The Trump administration is set to restart thousands of frozen green card and asylum cases after a federal court ruling.
Immigrants from 39 countries affected by the Trump administration's travel ban have had their applications left in limbo.
The policy could be “devastating” for tens of thousands of people in Philadelphia who have applied for a green card via the adjustment of status process.
A new federal memo could force hundreds of thousands of visa holders to leave the U.S.—and wait abroad—to apply for permanent residency.
Immigration attorney Yossel Balisok says new USCIS guidance could make green card approvals harder to secure and raises new ...
A dramatic policy change to the green card application process last Friday will now force applicants to return to their home ...
Because employees have routinely been able to adjust status from within the United States, U.S. employers with immigration ...
The Trump administration’s announcement that people who want to apply for green cards must leave the U.S. and apply in their home countries sent shockwaves through some immigrant communities.
Immigrants who have ever been in the country illegally—or who have had gaps between visas—could face particular hurdles.
The surprise change is the latest step by White House to make legal immigration more difficult for foreigners already in the U.S. and for those hoping to come here.
USCIS has made green card applications harder by changing Adjustment of Status from a default to a discretionary process.
The new USCIS policy PM-602-0199 pushing green card processing overseas could postpone U.S. tax residency, worldwide taxation ...