245i Adjustment of Status Approval Based on Approved EB-2 I-140 for Filipino Hydraulic Power Unit Design and Installation Project Manager in Houston Texas

CASE: Adjustment of Status / 245i / I-140 (EB-2)    
APPLICANT: Filipino Hydraulic Power Unit Design and Installation Project Manager

LOCATION: Houston, TX

 

Our client is from the Philippines. His prospective employer was willing to do an immigration petition for him, second-preference. Our client has a Bachelor’s degree in Maritime Transportation and has more than 5 years of work experience as a Hydraulic Equipment Installer / Operator. After talking to our client, our firm concluded that his employer can petition him as a Hydraulic Power Unit Design and Installation Project Manager. Based on our client’s education and work background, our office determined that he is eligible for EB-2 classification.

Prior to filing PERM, our firm prepared the prevailing wage request, job order, advertisements, internal job posting, recruitment report, and all other steps which are important pre-PERM filing. Take note that PERM could be filed at least 60 days from the job posting date or 30 days from the last ad. On September 12, 2016, the prevailing wage request was filed.  After we obtained Prevailing Wage determination, our office filed the job order on January 10, 2017. On May 3, 2017, we promptly filed PERM. Eventually, on August 11, 2017, the PERM Labor Certification was approved – an EB2 position for the Filipino beneficiary.

We then proceeded with the I-140 Petition filing. We submitted the “ability to pay” letter for the I-140 petition application. We included the job offer letter, employer’s tax records, and other necessary supporting documents. The I-140 Petition was filed on September 6, 2017 via premium processing service. Eventually, on September 21, 2017, the I-140 EB-2 Petition for our Filipino client was approved without any Request for Evidence (RFE).

Then, he retained our office for the adjustment of status applications for him and his family members. In fact, our client failed to maintain his status in the United States; nonetheless, he could be eligible to file adjustment of status under the INA Section 245(i). Our client is the derivative beneficiary of an I-130 F3 petition filed by his US Citizen grandfather to his mother filed back in April 1993 and approved in July 1993. Our client was 14 years old at that time.

INA Section 245(i) allows a person to apply to adjust status notwithstanding the fact that he overstayed his immigration status.  Thus, a person who entered legally but overstayed can adjust status based on an approved and current I-140 EB2 Petition if he paid the special fee required of $1000 and files Supplement A to I-485, as long as he is the beneficiary or derivative beneficiary of any approvable immigrant petition under section 204 (including I-130 F3 Petitions) that was filed on or before April 30, 2001 and proves physical presence as of December 21, 2000. INA 245(i). Beneficiaries or derivative beneficiaries who were petitioned prior to January 14, 1998 do not have to prove physical presence in 2000.

According to the Robert Bach’s “Accepting Applications for Adjustment of Status Under Section 245(i) of the “Immigration and Nationality Act” memorandum (“Bach Memo June 10, 1999).  

“Section 245(i) defines the term “beneficiary” to include a spouse or child eligible to receive a visa under section 203(d) of the Act’ This applies to spouses or children ‘accompanying or following to join’  the principal alien…. The spouse or child of a grandfathered alien as of January 14 is also grandfathered for 245(i) purposes. This means that the spouse or child is grandfathered irrespective of whether the spouse or child adjusts with the principal. The pre-January 15 spouse or child also are grandfathered even after losing the status of spouse or child, such as by divorce or by becoming 21 years of age…

Often, a principal alien who has filed a visa petition or labor certification application will have a “child” who reaches the age of 21, and thus no longer meet the statutory definition of child, before the petition or application is approved or the principal alien adjusts status. However, such an “aged-out” beneficiary will remain a beneficiary for the purpose of determining whether he or she may use section 245(i) to adjust status.”

(Bach Memo June 10, 1999)

Thus, since our client was the derivative beneficiary of an I-130 F3 Petition filed in April 1993, which was before January 14, 1998, he and his family are eligible for adjustment of status by virtue of INA 245(i) despite their overstay.

Our office filed their I-485 adjustment of status applications under the 245(i) category for our client on October 24, 2017.  Everything went smoothly and the receipt notices and fingerprint appointment all came on time. We thoroughly prepared our clients prior to their interviews as well.

On August 17, 2018, our client was interviewed at the Houston, Texas USCIS Field Office. Attorney Sung Hee (Glen) Yu, Esq. from our office accompanied our clients as well. Eventually, their green card applications were approved by the USCIS on November 14, 2018.

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