HR 2741 IH
106th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. R. 2741
To adjust the immigration status of
certain Colombian and Peruvian nationals who are in the United
States.
IN THE HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES
August 5, 1999
Mr. DIAZ-BALART (for himself, Ms.
ROS-LEHTINEN, Mr. SMITH of New Jersey, Mr. GILMAN, Mr. DAVIS of
Virginia, Mr. MENENDEZ, Mr. WATTS of Oklahoma, Mr. MCCOLLUM, and
Mr. BONILLA) introduced the following bill; which was referred to
the Committee on the Judiciary
A BILL
To adjust the immigration status of certain Colombian and
Peruvian nationals who are in the United States.
- Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of America in
Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
- This Act may be cited as the `Andean Adjustment Act of
1999'.
SEC. 2. ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS OF CERTAIN COLOMBIAN AND
PERUVIAN NATIONALS.
- (a) ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS-
- (1) IN GENERAL- Notwithstanding section 245(c) of
the Immigration and Nationality Act, the status
of any alien described in subsection (b) shall be
adjusted by the Attorney General to that of an
alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence,
if the alien--
- (A) applies for such adjustment before
April 1, 2003; and
- (B) is otherwise eligible to receive an
immigrant visa and is otherwise
admissible to the United States for
permanent residence, except in
determining such admissibility the
grounds for inadmissibility specified in
paragraphs (4), (5), (6)(A), and (7)(A)
of section 212(a) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act shall not apply.
- (2) RELATIONSHIP OF APPLICATION TO CERTAIN
ORDERS- An alien present in the United States who
has been ordered excluded, deported, removed, or
ordered to depart voluntarily, from the United
States under any provision of the Immigration and
Nationality Act may, notwithstanding such order,
apply for adjustment of status under paragraph
(1). Such an alien may not be required, as a
condition on submitting or granting such
application, to file a motion to reopen,
reconsider, or vacate such order. If the Attorney
General grants the application, the Attorney
General shall cancel the order. If the Attorney
General renders a final administrative decision
to deny the application, the order shall be
effective and enforceable to the same extent as
if the application had not been made.
- (b) ALIENS ELIGIBLE FOR ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS- The
benefits provided by subsection (a) shall apply to any
alien who is a national of Colombia or Peru--
- (1) who was physically present in the United
States on December 1, 1995; and
- (2) has been physically present in the United
States for at least 1 year and is physically
present in the United States on the date the
application for adjustment of status under this
Act is filed, except an alien shall not be
considered to have failed to maintain continuous
physical presence by reason of an absence, or
absences, from the United States for any periods
in the aggregate not exceeding 180 days.
- (1) IN GENERAL- The Attorney General shall
provide by regulation for an alien subject to a
final order of deportation, removal, or exclusion
to seek a stay of such order based on the filing
of an application under subsection (a).
- (2) DURING CERTAIN PROCEEDINGS- Notwithstanding
any provision of the Immigration and Nationality
Act, the Attorney General shall not order any
alien to be removed from the United States, if
the alien is in exclusion, deportation, or
removal proceedings under any provision of such
Act and raises as a defense to such an order the
eligibility of the alien to apply for adjustment
of status under subsection (a), except where the
Attorney General has rendered a final
administrative determination to deny the
application.
- (3) WORK AUTHORIZATION- The Attorney General may
authorize an alien who has applied for adjustment
of status under subsection (a) to engage in
employment in the United States during the
pendency of such application and may provide the
alien with an `employment authorized' endorsement
or other appropriate document signifying
authorization of employment, except that if such
application is pending for a period exceeding 180
days, and has
not been denied, the Attorney General shall authorize such
employment.
- (d) ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS FOR SPOUSES AND CHILDREN-
- (1) IN GENERAL- Notwithstanding section 245(c) of
the Immigration and Nationality Act, the status
of an alien shall be adjusted by the Attorney
General to that of an alien lawfully admitted for
permanent residence, if--
- (A) the alien is the spouse, child, or
unmarried son or daughter, of an alien
whose status is adjusted to that of an
alien lawfully admitted for permanent
residence under subsection (a), except
that in the case of such an unmarried son
or daughter, the son or daughter shall be
required to establish that they have been
physically present in the United States
for at least 1 year;
- (B) the alien applies for such adjustment
and is physically present in the United
States on the date the application is
filed; and
- (C) the alien is otherwise eligible to
receive an immigrant visa and is
otherwise admissible to the United States
for permanent residence, except in
determining such admissibility the
grounds for exclusion specified in
paragraphs (4), (5), (6)(A), and (7)(A)
of section 212(a) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act shall not apply.
- (2) PROOF OF CONTINUOUS PRESENCE- For purposes of
establishing the period of continuous physical
presence referred to in paragraph (1)(B), an
alien shall not be considered to have failed to
maintain continuous physical presence by reason
of an absence, or absences, from the United
States for any periods in the aggregate not
exceeding 180 days.
- (e) AVAILABILITY OF ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW- The Attorney
General shall provide to applicants for adjustment of
status under subsection (a) the same right to, and
procedures for, administrative review as are provided
to--
- (1) applicants for adjustment of status under
section 245 of the Immigration and Nationality
Act; or
- (2) aliens subject to removal proceedings under
section 240 of such Act.
- (f) LIMITATION ON JUDICIAL REVIEW- A determination by the
Attorney General as to whether the status of any alien
should be adjusted under this Act is final and shall not
be subject to review by any court.
- (g) NO OFFSET IN NUMBER OF VISAS AVAILABLE- When an alien
is granted the status of having been lawfully admitted
for permanent residence pursuant to this Act, the
Secretary of State shall not be required to reduce the
number of immigrant visas authorized to be issued under
any provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act.
- (h) APPLICATION OF IMMIGRATION AND NATIONALITY ACT
PROVISIONS- Except as otherwise specifically provided in
this section, the definitions contained in the
Immigration and Nationality Act shall apply in the
administration of this Act. Nothing contained in this Act
shall be held to repeal, amend, alter, modify, effect, or
restrict the powers, duties, functions, or authority of
the Attorney General in the administration and
enforcement of such Act or any other law relating to
immigration, nationality, or naturalization. The fact
that an alien may be eligible to be granted the status of
having been lawfully admitted for permanent residence
under this section shall not preclude the alien from
seeking such status under any other provision of law for
which the alien may be eligible.
END