2015 Old Blog

Immigrants and the U.S. military: Fighting side by side since 1776

Posted by admin on Nov 11, 2013 10:55:56 AM

This Veteran’s Day, we express our gratitude towards all of those who have served in the United States military, especially those who have sacrificed their lives on behalf of the country. Not everyone realizes that many of our nation’s veterans are U.S. immigrants, and they have played crucial roles in our nation’s military efforts since the Declaration of Independence. As we are a nation of immigrants, it should come as no surprise that immigrants and the U.S. military have depended on each other since this country was founded.

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Topics: Immigration Reform Updates, Personal and Family Visas, Immigration Blog

Just passing through: The C Visa (U.S. transit visa)

Posted by admin on Nov 8, 2013 10:03:52 AM

The C visa or U.S. transit visa is an extremely short-term visa for individuals passing through the United States in immediate and continuous transit. Generally, Like B visas, C visas are not necessary for citizens of member countries of the Visa Waiver Program. Each person traveling regardless of age needs their own C visa. The maximum duration of any C visa is no more than 29 days.

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Topics: Work-Based Visas, Personal and Family Visas, Immigration Blog

Truth, Justice, and the American Way: Superman and Immigration

Posted by admin on Nov 7, 2013 3:08:12 AM

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Topics: Immigration Reform Updates, Immigration Blog

Rep. Luis Gutierrez denounces extreme actions by DREAMer groups

Posted by admin on Nov 5, 2013 12:07:27 PM

Yesterday afternoon, the office of U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-IL) released a statement disavowing any support or relationship with DREAMer and immigrant activist organizations NIYA (National Immigrant Youth Alliance) and DREAMActivist.org after one of their own was arrested in Gutierrez’ office. Up until recently, Gutierrez was tangentially involved with these DREAMer activist organizations in an attempt to help a group known as the “DREAM 30.” Just a few weeks ago, these thirty or so undocumented DREAMers voluntarily walked back into Mexico and tried to re-enter to request asylum at the U.S. border. Not surprisingly, all were detained immediately.

The DREAM 30 controversy

The DREAM 30 stated their goal in leaving and attempting to re-enter the U.S. was to bring awareness to the plight of undocumented immigrants in the United States, but also to finally obtain their own legitimate status in the U.S. through a lesser-known route: asylum. When granted, asylum protects immigrants in extremely dangerous circumstances from having to return to their country of origin, even if they don’t have legal status. As we outlined in a recent post, asylum has a specific set of restrictions and can be very difficult to obtain. The odds were very slim that most of the DREAM 30 would get it.

As it currently stands, 21 members of the DREAM 30 have been released, one was deported, and eight are still in detention and waiting for a decision. Several members of the DREAM 30 were eligible for deferred action but chose not to apply, in some cases as another act of protest. Many of them still have legal immigration issues to be sorted out, but it seems that most fared far better than current U.S. immigration policy would predict. Self-deportation as a form of protest is an extremely risky (and controversial) move that many prominent pro-immigrant groups have already declared detrimental to the immigration reform cause.

DREAMer arrested in Rep. Gutierrez’s office

The ideologies of the DREAM 30, NIYA, and DREAMActivist.org, and Rep. Gutierrez collided yesterday after a member of the DREAM 30 staged a protest in his office by demanding the congressman obtain pardons from President Obama for all the remaining members still in detention, not a small request by any measure. Gutierrez’s office summarized the incident on his Facebook page yesterday:

“This afternoon, representatives of the National Immigrant Youth Alliance (NIYA), DREAMActivist.org, and the #DREAM30 sat-in at the office of Congressman Luis V. Gutierrez (D-IL) in Washington, D.C. One activist, who was recently released from detention in El Paso, Texas at the request of Congressman Gutiérrez, was removed from the office of Congressman Gutiérrez for refusing to leave until the Congressman spoke personally with President Obama and secured the release of other detainees. The activists were asked to leave by U.S. Capitol Police. Two activists left the office. A third refused and was escorted out by U.S. Capitol Police.“

Members of DREAMActivist.org and NIYA have also boasted publicly on social media that they secretly recorded Gutierrez in private meetings with parents of the DREAM 30 detainees, where they allegedly caught him making disparaging remarks about their leaders, and have continued on a smear campaign throughout the day claiming Gutierrez is a traitor to the cause. This highlights a somewhat surprising division among immigration allies, since most will agree no other member of Congress has so consistently, publicly, and emphatically been in support of comprehensive immigration reform as Rep. Gutierrez.

United we stand; divided we fall

Over the past few months, NIYA and DREAMActivist.org have already garnered a reputation for being abrasive and disrespectful, especially online, often resorting to name-calling and harassment. Their supporters have called Gutierrez a phony and a liar, claiming he is an immigration activist for fame and recognition. It’s a bold claim to make, especially after the Congressman was arrested in an immigration reform protest just a month ago and has a longstanding reputation of being one of immigration reform’s strongest allies. It’s interesting to note that another member of the DREAM 30 was arrested in Rep. Ruben Hinojosa’s (D-TX) office that same day for the same reason, and he has escaped scrutiny from these groups. Being the more famous of the two congressmen, it makes sense to choose Gutierrez as a target if their goal was to get the most media attention.

Blaming Gutierrez for not obtaining pardons for the DREAM 30 (who all knew they were going to get arrested before they crossed the border) makes the entire movement look bad and doesn’t put DREAMers in a flattering light. Their demands were extreme and extremely misguided, and most likely based on poor legal advice and misinterpretation of current U.S. immigration laws.

Nobody wins when activist groups viciously attack each other just for the chance to prove one single faction is “the most right.” (Nobody wins except maybe in this case… the House Republicans and anti-immigrant groups.) Gutierrez himself will admit recent immigration reform proposals are not perfect, not even close, and nobody will get everything they want in one single piece of immigration legislation. If these groups are not interested in working with other viewpoints to get a comprehensive bill passed, they should be at least be able to admit they are in fact not true advocates of immigration reform and their mission is something else entirely.

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Topics: Immigration Reform Updates, Immigration Blog

A Brief History of USCIS

Posted by admin on Nov 4, 2013 10:44:34 AM

Did you know that USCIS officially took over immigration service duties of the federal government only on March 1, 2003? On that date, USCIS was formed to “enhance the security and improve the efficiency of national immigration services by exclusively focusing on the administration of benefit applications.” (http://www.uscis.gov/about-us/our-history) In addition to USCIS, you have probably heard of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP). These elements of the Department of Homeland Security deal with immigration enforcement and carrying out actions in order to ensure border security.

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Topics: Work-Based Visas, Personal and Family Visas, Immigration Blog

Scheduling your consular appointment is not one-size-fits-all

Posted by admin on Oct 31, 2013 11:30:28 AM

Did you know that scheduling an appointment for your non-immigrant visa can differ vastly from consulate to consulate?

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Topics: Work-Based Visas, Personal and Family Visas, Immigration Blog

Introducing the new VISANOW website

Posted by admin on Oct 28, 2013 5:19:56 PM

At VISANOW, we have revolutionized the legal immigration experience through technology, professional expertise, and innovative thinking. It only makes sense to have a modern, innovative website to match. We have taken our website to the next level with a redesign and restructuring that will continue to improve the overall immigration experience for our visitors and clients.

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Topics: For Human Resources Professionals, Work-Based Visas, Personal and Family Visas, Immigration Blog

VISANOW co-hosts immigration workshop for Chicago immigrants

Posted by admin on Oct 24, 2013 8:34:42 AM

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Topics: Personal and Family Visas, Immigration Blog

What's the difference between U.S. immigrant refugees and asylees?

Posted by admin on Oct 22, 2013 12:36:05 PM

UPDATE: Following the Boston Marathon bombing, the Washington Post and others reported that the bombers were refugees. Other reports, however, have indicated that the Tsarnaev brothers were not refugees — they arrived in the United States as young children of an asylee. As a State Department official told Bloomberg, their father came to the United States on a tourist visa and applied for asylum.

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Topics: Personal and Family Visas, Immigration Blog

The ABCs of U.S. Visas: The A Visa

Posted by admin on Oct 21, 2013 12:10:15 PM

 

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Topics: Work-Based Visas, Personal and Family Visas, Immigration Blog

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