Family-sponsored Preferences

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Annual Report of Immigrant Visa Applicants in the Family-sponsored and Employment-based preferences Registered at the National Visa Center as of November 1, 2009 Most prospective immigrant visa applicants qualify for status under the law on the basis of family relationships or employer sponsorship. Entitlement to visa processing in these classes is established ordinarily through approval by Citizenship and Immigration Services (CIS) of a petition filed on the applicant's behalf. The petitions of applicants who will be processed at an overseas post are forwarded by CIS to the Department of State; applicants in categories subject to numerical limit are registered on the visa waiting list. Each case is assigned a priority (i.e., registration) date based on the filing date accorded to the petition. Visa issuance within each numerically limited category is possible only if the applicant's priority date is within the applicable cut-off dates which are published each month by the Department of State in the Visa Bulletin. Family and Employment preference applicants compete for visa numbers within their respective categories on a worldwide basis according to priority date; a per-country limit on such preference immigrants set by INA 202 places a maximum on the amount of visas which may be issued in a single year to applicants from any one country, however. In October, the Department of State asked the National Visa Center (NVC) at Portsmouth, New Hampshire to report the totals of applicants on the waiting list in the various numerically-limited immigrant categories. Applications for adjustment of status under INA 245 which are pending at CIS Offices are not included in the tabulation of the immigrant waiting list data which is being provided at this time. As such, the following figures ONLY reflect petitions which the Department of State has received, and do not include the significant number of applications held with the CIS Offices. The following figures have been compiled from the NVC report submitted to the Department on November 3, 2009, and show the number of immigrant visa applicants on the waiting list in the various preferences and subcategories subject to numerical limit. All figures reflect persons registered under each respective numerical limitation, i.e., the totals represent not only principal applicants or petition beneficiaries, but their spouses and children entitled to derivative status under INA 203(d) as well.

Family-sponsored Preferences Category FAMILY FIRST 245,516 FAMILY SECOND TOTAL 842,762 2A-Spouses/Children: 324,864 2B- Adult Sons/Daughters: 517,898 FAMILY THIRD 553,280 FAMILY FOURTH 1,727,897 TOTAL 3,369,455 Employment-based Preferences Category EMPLOYMENT FIRST 3,601 EMPLOYMENT SECOND 6,295 EMPLOYMENT THIRD TOTAL 119,759 Skilled Workers: 103,448 Other Workers: 16,311 EMPLOYMENT FOURTH TOTAL 529 EMPLOYMENT FIFTH TOTAL 325 TOTAL 130,509 GRAND TOTAL 3,499,964

Immigrant Waiting List By Country Immigrant visa issuances during fiscal year 2010 are limited by the terms of INA 201 to no more than 226,000 in the family-sponsored preferences and approximately 150,000 in the employment-based preferences. (Visas for "Immediate Relatives" (i.e., spouses, unmarried children under the age of 21 years, and parents) of U.S. citizens are not subject to numerical limitation, however.) It should by no means be assumed that once an applicant is registered, the case is then continually included in the waiting list totals unless and until a visa is issued. The consular procedures mandate a regular culling of visa cases to remove from the count those unlikely to see further action, so that totals are not unreasonably inflated. If, for example, a consular post receives no response within one year from an applicant to whom the visa application instruction letter (i.e., the consular "Packet 3" letter) is sent when the movement of the visa availability cut-off date indicates a visa may become available within a reasonable time frame, the case is considered "inactive" under the consular procedures and is no longer included in waiting list totals. The thirteen countries with the highest number of waiting list registrants are listed below; together these represent 79% of the total. This list includes all countries with at least 50,000 persons on the waiting list. The per-country limit in INA 202 sets an annual maximum on the amount of preference visas which may be issued to applicants from any one country; the 2010 per-country limit will be approximately 26,260. Country Mexico 1,178,761 Philippines 482,694 China-mainland born 197,559 India 194,954 Vietnam 184,692 Dominican Republic 115,565 Cuba 70,069 Bangladesh 67,662 El Salvador 65,150 Pakistan 57,881 Haiti 54,716 Korea, South 52,196 Jamaica 51,782 All Others 726,283 Worldwide 3,499,964

Immigrant Waiting List By Preference Category FAMILY-SPONSORED PREFERENCES Family FIRST Preference: The worldwide Family FIRST preference numerical limitation is 23,400. The top ten countries with the highest F1 waiting list totals are: Family First Percent of Preference Category Country Waiting List Mexico 68,628 27.9% Philippines 35,789 14.6% Jamaica 16,947 6.9% Dominican Republic 13,594 5.5% Haiti 11,503 4.7% Vietnam 7,764 3.2% Cuba 7,402 3.0% Guyana 7,378 3.0% El Salvador 6,124 2.5% Colombia 5,347 2.2% All Others 65,040 26.5% 245,516 100% Cases are being added to the waiting list in this category not only by the approval of new FIRST preference petitions, but also through automatic conversion of pending 2B cases into FIRST preference upon the naturalization of the petitioner. Given the 517,898 Family 2B waiting list and the several years' interval between 2B petition filing and visa issuance, it is likely that increasing numbers of petitioners will be naturalized and the petitions converted to Family FIRST preference long before 2B visas become available. The prospect is for increasing oversubscription in the FIRST preference, with slower advances in the worldwide cut-off date the consequence. Only two countries, Philippines and Mexico, have FIRST preference cut-off dates which are earlier than the worldwide date.

Family SECOND Preference: The total Family SECOND preference waiting list figure is 842,762. Of these, 324,864 (38.5%) are spouses and children of permanent residents of the United States (the 2A class), and 517,898 (61.5%) are adult unmarried sons/daughters of permanent residents (the 2B class). The Family SECOND preference represents 25% of the total Family preference waiting list. It will receive 114,200 visa numbers for FY-2010, just over half of the 226,000 family preference total; 77% of SECOND preference numbers are provided to 2A applicants, while the remaining 23% go to the 2B class. 2A: About 88,000 visa numbers are expected to be available during FY-2010. The top five countries with the highest 2A waiting list totals are: Family 2A Percent of Preference Category Country Waiting List Mexico 173,631 53.4% Dominican Republic 25,694 7.9% Philippines 12,117 3.7% Cuba 12,073 3.7% El Salvador 11,741 3.6% All Others 89,608 27.6% 324,864 100% The 1990 Act increased the number of visas which are available for the 2A class, which provided a greater equalization of the visa waiting period for applicants from all countries. At present, only Mexico has a visa cut-off date earlier than that for all other countries. It is apparent, however, that the large waiting list will ensure the continued oversubscription and a considerable delay between the filing of a petition and the applicant's turn for visa issuance being reached. One result of the extended wait for a 2A visa is that some of the children (i.e., under 21 years of age) registered in this class will not be reached for visas before their 21st birthday. In such situation, they are automatically moved into the 2B class (for unmarried adult sons/daughters of permanent residents) as soon as they turn 21. The wait for a 2B visa is even longer than in 2A. The four year interval between the cut-off and calendar dates for most countries assures that many petitioners will be eligible to naturalize before 2A visa numbers become available for their spouses and children. Upon naturalization of the petitioner, a pending 2A case is converted automatically into the "Immediate Relative" visa category, which is not subject to numerical limit and in which, therefore, there is no visa waiting period. As a result, the amount of cases being processed in the "Immediate Relative" category is likely to increase, and the rate of new F2A filings would stabilize the waiting list.

2B: Visa numbers for this class of adult sons and daughters are expected to total about 26,000 during FY-2010. The waiting list far exceeds the annual limit. The top ten countries with the highest 2B waiting list totals are: Family 2B Percent of Preference Category Country Waiting List Mexico 222,006 42.9% Philippines 55,365 10.7% Dominican Republic 49,903 9.6% Haiti 18,739 3.6% El Salvador 18,608 3.6% China-mainland born 18,496 3.6% Cuba 11,184 2.2% Vietnam 9,380 1.8% Jamaica 8,158 1.6% India 7,894 1.5% All Others 98,165 19.0% 517,898 100% As noted above, some of the additional 2B cases are applicants converted from the 2A class upon their turning 21. Family THIRD Preference: The annual visa limit is 23,400. Two oversubscribed countries (Philippines and Mexico) have sufficiently heavy demand in this preference to require a cut-off date substantially earlier than the worldwide date. The top ten countries with the highest F3 waiting list totals are: Family Third Percent of Preference Category Country Waiting List Philippines 136,111 24.6% Mexico 90,897 16.4% Vietnam 54,088 9.8% India 36,432 6.6% China-mainland born 21,937 4.0% Cuba 19,661 3.6% Poland 15,066 2.7% Guyana 11,465 2.1% Jamaica 11,162 2.0% Pakistan 9,866 1.8% All Others 146,595 26.5% 553,280 100%

Family FOURTH Preference: Applicants registered in the Family FOURTH preference total 1,727,897. Annual visa issuances are limited to 65,000. Because of the demand so much in excess of available visas, the waiting period is longer than in any other category. The countries listed below have the largest number of FOURTH preference applicants: Family Fourth Percent of Preference Category Country Waiting List Mexico 618,871 35.8% Philippines 195,892 11.3% China-mainland born 134,178 7.8% India 120,252 7.0% Vietnam 108,425 6.3% Bangladesh 58,417 3.4% Pakistan 39,861 2.3% China-Taiwan 31,633 1.8% South Korea 30,069 1.7% Colombia 24,224 1.4% All Others 366,075 21.2% 1,727,897 100% The steadily growing waiting period in this preference, now approaches ten years for countries of most favorable visa availability and even longer for some oversubscribed countries.

EMPLOYMENT-BASED PREFERENCES It is important to note that approximately ninety percent of all Employment preference immigrants are currently being processed as adjustment of status cases at CIS offices. Cases pending with CIS are not counted in the consular waiting list tally which is presented below. Therefore, in several Employment categories the waiting list totals being provided below understate real immigrant demand. The Employment waiting list counts not only prospective workers, but also their spouses and children entitled under the law to derivative preference status. Employment FIRST Preference: Top countries are: Employment Percent of First Category Country Preference Waiting List Canada 388 10.8% China-mainland born 385 10.7% Great Britain 375 10.4% India 249 6.9% Japan 209 5.8% Korea, South 170 4.7% Germany 114 3.2% Venezuela 109 3.0% Iran 108 3.0% Mexico 108 3.0% All Others 1,386 38.5% Worldwide 3,601 100% Visa availability is "current" for all countries. Employment SECOND Preference: Top countries are: Employment Percent of Second Category Country Preference Waiting List India 2,996 47.6% China-mainland born 936 14.9% Korea, South 386 6.1% Philippines 237 3.8% Canada 191 3.0% All Others 1,549 24.6% Worldwide 6,295 100% This category is "current" at present for all but two countries.

Employment THIRD Preference: Top countries are: Employment Third Preference: Percent of Skilled Worker/ Waiting List Professional in These Country Components Classes Philippines 45,331 43.8% India 20,467 19.8% China-mainland born 7,122 6.9% Korea, South 3,361 3.2% Mexico 2,339 2.3% All Others 24,828 24.0% Worldwide 103,448 100% Employment Third Other Workers : Top Countries are: Employment Third Percent of Preference: Waiting List Other Worker in This Country Component Class China-mainland born 5,079 31.1% Korea, South 3,712 22.8% Mexico 2,212 13.5% Philippines 1,756 10.8% India 533 3.3% All Others 3,019 18.5% Worldwide 16,311 100% With visa demand well in excess of the Employment Third Preference annual limits, a significant wait for a visa must be expected to continue for the indefinite future.

Employment FOURTH Preference: Top countries are: Percent of Employment Waiting List Fourth in These Country Preference Classes India 111 21.0% Korea, South 39 7.4% Afghanistan 28 5.3% Iran 28 5.3% Mexico 23 4.3% Philippines 23 4.3% All Others 277 52.4% Worldwide 529 100% Employment FIFTH Preference: Top countries are: Percent of Employment Waiting List Fifth in These Country Preference Classes China-mainland born 126 38.8% Iran 63 19.4% Korea, South 57 17.5% All Others 79 24.3% Worldwide 325 100%

Family Immigrant Waiting List By Country The six countries with the highest number of Family sponsored waiting list registrants are listed below; together these represent just over 67% of the total. (The per-country limit in INA 202 sets an annual maximum on the amount of Family preference visas which may be issued to applicants from any one country; the FY-2010 per-country limit will be approximately 15,820.) Family Preferences Country Mexico 1,174,033 Philippines 435,274 Vietnam 184,516 China-mainland born 183,910 India 170,589 Dominican Republic 115,478 All Others 1,105,655 Worldwide 3,369,455 Family Immigrant Waiting List By Region A breakdown of the NVC waiting list by region is: Region Africa 69,293 Asia 1,352,539 Europe 110,048 N. America* 1,640,538 Oceania 9,261 S. America 187,776 Family 3,369,455 *North America includes Canada, Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean.

Employment Immigrant Waiting List By Country The five countries with the highest number of Employment-based waiting list registrants are listed below; together these represent 75% of the total. This list includes all countries with at least 100,000 persons on the waiting list. (The per-country limit in INA 202 sets an annual maximum on the amount of Employment preference visas which may be issued to applicants from any one country; the FY-2010 per-country limit will be approximately 10,440.) Employment Preferences Country Philippines 47,420 India 24,365 China-mainland born 13,649 Korea, South 7,725 Mexico 4,728 All Others 32,622 Worldwide 130,509 Employment Immigrant Waiting List By Region A breakdown of the NVC waiting list by region is: Region Africa 3,213 Asia 104,370 Europe 7,783 N. America* 9,573 Oceania 336 S. America 5,234 Employment 130,509 *North America includes Canada, Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean.