IMMIGRATION LAW & POLICY

Obtaining
Lawful Permanent Resident
Status

 

SOLVE Act: Democrats introduce comprehensive immigration reform proposal
Immigrants' Rights Update, Vol. 18, No. 3, May  20, 2004

The Safe, Orderly, Legal Visas and Enforcement (SOLVE) Act, introduced on May 4, 2004, in the Senate by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-MA) and in the House of Representatives by Reps. Luis V. Gutierrez (D-IL) and Robert Menendez (D-NJ), would strengthen employment and labor protections for workers in the United States, including immigrant workers and workers who would be employed under a temporary worker program that the act would create.  It would also reverse the Supreme Court’s decision in Hoffman Plastic Compounds v. NLRB, 122 S.Ct. 1275 (2002), in which the Court restricted the remedies available to undocumented workers whose employers violate laws intended to protect workers.

The SOLVE Act is the second comprehensive immigration reform proposal to be introduced in Congress this year.  The first was introduced by Senators Chuck Hagel (R-NE) and Tom Daschle (D-SD) on Jan. 24, 2004, after President Bush, with much fanfare, announced earlier that month a set of principles that he said would govern his administration’s approach to immigration reform.  Since the president made his announcement, however, legislators from both political parties have complained that he has done very little to move his reform program through Congress.

Even though it is unlikely that any comprehensive immigration reform bill will be enacted this year, immigrants’ and workers’ rights advocates would profit from staying abreast of what reforms are being proposed, so they can help advance the ones that would best serve the people for whom they advocate.  Immigrant communities, too, need to be provided accurate information about new reform proposals, both so they can advocate for themselves and so they understand clearly that these are only legislative proposals—that presently there is no new legalization program for which immigrants can apply.

The SOLVE Act features the following provisions:

title i:  earned adjustment

The SOLVE Act would create an earned adjustment program whereby undocumented workers who are presently in the U.S. could apply for LPR status if they meet certain requirements. 

Eligibility requirements for earned adjustment.  Under the SOLVE Act, undocumented noncitizens would be eligible for earned adjustment to LPR status if they meet the following requirements:

Non–U.S. citizen workers in the U.S. who have had contact with the Dept. of Homeland Security (DHS) or have been in immigration court could still apply for earned adjustment—even if they have been ordered removed from the U.S.—if they are otherwise eligible for the benefit.  The SOLVE Act would require the government to terminate removal proceedings against any noncitizen in removal proceedings who could show that he or she is prima facie eligible for earned adjustment (i.e., a preliminary review of the noncitizen’s case indicates that he or she is eligible).  In addition, noncitizens with orders of deportation, exclusion, removal, or voluntary departure would be eligible to apply for earned adjustment.

Spouses and children of principal applicants.  Under the SOLVE Act’s earned adjustment provision, the spouse and children (unmarried and under 21 years of age) of the principal applicant could also apply for LPR status.  In addition, spouses and children who otherwise would be able to adjust but whose relationship to the principal applicant has ended due to domestic violence, or those who could show that they have been battered or subjected to extreme cruelty, would also be eligible to adjust to LPR status.

Other provisions of the proposed earned adjustment program.  The other earned adjustment–related provisions of the SOLVE Act include the following:

Transitional status for immigrant workers not covered by the earned adjustment program.  The SOLVE Act would provide for a transitional status for  undocumented workers who are currently present in the U.S. (as of May 4, 2004) but who cannot meet the other earned adjustment requirements.

title ii:  family reunification

     The SOLVE Act proposes reforms to the current family-based immigration system, addressing the unconscionable backlogs in this system that keep families separated for years.  The act’s proposals include:

title iii:  temporary worker program

SOLVE would amend the current H‑2B nonagricultural seasonal worker visa program and create a new H‑1D program for workers employed in low-skilled positions other than agriculture.  Under these programs, temporary workers not only would have access to a path toward permanent lawful status in the U.S.; they also would be covered by the act’s labor protections.

Temporary worker visa programs.  The SOLVE Act would create a new program, H‑1D, through which employers could hire foreign workers to fill positions that they could not find U.S. workers to fill.  The act would make 250,000 visas available for such H‑1D workers.  Each visa would be valid for two years and would be renewable for two additional two-year terms (i.e., it would be valid and renewable for up to six years).  The act would create a second program, H‑2B, for nonagricultural migrant workers.  One hundred thousand visas would be available for H‑2B workers; each visa would be valid initially for nine months and be renewable for up to forty months.  Members of H‑1D and H‑2B workers’ immediate families would be allowed to accompany the workers to the U.S., but they would be eligible to be employed in the U.S. only if they, too, qualified for a temporary worker visa.

Under the SOLVE Act, temporary H‑1D and H‑2B workers would have “job portability,” meaning that they would be allowed to move to another H‑1D or H‑2B job after three months on the job through which they acquired their visa.  However, the three-month requirement could be waived for any worker who showed that his or her employer violated a term of the visa sponsorship, that the employer violated any other law or regulation relating to the worker’s employment, or that the worker’s personal circumstances had changed so as to require a change of employer.

The H‑1D and H‑2B programs proposed in the SOLVE Act would include a path to lawful permanent residence status for the workers who participated in them.  Either the temporary worker’s employer could immediately file a permanent resident visa petition on behalf of the worker, or the worker could self-petition after two years of employment.  Spouses and children of such workers would be eligible for derivative permanent resident status, and such adjustment applications would not be subject to the caps on the number of permanent resident visas that may be issued each year.

Employment and labor law protections.  SOLVE  would reverse the Supreme Court’s decision in Hoffman by establishing that neither back pay remedies nor any other monetary relief for unlawful employment practices shall be denied a wronged employee even if the employee was hired in violation of immigration laws.

The act also would require that the DHS, which is charged with enforcing immigration law, check with the Dept. of Labor (DOL) or the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) whenever it receives information from any source that would create a suspicion that enforcing the law in a particular situation or site may involve the DHS in a labor dispute (e.g., between an employer and immigrant employees who believe the employer has treated them unfairly).  The act lays out questions the DHS should ask the informant, including whether there is a labor dispute in progress at the work site and if the subjects of the information have raised workplace complaints or grievances.  The SOLVE Act would not prohibit the DHS from acting on such information, even if it determined that there may be a labor dispute in progress at the site.  It would, however, require the DHS to ensure “to the extent possible” that any immigrant worker arrested or detained as a result of such an enforcement action is not removed from the U.S. without the DHS first notifying the appropriate enforcement agency that has jurisdiction over the workplace violation.

Under the SOLVE Act’s provisions, immigrants who have filed a workplace claim or who are material witnesses in any pending or anticipated proceeding involving a workplace claim would be granted a stay of removal plus work authorization unless the DOL could prove to the immigration judge (by a preponderance of the evidence) either that the removal proceedings are unrelated to the workplace claim or that the claim was filed in bad faith.

The act also would strengthen the requirements an employer must meet in order to hire workers through a temporary worker program.  In particular, the SOLVE Act would require such employers to attest to the following:

Along with this attestation, the employer would have to submit to the DOL a copy of the job offer describing the wages and other terms and conditions of employment.

The SOLVE Act would confer on H‑1D and H‑2B workers all rights and remedies available under federal, state, or local labor and employment laws.  Workers under the temporary worker program would be provided “whistle blower” protection, i.e., the act would make it unlawful for employers to intimidate, threaten, or discriminate against a worker because the worker disclosed information about or cooperates or seeks to cooperate in an investigation of the employer’s compliance with the requirements of the temporary worker program.  Finally, the SOLVE Act would give H‑1D and H‑2B workers a private right of action against employers who fail to comply with the provisions and requirements of the temporary worker program.

More information on the SOLVE Act that advocates might find useful is available on the website of the American Immigration Lawyers Association: www.aila.org.  A summary of the first comprehensive immigration reform bill introduced in Congress this year, the Hagel-Daschle bill, is available on NILC’s website (www.nilc.org), as is NILC’s response to President Bush’s immigration reform principles.

 

 

Home | About NILC | Publications | Community Education Materials
Immigrants & Employment | Immigrants & Public Benefits | Immigration Law & Policy
Trainings | Links
California Immigrant Welfare Collaborative