions
of section 212(a) may not be
waived by the Attorney General
under clause (i):
- (I) Paragraph (2) (A) and
(B) (relating to
criminals).
- (II) Paragraph (4)
(relating to aliens
likely to become public
charges).
- (III) Paragraph (2)(C)
(relating to drug
offenses), except for so
much of such paragraph as
relates to a single
offense of simple
possession of 30 grams or
less of marijuana.
- (IV) Paragraph (3)
(relating to security and
related grounds), other
than subparagraph (E)
thereof.
- (C) SPECIAL RULE FOR
DETERMINATION OF PUBLIC CHARGE-
An alien is not ineligible for
adjustment of status under this
section due to being inadmissible
under section 212(a)(4) if the
alien demonstrates a history of
employment in the United States
evidencing self-support without
reliance on public cash
assistance.
- (e) TEMPORARY STAY OF REMOVAL AND WORK AUTHORIZATION FOR
CERTAIN APPLICANTS-
- (1) BEFORE APPLICATION PERIOD- The Attorney
General shall provide that in the case of an
alien who is apprehended before the beginning of
the application period described in subsection
(a)(1) and who can establish a nonfrivolous case
of eligibility to have his status adjusted under
subsection (a) (but for the fact that he may not
apply for such adjustment until the beginning of
such period), until the alien has had the
opportunity during the first 30 days of the
application period to complete the filing of an
application for adjustment, the alien--
- (A) may not be removed, and
- (B) shall be granted authorization to
engage in agricultural employment in the
United States and be provided an
`employment authorized' endorsement or
other appropriate work permit for such
purpose.
- (2) DURING APPLICATION PERIOD- The Attorney
General shall provide that in the case of an
alien who presents a nonfrivolous application for
adjustment of status under subsection (a) during
the application period, including an alien who
files such an application within 30 days of the
alien's apprehension, and until a final
determination on the application has been made in
accordance with this section, the alien--
- (A) may not be removed, and
- (B) shall be granted authorization to
engage in agricultural employment in the
United States and be provided an
`employment authorized' endorsement or
other appropriate work permit for such
purpose.
- (3) PROHIBITION- No application fees collected by
the Service pursuant to this subsection may be
used by the Service to offset the costs of the
agricultural worker adjustment program under this
title until the Service implements the program
consistent with the statutory mandate as follows:
- (A) During the application period
described in subsection (a)(1)(A) the
Service may grant nonimmigrant admission
to the United States, work authorization,
and provide an `employment authorized'
endorsement or other appropriate work
permit to any alien who presents a
preliminary application for adjustment of
status under subsection (a) at a
designated port of entry on the southern
land border. An alien who does not enter
through a port of
entry is subject to deportation and removal as otherwise
provided in this Act.
- (B) During the application period
described in subsection (a)(1)(A) any
alien who has filed an application for
adjustment of status within the United
States as provided in subsection
(b)(1)(A) is subject to paragraph (2) of
this subsection.
- (C) A preliminary application is defined
as a fully completed and signed
application with fee and photographs
which contains specific information
concerning the performance of qualifying
employment in the United States and the
documentary evidence which the applicant
intends to submit as proof of such
employment. The applicant must be
otherwise admissible to the United States
and must establish to the satisfaction of
the examining officer during an interview
that his or her claim to eligibility for
agriculture worker status is credible.
- (f) ADMINISTRATIVE AND JUDICIAL REVIEW-
- (1) ADMINISTRATIVE AND JUDICIAL REVIEW- There
shall be no administrative or judicial review of
a determination respecting an application for
adjustment of status under this section except in
accordance with this subsection.
- (2) ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW-
- (A) SINGLE LEVEL OF ADMINISTRATIVE
APPELLATE REVIEW- The Attorney General
shall establish an appellate authority to
provide for a single level of
administrative appellate review of such a
determination.
- (B) STANDARD FOR REVIEW- Such
administrative appellate review shall be
based solely upon the administrative
record established at the time of the
determination on the application and upon
such additional or newly discovered
evidence as may not have been available
at the time of the determination.
- (A) LIMITATION TO REVIEW OF EXCLUSION OR
DEPORTATION- There shall be judicial
review of such a denial only in the
judicial review of an order of removal
under section 106.
- (B) STANDARD FOR JUDICIAL REVIEW- Such
judicial review shall be based solely
upon the administrative record
established at the time of the review by
the appellate authority and the findings
of fact and determinations contained in
such record shall be conclusive unless
the applicant can establish abuse of
discretion or that the findings are
directly contrary to clear and convincing
facts contained in the record considered
as a whole.
- (g) DISSEMINATION OF INFORMATION ON ADJUSTMENT PROGRAM-
Beginning not later than the date designated by the
Attorney General under subsection (a)(1)(A), the Attorney
General, in cooperation with qualified designated
entities, shall broadly disseminate information
respecting the benefits which aliens may receive under
this section and the requirements to obtain such
benefits.
TITLE II--AGRICULTURAL WORKER REGISTRIES
SEC. 201. AGRICULTURAL WORKER REGISTRIES.
- (a) ESTABLISHMENT OF REGISTRIES-
- (1) IN GENERAL- The Secretary of Labor shall
establish and maintain a system of registries
containing a current database of workers
described in paragraph (2) who seek agricultural
employment and the employment status of such
workers--
- (A) to ensure that eligible United States
workers are informed about available
agricultural job opportunities and have
the right of first refusal for the
agricultural jobs available through the
registry; and
- (B) to provide timely referral of such
workers to agricultural job opportunities
in the United States.
- (2) COVERED WORKERS- The workers covered by
paragraph (1) are--
- (A) eligible United States workers; and
- (B) eligible nonimmigrant agricultural
workers whose status was adjusted under
section 101(a).
- (A) SINGLE STATE- Each registry
established under paragraph (1) shall
include the job opportunities in a single
State, except that, in the case of New
England States, two or more such States
may be represented by a single registry
in lieu of multiple registries.
- (B) REQUESTS FOR INCLUSION- Each State
having any group of agricultural
producers seeking to utilize the registry
shall be represented by a registry,
except that, in the case of a New England
State, the State shall be represented by
the registry covering the group of States
of which the State is a part.
- (4) COMPUTER DATABASE- The Secretary of Labor may
establish the registries as part of the computer
databases known as `America's Job Bank' and
`America's Talent Bank'.
- (5) RELATION TO PROCESS FOR IMPORTING H-2A
WORKERS- Notwithstanding section 218 of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1188),
no petition to import an alien as an H-2A worker
(as defined in section 218(i)(2) of that Act) may
be approved by the Attorney General unless the
H-2A employer--
- (A) has applied to the Secretary to
conduct a search of the registry of the
State in which the job opportunities for
which H-2A workers are sought are
located; and
- (B) has received a report described in
section 303(a)(1).
- (1) IN GENERAL- An eligible individual who seeks
employment in agricultural work may apply to be
included in the registry for the State in which
the individual resides. Such application shall
include--
- (A) the name and address of the
individual;
- (B) the period or periods of time
(including beginning and ending dates)
during which the individual will be
available for agricultural work;
- (C) the registry or registries on which
the individual desires to be included;
- (D) the specific qualifications and work
experience possessed by the applicant;
- (E) the type or types of agricultural
work the applicant is willing to perform;
- (F) such other information as the
applicant wishes to be taken into account
in referring the applicant to
agricultural job opportunities; and
- (G) such other information as may be
required by the Secretary.
- (2) VALIDATION OF EMPLOYMENT AUTHORIZATION- No
person may be included on any registry unless the
Secretary of Labor has requested and obtained
from the Attorney General a certification that
the person is authorized to be employed in the
United States.
- (3) UNITED STATES WORKERS- United States workers
shall have preference in referral by the
registry, and may be referred to any job
opportunity nationwide for which they are
qualified and make a commitment to be available
at the time and place needed.
- (4) ADJUSTED NONIMMIGRANTS- Adjusted nonimmigrant
aliens who apply to be included in a registry may
only be referred to job opportunities for which
they are qualified within the State covered by
the registry or within States contiguous to that
State.
- (5) SANCTIONS FOR NONCOMPLIANCE- Adjusted
nonimmigrant aliens who elect to be listed on the
registry and who fail to report to a registry job
opportunity for which they had made an
affirmative commitment and been referred will be
removed from the registry for a period of 6
months for the first such failure and for a
period of 1 year for each succeeding failure.
- (6) USE OF REGISTRY- Any United States
agricultural employer may use the registry.
- (7) DISCRETIONARY USE FOR NEW HIRES- An
agricultural employer may require prospective
employees to register with a registry as a means
of assuring that its workers are eligible to be
employed in the United States.
- (8) WORKERS REFERRED TO JOB OPPORTUNITIES- The
name of each registered worker who is referred
and accepts employment with an employer shall be
classified as inactive on each registry on which
the worker is included during the period of
employment involved in the job to which the
worker was referred, unless the worker reports to
the Secretary that the worker is no longer
employed and is available for referral to another
job opportunity. A registered worker classified
as inactive shall not be referred.
- (9) REMOVAL OF NAMES FROM A REGISTRY- The
Secretary shall remove from the appropriate
registry the name of any registered worker who,
on 3 separate occasions within a 3-month period,
is referred to a job opportunity pursuant to this
section, and who declines such referral or fails
to report to work in a timely manner.
- (10) VOLUNTARY REMOVAL- A registered worker may
request that the worker's name be removed from a
registry.
- (11) REMOVAL BY EXPIRATION- The application of a
registered worker shall expire, and the Secretary
shall remove the name of such worker from the
appropriate registry if the worker has not
accepted a job opportunity pursuant to this
section within the preceding 12-month period.
- (12) REINSTATEMENT- A worker whose name is
removed from a registry pursuant to paragraph
(9), (10), or (11) may apply to the Secretary for
reinstatement to such registry at any time.
- (c) CONFIDENTIALITY OF REGISTRIES- The Secretary shall
maintain the confidentiality of the registries
established pursuant to this section, and the information
in such registries shall not be used for any purposes
other than those authorized in this Act.
- (d) ADVERTISING OF REGISTRIES- The Secretary shall widely
disseminate, through advertising and other means, the
existence of the registries for the purpose of
encouraging eligible United States workers seeking
agricultural job opportunities to register. The Secretary
of Labor shall ensure that the information about the
registry is made available to eligible workers through
all appropriate means, including appropriate State
agencies, groups representing farm workers, and
nongovernmental organizations, and shall ensure that the
registry is accessible to growers and farm workers.
TITLE III--H-2A REFORM
SEC. 301. EMPLOYER APPLICATIONS AND ASSURANCES.
- (a) APPLICATIONS TO THE SECRETARY-
- (1) IN GENERAL- Not later than 28 days prior to
the date on which an H-2A employer desires to
employ an H-2A worker in a temporary or seasonal
agricultural job opportunity, the employer shall,
before petitioning for the admission of such a
worker, apply to the Secretary for the referral
of a United States worker or nonimmigrant
agricultural worker whose status was adjusted
under section 101(a) through a search of the
appropriate registry, in accordance with section
302. Such application shall--
- (A) describe the nature and location of
the work to be performed;
- (B) list the anticipated period (expected
beginning and ending dates) for which
workers will be needed;
- (C) indicate the number of job
opportunities in which the employer seeks
to employ workers from the registry;
- (D) describe the bona fide occupational
qualifications that must be possessed by
a worker to be employed in the job
opportunity in question;
- (E) describe the wages and other terms
and conditions of employment the employer
will offer, which shall not be less (and
are not required to be more) than those
required by this section;
- (F) contain the assurances required by
subsection (c);
- (G) specify the foreign country or region
thereof from which alien workers should
be admitted in the case of a failure to
refer United States workers under this
Act; and
- (H) be accompanied by the payment of a
registry user fee determined under
section 404(b)(1)(A) for each job
opportunity indicated under subparagraph
(C).
- (2) APPLICATIONS BY ASSOCIATIONS ON BEHALF OF
EMPLOYER MEMBERS-
- (A) IN GENERAL- An agricultural
association may file an application under
paragraph (1) for registered workers on
behalf of its employer members.
- (B) EMPLOYERS- An application under
subparagraph (A) shall cover those
employer members of the association that
the association certifies in its
application have agreed in writing to
comply with the requirements of this Act.
- (b) AMENDMENT OF APPLICATIONS- Prior to receiving a
referral of workers from a registry, an employer may
amend an application under this subsection if the
employer's need for workers changes. If an employer makes
a material amendment to an application on a date which is
later than 28 days prior to the date on which the workers
on the amended application are sought to be employed, the
Secretary may delay issuance of the report described in
section 302(b) by the number of days by which the filing
of the amended application is later than 28 days before
the date on which the employer desires to employ workers.
- (c) ASSURANCES- The assurances referred to in subsection
(a)(1)(F) are the following:
- (1) ASSURANCE THAT THE JOB OPPORTUNITY IS NOT A
RESULT OF A LABOR DISPUTE- The employer shall
assure that the job opportunity for which the
employer requests a registered worker is not
vacant because a worker is involved in a strike,
lockout, or work stoppage in the course of a
labor dispute involving the job opportunity at
the place of employment.
- (2) ASSURANCE THAT THE JOB OPPORTUNITY IS
TEMPORARY OR SEASONAL-
- (A) REQUIRED ASSURANCE- The employer
shall assure that the job opportunity for
which the employer requests a registered
worker is temporary or seasonal.
- (B) SEASONAL BASIS- For purposes of this
Act, labor is performed on a seasonal
basis where, ordinarily, the employment
pertains to or is of the kind exclusively
performed at certain seasons or periods
of the year and which, from its nature,
may not be continuous or carried on
throughout the year.
- (C) TEMPORARY BASIS- For purposes of this
Act, a worker is employed on a temporary
basis where the employment is intended
not to exceed 10 months.
- (3) ASSURANCE OF PROVISION OF REQUIRED WAGES AND
BENEFITS- The employer shall assure that the
employer will provide the wages and benefits
required by subsections (a), (b), and (c) of
section 304 to all workers employed in job
opportunities for which the employer has applied
under subsection (a) and to all other workers in
the same occupation at the place of employment,
and in no case less than the greater of the
hourly wage prescribed under section 6(a)(1) of
the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (29 U.S.C.
206(a)(1)), or the applicable State minimum wage.
- (4) ASSURANCE OF EMPLOYMENT- The employer shall
assure that the employer will not refuse
to employ qualified individuals referred under section 302,
and will terminate qualified individuals employed pursuant to
this Act only for lawful job-related reasons, including lack of
work.
- (5) ASSURANCE OF COMPLIANCE WITH LABOR LAWS-
- (A) IN GENERAL- An employer who requests
registered workers shall assure that,
except as otherwise provided in this Act,
the employer will comply with all
applicable Federal, State, and local
labor laws, including laws affecting
migrant and seasonal agricultural
workers, with respect to all United
States workers and alien workers employed
by the employer.
- (B) LIMITATIONS- The disclosure required
under section 201(a) of the Migrant and
Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection
Act (29 U.S.C. 1821(a)) may be made at
any time prior to the time the alien is
issued a visa permitting entry into the
United States.
- (6) ASSURANCE OF ADVERTISING OF THE REGISTRY- The
employer shall assure that the employer will,
from the day an application for workers is
submitted under subsection (a), and continuing
throughout the period of employment of any job
opportunity for which the employer has applied
for a worker from the registry, post in a
conspicuous place a poster to be provided by the
Secretary advertising the availability of the
registry.
- (7) ASSURANCE OF ADVERTISING OF JOB
OPPORTUNITIES- The employer shall assure that not
later than 14 days after submitting an
application to a registry for workers under
subsection (a) the employer will advertise the
availability of the job opportunities for which
the employer is seeking workers from the registry
in a publication in the local labor market that
is likely to be patronized by potential
farmworkers, if any, and refer interested workers
to register with the registry.
- (8) ASSURANCE OF CONTACTING FORMER WORKERS- The
employer shall assure that the employer has made
reasonable efforts through the sending of a
letter by United States Postal Service mail, or
otherwise, to contact any eligible worker the
employer employed during the previous season in
the occupation at the place of intended
employment for which the employer is applying for
registered workers, and has made the availability
of the employer's job opportunities in the
occupation at the place of intended employment
known to such previous worker, unless the worker
was terminated from employment by the employer
for a lawful job-related reason or abandoned the
job before the worker completed the period of
employment of the job opportunity for which the
worker was hired.
- (9) ASSURANCE OF PROVISION OF WORKERS
COMPENSATION- The employer shall assure that if
the job opportunity is not covered by the State
workers' compensation law, that the employer will
provide, at no cost to the worker, insurance
covering injury and disease arising out of and in
the course of the worker's employment which will
provide benefits at least equal to those provided
under the State workers' compensation law for
comparable employment.
- (10) ASSURANCE OF PAYMENT OF ALIEN EMPLOYMENT
USER FEE- The employer shall assure that if the
employer receives a notice of insufficient
workers under section 302(c), such employer shall
promptly pay the alien employment user fee
determined under section 404(b)(1)(B) for each
job opportunity to be filled by an eligible alien
as required under such section.
- (d) WITHDRAWAL OF APPLICATIONS-
- (1) IN GENERAL- An employer may withdraw an
application under subsection (a), except that, if
the employer is an agricultural association, the
association may withdraw an application under
subsection (a) with respect to one or more of its
members. To withdraw an application, the employer
shall notify the Secretary in writing, and the
Secretary shall acknowledge in writing the
receipt of such withdrawal notice. An employer
who withdraws an application under subsection
(a), or on whose behalf an application is
withdrawn, is relieved of the obligations
undertaken in the application.
- (2) LIMITATION- An application may not be
withdrawn while any alien provided status under
this Act pursuant to such application is employed
by the employer.
- (3) OBLIGATIONS UNDER OTHER STATUTES- Any
obligation incurred by an employer under any
other law or regulation as a result of
recruitment of United States workers under an
offer of terms and conditions of employment
required as a result of making an application
under subsection (a) is unaffected by withdrawal
of such application.
- (e) REVIEW OF APPLICATION-
- (1) IN GENERAL- Promptly upon receipt of an
application by an employer under subsection (a),
the Secretary shall review the application for
compliance with the requirements of such
subsection.
- (2) APPROVAL OF APPLICATIONS- If the Secretary
determines that an application meets the
requirements of subsection (a), and the employer
is not ineligible to apply under paragraph (2),
(3), or (4) of section 305(b), the Secretary
shall, not later than 7 days after the receipt of
such application, approve the application and so
notify the employer.
- (3) REJECTION OF APPLICATIONS- If the Secretary
determines that an application fails to meet 1 or
more of the requirements of subsection (a), the
Secretary, as expeditiously as possible, but in
no case later than 7 days after the receipt of
such application, shall--
- (A) notify the employer of the rejection
of the application and the reasons for
such rejection, and provide the
opportunity for the prompt resubmission
of an amended application; and
- (B) offer the applicant an opportunity to
request an expedited administrative
review or a de novo administrative
hearing before an administrative law
judge of the rejection of the
application.
- (4) REJECTION FOR PROGRAM VIOLATIONS- The
Secretary shall reject the application of an
employer under this section if--
- (A) the employer has been determined to
be ineligible to employ workers under
section 401(b); or
- (B) the employer during the previous
two-year period employed H-2A workers or
registered workers and the Secretary of
Labor has determined, after notice and
opportunity for a hearing, that the
employer at any time during that period
substantially violated a material term or
condition of the assurances made with
respect to the employment of United
States workers or nonimmigrant workers.
- No employer may have applications under this
section rejected for more than 3 years for any
violation described in this paragraph.
SEC. 302. SEARCH OF REGISTRY.
- (a) SEARCH PROCESS AND REFERRAL TO THE EMPLOYER- Upon the
approval of an application under section 301(e), the
Secretary shall promptly begin a search of the registry
of the State (or States) in which the work is to be
performed to identify registered United States workers
and adjusted aliens with the qualifications requested by
the employer. The Secretary shall contact such qualified
registered workers and determine, in each instance,
whether the worker is ready, willing, and able to accept
the employer's job opportunity and will make the
affirmative commitment to work for the employer at the
time and place needed. The Secretary shall provide to
each worker who commits to work for the employer the
employer's name, address, telephone number, the location
where the employer has requested that employees report
for employment, and a statement disclosing the terms and
conditions of employment.
- (b) DEADLINE FOR COMPLETING SEARCH PROCESS; REFERRAL OF
WORKERS- As expeditiously as possible, but not later than
7 days before the date on which an employer desires work
to begin, the Secretary shall complete the search under
subsection (a) and shall transmit to the employer a
report containing the name, address, and social security
account number of each registered worker who has made the
affirmative commitment described in subsection (a) to
work for the employer on the date needed, together with
sufficient information to enable the employer to
establish contact with the worker. The identification of
such registered workers in a report shall constitute a
referral of workers under this section.
- (c) ACCEPTANCE OF REFERRALS- H-2A employers shall accept
all qualified United States worker referrals who make a
commitment to report to work at the time and place needed
and to complete the full period of employment offered,
and those adjusted nonimmigrants on the registry of the
State in which the intended employment is located, and
the immediately contiguous States. An employer shall not
be required to accept more referrals than the number of
job opportunities for which the employer applied to the
registry.
- (d) NOTICE OF INSUFFICIENT WORKERS- If the report
provided to the employer under subsection (b) does not
include referral of a sufficient number of registered
workers to fill all of the employer's job opportunities
in the occupation for which the employer applied under
section 301(a), the Secretary shall indicate in the
report the number of job opportunities for which
registered workers could not be referred, and shall
promptly transmit a copy of the report to the Attorney
General and the Secretary of State, by electronic or
other means ensuring next day delivery.
- (e) USER FEE FOR CERTIFICATION TO EMPLOY ALIEN WORKERS-
With respect to each job opportunity for which a notice
of insufficient workers is made, the Secretary shall
require the payment of an alien employment user fee
determined under section 404(b)(1)(B).
SEC. 303. ISSUANCE OF VISAS AND ADMISSION OF ALIENS.
- (1) NUMBER OF ADMISSIONS- Subject to paragraph
(3), the Secretary of State shall promptly issue
visas to, and the Attorney General shall admit,
as nonimmigrant aliens described in section
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act a sufficient number of eligible
aliens designated by the employer to fill the job
opportunities of the employer--
- (A) upon receipt of a copy of the report
described in section 302(c);
- (B) upon approval of an application (or
copy of an application under subsection
(b));
- (C) upon receipt of the report required
by subsection (c)(1)(B); or
- (D) upon receipt of a report under
subsection (d).
- (2) PROCEDURES- The admission of aliens under
paragraph (1) shall be subject to the procedures
of section 218 of the Immigration and Nationality
Act, as amended by this Act.
- (b) DIRECT APPLICATION UPON FAILURE TO ACT-
- (1) APPLICATION TO THE SECRETARY OF STATE- If the
employer has not received a referral of
sufficient workers pursuant to section 302(b) or
a report of insufficient workers pursuant to
section 302(c), by the date that is 7 days before
the date on which the work is anticipated to
begin, the employer may submit an application for
alien workers directly to the Secretary of State,
with a copy of the application provided to the
Attorney General, seeking the issuance of visas
to and the admission of aliens for employment in
the job opportunities for which the employer has
not received referral of registered workers. Such
an application shall include a copy of the
employer's application under section 301(a),
together with evidence of its timely submission.
The Secretary of State may consult with the
Secretary of Labor in carrying out this
paragraph.
- (2) EXPEDITED CONSIDERATION BY SECRETARY OF
STATE- The Secretary of State shall, as
expeditiously as possible, but not later than 5
days after the employer files an application
under paragraph (1), issue visas to, and the
Attorney General shall admit, a sufficient number
of eligible aliens designated by the employer to
fill the job opportunities for which the employer
has applied under that paragraph, if the employer
has met the requirements of sections 301 and 302.
The employer shall be subject to the alien
employment user fee determined under section
404(b)(1)(B) with respect to each job opportunity
for which the Secretary of State authorizes the
issuance of a visa pursuant to paragraph (2).
- (c) REDETERMINATION OF NEED-
- (1) REQUESTS FOR REDETERMINATION-
- (A) IN GENERAL- An employer may file a
request for a redetermination by the
Secretary of the employer's need for
workers if--
- (i) a worker referred from the
registry is not at the place of
employment on the date of need
shown on the application, or the
date the work for which the
worker is needed has begun,
whichever is later;
- (ii) the worker is not ready,
willing, able, or qualified to
perform the work required; or
- (iii) the worker abandons the
employment or is terminated for a
lawful job-related reason.
- (B) ADDITIONAL AUTHORIZATION OF
ADMISSIONS- The Secretary shall
expeditiously, but in no case later than
72 hours after a redetermination is
requested under subparagraph (A), submit
a report to the Secretary of State and
the Attorney General providing notice of
a need for workers under this subsection,
if the employer has met the requirements
of sections 301 and 302 and the
conditions described in subparagraph (A).
- (2) JOB-RELATED REQUIREMENTS- An employer shall
not be required to initially employ a worker who
fails to meet lawful job-related employment
criteria, nor to continue the employment of a
worker who fails to meet lawful, job-related
standards of conduct and performance, including
failure to meet minimum production standards
after a 3-day break-in period.
- (d) EMERGENCY APPLICATIONS- Notwithstanding subsections
(b) and (c), the Secretary may promptly transmit a report
to the Attorney General and Secretary of State providing
notice of a need for workers under this subsection for an
employer--
- (1) who has not employed aliens under this Act in
the occupation in question in the prior year's
agricultural season;
- (2) who faces an unforeseen need for workers (as
determined by the Secretary); and
- (3) with respect to whom the Secretary cannot
refer able, willing, and qualified workers from
the registry who will commit to be at the
employer's place of employment and ready for work
within 72 hours or on the date the work for which
the worker is needed has begun, whichever is
later.
- The employer shall be subject to the alien employment
user fee determined under section 404(b)(1)(B) with
respect to each job opportunity for which a notice of
insufficient workers is made pursuant to this subsection.
- (e) REGULATIONS- The Secretary of State shall prescribe
regulations to provide for the designation of aliens
under this section.
SEC. 304. EMPLOYMENT REQUIREMENTS.
- (1) IN GENERAL- An employer applying under
section 301(a) for workers shall offer to pay,
and shall pay, all workers in the occupation or
occupations for which the employer has applied
for workers from the registry, not less (and is
not required to pay more) than the greater of the
prevailing wage in the occupation in the area of
intended employment or the adverse effect wage
rate. No worker shall be paid less than the
greater of the hourly wage prescribed under
section 6(a)(1) of the Fair Labor Standards Act
of 1938 (29 U.S.C. 206(a)(1)), or the applicable
State minimum wage.
- (2) PAYMENT OF PREVAILING WAGE DETERMINED BY A
STATE EMPLOYMENT SECURITY AGENCY SUFFICIENT- In
complying with paragraph (1), an employer may
request and obtain a prevailing wage
determination from the State employment security
agency. If the employer requests such a
determination, and pays the wage required by
paragraph (1) based upon such a determination,
such payment shall be considered sufficient to
meet the requirement of paragraph (1).
- (3) RELIANCE ON WAGE SURVEY- In lieu of the
procedure of paragraph (2), an employer may rely
on other information, such as an
employer-generated prevailing wage survey that
the Secretary determines meets criteria specified
by the Secretary in regulations.
- (4) ALTERNATIVE METHODS OF PAYMENT PERMITTED-
- (A) IN GENERAL- A prevailing wage may be
expressed as an hourly wage, a piece
rate, a task rate, or other incentive
payment method, including a group rate.
The requirement to pay at least the
prevailing wage in the occupation and
area of intended employment does not
require an employer to pay by the method
of pay in which the prevailing rate is
expressed, except that, if the employer
adopts a method of pay other than the
prevailing rate, the burden of proof is
on the employer to demonstrate that the
employer's method of pay is designed to
produce earnings equivalent to the
earnings that would result from payment
of the prevailing rate.
- (B) COMPLIANCE WHEN PAYING AN INCENTIVE
RATE- In the case of an employer that
pays a piece rate or task rate or uses
any other incentive payment method,
including a group rate, the employer
shall be considered to be in compliance
with any applicable hourly wage
requirement if the average of the hourly
earnings of the workers, taken as a
group, in the activity for which a piece
rate, task rate, or other incentive
payment, including a group rate, is paid,
for the pay period, is at least equal to
the required hourly wage, except that no
worker shall be paid less than the hourly
wage prescribed under section 6(a)(1) of
the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (29
U.S.C. 206(a)(1)) or the applicable State
minimum wage.
- (C) TASK RATE- For purposes of this
paragraph, the term `task rate' means an
incentive payment method based on a unit
of work performed such that the incentive
rate varies with the level of effort
required to perform individual units of
work.
- (D) GROUP RATE- For purposes of this
paragraph, the term `group rate' means an
incentive payment method in which the
payment is shared among a group of
workers working together to perform the
task.
- (b) REQUIREMENT TO PROVIDE HOUSING-
- (A) REQUIREMENT- An employer applying
under section 301(a) for registered
workers shall offer to provide housing at
no cost (except for charges permitted by
paragraph (5)) to all
workers employed in job opportunities to which the employer
has applied under that section, and to all other workers in the
same occupation at the place of employment, whose place of
residence is beyond normal commuting distance.
- (B) LIABILITY- An employer not complying
with subparagraph (A) shall be liable to
a registered worker for the costs of
housing equivalent to the type of housing
required to be provided under that
subparagraph and shall not be liable for
any employment-related obligation solely
by reason of such noncompliance.
- (2) TYPE OF HOUSING- In complying with paragraph
(1), an employer may, at the employer's election,
provide housing that meets applicable Federal
standards for temporary labor camps or secure
housing that meets applicable local standards for
rental or public accommodation housing or other
substantially similar class of habitation, or, in
the absence of applicable local standards, State
standards for rental or public accommodation
housing or other substantially similar class of
habitation.
- (3) WORKERS ENGAGED IN THE RANGE PRODUCTION OF
LIVESTOCK- The Secretary shall issue regulations
that address the specific requirements for the
provision of housing to workers engaged in the
range production of livestock.
- (4) LIMITATION- Nothing in this subsection shall
be construed to require an employer to provide or
secure housing for persons who were not entitled
to such housing under the temporary labor
certification regulations in effect on June 1,
1986.
- (A) UTILITIES AND MAINTENANCE- An
employer who provides housing to a worker
pursuant to paragraph (1) may charge an
amount equal to the fair market value
(but not greater than the employer's
actual cost) for maintenance and
utilities, or such lesser amount as
permitted by law.
- (B) SECURITY DEPOSIT- An employer who
provides housing to workers pursuant to
paragraph (1) may require, as a condition
for providing such housing, a deposit not
to exceed $50 from workers occupying such
housing to protect against gross
negligence or willful destruction of
property.
- (C) DAMAGES- An employer who provides
housing to workers pursuant to paragraph
(1) may require a worker found to have
been responsible for damage to such
housing which is not the result of normal
wear and tear related to habitation to
reimburse the employer for the reasonable
cost of repair of such damage.
- (6) HOUSING ALLOWANCE AS ALTERNATIVE-
- (A) IN GENERAL- In lieu of offering
housing pursuant to paragraph (1), the
employer may provide a reasonable housing
allowance during the 3-year period
beginning on the date of enactment of
this Act. After the expiration of that
period such allowance may be provided
only if the requirement of subparagraph
(B) is satisfied or, in the case of a
certification under subparagraph (B) that
is expired, the requirement of
subparagraph (C) is satisfied. Upon the
request of a worker seeking assistance in
locating housing, the employer shall make
a good faith effort to assist the worker
in identifying and locating housing in
the area of intended employment. An
employer who offers a housing allowance
to a worker, or assists a worker in
locating housing which the worker
occupies, pursuant to this subparagraph
shall not be deemed to be a housing
provider under section 203 of the Migrant
and Seasonal Agricultural Worker
Protection Act (29 U.S.C. 1823)
solely by virtue of providing such housing allowance.
- (B) CERTIFICATION- The requirement of
this subparagraph is satisfied if the
Governor of the State certifies to the
Secretary that there is adequate housing
available in an area of intended
employment for migrant farm workers,
aliens provided status pursuant to this
Act, or nonimmigrant aliens described in
section 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act, who are
seeking temporary housing while employed
at farm work. Such certification shall
expire after 3 years unless renewed by
the Governor of the State.
- (C) EFFECT OF CERTIFICATION-
Notwithstanding the expiration of a
certification under subparagraph (B) with
respect to an area of intended
employment, a housing allowance described
in subparagraph (A) may be offered for up
to one year after the date of expiration.
- (D) AMOUNT OF ALLOWANCE- The amount of a
housing allowance under this paragraph
shall be equal to the statewide average
fair market rental for existing housing
for nonmetropolitan counties for the
State in which the employment occurs, as
established by the Secretary of Housing
and Urban Development pursuant to section
8(c) of the United States Housing Act of
1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437f(c)), based on a
2-bedroom dwelling unit and an assumption
of 2 persons per bedroom.
- (c) REIMBURSEMENT OF TRANSPORTATION-
- (1) TO PLACE OF EMPLOYMENT- A worker who is
referred to a job opportunity under section
302(a), or an alien employed pursuant to this
Act, who completes 50 percent of the period of
employment of the job opportunity for which the
worker was hired, shall be reimbursed by the
employer for the cost of the worker's
transportation and subsistence from the worker's
permanent place of residence (or place of last
employment, if the worker traveled from such
place) to the place of employment to which the
worker was referred under section 302(a).
- (2) FROM PLACE OF EMPLOYMENT- A worker who is
referred to a job opportunity under section
302(a), or an alien employed pursuant to this
Act, who completes the period of employment for
the job opportunity involved, shall be reimbursed
by the employer for the cost of the worker's
transportation
and subsistence from the place of employment to the worker's
place of residence, or to the place of next employment, if the
worker has contracted with a subsequent employer who has not
agreed to provide or pay for the worker's transportation and
subsistence to such subsequent employer's place of employment.
- (A) AMOUNT OF REIMBURSEMENT- Except as
provided in subparagraph (B), the amount
of reimbursement provided under paragraph
(1) or (2) to a worker or alien shall not
exceed the lesser of--
- (i) the actual cost to the worker
or alien of the transportation
and subsistence involved; or
- (ii) the most economical and
reasonable common carrier
transportation charges and
subsistence costs for the
distance involved.
- (B) DISTANCE TRAVELED- No reimbursement
under paragraph (1) or (2) shall be
required if the distance traveled is 100
miles or less, or the worker is not
residing in employer-provided housing or
housing secured through a voucher as
provided in subsection (b)(6).
- (C) PLACE OF RECRUITMENT- For the purpose
of the reimbursement required under
paragraph (1) or (2) to aliens admitted
pursuant to this Act, the alien's place
of residence shall be deemed to be the
place where the alien was issued the visa
authorizing admission to the United
States or, if no visa was required, the
place from which the alien departed the
foreign country to travel to the United
States.
- (d) CONTINUING OBLIGATION TO EMPLOY UNITED STATES
WORKERS-
- (1) IN GENERAL- An employer that applies for
registered workers under section 301(a) shall, as
a condition for the approval of such application,
continue to offer employment to qualified,
eligible United States workers who are referred
under section 302(b) after the employer receives
the report described in section 302(b).
- (2) LIMITATION- An employer shall not be
obligated to comply with paragraph (1)--
- (A) after 50 percent of the anticipated
period of employment shown on the
employer's application under section
301(a) has elapsed; or
- (B) during any period in which the
employer is employing no H-2A workers in
the occupation for which the United
States worker was referred; or
- (C) during any period when the Secretary
is conducting a search of a registry for
workers in the occupation and area of
intended employment to which the worker
has been referred, or in other
occupations in the area of intended
employment for which the worker that has
been referred is qualified and that offer
substantially similar terms and
conditions of employment.
- (3) LIMITATION ON REQUIREMENT TO PROVIDE HOUSING-
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act,
an employer to whom a registered worker is
referred pursuant to paragraph (1) may provide a
reasonable housing allowance to such referred
worker in lieu of providing housing if the
employer does not have sufficient housing to
accommodate the referred worker and all other
workers for whom the employer is providing
housing or has committed to provide housing.
- (4) REFERRAL OF WORKERS DURING 50-PERCENT PERIOD-
The Secretary shall make all reasonable efforts
to place a registered worker in an open job
acceptable to the worker, including available
jobs not listed on the registry, before referring
such worker to an employer for a job opportunity already
filled by, or committed to, an alien admitted pursuant to this
Act.
SEC. 305. PROGRAM FOR THE ADMISSION OF TEMPORARY H-2A
WORKERS.
- Section 218 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8
U.S.C. 1188) is amended to read as follows:
`ADMISSION OF TEMPORARY H-2A WORKERS
- `SEC. 218. (a) PROCEDURE FOR ADMISSION OR EXTENSION OF
ALIENS-
- `(1) ALIENS WHO ARE OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES-
- `(A) CRITERIA FOR ADMISSIBILITY-
- `(i) IN GENERAL- An alien
described in section
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act
shall be admissible under this
section if the alien is
designated pursuant to section
302 of the Agricultural Job
Opportunity Benefits and Security
Act of 2000, otherwise admissible
under this Act, and the alien is
not ineligible under clause (ii).
- `(ii) DISQUALIFICATION- An alien
shall be ineligible for admission
to the United States or being
provided status under this
section if the alien has, at any
time during the past 5 years--
- `(I) violated a material
provision of this
section, including the
requirement to promptly
depart the United States
when the alien's
authorized period of
admission under this
section has expired; or
- `(II) otherwise violated
a term or condition of
admission to the United
States as a nonimmigrant,
including overstaying the
period of authorized
admission as such a
nonimmigrant.
- `(iii) INITIAL WAIVER OF
INELIGIBILITY FOR UNLAWFUL
PRESENCE-
- `(I) IN GENERAL- An alien
who has not previously
been admitted to the
United States pursuant to
this section, and who is
otherwise eligible for
admission in accordance
with clauses (i) and
(ii), shall not be deemed
inadmissible by virtue of
section 212(a)(9)(B).
Such an alien shall
depart the United States to be eligible for admission under
this section.
- `(II) TERMINATION-
Subclause (I) shall
terminate on the date
that is 4 years after the
date of the enactment of
the Agricultural Job
Opportunity Benefits and
Security Act of 2000.
- `(B) PERIOD OF ADMISSION- The alien shall
be admitted for the period requested by
the employer not to exceed 10 months, or
the ending date of the anticipated period
of employment on the employer's
application for registered workers,
whichever is less, plus an additional
period of 14 days, during which the alien
shall seek authorized employment in the
United States. During the 14-day period
following the expiration of the alien's
work authorization, the alien is not
authorized to be employed unless an
employer who is authorized to employ such
worker has filed an extension of stay on
behalf of the alien pursuant to paragraph
(2).
- `(C) ABANDONMENT OF EMPLOYMENT-
- `(i) IN GENERAL- An alien
admitted or provided status under
this section who abandons the
employment which was the basis
for such admission or status
shall be considered to have
failed to maintain nonimmigrant
status as an alien described in
section 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) and
shall depart the United States or
be subject to removal under
section 237(a)(1)(C)(i).
- `(ii) REPORT BY EMPLOYER- The
employer (or association acting
as agent for the employer) shall
notify the Attorney General
within 7 days of an alien
admitted or provided status under
this Act pursuant to an
application to the Secretary of
Labor under section 302 of the
Agricultural Job Opportunity
Benefits and Security Act of 2000
by the employer who prematurely
abandons the alien's employment.
- `(iii) REMOVAL BY THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL- The Attorney General
shall promptly remove from the
United States aliens admitted
pursuant to section
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) who have
failed to maintain nonimmigrant
status or who have otherwise
violated the terms of a visa
issued under this title.
- `(iv) VOLUNTARY TERMINATION-
Notwithstanding the provisions of
clause
(i), an alien may voluntarily terminate his or her employment
if the alien promptly departs the United States upon termination
of such employment.
- `(D) IDENTIFICATION DOCUMENT AND
IDENTIFICATION SYSTEM-
- `(i) IN GENERAL- Each alien
admitted under this section
shall, upon receipt of a visa, be
given an identification and
employment eligibility document
to verify eligibility for
employment in the United States
and verify such person's proper
identity.
- `(ii) REQUIREMENTS- No
identification and employment
eligibility document may be
issued and no identification
system may be implemented which
does not meet the following
requirements:
- `(I) The document and
system shall be capable
of reliably determining
whether--
`(aa) the individual with the identification and employment
eligibility document whose eligibility is being verified is in
fact eligible for employment,
`(bb) the individual whose eligibility is being verified is
claiming the identity of another person, and
`(cc) the individual whose eligibility is being verified has
been properly admitted under this section.
- `(II) The document shall
be in the form that is
resistant to
counterfeiting and to
tampering.
- `(III) The document and
system shall--
`(aa) be compatible with other Immigration and Naturalization
Service databases and other Federal government databases for the
purpose of excluding aliens from benefits for which they are not
eligible and to determine whether the alien is illegally present
in the United States, and
`(bb) be compatible with law enforcement databases to
determine if the alien has been convicted of criminal offenses.
- `(2) EXTENSION OF STAY OF ALIENS IN THE UNITED
STATES-
- `(A) EXTENSION OF STAY- If an employer
with respect to whom a report or
application described in section
302(a)(1) of the Agricultural Job
Opportunity Benefits and Security Act of
2000 has been submitted seeks to employ
an alien who has acquired status under
this section and who is lawfully present
in the United States, the employer shall
file with the Attorney General an
application for an extension of the
alien's stay or a change in the alien's
authorized employment. The application
shall be accompanied by a copy of the
appropriate report or application
described in section 302 of the
Agricultural Job Opportunity Benefits and
Security Act of 2000.
- `(B) LIMITATION ON FILING AN APPLICATION
FOR EXTENSION OF STAY- An application may
not be filed for an extension of an
alien's stay for a period of more than 10
months, or later than a date which is 3
years from the date of the alien's last
admission to the United States under this
section, whichever occurs first.
- `(C) WORK AUTHORIZATION UPON FILING AN
APPLICATION FOR EXTENSION OF STAY- An
employer may begin employing an alien who
is present in the United States who has
acquired status under this Act on the day
the employer files an application for
extension of stay. For the purpose of
this requirement, the term `filing' means
sending the application by certified mail
via the United States Postal Service,
return receipt requested, or delivered by
guaranteed commercial delivery which will
provide the employer with a documented
acknowledgment of the date of sending and
receipt of the application. The employer
shall provide a copy of the employer's
application to the alien, who shall keep
the application with the alien's
identification and employment eligibility
document as evidence that the application
has been filed and that the alien is
authorized to work in the
United States. Upon approval of an application for an
extension of stay or change in the alien's authorized employment,
the Attorney General shall provide a new or updated employment
eligibility document to the alien indicating the new validity
date, after which the alien is not required to retain a copy of
the application.
- `(D) LIMITATION ON EMPLOYMENT
AUTHORIZATION OF ALIENS WITHOUT VALID
IDENTIFICATION AND EMPLOYMENT ELIGIBILITY
CARD- An expired identification and
employment eligibility document, together
with a copy of an application for
extension of stay or change in the
alien's authorized employment that
complies with the requirements of
subparagraph (A), shall constitute a
valid work authorization document for a
period of not more than 60 days from the
date of application for the extension of
stay, after which time only a currently
valid identification and employment
eligibility document shall be acceptable.
- `(E) LIMITATION ON AN INDIVIDUAL'S STAY
IN STATUS- An alien having status under
this section may not have the status
extended for a continuous period longer
than 3 years unless the alien remains
outside the United States for an
uninterrupted period of 6 months. An
absence from the United States may break the continuity of the
period for which a nonimmigrant visa issued under section
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) is valid. If the alien has resided in the
United States 10 months or less, an absence breaks the continuity
of the period if it lasts for at least 2 months. If the alien has
resided in the United States 10 months or more, an absence breaks
the continuity of the period if it lasts for at least one-fifth
the duration of the stay.
- `(b) STUDY BY THE ATTORNEY GENERAL- The Attorney General
shall conduct a study to determine whether aliens under
this section depart the United States in a timely manner
upon the expiration of their period of authorized stay.
If the Attorney General finds that a significant number
of aliens do not so depart and that withholding a portion
of the aliens' wages to be refunded upon timely departure
is necessary as an inducement to assure such departure,
then the Attorney General shall so report to Congress and
make recommendations on appropriate courses of action.'.
- (b) NO FAMILY MEMBERS PERMITTED- Section 101(a)(15)(H) of
the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(H)) is amended by striking `specified in this
paragraph' and inserting `specified in this subparagraph
(other than in clause (ii)(a))'.
- (c) RANGE PRODUCTION OF LIVESTOCK- Nothing in this title
shall preclude the Secretary of Labor and the Attorney
General from continuing to apply special procedures to
the employment, admission, and extension of aliens in the
range production of livestock.
TITLE IV--MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
SEC. 401. ENHANCED WORKER PROTECTIONS AND LABOR STANDARDS
ENFORCEMENT.
- (a) ENFORCEMENT AUTHORITY-
- (1) INVESTIGATION OF COMPLAINTS-
- (A) AGGRIEVED PERSON OR THIRD PARTY
COMPLAINTS- The Secretary shall establish
a process for the receipt, investigation,
and disposition of complaints respecting
an employer's failure to meet a condition
specified in section 301 or an employer's
misrepresentation of material facts in an
application under that section, or
violation of the provisions described in
subparagraph (B). Complaints may be filed
by any aggrieved person or any
organization (including bargaining
representatives). No investigation or
hearing shall be conducted on a complaint
concerning such a failure or
misrepresentation unless the complaint
was filed not later than 12 months after
the date of the failure or
misrepresentation, as the case may be.
The Secretary shall conduct an
investigation under this paragraph if
there is reasonable cause to believe that
such a failure or misrepresentation has
occurred.
- (B) EXPEDITED INVESTIGATION OF SERIOUS
CHILD LABOR, WAGE, AND HOUSING
VIOLATIONS- The Secretary shall complete
an investigation and issue a written
determination as to whether or not a
violation has been committed within 10
days of the receipt of a complaint
pursuant to subparagraph (A) if there is
reasonable cause to believe that any of
the following serious violations have
occurred:
- (i) A violation of section 12(c)
of the Fair Labor Standards Act
of 1938 (29 U.S.C. 212(c)).
- (ii) A failure to make a wage
payment, except that complaints
alleging that an amount less than
the wages due has been paid shall
be handled pursuant to
subparagraph (A).
- (iii) A failure to provide the
housing allowance required under
section 304(b)(6).
- (iv) Providing housing pursuant
to section 304(b)(1) that fails
to comply with standards under
section 304(b)(2) and which poses
an immediate threat of serious
bodily injury or death to
workers.
- (C) STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION- Nothing in
this Act limits the authority of the
Secretary of Labor to conduct any
compliance investigation under any other
labor law, including any law affecting
migrant and seasonal agricultural workers
or, in the absence of a complaint under
this paragraph, under this Act.
- (2) WRITTEN NOTICE OF FINDING AND OPPORTUNITY FOR
APPEAL- After an investigation has been
conducted, the Secretary shall issue a written
determination as to whether or not any violation
described in subsection (b) has been committed.
The Secretary's determination shall be served on
the complainant and the employer, and shall
provide an
opportunity for an appeal of the Secretary's decision to an
administrative law judge, who may conduct a de novo hearing.
- (3) ABILITY OF ALIEN WORKERS TO CHANGE EMPLOYERS-
- (A) IN GENERAL- Pending the completion of
an investigation pursuant to paragraph
(1)(A), the Secretary may permit the
transfer of an aggrieved person who has
filed a complaint under such paragraph to
an employer that--
- (i) has been approved to employ
workers under this Act; and
- (ii) agrees to accept the person
for employment.
- (B) REPLACEMENT WORKER- An aggrieved
person may not be transferred under
subparagraph (A) until such time as the
employer from whom the person is to be
transferred receives a requested
replacement worker referred by a registry
pursuant to section 302 of this Act or
provided status under section
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the Immigration
and Nationality Act.
- (C) LIMITATION- An employer from whom an
aggrieved person has been transferred
under this paragraph shall have no
obligation to reimburse the person for
the cost of transportation prior to the
completion of the period of employment
referred to in section 304(c).
- (D) VOLUNTARY TRANSFER- Notwithstanding
this paragraph, an employer may
voluntarily agree to transfer a worker to
another employer that--
- (i) has been approved to employ
workers under this Act; and
- (ii) agrees to accept the person
for employment.
- (1) BACK WAGES- Upon a final determination that
the employer has failed to pay wages as required
under this section, the Secretary may assess
payment of back wages due to any United States
worker or alien described in section
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act employed by the employer in the
specific employment in question. The back wages
shall be equal to the difference between the
amount that should have been paid and the amount
that actually was paid to such worker.
- (2) FAILURE TO PAY WAGES- Upon a final
determination that the employer has failed to pay
the wages required under this Act, the Secretary
may assess a civil money penalty up to $1,000 for
each person for whom the employer failed to pay
the required wage, and may recommend to the
Attorney General the disqualification of the
employer from the employment of aliens described
in section 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act for a period of
time determined by the Secretary not to exceed 1
year.
- (3) OTHER VIOLATIONS- If the Secretary, as a
result of an investigation pursuant to a
complaint, determines that an employer covered by
an application under section 401(a) has--
- (A) filed an application that
misrepresents a material fact;
- (B) failed to meet a condition specified
in section 401; or
- (C) committed a serious violation of
subsection (a)(1)(B),
- the Secretary may seek a cease and desist order
and assess a civil money penalty not to exceed
$1,000 for each violation and may recommend to
the Attorney General the disqualification of the
employer if the Secretary finds it to be a
substantial misrepresentation or violation of the
requirements for the employment of any United
States workers or aliens described in section
101(a)(15)(ii)(a) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act for a period of time determined
by the Secretary not to exceed 1 year. In
determining the amount of civil money penalty to
be assessed or whether to recommend
disqualification of the employer, the Secretary
shall consider the seriousness of the violation,
the good faith of the employer, the size of the
business of the employer being charged, the
history of previous violations by the employer,
whether the employer obtained a financial gain
from the violation, whether the violation was
willful, and other relevant factors.
- (4) EXPANDED PROGRAM DISQUALIFICATION-
- (A) 3 YEARS FOR SECOND VIOLATION- Upon a
second final determination that an
employer has failed to pay the wages
required under this Act, or a second
final determination that the employer has
committed another substantial violation
under paragraph (3) in the same category
of violations, with respect to the same
alien, the Secretary shall report such
determination to the Attorney General and
the Attorney General shall disqualify the
employer from the employment of aliens
described in section 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a)
of the Immigration and Nationality Act
for a period of 3 years.
- (B) PERMANENT FOR THIRD VIOLATION- Upon a
third final determination that an
employer has failed to pay the wages
required under this section or committed
other substantial violations under
paragraph (3), the Secretary shall report
such determination to the Attorney
General, and the Attorney General shall
disqualify the employer from any
subsequent employment of aliens described
in section 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act.
- (c) ROLE OF ASSOCIATIONS-
- (1) VIOLATION BY A MEMBER OF AN ASSOCIATION- An
employer on whose behalf an application is filed
by an association acting as its agent is fully
responsible for such application, and for
complying with the terms and conditions of this
Act, as though the employer had filed the
application itself. If such an employer is
determined to have violated a requirement of this
section, the penalty for such violation shall be
assessed against the employer who committed the
violation and not against the association or
other members of the association.
- (2) VIOLATION BY AN ASSOCIATION ACTING AS AN
EMPLOYER- If an association filing an application
on its own behalf as an employer is determined to
have committed a violation under this subsection
which results in disqualification from the
program under subsection (b), no individual
member of such association may be the beneficiary
of the services of an alien described in section
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act in an occupation in which such
alien was employed by the association during the
period such disqualification is in effect, unless
such member files an application as an individual
employer or such application is filed on the
employer's behalf by an association with which
the employer has an agreement that the employer
will comply with the requirements of this Act.
- (d) STUDY OF AGRICULTURAL LABOR STANDARDS AND
ENFORCEMENT-
- (1) COMMISSION ON HOUSING MIGRANT AGRICULTURAL
WORKERS-
- (A) ESTABLISHMENT- There is established
the Commission on Housing Migrant
Agricultural Workers (in this paragraph
referred to as the `Commission').
- (B) COMPOSITION- The Commission shall
consist of 12 members, as follows:
- (i) Four representatives of
agricultural employers and one
representative of the Department
of Agriculture, each appointed by
the Secretary of Agriculture.
- (ii) Four representatives of
agricultural workers and one
representative of the Department
of Labor, each appointed by the
Secretary of Labor.
- (iii) One State or local official
knowledgeable about farmworker
housing and one representative of
Housing and Urban Development,
each appointed by the Secretary
of Housing and Urban Development.
- (C) FUNCTIONS- The Commission shall
conduct a study of the problem of
in-season housing for migrant
agricultural workers.
- (D) INTERIM REPORTS- The Commission may
at any time submit interim reports to
Congress describing the findings made up
to that time with respect to the study
conducted under subparagraph (C).
- (E) FINAL REPORT- Not later than 3 years
after the date of enactment of this Act,
the Commission shall submit a report to
Congress setting forth the findings of
the study conducted under subparagraph
(C).
- (F) TERMINATION DATE- The Commission
shall terminate upon filing its final
report.
- (2) STUDY OF RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CHILD CARE AND
CHILD LABOR- The Secretaries of Labor,
Agriculture, and Health and Human Services shall
jointly conduct a study of the issues relating to
child care of migrant agricultural workers. Such
study shall address issues related to the
adequacy of educational and day care services for
migrant children and the relationship, if any, of
child care needs and child labor violations in
agriculture. An evaluation of migrant and
seasonal Head Start programs (as defined in
section 637(12) of the Head Start Act) as they
relate to these issues shall be included as a
part of the study.
- (3) STUDY OF FIELD SANITATION- The Secretary of
Labor and the Secretary of Agriculture shall
jointly conduct a study regarding current field
sanitation standards in agriculture and evaluate
alternative approaches and innovations that may
further compliance with such standards.
- (4) STUDY OF COORDINATED AND TARGETED LABOR
STANDARDS ENFORCEMENT- The Secretary, in
consultation with the Secretary of Agriculture,
shall conduct a study of the most persistent and
serious labor standards violations in agriculture
and evaluate the most effective means of
coordinating enforcement efforts between Federal
and State officials. The study shall place
primary emphasis on the means by which Federal
and State authorities, in consultation with
representatives of workers and agricultural
employers, may develop more effective methods of
targeting resources at repeated and egregious
violators of labor standards. The study also
shall consider ways of facilitating expanded
education among agricultural employers and
workers regarding compliance with labor standards
and evaluate means of broadening such education
on a cooperative basis among employers and
workers.
- (5) REPORT- Not later than 3 years after the date
of enactment of this Act, with respect to each
study required to be conducted under paragraphs
(2) through (4), the Secretary or group of
Secretaries required to conduct the study shall
submit to Congress a report setting forth the
findings of the study.
SEC. 402. BILATERAL COMMISSIONS.
- The Attorney General is authorized and requested to
establish a bilateral commission between the United
States and each country not less than 10,000 nationals of
which are nonimmigrant aliens described in section
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the Immigration and Nationality
Act (8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a)). Such bilateral
commissions shall provide a forum to the governments
involved to discuss matters of mutual concern regarding
the program for the admission of aliens under section
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the Immigration and Nationality
Act.
SEC. 403. REGULATIONS.
- (a) REGULATIONS OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL- The Attorney
General shall consult with the Secretary and the
Secretary of Agriculture on all regulations to implement
the duties of the Attorney General under this Act.
- (b) REGULATIONS OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE- The Secretary
of State shall consult with the Attorney General, the
Secretary of Labor, and the Secretary of Agriculture on
all regulations to implement the duties of the Secretary
of State under this Act.
- (c) REGULATIONS OF THE SECRETARY OF LABOR- The Secretary
shall consult with the Secretary of Agriculture and shall
obtain the approval of the Attorney General on all
regulations to implement the duties of the Secretary
under this Act.
- (d) DEADLINE FOR ISSUANCE OF REGULATIONS- All regulations
to implement the duties of the Attorney General, the
Secretary of State, and the Secretary of Labor shall take
effect on the effective date of this Act.
SEC. 404. DETERMINATION AND USE OF USER FEES.
- (a) SCHEDULE OF FEES- The Secretary of Labor shall
establish and periodically adjust a schedule for the
registry user fee and the alien employment user fee
imposed under this Act, and a collection process for such
fees from employers participating in the programs
provided under this Act. Such fees shall be the only fees
chargeable to employers for services provided under this
Act.
- (b) DETERMINATION OF SCHEDULE-
- (1) IN GENERAL- The schedule under subsection (a)
shall reflect a fee rate based on the number of
job opportunities indicated in an employer's
application under section 301(a)(1)(C) and
sufficient to provide for the reimbursement of
the direct costs of providing the following
services:
- (A) REGISTRY USER FEE- Services provided
through the agricultural worker
registries established under section
301(a), including registration, referral,
and validation, but not including
services that would otherwise be provided
by the Secretary of Labor under related
or similar programs if such registries
had not been established.
- (B) ALIEN EMPLOYMENT USER FEE- Services
related to an employer's authorization to
employ eligible aliens pursuant to this
Act, including the establishment and
certification of eligible employers, the
issuance of documentation, and the
admission of eligible aliens.
- (A) IN GENERAL- In establishing and
adjusting such schedule, the Secretary of
Labor shall comply with Federal cost
accounting and fee setting standards.
- (B) PUBLICATION AND COMMENT- The
Secretary of Labor shall publish in the
Federal Register an initial fee schedule
and associated collection process and the
cost data or estimates upon which such
fee schedule is based, and any subsequent
amendments thereto, pursuant to which
public comment will be sought and a final
rule issued.
- (1) IN GENERAL- All proceeds resulting from the
payment of registry user fees and alien
employment user fees shall be available without
further appropriation and shall remain available
without fiscal year limitation to reimburse the
Secretaries of Labor, State, and Agriculture, and
the Attorney General for the costs of carrying
out section 218 of the Immigration and
Nationality Act and the provisions of this Act.
- (2) LIMITATION ON ENFORCEMENT COSTS- In making a
determination of reimbursable costs under
paragraph (1), the Secretary of Labor shall
provide that reimbursement of the costs of
enforcement under section 401 shall not exceed 10
percent of the direct costs of the Secretary
described in subsection (b)(1) (A) and (B).
SEC. 405. FUNDING FOR STARTUP COSTS.
- If additional funds are necessary to pay the startup
costs of the agricultural worker registries established
under section 301(a), such costs may be paid out of
amounts available to Federal or State governmental
entities under the Wagner-Peyser Act (29 U.S.C. 49 et
seq.). Proceeds described in section 404(c) may be used
to reimburse the use of such available amounts.
SEC. 406. REPORT TO CONGRESS.
- (a) REQUIREMENT- Not later than 4 years after the
effective date under section 408, the Resources,
Community and Economic Development Division, and the
Health, Education and Human Services Division, of the
Office of the Comptroller General of the United States
shall jointly prepare and transmit to the Committee on
the Judiciary of the House of Representatives and the
Committee on the Judiciary of the Senate a report
describing the results of a review of the implementation
of and compliance with this Act. The report shall
address--
- (1) whether the program has ensured an adequate
and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers
at the time and place needed by employers;
- (2) whether the program has ensured that aliens
admitted under this program are employed only in
authorized employment, and that they timely
depart the United States when their authorized
stay ends;
- (3) whether the program has ensured that
participating employers comply with the
requirements of the program with respect to the
employment of United States workers and aliens
admitted under this program;
- (4) whether the program has ensured that aliens
admitted under this program are not displacing
eligible, qualified United States workers or
diminishing the wages and other terms and
conditions of employment of eligible United
States workers;
- (5) to the extent practicable, compare the wages
and other terms of employment of eligible United
States workers and aliens employed under this
program with the wages and other terms of
employment of agricultural workers who are not
authorized to work in the United States;
- (6) whether the housing provisions of this
program ensure that adequate housing is available
to workers employed under this program who are
required to be provided housing or a housing
allowance;
- (7) recommendations for improving the operation
of the program for the benefit of participating
employers, eligible United States workers,
participating aliens, and governmental agencies
involved in administering the program; and
- (8) recommendations for the continuation or
termination of the program under this Act.
- (b) ADVISORY BOARD- There shall be established an
advisory board to be composed of--
- (1) four representatives of agricultural
employers to be appointed by the Secretary of
Agriculture, including individuals who have
experience with the H-2A program; and
- (2) four representatives of agricultural workers
to be appointed by the Secretary of Labor,
including individuals who have experience with
the H-2A program,
- to provide advice to the Comptroller General in the
preparation of the reports required under subsection (a).
SEC. 407. EFFECTIVE DATE.
- (a) IN GENERAL- This Act and the amendments made by this
Act shall become effective on the date that is 1 year
after the date of enactment of this Act.
- (b) REPORT- Not later than 180 days after the date of
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall prepare and
submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report
that described the measures being taken and the progress
made in implementing this Act.
END