PAROLE IN PLACE POLICY CHALLENGED BY 16 STATES

In June 2024, the Biden Administration announced its plan to rollout a process called Keeping Families Together, which would extend parole-in-place, which was previously limited to the immediate family members of members of the armed forces, to the spouses of US citizens who had been living in the US for ten years. Immediately after the program went live and started receiving applications on August 19, 2024, Texas and 15 additional states filed a lawsuit, and a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) asking the court to immediately block the process. The Court previously dismissed a lawsuit brought by Texas challenging another parole program from the Biden administration, the CHNV Parole Program (interchangeably, the “CHNV Parole Program” or the “Program”). The Court in that case found that the States lacked standing to bring the challenge. That parole program had a relatively small number of eligible immigrants compared to the number that qualify under the new Keeping Families Together program. On Aug. 26, 2024, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, in Texas v. Department of Homeland Security, Case Number 24-cv-306, administratively stayed DHS from granting parole in place under Keeping Families Together for 14 days. Subsequently, the court issued another order and the administrative stay remains in effect through Sept. 23, 2024. Applications for parole-in-place under Keeping Families Together are still being accepted by USCIS. To apply one must submit an Form I-131F to USCIS (this form is only available for online submission). Apply online here. To comply with the district court’s administrative stay, USCIS will: – Not grant any pending parole in place requests under Keeping Families Together. – Continue to accept filings of Form I-131F, Application for Parole in Place for Certain Noncitizen Spouses and Stepchildren of U.S. Citizens. – Continue to schedule biometric appointments and capture biometrics at Application Support Centers (ASCs). – The district court’s administrative stay order does not affect any applications that were approved before the administrative stay order was issued at 6:46 p.m. Eastern Time on Aug. 26, 2024. Parole is an exercise of DHS’s discretionary authority under section 212(d)(5)(A) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) to allow certain noncitizen “applicants for admission” to be present in the United States on a temporary, case-by-case basis for urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit. The INA defines an “applicant for admission,” in relevant part, as a noncitizen “present in the United States who has not been admitted.” Noncitizens who are present in the United States without admission or parole may be considered for parole in place under this process because they remain “applicants for admission.” Parole in place is available only for noncitizens who are present in the United States. If granted parole, and if otherwise eligible, these noncitizens may apply for adjustment of status to that of a lawful permanent resident without being required to leave the United States and be processed by a U.S. consulate overseas or obtaining an I-601A waiver.

Court Denies Motion to Vacate & Extends Stay of New Parole in Place Program

Judge says Hold On

On September 4, 2024, a Federal Court denied the Federal Government’s motion to vacate and extended the stay that was previously put in place to prevent the Department of Homeland Security from granting applications for the new Keeping Families Together (parole-in-place for certain spouses of US citizens). The court extended itstemporary stay and restraining order for an additional 14-day period, such that it expires at the end of September 23, 2024, though it may be extended again. DHS can and will continue to receive applications for the new program but are barred from granting anyone parole under the order. Another hearing was scheduled for September 18, 2024, and deadlines for motions were set for the week prior. The Court said it was moving the case along on an accelerated timeline. The order states, “The rigor of defendants’ recent 60-page filing, however, does convince the court that a hearing on the facts and the law can be scheduled on an even more accelerated schedule than previously anticipated, which the court sets below.” If you are interested in reading the entire order from the Court you can find it below.

United States District Court Puts New Parole In Place Policy on Hold

On August 26, 2024, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, in Texas v. Department of Homeland Security, Case Number 24-cv-306 administratively stayed DHS from granting parole in place under Keeping Families Together for 14 days; the District Court might extend the period of this administrative stay. While the administrative stay is in place: USCIS cannot grant any pending parole in place requests under Keeping Families Together. USCIS will continue to accept filings of Form I-131F, Application for Parole in Place for Certain Noncitizen Spouses and Stepchildren of U.S. Citizens, without adjudicating them. NOTE: The District Court’s administrative stay order does not affect any applications that were approved before the administrative stay order was issued. See USCIS.gov for the most up-to-date information and any updates.

USCIS BEGINS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR PAROLE-IN-PLACE FOR SPOUES OF US CITIZENS ON AUGUST 19, 2024

USCIS Wait Times

On August 19, 2024 USCIS will begin accepting Applications for Parole in Place for Certain Noncitizen Spouses and Stepchildren of U.S. Citizens using a new electronic Form I-131F. USCIS has published webpages with additional information about these processes:  Filing Guide for Form I-131F & Keeping Families Together webpage. USCIS has also updated the Key Questions and Answers about the process on the Keeping Families Together webpage. More information about Keeping Families Together will be made available in a Federal Register notice in the coming days. The Form I-131F will only be available to file online.  Each requestor, including minors, must file a separate Form I-131F, and each requestor must have their own USCIS online account, including minors. Information on creating a USCIS online account is available on the How to Create a USCIS Online Account webpage. NOTE: There is no paper form for this process. THE ENTIRE PROCESS MUST BE DONE ONLINE. Interested to see how many people will actually be applying for this. Seems like most people who are eligible would have already done an I-601A if they really wanted to get residency. Maybe people who have pending 601A waivers who have been waiting years will apply for PIP as a backup plan or in hopes of speeding up this process. Hopefully this will cut down on the insane increase in the processing times of 601A waivers, which has more than tripled since COVID.