Saturday, September 5, 2009, 11:48 am
Neufeld Memorandum on Form I-140 Successor-in-Interest
September 05th, 2009 | Category: News
In a memorandum dated August 6, 2009, Donald Neufeld, the Acting Associate Director for USCIS Domestic Operations Unit provides new guidance and amends USCIS policy with respect to review of Form I-140 successor-in-interest (”SI”) amendments. The goal of the new guidance is to update (the dated) USCIS policy in light of changing business realities with respect to corporate mergers and acquisitions.
Prior I-140 SI Standard
The prior standard by which I-140 SI filings were reviewed was that the I-140’s validity will be reaffirmed only if the successor company had assumed all of the rights, duties, obligations and assets of the original employer and continue to operate the same type of business as the original employer. Additionally, the new employer had to establish its ability to pay the profferred wage specified on the labor certification.
The old standard, initially set forth in a 1993 Paleo memorandum, is quite old and does not reflect the realities of the corporate M&A and business practices where it is now rare that a successor company would assume all of the predecessor company’s rights and obligations.
New Standard for I-140 SI Review
According to the Neufeld Memo, for all SI I-140 petitions filed after August 6, 2009, the adjudication officers should focus on the following factors:
1. The Job Opportunity Offered By The Successor Must Be The Same As The Job Opportunity In The Original Labor Certification.
The job offered by the successor must remain unchanged with respect to rate-of-pay (upward adjustments due to passage of time are acceptable), job description and job requirements specified on the labor certification. There cannot be any changes to the job which would affect the labor market test conducted initially by the predecessor company. The job opportunity must continue to exist at all time and there must not be a substantial lapse of operations with respect to the successor company after the business transfer.
2. The Successor Company Bears Burden To Establish Continuing Eligibility In All Respects, Including Ability-to-Pay.
The successor company must demonstrate that all of the criteria for the visa classification initially proposed have been met. This includes, but is not limited to, the predecessor’s ability to pay the profferred wage from the date of the filing of the labor certification (the “priority date”) until the date of the business transfer. Similarly, the successor must demonstrate that it is a valid “employer” under the USCIS regulations and that it has ability to pay the profferred wage. The I-140 SI petition must also include evidence to establish that the sponsored employee possesses the minimum education/experience specified on the labor certification.
3. The Successor Must Fully Document The Transfer And Assumption Of Ownership.
The Neufeld Memo specifically addresses that the transfer of ownership must occur after the approval of the underlying labor certification. Additionally, the successor must present evidence to document the business transaction such as:
- contract of sale or similar document of the acquisition;
- mortgage closing statements;
- SEC Form 10-K;
- audited financial statements;
- documentation of the transfer of real property and business licenses;
- copies of financial instruments used to executed the transfer; and
- media or other reports of the business transfer.
When a specific unit of the predecessor unit is being transferred, the transferred unit must be clearly defined unit within the predecessor organization and that unit must be transferred in its entirety to the successor except certain unrelated liabilities. As discussed above, the job offered to the alien beneficiary must continue to be in the transferred unit.
AC21 and Successor-in Interest
The Neufeld Memo specifically addresses the situations in which the alien beneficiary is entitled to port his or her process to a new employer under Section 106(c) of AC21. In such cases, a SI entity need not file a new petition on alien’s behalf assuming AC21 conditions have been met (such as “same or similar job”).
SI Amendments Not Needed For Self-Sponsored I-140 Petitions
I-140 petitions filed in connection with visa categories which do not require labor certifications (EB-1 EA, EB-2 NIW) remain valid even if a business transfer has occurred. There is no need of I-140 SI amendments in such cases.
New Labor Certification May Be Required In Certain Cases
If the successor entity cannot support the requirements outlined above a new labor certification setting forth the changed job conditions must be filed. Specifically, USCIS required a new labor certification be filed when (1) the successor entity has not met the three factors outlined in the Neufeld Memo, (2) the labor certification is not valid for the new geographic area of the alien beneficiary’s proposed employment, or (3) there has been another material change in the job opportunity offered.
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