9 FAM 402.12
Intracompany Transferees - L Visas
(CT:VISA-433; 08-09-2017)
(Office of Origin: CA/VO/L/R)
9 FAM 402.12-1 Related Statutory
and Regulatory Authority
9 FAM 402.12-1(A) Immigration
and Nationality Act
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
INA 101(a)(15)(L) (8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(15)(L)); INA
101(a)(32) (8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(32)); INA 101(a)(44) (8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(44)); INA
214(b) (8 U.S.C. 1184(b)); INA 214(c) (8 U.S.C. 1184(c)); INA 214(h) (8 U.S.C.
1184(h)); INA 214(j) (8 U.S.C. 1184(j)).
9 FAM 402.12-1(B) Code of
Federal Regulations
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
22 CFR 41.54.
9 FAM 402.12-2 Overview of L visas
(CT:VISA-433; 08-09-2017)
a. Intracompany transferee means an alien who, within
three years preceding the time of his or her application for admission into the
United States, has been employed abroad continuously for one year by a firm,
corporation, or other legal entity or parent, branch, affiliate, or subsidiary
thereof, and who seeks to enter the United States temporarily in order to
render his or her services to a branch of the same employer or a parent,
affiliate, or subsidiary thereof, in a capacity that is managerial, executive,
or involves specialized knowledge.
b. Section 1(b) of Public Law 91-225 of April 7, 1970,
created a nonimmigrant visa (NIV) classification at INA 101(a)(15)(L) for
intracompany transferees. An individual or blanket petition, approved by U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), is a prerequisite for L visa
issuance.
c. The L nonimmigrant classification was created to
permit international companies to temporarily transfer qualified employees to
the United States for the purpose of improving management effectiveness,
expanding U.S. exports, and enhancing competitiveness in markets abroad. Prior
to the enactment of Public Law 91-225, no nonimmigrant classification existed
that fully met the needs of intracompany transferees. Those who did not
qualify as E nonimmigrants were forced to apply for immigrant visas (IV) to the
United States, even if there was no intent to reside permanently.
d. INA 101(a)(15)(L) was amended for the first time by
the Immigration Act of 1990 (Public Law 101-649 of November 29, 1990) to
provide that the required one-year period of continuous prior employment with
the petitioner take place within three years, rather than immediately preceding
the time of the aliens application for admission into the United States.
e. On April 18, 2017, the
President signed the Executive Order on Buy American Hire American (E.O.
13788), intended to create higher wages and
employment rates for workers in the United States, and to protect their
economic interests. The goal of E.O. 13788 is to protect the interests of United States workers
in the administration of our immigration system, including through the
prevention of fraud or abuse, and it is with this spirit in mind that cases
under INA 101(a)(15)(L) must be
adjudicated.
9 FAM 402.12-3 Classification
Codes
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
22 CFR 41.12 identifies the following visa classification
symbols for intracompany transfers in accordance with INA 101(a)(L):
L1
|
Intracompany Transferee (Executive, Managerial, and
Specialized Knowledge Personnel Continuing Employment with International Firm
or Corporation)
|
L2
|
Spouse or Child of Intracompany Transferee
|
9 FAM 402.12-4 Classification
Criteria for Intracompany Transferees
9 FAM 402.12-4(A) Individual
Petitions
(CT:VISA-322; 04-07-2017)
The following elements must be considered in evaluating
entitlement to L-1 classification in individual petition cases:
(1) The petitioner is the same firm, corporation, or
other legal entity, or parent, branch, affiliate, or subsidiary thereof, for
whom the beneficiary has been employed abroad (see 9 FAM 402.12-9
below);
(2) The beneficiary is a manager, executive, or an
alien having specialized knowledge, and is destined to a managerial or
executive position or a position requiring specialized knowledge (see 9 FAM
402.12-14 below);
(3) The petitioner and beneficiary have the requisite
employer-employee relationship (see 9 FAM
402.12-12 below);
(4) The petitioner will continue to do business in the
United States and at least one other country (see 9 FAM
402.12-10 below);
(5) The beneficiary meets the requirement of having
had one year of prior continuous qualifying experience within the previous
three years (see 9 FAM
402.12-13 below);
(6) If the beneficiary is coming to open, or be
employed in, a new office, the requirements described in 9 FAM
402.12-11 below are met;
(7) Many L aliens are subject to time limits (see 9 FAM
402.12-16(D) below), or the two-year foreign residence requirement for
former exchange visitors (see 9 FAM
402.12-20 below); and
(8) The beneficiary is not subject to INA 214(b) and
is not required to have a residence abroad which he or she has no intention of
abandoning (see 9 FAM
402.12-15 below).
9 FAM 402.12-4(B) Blanket
Petitions
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
In addition to those elements listed in 9 FAM
402.12-4(A) above, the characteristics considered in evaluating entitlement
to L-1 classification in blanket petition cases are specified below. (See 9 FAM
402.12-8 below for a full description of the qualifying requirements and
processing procedures for blanket petition cases.)
(1) The petitioner and its entities meet the
requirements of size, structure, and scope of business activities for approval
of L blanket petitions (see 9 FAM
402.12-8(B) below);
(2) The beneficiary is a manager, executive, or
specialized knowledge professional and is destined to a position for a manager,
executive, or specialized knowledge professional (see 9 FAM
402.12-8(C) below);
(3) The beneficiary is not coming to open or be
employed in a new office (see 9 FAM
402.12-8(C) below); and
(4) The petitioner has not filed an individual L
petition for the alien (see 9 FAM
402.12-8(C) below).
9 FAM 402.12-5 Significance of
Approved Petition
9 FAM 402.12-5(A) DHS
Responsible for Adjudicating L Petitions
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. By mandating a preliminary petition, Congress placed
responsibility and authority with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to
determine whether the requirements for L status, which are examined in the
petition process, have been met. An approved Form I-129, Petition for a
Nonimmigrant Worker, must be verified either through the Petition Information
Management Service (PIMS) or through the Person Centric Query Service (PCQS),
in the CCD under the Cross Applications tab, before a visa can be issued. The
Form I-797, Notice of Action, is no longer required to be presented to you at
the time of the applicants interview. You are to consider verification of the
approved Form I-129 through PIMS or PCQS, in itself, as prima facie evidence
that in the case of a(n):
(1) Individual petition, the petitioner and alien
beneficiary meet the requirements for L status; or
(2) Blanket petition (9 FAM
402.12-8 below), the petitioner and its parent, branches, affiliates, or
subsidiaries specified in the petition are qualifying organizations under INA
101(a)(15)(L).
b. The large majority of approved L petitions are
valid, and involve bona fide establishments, relationships, and individual
qualifications which conform to the DHS regulations in effect at the time the L
petition was filed.
c. You generally must not request the Department to
provide status reports on petitions filed with the Department of Homeland
Security (DHS), nor must they contact DHS directly for such reports. As an
alternative, you may suggest that the applicant communicate with his or her sponsor.
Cases of public relations significance may be submitted to the Department
(TAGS: CVIS). Justification for such action must be included with your
request.
9 FAM 402.12-5(B) Approved
Petition Prima Facie Evidence of Entitlement to L Classification
(CT:VISA-322; 04-07-2017)
a. You should not require that an approved Form I-129,
Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker, or evidence that the L petition has been
approved (i.e., a Form I-797, Notice of Action), be presented by an applicant
seeking an L visa. All petition approvals must be verified either through the
Petition Information Management Service (PIMS) or through the Person Centric
Query Service (PCQS), in the CCD under the Cross Applications tab. Once you
have verified approval through PIMS or PCQS, consider this as prima facie
evidence that the requirements for L classification, which are examined in the
petition process, have been met. You may not question the approval of L
petitions without specific evidence, unavailable to DHS at the time of petition
approval, that the beneficiary may not be entitled to status. The large
majority of approved L petitions are valid, and involve bona fide
establishments, relationships, and individual qualifications that conform to
the DHS regulations in effect at the time the L petition was filed.
b. On the other hand, the approval of a petition by DHS
does not relieve the alien of the burden of establishing visa eligibility in
the course of which questions may arise as to his or her eligibility to L
classification. If you develop information during the visa interview (e.g.,
evidence which was not available to DHS) that gives you reason to believe that
the beneficiary may not be entitled to status, you may request any additional
evidence which bears a reasonable relationship to this issue. Disagreement
with DHS interpretation of the law or the facts, however, is not sufficient
reason to ask DHS to reconsider its approval of the petition.
9 FAM 402.12-5(C) Referring
Approved L Petition for Reconsideration
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. You must consider all approved L petitions in light
of this guidance process and dispatch those cases which appear legitimate, and
identify those which require local investigation or referral to the approving
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) office for reconsideration.
You must refer cases to USCIS for reconsideration sparingly, to avoid
inconveniencing bona fide petitioners and beneficiaries and causing duplication
of effort by USCIS. You must have specific evidence of a requirement for
automatic revocation, lack of qualification on the part of the beneficiary,
misrepresentation in the petition process, or of previously unknown facts,
which might alter USCIS finding, before requesting approval of a review of the
Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker. When seeking reconsideration,
you must forward, under cover of Form DS-3099, NIV Petition Revocation Request
Cover Sheet-Kentucky Consular Center, the petition, all pertinent
documentation, and a written memorandum of the evidence supporting the request
for reconsideration to the Kentucky Consular Center (KCC), which will forward
the request to the approving USCIS office.
b. Send requests for petition revocations to the
following address, using registered mail or express mail:
Attention: Fraud Prevention Manager
Kentucky Consular Center
3505 N. Hwy 25W
Williamsburg, KY 40769
c. The KCC will maintain a copy of the request and all
supporting documentation and will track all consular revocation requests. You
are no longer required to maintain a copy of all documents, although scanning
the revocation request and supporting documents into the case file is
recommended.
d. You must not send Blanket L Petitions back to the
approving U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) office for
reconsideration. For the proper procedure on how to refuse a Blanket L-based
visa and how to dispose of the petition, refer to 9 FAM
402.12-8(G).
9 FAM 402.12-6 Adjudicating L
Visa Applications
9 FAM 402.12-6(A) Determining
Visa Eligibility
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
You do not have the authority to question the approval of
L petitions without specific evidence, unavailable to DHS at the time of
petition approval, that the requisites of INA 101(a)(15)(L) have not been met.
On the other hand, the approval of a petition by DHS does not relieve the alien
of the burden of establishing visa eligibility. If you have reason to believe,
based upon information developed during the visa interview or other evidence
that was not available to DHS, that the petitioner or beneficiary may not be
entitled to status, you may request any additional evidence which bears a
reasonable relationship to this issue. Disagreement with DHS interpretation of
the law or the facts, however, is not sufficient reason to ask DHS to
reconsider its approval of the petition.
9 FAM 402.12-6(B) Approved
Petitions
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. The approval of a petition by the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) does not establish that the alien is eligible to receive
a nonimmigrant visa (NIV). You may not authorize a petition-based NIV without
verification of petition approval through the Petition Information Management
Service (PIMS).
b. PIMS is the sole source of confirmation that a
petition for a visa has been approved. Verification in PIMS is prima facie
evidence of entitlement to L classification.
c. If you know or have reason to believe that an alien
applying for a visa under INA 101(a)(15)(L) is not entitled to the
classification as approved, you must suspend action on an aliens application
and submit a report to the approving DHS office.
9 FAM 402.12-6(C) Evidence
Forming Basis for L Visa Issuance
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. The basis for L visa eligibility consists of an
approved Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker, that must be verified
either through PIMS or through PCQS before issuing a visa. The Form I-797 is
no longer required to be presented to you at the time of the applicants
interview.
b. You must use either the electronic PIMS record
created by the KCC or the record obtained through PCQS to verify petition
approval. You can access the details of approved NIV petitions through the
Consular Consolidated Database (CCD), through the Petition Information
Management Service (PIMS) Petition Report, or through the Person Centric Query
Service (PCQS) in the CCD under the Cross Applications tab.
c. A valid Form I-797 must include the date of the
Notice, the name of the petitioner, the name of the beneficiary, the
petition/receipt number, the expiration date of the petition, and the name,
address, and telephone number of the approving DHS office. The paper Form
I-797 is an unsigned computer-generated form, which contains the receipt
number, and can be used only to make an L visa appointment. In the event PIMS
does not yet contain the record, you may send an email with the receipt number
to PIMS@state.gov. KCCs Fraud Prevention Unit (FPU) will research approval of
the petition and, if able to confirm its approval, will make the details available
through the CCD within two working days.
d. If PIMS does not contain the petition approval,
before sending an email to KCC, you have the option to look for petition
approval in PCQS in the CCD under the Cross Applications tab. In PCQS, under
Search Criteria, select Receipt Number; then enter the number from the Form
I-797, e.g., EAC1234567890. First, search just CISCOR to find the petition,
but if not found in CISCOR, you must also check CLAIMS 3. If you find a
petition approval in PCQS that was not in PIMS, send an email to PIMS@state.gov
as follows: Petition with Receipt Number EAC1234567890 was found in PCQS but
not in PIMS. You may not authorize a petition-based NIV without verification of
petition approval either through PIMS or PCQS.
9 FAM 402.12-6(D) Consular
Consolidated Database (CCD) Access to Approved Nonimmigrant Visa (NIV)
Petitions
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. PIMS provides confirmation that a petition for a
visa has been approved. Verification in PIMS is prima facie evidence of entitlement
to L classification.
b. You must use the electronic PIMS record created by
the KCC, or the petition record found through the PCQS, to verify petition
approval. In regard to PIMS, it is listed in the CCD under a sub-category of
the NIV menu called NIV Petitions. PIMS allows all information on a
petitioner, petition, and/or beneficiary to be linked through a centrally
managed CCD service.
c. The electronic PIMS record created by the KCC is
used to determine petition approval and visa eligibility. The PIMS Petition
Report contains a record of all petitioners recorded by the KCC as having
approved petitions since 2004. In addition, the KCC FPU has provided
informational memos on a large percentage of these petitioners. Each new,
approved petition is linked to a base petitioner record, allowing superior
tracking of NIV petitioner and petition information. As a result of this
change, the KCC has ceased emailing scanned copies of approved NIV petitions to
posts.
d. If you are unable to immediately locate information
on a specific petition, you may send an email to PIMS@state.gov. KCCs FPU
will research approval of the petition and, if able to confirm its approval,
will make the details available through the CCD within 2 working days. You may
submit your request to KCC only within five (5) working days of the scheduled
interview date and you must have checked PIMS before submitting to KCC. KCC
will check the USCIS CLAIMS database, and will upload the CLAIMS report into
PIMS so that you can proceed with the scheduled interview. KCC will not process
PIMS requests submitted prior to the five day window. Please be sure to
conduct a PIMS query before sending in these special requests, in order to
reduce KCCs workload.
e. You may use approved Form I-129 and Form I-797
presented at post as sufficient proof to schedule an appointment, or may
schedule an appointment based on the applicants confirmation that the petition
has been approved, but only verification of petition approval in PIMS or
through PCQS is sufficient evidence for visa adjudication.
9 FAM 402.12-7 Processing
Individual L Petitions
9 FAM 402.12-7(A) Individual
Petitions
(CT:VISA-322; 04-07-2017)
a. An employer must file Form I-129, Petition for a
Nonimmigrant Worker, with DHS to accord status as an intracompany transferee.
Form I-129 is also used to request extensions of petition validity and
extensions of stay in L status. The form must be filed with the USCIS Service
Center that has jurisdiction over the location where the alien will perform
services.
b. Approved individual L petitions, except those
involving new offices, are initially valid for the period of established need
for the beneficiarys services, not to exceed three years. If the beneficiary
is coming to the United States to open or be employed in a new office, the
petition may be approved for a period not to exceed one year. (See 9 FAM
402.12-11(D) below.)
c. To extend the validity of an individual L petition,
the petitioner must file Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker, with
the jurisdictional DHS Regional Service Center. A petition extension may be
filed only if the validity of the original petition has not expired.
9 FAM 402.12-7(B) Notifying
Petitioner of Petition Approval
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
The DHS uses Form I-797, Notice of Action, to notify the
petitioner that the L petition filed by the petitioner has been approved. DHS
must notify the petitioner of the approval of an individual or blanket petition
within 30 days after a completed petition has been filed. Form I-797 is also
used to advise the petitioner that an extension of petition validity and
extension of stay in L status for the employee has been granted. The
petitioner may furnish Form I-797 to the employee for the purpose of making a
visa appointment, or to facilitate the employees entry into the United States,
either initially or after a temporary absence abroad during the employees stay
in L status.
9 FAM 402.12-7(C) Individual Petitions
for Canadian Citizens
(CT:VISA-322; 04-07-2017)
a. A U.S. or foreign employer seeking to classify a
citizen of Canada as an intracompany transferee may file an individual petition
in duplicate on Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker, with CBP in
conjunction with the Canadian citizens application for admission. A Canadian
citizen may present Form I-129, along with supporting documentation, to an
immigration officer at a Class A port of entry (POE) located on the United
States-Canada border or a U.S. pre-clearance station in Canada at the time of
applying for admission. The petitioning employer need not appear, but the Form
I-129 must bear the authorized signature of the petitioner.
b. The availability of the above procedure does not preclude
the advance filing of an individual petition with DHS, in which case the
beneficiary may present a copy of the approved Form I-797, Notice of Action, at
a POE.
9 FAM 402.12-7(D) The
Procedure for Issuing Individual Petition L Visas
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
Issued visas must be annotated for the principal alien and
for any derivative spouse or child. The annotation should also state the name
of the company or qualifying entity that the applicant will be primarily
working for as it is listed in the Petition Information Management Service
(PIMS) or PCQS record.
(1) Example Individual L Annotations:
MUST PRESENT I-797 AT POE
PN-[PETITIONER NAME]
P#-[PETITION RECEIPT NUMBER] PED-[PETITION
EXPIRATION DATE]
(2) Individual L Derivatives
Annotations:
P.A.: JOHN DOE
PN-[PETITIONER NAME]
P#-[PETITION RECEIPT NUMBER] PED-[PETITION
EXPIRATION DATE]
9 FaM 402.12-8 Processing
Blanket L Petitions
9 FAM 402.12-8(A) Blanket
Petitions
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. Certain petitioners seeking the classification of
multiple aliens as intracompany transferees may file a single blanket petition
with DHS. Qualified petitioners must use Form I-129 to file for approval of a
blanket petition with the DHS Service Center having jurisdiction over the area
where the petitioner is located. Form I-129 must also be filed in advance with
the appropriate DHS Service Center for Canadian citizens who wish to enter the
United States as L nonimmigrants under the blanket petition provision (see 9 FAM
402.12-8(E) below). The DHS Service Center is required to notify the
petitioner of the approval of a blanket petition within 30 days after a
completed petition has been filed.
b. An approved L blanket petition is valid initially
for a period of three years and may be extended indefinitely thereafter if the
qualifying organizations have complied with the regulations governing the
blanket petition provision. To request indefinite petition validity, the
petitioner must file a new Form I-129, Petition for a Nonimmigrant Worker,
along with a copy of the previous approval notice Form I-797, Notice of Action,
and a report of admissions during the preceding three years. This report must
include a list of the aliens admitted during the preceding three-year period,
the positions held, the employing entity(ies), and the dates of initial
admission and final departure of each alien. The petitioner must establish
that it still meets the criteria for filing a blanket petition, and must
document any changes in the business relationships listed on the original
petition and any additional qualifying organizations it wishes to include.
c. Once the initial three-year validity period of a
blanket petition has expired, if the petitioner fails to request an indefinite
validity blanket petition, or if the request for indefinite validity is denied,
the petitioner and its other qualifying organizations must file individual
petitions on behalf of its employees until another three years have elapsed.
Thereafter, the petitioner may seek approval of a new blanket petition.
9 FAM 402.12-8(B) Requirements
for Petitioners
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. A U.S. petitioner, which meets the following
requirements, may file a blanket petition seeking continuing approval of itself
and its specified parent, branches, subsidiaries, and affiliates as qualifying
organizations under INA 101(a)(15)(L):
(1) The petitioner and each of the specified
qualifying organizations are engaged in commercial trade or services;
(2) The petitioner has an office in the United States
that has been doing business for one year or more;
(3) The petitioner has three or more domestic and
foreign branches, subsidiaries, or affiliates; and
(4) The petitioner and the other qualifying
organizations:
(a) Have obtained approval of petitions for at least ten
L managers, executives, or specialized knowledge professionals during the
past 12 months; or
(b) Have U.S. subsidiaries or affiliates with combined
annual sales of at least $25 million; or
(c) Have a U.S. work force of at least 1,000 employees.
b. The blanket petition provision is meant to serve
only relatively large, established companies having multi-layered structures
and numerous related business entities. Such companies usually have an
established program for rotating personnel and, in general, are the type of
companies for which the L classification was created. The criteria to qualify
for blanket petitions are formulated to exclude small and nonprofit
organizations. Such organizations must continue to file an individual petition
for each beneficiary.
9 FAM 402.12-8(C) Requirements
for Beneficiaries
(CT:VISA-322; 04-07-2017)
a. The blanket petition provision is available only to
managers, executives, and specialized knowledge professionals (see 9 FAM 402.12-14(D)
below) who are destined to work in an established office in the United States
(i.e., aliens seeking to open or be employed in a new office (see 9 FAM
402.12-11 above) do not qualify). Aliens who possess specialized
knowledge, but who are not specialized knowledge professionals, must obtain L-1
status through an individual petition. An alien may not apply for a visa under
the blanket petition procedure if an individual petition has been filed on his
or her behalf.
b. Since the individual beneficiaries of blanket
petitions are not named in the petition, their eligibility for L status is not
examined by DHS. Consequently, you (or, in the case of visa-exempt aliens, an
immigration officer) are responsible for verifying the qualifications of alien
applicants for L classification in blanket petition cases. (See paragraph c of
this section below.)
c. You have the authority and responsibility for
verifying the qualifications of individual managers, executives, and
specialized knowledge professionals who are seeking L classification under the
blanket petition provision, and who are outside the United States and require
visas. In addition to presenting the required number of copies of Forms I-129S
and Form I-797, (see 9 FAM
402.12-8(D) and (E) below), the alien must establish that he or she is
either a manager, executive, or specialized knowledge professional employed by
a qualifying organization. You must determine that the position in the United
States is with the organization named on the approved petition, that the job is
for a manager, executive, or specialized knowledge professional, and that the
applicant has the requisite employment with the organization abroad for twelve
months within the previous three years.
NOTE: Section 413 of Public Law 108-477 changed
the previous employment requirement for L-1 blanket petitions from six months
to twelve months, effective June 6, 2005. However, this only applies to
initial applicants for an L-1 nonimmigrant visa on the basis of a blanket
petition filed with USCIS. Therefore, an alien who was classified as an L-1
nonimmigrant prior to June 6, 2005 on the basis of the blanket petition would
continue to be subject to the six-month employment requirement.
9 FAM 402.12-8(D) Aliens
Applying Under a Blanket Petition
(CT:VISA-216; 10-18-2016)
a. When a qualifying organization listed in an approved
blanket petition wishes to transfer an alien abroad who requires a visa to
another listed qualifying organization in the United States, that organization
must complete a Form I-129S, Nonimmigrant Petition Based on Blanket L
Petition. An original, photocopied, faxed, or scanned copy of the handwritten
signature on the form is considered valid. The qualifying organization must
retain one copy for its records and send three copies to the alien
beneficiary. A copy of the Form I-797, Notice of Action, notifying the
petitioner of the approval of the blanket petition (which will identify the
organizations included in the petition) must be attached to each copy of Form I-129S.
b. After receipt of Form I-797 and Form I-129S, a
qualified employee who is being transferred to the United States may use these
documents to apply at a consular office for visa issuance within six months of
the date on Form I-129S.
9 FAM 402.12-8(E) Canadian
Citizens Seeking L Classification Under Blanket Petitions
(CT:VISA-322; 04-07-2017)
Citizens of Canada seeking L classification under a
blanket petition must present three copies of Form I-129S along with three
copies of the Form I-797, to an immigration officer at a Class A port of entry
(POE) on the United States-Canada border or a U.S. pre-clearance station in
Canada. The availability of this procedure does not preclude the advance
filing of Form I-129S with the USCIS Service Center where the blanket petition
was approved.
9 FAM 402.12-8(F) Procedure
for Issuing Blanket Petition L Visas
(CT:VISA-322; 04-07-2017)
a. Consular officers may grant L classification only in
clearly approvable applications. If the visa is issued, it should be annotated
Blanket L-1 for the principal alien and Blanket L-2 for any derivative
spouse or child. The annotation should also state the name of the company or
qualifying entity that the applicant will be primarily working for that is on
the Form I-129S, Nonimmigrant Petition Based on Blanket L Petition. This
company should be listed in PIMS; either on the Blanket I-797 approval notice
or in the Petitioner alias field in PIMS. The second annotation line should be
retained for any necessary clearance or waiver information, or duration and
purpose information when visa validity is limited, see 9 FAM 403.9-5.
(1) Template for Blanket L
Annotations:
BLANKET L-1; MUST PRESENT I-129S AT POE
Clearance received on (date)" or
"212(D)(3)(A): <waiver information>"
PN-<PETITIONER NAME>
P#-<PETITION RECEIPT NUMBER> I-129S EXP: <EXP
DATE>
(2) Template for Blanket L
Derivatives Annotations:
BLANKET L-2; P.A.: JOHN DOE
Clearance received on (date)" or
"212(D)(3)(A): <waiver information>"
PN-<PETITIONER NAME>
P#-<PETITION RECEIPT NUMBER> I-129S EXP: <EXP
DATE>
b. The consular officer must also be sure to properly
endorse all three copies of the aliens Form I-129S, Nonimmigrant Petition
Based on Blanket L Petition, scan one copy into the case in NIV, and return two
copies to the applicant for their recordkeeping. (NOTE: Once a copy of the
Form I-129S is scanned into the case, there is no requirement to keep a
physical copy of the form, which can be destroyed.) The image of I-129S below
highlights which boxes you must complete to properly endorse the form. Proper
endorsement includes noting the approval basis and adjudication date in the
approved as box (shown in green below); listing the I-129S validity dates (in
the red box below) ;and a post or officer stamp in addition to the adjudication
officers initials or signature in the action block. At the time of the
interview, advise the alien to hand-carry these forms with them to the U.S.
Port of Entry (POE).

c. Determining Validity Dates of
I-129S Petition:
(1) The consular officer must determine the validity
dates for the I-129S petition. For initial Blanket L applicants, the validity
end date should either be three years from the date of adjudication or the end
date requested on the "Dates of intended employment" in Part 2,
question 2b of the Form I-129S by the petitioner, whichever is less.
(2) For renewal Blanket L applicants, you must not
only consider what the petitioner is requesting, but also determine the
applicant's remaining time under the maximum period of stay as outlined in 9 FAM
402.12-16(C). In order to assist U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) with ensuring Blanket L visa applicants are
not admitted beyond their maximum period of stay, the consular officer must
limit the approval dates of the I-129S when maximum period of stay will be
reached prior to the dates requested by the petitioner. For example, if a
Blanket L-1A Executive or Manager has already spent six years in L-1 status in
the United States, you should limit the approval of the I-129S to one year to
ensure they are not admitted in excess of the seven year maximum period of
stay, even if the employer is asking for a longer period.
9 FAM 402.12-8(G) Procedure
For Denying Blanket Petition-Based L Visa
(CT:VISA-322; 04-07-2017)
a. If you determine that an alien has not established
his or her eligibility for an L visa under a blanket petition, your decision
will be final. You must record the reason for the decision on all copies of
Form I-129S by writing "NCA" or "not clearly approvable" in
the "Denial Reasons" box (shown in blue in the image above). Scan one
copy into NIV and shred it, give one copy to the alien for their records, and
send one copy of Form I-129S to the USCIS Regional Service Center which
approved the blanket petition. Note that this is not a request to revoke a
petition; it is merely notification of your final decision.
b. The petitioner may continue to seek L classification
for the alien by filing a Form I-129, individual petition on his or her behalf
with the USCIS Service Center having jurisdiction over the area of intended
employment. The petition must state the reason why the alien was denied an L
visa under the blanket procedure and must specify the consular office, which
made the determination and the date of the decision.
9 FAM 402.12-8(H) Filing
Individual L Petition Instead of Using Blanket Petition Procedure
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
Although an alien might qualify to be a beneficiary of an
L blanket petition, the petitioner may file an individual L petition on behalf
of that alien in lieu of using the blanket petition procedure. When exercising
this option, the petitioner must certify that the alien will not apply for a
blanket L visa. The petitioner and other qualifying organizations listed on a
blanket petition may not seek L classification for the same alien under both
procedures, unless a consular officer first denies eligibility under the
blanket petition provision.
9 FAM 402.12-8(I) Reassigning
L Blanket Petition Beneficiary
(CT:VISA-322; 04-07-2017)
An alien admitted under an approved L blanket petition may
be reassigned to any organization listed in the approved petition during his or
her authorized stay without referral to DHS, if the alien will be performing
virtually the same job duties. If the alien will be performing different
duties, the petitioner must complete a new Certificate of Eligibility Form I-129S,
Nonimmigrant Petition Based on Blanket L Petition, and file it with the USCIS
Regional Service Center, which approved the blanket petition.
9 FAM 402.12-8(J) Blanket L-1
Fees
(CT:VISA-24; 12-21-2015)
a. INA 214(c)(12)(B) requires the collection of a Fraud
Prevention and Detection fee in the amount of $500 from applicants for L visas
who are covered under a blanket petition for L status. You must collect the
MRV fee whether or not a visa is issued, for all first-time blanket L
applications under any Form I-129S, Nonimmigrant Petition Based on Blanket L
Petition. If a subsequent L-1 visa application is based on a new Form I-129S,
you must collect the Fraud Prevention and Detection fee again.
b. Consular sections must collect the $4,500 fee from
any applicants for blanket L-1 visas whose employers are subject to the fee.
Part 1A, "Data Collection," of Form I-129S, Nonimmigrant Petition
Based on Blanket L Petition, asks two questions relative to 9-11 Response and
Biometric Entry-Exit fee applicability:
(1) Does the petitioner employ 50 or more individuals
in the United States?
(2) If yes, are more than 50 percent of those individuals
in H-1B or L nonimmigrant status?
c. If the petitioner answers yes to both questions,
the Consolidated Appropriations Act fee for blanket L-1 applications applies.
(Note: L-2 derivatives are not subject to the fee.) If the fee applies, direct
the applicant to pay the additional fee on behalf of the petitioner to the
consular cashier at the time of application. Use ACRS code 20 for this
purpose. This fee for blanket L-1 visa applicants must be charged whether or
not the visa is issued, and applies in all first-time blanket L applications
under any I-129S petition. If the applicant loses his or her passport or has a
limited validity and applies for a new visa prior to the expiration of the Form
I-129S, do not collect the $4,500 fee for the re-use of the Form I-129S.
However, if the petitioner files a new Form I-129S (for example, to extend the
applicant's petition after the initial three years) or if the L-1 application
presented by the applicant is based on a Form I-129S from another petitioner,
then a new fee would be required. The Consolidated Appropriations Act fee is
to be paid in addition to the $500 Fraud Prevention and Detection fee and the
MRV fee.
9 FAM 402.12-8(K) Effect of
Blanket L-1 Fees on Reciprocity Fees
(CT:VISA-130; 05-16-2016)
a. You must collect from a blanket L-1 applicant the
Fraud Prevention and Detection fee and, if applicable under the criteria in 9 FAM
402.12-8(J) above, the Consolidated
Appropriations Act fee.
b. In order to maintain reciprocal treatment regarding
visas fees with the applicants country of nationality, the Fraud fee and/or
Consolidated Appropriations Act fees must be deducted from any applicable
reciprocity fees. The reciprocity fee paid should be the remainder of the cost
after other applicable fees have been deducted.
c. For example, if an applicant has an $800
reciprocity fee, but has paid the $500 Fraud Prevention and Detection Fee, he
or she would only be required to pay the remaining $300 of the reciprocity fee
at time of issuance. Conversely, if an applicants reciprocity fee was $400
and they paid the $500 fee, they would have no further reciprocity fee
obligation to pay at time of issuance.
9 FAM 402.12-9 Organizations
Qualifying as Petitioners
9 FAM 402.12-9(A) Nature of
Petitioning Business Entity
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. For the purposes of the L classification, a
petitioner is a qualifying organization desiring to bring an alien to the
United States as an L-1 nonimmigrant. It must be a parent, branch, affiliate,
or subsidiary of the same employer for whom the alien has been employed abroad
prior to entry. The petitioner may be either a U.S. or foreign organization.
b. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) uses the
following definitions and descriptions of business entities in adjudicating L
petitions:
(1) Qualifying Organization:
Qualifying organization means a U.S. or foreign firm, corporation, or other
legal entity which:
(a) Meets exactly one of the qualifying relationships
specified in the definitions of a parent, branch, affiliate, or subsidiary;
(b) Is or will be doing business (engaging in
international trade is not required) as an employer in the United States and in
at least one other country, directly or through a parent, branch, affiliate, or
subsidiary for the duration of the aliens stay in the United States as an
intracompany transferee; and
(c) Otherwise meets the requirements of INA
101(a)(15)(L).
(2) Parent: Parent means a
firm, corporation, or other legal entity, which has subsidiaries. Any business
entity, which has subsidiaries, is a parent. However, a subsidiary may own
other subsidiaries and also be a parent, even though it has an ultimate parent.
(3) Branch: Branch means an
operating division or office of the same organization housed in a different
location. Any such office or operating division, which is not established as a
separate business entity, is considered a branch.
(4) Subsidiary: Subsidiary
means a firm, corporation, or other legal entity of which a parent owns,
directly or indirectly:
(a) More than half of the entity and controls the
entity; or
(b) Half of the entity and controls the entity; or
(c) 50 percent of a 50-50 joint venture and has equal
control and veto power over the entity; or
(d) Less than half of the entity, but in fact controls
the entity.
(5) The 50-50 joint venture can be owned and
controlled by only two legal entities; all other combinations of a joint
venture do not qualify as a subsidiary. A contractual joint venture does not
qualify as a subsidiary. A parent may own less than half of the entity but
have control because the other stock is widely dispersed among minor
stockholders; for example, when an individual or company acquires sufficient
shares of a publicly held company to be able to nominate and elect the board of
directors.
(6) Affiliate: Affiliate
means:
(a) One of two subsidiaries, both of which are owned and
controlled by the same parent or individual; or
(b) One of two legal entities owned and controlled by
the same group of individuals, each individual owning and controlling
approximately the same share or proportion of each entity; or
(c) In the case of a partnership that is organized in
the United States to provide accounting services along with managerial and/or
consulting services and that markets its accounting services under an
internationally recognized name under an agreement with a worldwide
coordinating organization that is owned and controlled by the member accounting
firms, a partnership (or similar organization) that is organized outside the
United States to provide accounting services must be considered to be an
affiliate of the U.S. partnership if it markets its accounting services under
the same internationally recognized name under the agreement with the worldwide
coordinating organization of which the U.S. partnership is also a member.
(7) Subsidiaries are affiliates of each other. The
affiliate relationship arises from the common ownership and control of both
subsidiaries by the same legal entity. Affiliation also exists between legal
entities where an identical group of individuals owns and controls both
businesses in basically the same proportions or percentages. Associations
between companies based on factors such as ownership of a small amount of stock
in another company, exchange of products or services, licensing or franchising
agreements, membership on boards of directors, or the formation of consortiums
or cartels do not create affiliate relationships between the entities for L
purposes.
9 FAM 402.12-9(B) Relationship
Between Petitioner and Other Business Entities
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
For L classification purposes, ownership and control are
the factors, which establish a qualifying relationship between a petitioner and
other business entities. Both the U.S. and foreign businesses must be legal
entities. In the United States, a business is usually in the form of a
corporation, partnership, or proprietorship. Ownership means the legal right
of possession with full power and authority to control. Control means the
right and authority to direct the management and operations of the business
entity.
9 FAM 402.12-9(C) Nonprofit
Organizations
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
An organized religious, charitable, service, or other
nonprofit organization must demonstrate that it is ...a firm or corporation or
other legal entity or an affiliate or subsidiary thereof... just as commercial
businesses must do to qualify for L status. Nonprofit organizations are
eligible to file individual petitions but not blanket petitions. (See 9 FAM
402.12-8(B) paragraph b above.)
9 FAM 402.12-9(D) Evidence
Required by DHS in Determining Petitioners Status
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) regulations do
not ordinarily require submission of extensive evidence of the petitioning
organizations corporate structure. In questionable cases, however, DHS may
seek whatever evidence is deemed necessary, including certified audits, balance
sheets, profit and loss statements, non-certified audits (reviews, compilations),
annual reports, tax records, etc.
9 FAM 402.12-9(E) Size and
Scope of Operation
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
While the petitioners size does not limit its use of the
intracompany transferee category (except for access to the blanket petition
provision), DHS regulations do require that the petitioning organization
demonstrate its ongoing international nature by continuing to do business in
the United States and abroad. (See 9 FAM
402.12-10 below.)
9 FAM 402.12-9(F) Corporation
Separate Legal Entity From Owners
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
A corporation is a separate legal entity from its owners
or stockholders for the purpose of qualifying an alien beneficiary as an
intracompany transferee under INA 101(a)(15)(L). A corporation may employ and
petition for its owners, even a sole owner.
9 FAM 402.12-10 Petitioner Must
be Doing Business in the United States and at Least One Other Country
9 FAM 402.12-10(A) Doing
Business
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. A qualifying organization under INA 101(a)(15)(L) must,
for the duration of the intracompany transferees stay in the United States, be
doing business (engaging in international trade is not required) as an employer
in the United States and in at least one other country. (For employees coming
to open or be employed in a new office in the United States, (see 9 FAM
402.12-11 below)). Company representatives and liaison offices which
provide services in the United States, even if the services are to a company
outside the United States, are included in the doing business definition and
aliens who perform such services may qualify for L-1 status.
b. Doing business means the regular, systematic, and
continuous provision of goods and/or services by a qualifying organization and
does not include the mere presence of an agent or office of the qualifying
organization in the United States and abroad.
9 FAM 402.12-10(B) Transfer
to United States of Employees Unattached to Foreign Entity
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
A U.S. company, which is doing business as an employer in
the United States and in at least one foreign country, can utilize the L
classification to transfer to the United States employees abroad who are
unattached to a foreign entity. The reverse of this situation, however, is not
appropriate. A foreign organization must have, or be in the process of
establishing, a legal entity in the United States which is, or will be, doing
business as an employer in order to transfer an employee under INA
101(a)(15)(L).
9 FAM 402.12-10(C) Ongoing
International Nature of Organization
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
The DHS regulations require a qualifying organization to
demonstrate its ongoing international nature. The L classification was not
created for self-employed persons to enter the United States to continue
self-employment (unless they are otherwise qualified for L status), nor was the
L classification intended to accommodate the complete relocation of foreign
businesses to the United States.
9 FAM 402.12-11 Opening of New
Office
9 FAM 402.12-11(A) Qualified
Employees of New Offices May Receive L Status
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. INA 101(a)(15)(L) does not require the beneficiary
of an L petition to be coming for employment at a pre-existing, U.S.-based
office of the employer. A petition may be approved for a beneficiary who is
otherwise classifiable under INA 101(a)(15)(L) and who is coming to establish
an office (i.e., commence business) in the United States for the petitioner.
An alien in a managerial, executive, or specialized knowledge capacity may come
to open or be employed in a new office.
b. New office means an organization, which has been
doing business in the United States through a parent, branch, affiliate, or
subsidiary for less than one year.
9 FAM 402.12-11(B) Managers
and Executives Establishing or Joining New Office
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. A petitioner who seeks L status for a manager or
executive coming to open or to be employed in a new office must submit
evidence:
(1) That sufficient physical premises to house the new
office have been secured;
(2) That the beneficiary was employed for one
continuous year in the three-year period preceding the filing of the petition
in an executive or managerial capacity and that the proposed employment
involves executive or managerial authority over the new operation; and
(3) That the intended U.S. operation, within one year
of approval of the petition, will support an executive or managerial position.
b. While it is expected that a manager or executive in
a new office will be more than normally involved in day-to-day operations
during the initial phases of the business, he or she must also have authority
and plans to hire staff and have wide latitude in making decisions about the
goals and management of the organization.
9 FAM 402.12-11(C) Aliens
With Specialized Knowledge Establishing or Joining New Office
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
A petitioner seeking the entry of an alien with
specialized knowledge to open or be employed in a new office must demonstrate
that:
(1) Sufficient physical premises to house the new
office have been secured;
(2) The business entity in the United States is or
will be a qualifying organization as described in 9 FAM
402.12-9(A); and
(3) The petitioner has the financial ability to
remunerate the beneficiary and to commence doing business in the United States.
9 FAM 402.12-11(D) Petition
Validity for Employees of New Offices Limited to One Year
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
A petition for a qualified employee of a new office will
be approved for a period not to exceed one year, after which the petitioner
must demonstrate that it is doing business as defined in 9 FAM
402.12-10 above in order for the petition and aliens stay to be extended
beyond one year.
9 FAM 402.12-12 Employer-Employee
Relationship
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. The essential element in determining the existence
of an employer-employee relationship is the right of control; that is, the
right of the employer to order and control the employee in the performance of
his or her work. Possession of the authority to engage or the authority to
discharge is very strong evidence of the existence of an employer-employee
relationship.
b. The source of the beneficiarys salary and benefits
while in the United States (i.e., whether the beneficiary will be paid by the
U.S. or foreign affiliate of the petitioning company) is not controlling in
determining eligibility for L status. In addition, the employer-employee
relationship encompasses a situation in which the beneficiary will not be paid
directly by the petitioner, and such a beneficiary is not precluded from
establishing eligibility for L classification.
c. A beneficiary who will be employed in the United
States directly by a foreign company and who will not be controlled in any way
by (and thus, in fact, not have any employment relationship to) the foreign
companys office in the United States does not qualify as an intracompany
transferee. A beneficiary coming to the United States to serve as the chief
executive of the U.S. branch of the company would only have to show that he or
she receives general supervision or direction from higher level executives, the
board of directors, or the stockholders of the organization.
9 FAM 402.12-13 Qualifying
Experience Requirement
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. Continuous for One Year: INA
101(a)(15)(L) requires the beneficiary of an intracompany transferee petition
to have been employed continuously by the petitioner, or by an affiliate or
subsidiary thereof, for one year within the three years preceding the
beneficiarys application for admission into the United States.
b. Full-Time Employment: While
not expressly stated in the INA or regulations, INA 101(a)(15)(L) contemplates
that the beneficiarys qualifying experience with the petitioner must have been
continuous full-time employment, and not continuous part-time employment.
Several years of part-time employment equaling one year in aggregate cannot be
viewed as meeting the requirement.
c. Full-time services divided among affiliated
companies, each using the employee on a part-time basis, however, constitute
full-time employment if the aggregate time meets or exceeds the hours of a
full-time position.
d. Employment Abroad:
(1) The beneficiarys one year of qualifying
experience with the petitioner must be wholly outside the United States. Time
spent working for the petitioning firm in the United States does not qualify.
(2) Periods spent in the United States in any
authorized capacity on behalf of the foreign employer or a parent, branch,
affiliate, or subsidiary thereof, and brief trips to the United States for
business or pleasure, do not interrupt the continuity of the one year of
continuous employment abroad for L-1 status, but do not count toward
fulfillment of that requirement. Such periods spent in the United States may
follow the year of employment abroad and immediately precede application for
L-1 status, so long as the required one-year of qualifying employment during
the past three years has been served abroad.
9 FAM 402.12-14 Determining
Nature of Services
9 FAM 402.12-14(A) Nature of
Services Performed and to be Performed
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. In order to be classifiable under INA 101(a)(15)(L),
the services performed by the alien abroad, and those to be performed in the
United States, must involve either managerial capacity, executive capacity,
or specialized knowledge. The beneficiary of a blanket petition must meet
the higher standard of being a specialized knowledge professional, rather
than merely possessing specialized knowledge.
b. Qualifying Positions: The
following definitions in this section are used by DHS in evaluating the
positions to which L aliens are destined.
9 FAM 402.12-14(B) Managerial
or Executive Capacity
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. Managerial Capacity: Managerial
capacity means an assignment within an organization in which the employee
primarily:
(1) Manages the organization, or a department,
subdivision, function, or component of the organization;
(2) Supervises and controls the work of other
supervisory, professional, or managerial employees, or manages an essential
function within the organization, or a department or subdivision of the
organization;
(3) Has the authority to hire and fire or recommend
those as well as other personnel actions (such as promotion and leave authorization)
if another employee or other employees are directly supervised. If no other
employee is directly supervised, functions at a senior level within the
organizational hierarchy or with respect to the function managed; and
(4) Exercises discretion over the day-to-day
operations of the activity or function for which the employee has authority. A
first-line supervisor is not considered to be acting in a managerial capacity
merely by virtue of his or her supervisory duties unless the employees
supervised are professional.
b. Executive Capacity:
Executive capacity means an assignment within an organization in which the
employee primarily:
(1) Directs the management of the organization or a
major component or function of the organization;
(2) Establishes the goals and policies of the
organization, component, or function;
(3) Exercises wide latitude in discretionary
decision-making; and
(4) Receives only general supervision or direction
from higher level executives, the board of directors, or stockholders of the
organization.
c. An executive or managerial capacity requires a high
level of authority and a broad range of job responsibilities. Managers and
executives plan, organize, direct, and control an organizations major
functions and work through other employees to achieve the organizations
goals. In determining whether an alien supervises others, independent
contractors as well as company employees can be considered. The duties of a
position must primarily be of an executive or managerial nature, and a majority
of the executives or managers time must be spent on duties relating to policy
or operational management. This does not mean that the executive or manager
cannot regularly apply his or her professional expertise to a particular
problem. The definitions do not exclude activities that are common to
managerial or executive positions such as customer and public relations,
lobbying, and contracting.
d. An executive or manager may direct a function within
an organization. In general, however, individuals who control and directly
perform a function within an organization, but do not have subordinate staff
(except perhaps a personal staff), are more appropriately considered
specialized knowledge employees.
e. If a small or medium-sized business supports a
position wherein the duties are primarily executive or managerial, it can
qualify under the L category. However, neither the title of a position nor
ownership of the business is, by itself, an indicator of managerial or
executive capacity. The sole employee of a company may qualify as an executive
or manager, for L visa purposes, provided his or her primary function is to
plan, organize, direct, and control an organizations major functions through
other people.
9 FAM 402.12-14(C) Specialized
Knowledge Capacity
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. Specialized knowledge means special knowledge
possessed by an individual of the petitioning organizations product, service,
research, equipment, techniques, management, or other interests and its
application in international markets, or an advanced level of knowledge or
expertise in the organizations processes and procedures.
b. To serve in a specialized knowledge capacity, the
aliens knowledge must be different from or surpass the ordinary or usual
knowledge of an employee in the particular field and must have been gained
through significant prior experience with the petitioning organization. A
specialized knowledge employee must have an advanced level of expertise in his
or her organizations processes and procedures or special knowledge of the
organization, which is not readily available in the United States labor market.
c. Some characteristics of an employee who has
specialized knowledge are that he or she:
(1) Possesses knowledge that is valuable to the employers
competitiveness in the market place;
(2) Is uniquely qualified to contribute to the U.S.
employers knowledge of foreign operating conditions;
(3) Has been utilized as a key employee abroad and has
been given significant assignments which have enhanced the employers
productivity, competitiveness, image, or financial position; and
(4) Possesses knowledge, which can be gained only
through extensive prior experience with the employer.
9 FAM 402.12-14(D) Specialized
Knowledge Professional Capacity
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. Specialized Knowledge Professional:
Specialized knowledge professional means an individual who has
specialized knowledge as defined above and is a member of the professions as
specified in INA 101(a)(32).
b. A specialized knowledge professional must possess
the special or unusual knowledge specified in 9 FAM
402.12-14(C) above, and be a member of a profession as described in INA
101(a)(32). To qualify under the blanket petition provision (see 9 FAM
402.12-8(C) above), an alien must be a manager, executive, or specialized
knowledge professional.
9 FAM 402.12-14(E) L Status
Not Applicable to Skilled Workers
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
Petitions to accord L status may be approved for persons
with specialized knowledge, but not for persons who are merely skilled
workers. Being a skilled worker (i.e., one whose skill and knowledge enable
one to produce a product through physical or skilled labor) does not in itself
qualify an alien for the specialized knowledge category. Specialized
knowledge capability is based on the beneficiarys special knowledge of a
business firms product or service, management operations, decision-making
process, or similar elements that are not readily available in the U.S. labor
market rather than on his or her level of training or skill. INA 101(a)(15)(L)
was not intended to alleviate or remedy a shortage of U.S. workers; the
temporary worker provisions of INA 101(a)(15)(H) provide the appropriate means
for the admission of workers who are in short supply in the United States.
9 FAM 402.12-14(F) Beneficiary
Need Not Perform Same Work in the United States as Abroad
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
To qualify for an L visa, the beneficiary must be assigned
to a position in the United States in either the same category (i.e.,
managerial, executive, or involving specialized knowledge) as the position held
abroad, or in one of the other qualifying categories. The beneficiary need not
be coming to perform the same work that was performed abroad. Promotions within
the qualifying categories are possible (e.g., from specialized knowledge
employee to manager).
9 FAM 402.12-14(G) Full-time
Service Required but Not Entirely in the United States
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
In general, the intent of the L-1 classification is the
intracompany transfer to the United States of full-time executive, management,
or specialized knowledge personnel. However, while full-time employment by the
beneficiary is anticipated, INA 101(a)(15)(L) does not require that the
beneficiary perform full-time services within the United States. An executive
of a company with branch offices in Canada and the United States, for example,
could divide normal work hours between those offices and still qualify for an
L-1 visa. The alien's principal purpose while in the United States, however,
must be consistent with L status. Therefore, if an alien lived in the United
States and commuted to employment in Canada or Mexico, and only occasionally
worked in the United States, the alien would normally not qualify for L-1
status since the principal purpose for being in the United States would not
relate to L employment. An alien who lived in Canada and came to the United
States occasionally to work as an executive for the U.S. branch operation,
however, would normally qualify for L-1 status since that alien's principal
purpose for coming to the United States would be consistent with L
classification.
9 FAM 402.12-15 Temporariness
of Stay
(CT:VISA-322; 04-07-2017)
L aliens are excluded by law from INA 214(b). In
addition, INA 214(h) provides the fact that an alien has sought or will seek
permanent residence in the United States does not preclude him or her from
obtaining or maintaining L nonimmigrant status. The alien may legitimately
come to the United States as a nonimmigrant under the L classification and
depart voluntarily at the end of his or her authorized stay, and, at the same
time, lawfully seek to become a permanent resident of the United States.
Consequently, your evaluation of an applicants eligibility for an L visa must
not focus on the issue of temporariness of stay or immigrant intent.
9 FAM 402.12-16 Length of Stay
9 FAM 402.12-16(A) Admission
Only During Validity of Petition
(CT:VISA-322; 04-07-2017)
a. A beneficiary may be admitted to the United States
for the validity period of the petition, plus a period of up to ten days before
the validity period of the petition begins and ten days after it ends.
b. The beneficiary of a blanket petition may be
admitted for up to three years even though the initial validity period of the
blanket petition may expire before the end of the three-year period. If the
blanket petition will expire before the end of the three-year period, the
burden is on the petitioner to file to extend the validity of the blanket
petition, or to file an individual petition on the aliens behalf to authorize
an alien beneficiary's L status in the United States.
c. The admission period for any alien under INA
101(a)(15)(L) must not exceed three years unless an extension of stay (see 9 FAM
402.12-16(B) below) is granted.
9 FAM 402.12-16(B) Extensions
of Stay
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. For the beneficiary of an individual L petition, the
petitioner must request an extension of the aliens stay in the United States
on Form I-129. The effective dates of the petition extension and the
beneficiarys extension of stay, if authorized, must be the same.
b. When the alien is a beneficiary under a blanket
petition, the petitioner must file a new Form I-129-S, Nonimmigrant Petition
Based on Blanket L Petition, accompanied by a copy of the previous Form I-129-S,
and must concurrently request extension of the blanket petition with indefinite
validity if such validity has not already been granted.
c. Extensions of stay may be authorized in increments
of up to two years for beneficiaries of individual and blanket petitions. The
beneficiary must be physically present in the United States at the time the
extension of stay petition is filed. If the alien is required to leave the
United States for business or personal reasons while the extension requests are
pending, the petitioner may ask DHS to cable notification of the petition
extension to the consular office abroad where the alien will apply for another
visa. When the maximum allowable period of stay in L classification has been
reached (see 9 FAM
402.12-16(C) below), no further extensions may be granted.
9 FAM 402.12-16(C) Limitations
on Total Periods of Stay
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. The total period of stay for L aliens employed in a
specialized knowledge capacity may not exceed five years. The maximum
allowable period of stay for an alien employed in a managerial or executive
capacity may not exceed seven years. No further extensions may be granted once
these limits have been reached.
b. The total maximum period of stay will be calculated
by determining the actual total number of days the alien is lawfully admitted
and physically present in the United States in L category status.
Additionally, time spent in H status in the U.S. also accrues against the
maximum authorized period of stay in L status (and vice versa). See 8 CFR
214.2(l)(12). Time spent as an L-2 dependent does not count against the
maximum allowable period of stay available to a principal L-1 alien.
c. When an alien was initially admitted in a
specialized knowledge capacity and is later promoted to a managerial or
executive position, he or she must have been employed in the managerial or
executive position for at least six months in order to be eligible for the total
period of stay of seven years. The change to managerial or executive capacity
must have been approved by DHS in an amended, new, or extended petition at the
time that the change occurred or based on a new Blanket L I-129S petition
adjudication.
9 FAM 402.12-16(D) Readmission
After Maximum Total Period of Stay Reached
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. When a nonimmigrant has spent the maximum allowable
period of stay in the United States in L and/or H status, the alien may not be
issued a visa or be readmitted to the United States under the L or H visa
classification, nor may a new petition, extension, or change of status be
approved for that alien under INA 101(a)(15)(L) or (H), unless the alien has
resided and been physically present outside the United States for the immediate
past year.
b. Brief trips to the United States for business or
pleasure do not interrupt the one-year period abroad, but do not count towards
fulfillment of that requirement. Periods when the alien fails to maintain
status will be counted towards the applicable limitation; an alien may not
circumvent the limit by violating his or her status.
9 FAM 402.12-16(E) Exceptions
to Limitations on Readmission
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
The limitations on readmission described in 9 FAM
402.12-16(D) above will not apply to aliens who did not reside continually
in the United States, and, whose employment in the United States was seasonal
or intermittent, or was for an aggregate of six months or less per year, nor to
aliens who resided abroad and regularly commuted to the United States to engage
in part-time employment. The alien must provide clear and convincing proof
(e.g., evidence such as arrival and departure records, copies of tax returns,
records of employment abroad) that he or she qualifies for these exceptions.
The exceptions to limitations on readmission will not apply if the principal
aliens dependents have been living continuously in the United States in L-2
status.
9 FAM 402.12-17 Validity of L
Visas
9 FAM 402.12-17(A) Maximum
Validity of L Visa
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. The validity of an L visa may not exceed the period
of validity shown in the Visa Reciprocity and Country Documents Finder. You
should issue L visas with the maximum validity permitted based on reciprocity,
even though the initial validity period of the petition may expire earlier than
the visa. See 9 FAM
403.9-4(B) for discussion of the Department's policy regarding issuance of
full validity visas.
b. The annotation field of each L visa for individual
and blanket petition beneficiaries issued on or after March 15th, 2012 must
include either the petition expiration date as verified in PIMS or PCQS for
individual petitions, or the expiration of the approved Form I-129S for blanket
petitions
c. Posts are authorized to accept L visa applications
and issue visas to qualified applicants up to 90 days in advance of applicants'
beginning of employment status as noted on the Form I-797 or I-129S.
9 FAM 402.12-17(B) Limiting
Validity of L Visas
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
Consular officers may restrict visa validity in some cases
to less than the period of validity of the approved petition or authorized
period of stay (for example, on the basis of reciprocity or the terms of an
order waiving a ground of ineligibility). In any such case, in addition to the
other notations required on the L visa, please see the notations required per 9 FAM 403.9-5.
9 FAM 402.12-17(C) Reissuing
Limited L Visas
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
When an L visa has been issued with a validity of less
than the validity of the petition or authorized period of stay, consular
officers may reissue the visa any number of times within the validity period of
the petition or the authorized period of stay. If a fee is prescribed in the
Visa Reciprocity and Country Documents Finder, you must collect the visa
application fee for each re-issuance of the L visa.
9 FAM 402.12-17(D) L Visa
Renewals
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. When an applicant applies for a new L visa before
the current L visa expires, a you must cancel the current visa and, if
otherwise qualified, issue a new L visa for the maximum validity permitted
based on reciprocity.
b. When the applicants current petition will expire
shortly or the applicant has a new petition number with a validity date in the
future, you must annotate the new visa with the current valid petition
information only. U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) will verify the
existence of a valid petition upon entry at a Port of Entry regardless of the
annotation on the visa.
9 FAM 402.12-18 Spouse and
Children of L-1 Aliens
9 FAM 402.12-18(A) Derivative
Classification
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
a. The spouse and children of an L-1 nonimmigrant who
are accompanying or following to join the principal alien in the United States
are entitled to L-2 classification and are subject to the same visa validity,
period of admission, and limitation of stay as the L-1 alien. For a general
discussion of the classification of the spouse and children of a nonimmigrant,
(see 9 FAM
402.1-4 and 9 FAM 402.1-5).
b. A Canadian citizen spouse or child who is
accompanying or following to join a Canadian citizen in L-1 status must be
admitted as an L-2 nonimmigrant without requiring a visa. A non-Canadian
citizen spouse or child must have an L-2 visa when applying for admission.
c. If an L-1 nonimmigrant has maintained his or her
family in the United States in L-2 status, he or she cannot qualify for
exception from the five to seven-year limitation on total period of stay (see 9 FAM
402.12-16(E) above).
9 FAM 402.12-18(B) Verifying
Principal Alien is Maintaining Status
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
When an alien applies for an L-2 visa to follow-to-join a
principal alien already in the United States, you must be satisfied that the
principal alien is maintaining L-1 status before issuing the visa. You must
also refer to 9 FAM
402.12-6(D) above which discusses checking the status of approved petitions
in the Consular Consolidated Database (CCD).
9 FAM 402.12-18(C) Employment
in the United States Authorized for L-2 Dependent Aliens
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
Public Law 107-125 provides for work authorization for
nonimmigrant spouses (L-2) of intracompany transferees (L-1). Therefore, in
the case of an L-2 spouse who is accompanying or following to join the L-1
principal alien, the Attorney General must authorize the alien spouse to engage
in employment in the United States and provide the spouse with an employment
authorized endorsement or other appropriate work permit.
9 FAM 402.12-19 Servants of L
Nonimmigrants
(CT:VISA-1; 11-18-2015)
Personal or domestic servants seeking to accompany or
follow to join L nonimmigrant employers may be issued B-1 visas, provided they
meet the requirements of 9 FAM
402.2-5(D)(3).
9 FAM 402.12-20 Former Exchange
Visitors Subject to Two-Year Foreign Residence Requirement
(CT:VISA-322; 04-07-2017)
See 9 FAM
302.13-2(D) for instructions regarding
requests for waivers of the two-year foreign residence requirement by L visa
applicants who are former exchange visitors and subject to the two-year
requirement of INA 212(e).