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Four Things About Immigration That You Should Know

2/15/2017

 
Immigration
By Michael M. DiCicco | mdicicco@bathweg.com
I. Overview
​
That the United States is a land of immigrants is as American as baseball, apple pie and the 4th of July. Today, however, there may be no more divisive issue in the United States than immigration policy. This article does not address the pros and cons regarding liberal or conservative immigration policies. Instead, it is educational in approach inasmuch as it explains uncontroversially who is permitted to enter the United States under our immigration laws. 
​
II. Immigration: What Is It?
​
Immigration is the action of coming to live permanently in a different country. According to the Congressional Research Service, “Immigrants are persons admitted as legal permanent residents of the United States.” Immigration admissions are subject to detailed rules that set numerical limits and establish preference categories designed to limit and prioritize admission into the United States. 

III. Who Is Eligible?
​
The immigration system in the United States considers priority factors and personal status preference in determining who is eligible to become a permanent resident of the United States. The priority factors are family reunification and employment skills and talents including ability for capital investment. The system also creates a personal status preference that permits refugees and asylum seekers to gain permanent residency and creates a diversity lottery for those seeking entry without priority status. ​
a) Family
An individual with a close relative like a spouse, child or parent in the United States who is a citizen or lawful permanent resident is favored for immigration into the United States. The relative becomes the person’s sponsor and files a Petition for Alien Relative with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services Bureau. 

b) Employment Skills
An individual who seeks permanent residency in the United States based on employment skills must fit within one of five priority categories: 1) extraordinary ability in science, art, education, business, athletics or other occupation; 2) advanced degree equivalent to a masters, doctorate or professional degree; 3) skilled worker with a minimum of two years of training; 4) special worker such as religious worker or employee of the United States living abroad; and 5) investor who will invest $500,000 to $1,000,000 in a job creating enterprise that employs at least 10 full time American workers. 

c) Refugees and Asylum Seekers
Refugees and asylum seekers may gain permanent residency status if they have suffered past or are in reasonable fear of persecution on the basis of race, religion, nationality, political view or membership in a social group. Refugees and asylum seekers are generally living outside of their country of origin and are unable or unwilling to return because they fear serious harm. 
​
​d) Diversity Lottery System
Up to 55,000 persons annually are admitted into the United States as permanent residents based on a random selection among individuals who are from countries with low rates of immigration to the United States. These individuals who are given permanent residency in the United States are known as “lottery winners.”
ImmigrationEllis Island Great Hall
IV. How Many Immigrants?
The Immigration and Naturalization Act provides for an annual worldwide limit of 675,000 permanent immigrants not including limited exceptions for close family members, refugees and asylum seekers. Generally, the 675,000 limitation includes 480,000 family based immigrants, 140,000 employment based immigrants and 55,000 diversity based immigrants. In addition to the 675,000 aggregate limitation, the United States places a limit on how many immigrants can come to the United States from any one country. No group of family based or employment based immigrants from a single country can exceed 7% of the total amount of people immigrating to the United States in one year. In 2016, the President set the worldwide refugee ceiling for immigration to the United States at 85,000 while about 25,000 immigrants were asylum seekers granted permanent status. ​

Conclusion
Although immigration raises complex political and public policy considerations, the United States remains committed to immigration. This dynamic area of the law will be particularly relevant as the Unites States considers public policy changes regarding immigration. 

​​If you have a question about immigration, please contact Michael M. DiCicco, a partner at Bathgate, Wegener & Wolf.
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Margaret H Marino
2/16/2017 10:48:18 pm

Thank you for the information Important to know.


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*No aspect of this advertisement has been approved by the Supreme Court of New Jersey. A description of the selection process methodology for the awards referenced is available here.
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