Title: Fee Waivers Under the New Regulations
1Fee Waivers Under the New Regulations
- Web-Based Conference Call Training for Refugee
Service Providers - Peggy Gleason Laura Burdick
- Catholic Legal Immigration Network, Inc. (CLINIC)
- September 27, 2007
2Overview
- Background and recent history of fee increases
- Advocacy on the fee increases
- Fee waiver background and requirements
- Nuts and bolts of applying
- Practice tips
3Fee Increases
- First announced in the Federal Register on
February 1 - Have increased application fees by average of 66
- Justification to pay for improvements in
customer service, security systems, and
infrastructure
4The Problem
- INA allows USCIS to fund its services entirely
through fees (rather than tax dollars) and
Congress does not provide any regular, annual
appropriations for USCIS operating expenses - INA 286 (m) fees for providing adjudication
and naturalization services may be set at a level
that will ensure recovery of the full costs of
providing all such services, including the costs
of similar services provided without charge to
asylum applicants or other immigrants. Such fees
may also be set at a level that will recover any
additional costs associated with the
administration of the fees collected.
5The Problem, contd
- Congress requires USCIS to audit the costs of
processing applications every two years, and
adjust fees accordingly - Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990 USCIS must
review, on a biennial basis, the fees,
royalties, rents, and other charges imposed by
the agency for services and things of value it
provides, and make recommendations on revising
those charges to reflect costs incurred by it in
providing those services and things of value.
6Recent History of Increases
- Increases occurred in 1998, 2002, 2004, and 2005
- In October 2005, USCIS imposed a 10 average per
application fee increase for inflation
7New Fee Schedule (effective for applications
filed on or after July 30, 2007)
- N-400 from 330 to 595
- N-336 from 265 to 605
- I-485 from 325 to 930
- N-600 from 255 to 460
- Biometrics from 70 to 80
- Total citizenship application fee 675
8Procedures for Applications Erroneously Rejected
for Wrong Fee
- If rejected by S.C., re-submit same application
packet to S.C. with cover letter explanation,
Attn. Case Resolution Unit - If rejected by lock box, re-submit same
application packet with cover letter explanation
to USCIS, 427 S. LaSalle, 3rd Floor, Chicago, IL
60605-1029, Attn. Dennis Sharkey, with notation
Do Not Open in Mail Room - Will be given date of original receipt
9Advocacy on the Fee Increases
- USCIS accepted public comments for 60 days after
the initial, February Federal Register
announcement, until April 2, 2007 - More than 3,900 public comments received
- Comments are summarized in Federal Register
announcement dated May 30, 2007 - Effective date of increase was July 30, 2007
10Advocacy on the Fee Increases, contd
- Congressional hearing of the House Judiciary
Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship took
place February 14 - Proposed legislation on March 7 by Sen. Obama and
Rep. Gutierrez (Citizenship Promotion Act of
2007, S. 795, H.R. 1379) would halt increases and
provide appropriations for application processing - Proposed legislation on July 30 by Rep. Lofgren
would void fee increases - Lawsuit filed on August 28 by Immigrant Law Group
of Oregon
11Fee Waivers
- Allowed under 8 C.F.R. 103.7 (c) any of the
fees prescribed may be waived in any case in
which the alien is able to substantiate that he
or she is unable to pay the prescribed fee. - Based on inability to pay the fee
- Adjudicated by the USCIS office where application
is filed - Discretionary, varies by USCIS office
12Fee Waivers
- No USCIS form to standardize process
- USCIS recently said it would create better
informational materials for fee waiver applicants - High approval rates of 65-85 over the last year
(June 06 June 07), but not broken down by
type of application
13Fee Waivers Under the New Rule
- Only allowed for certain applications, including
N-400, N-336, N-600 - Not allowed for I-485, unless applicant is an
asylee or other group not subject to public
charge - Note refugees are exempt from I-485 fee (do not
have to pay biometrics fee, either this is new
policy) - New rule allows fee waiver for biometrics fee as
well as application fee if application fee is
waived, biometrics fee is also waived
14Fee Waiver Requirements
- Refer to policy guidance issued on 3/4/04,
available at http//www.uscis.gov/files/pressrele
ase/FeeWaiverGd3404.pdf - And new policy guidance issued 7/20/07, at
http//www.uscis.gov/files/pressrelease/FeeWaiver0
72007.pdf
15Fee Waiver Requirements Situations and Criteria
- USCIS will look at certain situations and
criteria - Public Benefits. Whether, within the last 180
days, you qualified for or received a federal
means-tested public benefit - Low Income. Whether your annual household income
on which taxes were paid for the most recent tax
year is at or below the poverty level - Age. Whether you are elderly (age 65 or over) at
this time
16Fee Waiver Requirements, contd
- Situations and criteria
- Disability. Whether you have a disability that
has been determined by the SSA, HHS, VA, or other
federal agency - Dependents. Whether you have dependents in
household who are seeking derivative status or
benefits concurrently - Special Situation. Whether you are in a special
situation that requires humanitarian or
compassionate consideration
17Fee Waiver Requirements Overall Financial
Picture
- USCIS also looks at overall financial picture
- Household members and their income
- Applicants income
- Applicants assets
- Applicants expenses
- Must submit documentation showing that you meet
the requirements
18Highlights from the USCIS Policy Guidance
- USCIS officers retain broad discretionary
authority - No automatic waiver based on one or more
situations/criteria (i.e. receipt of public
benefits) - Each case is unique and should be considered upon
its own merits - Will look at overall financial picture
19Highlights from the USCIS Policy Guidance, contd
- For household income, household is defined by
Census Bureau guidelines as all persons who
occupy a housing unit, whether related or not - Will look at any extraordinary expenditures of
applicant or dependents - Will look at monetary contributions received from
adult children, dependents, and other people
living in the household
20USCIS Policy Guidance, contd
- How to determine inability to pay?
- July 20, 2007 memo vague will apply totality of
the circumstances, and look to age, disability,
household income, receipt of federal means-tested
benefit in last 180 days and other relevant
evidence - March 4, 2004 Yates memo specific documentation
and process
21USCIS Policy Guidance, contd
- Authority 8 CFR 103.7 (c) which fees can be
waived, which exempt - Broad discretionary power to decide. Adjudicating
office to review with recommendations, decided by
supervisor. - NB Discretion is bound by fairness and
consistency. If exercise of discretion is
arbitrary or capricious, it may be reversed.
22Nuts and Bolts of Applying
- Send fee waiver request with supporting documents
(do not send fee in the alternative) - No USCIS form, but use CLINIC form
(http//www.cliniclegal.org/Refugee/feewaivers.htm
l ) and supporting documents to apply - Put large notation on mailing envelope, FEE
WAIVER REQUEST ENCLOSED and top of application
to flag it - INS memo in late 1998 directed field offices to
adjudicate waiver requests within 5 working days - No appeal, but can reapply with additional
documents if receive denial
23Nuts and Bolts of Applying, contd
- Per 2004 memo, useful documents include
- Sources of income pay stubs, employment
letters, tax returns - Household members names, dob, residence, their
income sources - Show receipt of means tested benefit i.e. TANF,
SSI, food stamps, CHIP, non emergency Medicaid in
last 180 days -
24More Fee Waiver Evidence
- Assets detail what, value, debt
- Prove humanitarian or compassionate special
circumstances - Show essential expenses including rent/mortgage,
utilities, medical, food, clothing, child care,
transport, credit debts, etc.
25How Much Documentation?
- Check local practice 2004 USCIS memo suggest
extensive documentation, local standards may be
less stringent - 2004 memo states officer must consider household
members in detail must consider income from
dependents and effect of extraordinary expenses
26Documentation
- Income when is it low enough to show unable to
pay? - 2004 memo says look to last tax return to see if
below poverty income guidelines (refer to
http//aspe.os.dhhs.gov/poverty/07poverty.shtml
for 2007 HHS guidelines) - Elderly (65 and over when waiver sent) given
special consideration - Disabled as determined by SSA or other federal
agency show verification
27Documentation, contd
- Note that TPS fee waivers have separate standard
8 CFR 244.20 inability to pay judged by last
3 months, if essential expenses exceed gross
income - TPS regs allow declarations if other evidence of
income/expense not available
28Fee Waivers Practice Tips
- Multiple family members as applicants each need
own waiver but should include copy of
principals fee waiver in each packet - If household member not contributing income but
living together, explain and document financial
picture - Translator certification at end of income/expense
statement
29Fee Waivers - Challenges
- SEIU v. Chertoff challenges 2007 fee schedule as
an unlawful revenue-raising measure beyond the
powers of USCIS to promulgate - NW Immigrants Rights Project
- www.Ilgrp.com
30Questions?
- Laura Burdick
- CLINIC
- Tel 202-635-5820
- Fax 202-635-2649
- E-mail lburdick_at_cliniclegal.org