Getting a work visa through employment is tough these days. Ask anyone in any industry. If you are a highly skilled foreign professional, athlete, or artist – who is not currently seeking a job change – you may want to consider applying for an “extraordinary ability” visa to get into the United States.
If you are a skilled worker the H-1B visa can be a great way to get into the United States to work, and eventually as a path to a green card and permanent residency. However with H-1B visa denials up in the United States, it’s more important that ever to make sure you have everything you need in advance before you apply.
It’s many people’s worst nightmare. You – or your loved one – receive a notice to appear in removal proceedings and are threatened with deportation. As I always remind people, the word was changed almost 25 years ago to “removal” by Congress. Then, President Bill Clinton signed the law. But make no mistake. It is still deportation. Many people panic as soon as they receive their notice, and contemplate going into hiding, or finding a way “get around” deportation. Don’t do either of these things.
Despite the fact that a DACA recipient was allowed to represent our country at the Olympics, a federal judge inflicted a blow to the program in late July.
This year, the number of immigrants held in private prisons & local jails that sat partially empty during the pandemic has risen from 14,000 in early January 2021 to nearly 27,000 in July. Over the years, we have spent a great deal of time visiting people in immigration custody. Many folks think of actual criminals that “belong” in jail — conjured up images of immigrants tied to organized crime or cartels — but this is rarely the case.