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DOL Backlog
Processing Centers Wrap Up LC Cases
Posted
Oct 19, 2007
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The U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), announced on October 1, 2007 that they
have cleared the labor certification (LC) backlog, and did so within their
scheduled timeframe. The announcement indicates that 99 percent of the
original 363,000 backlogged LC cases are completed. The remaining LC cases
await responses from the petitioning employers, rather than action on the
part of the DOL.
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DOL Report Appears Accurate
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In comparing the DOL report to our own experience with cases at the Backlog
Processing Centers (BPCs), it appears to us at the Murthy Law Firm that the
DOL report is accurate. When the BPCs began their work in March 2005, many
cases were moved to those centers. These cases were filed over the course of
many years; some as early as 2001. At this time, we have only a handful of
cases remaining at the BPCs. It is correct that they are waiting for action
from the employers / sponsors on these cases. Several of our pending
cases have been approved recently, but the actual certified forms are yet to
arrive from the DOL in the mail.
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Bumpy and Slow BPC Processing Seems to be
Resolved
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Many of us in the immigration community were quite skeptical as to the DOL's
ability to process and adjudicate the backlogged cases by their original
goal of September 30, 2007. The process was not always smooth, particularly
in the beginning. The DOL initially did not have systems for employers or
their attorneys to verify the existence and location of pending cases. There
was no way to assure clients that their cases were filed and pending, and no
way to obtain proof of the filings, which was required in order to file and
obtain H1B extensions in many instances. This was resolved, fortunately,
with an eMail system that worked well.
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The DOL's procedure of sending out continuation letters (also known as
45-day letters), also did not go smoothly at first. In an effort to narrow
their caseload to only the cases that were still viable, the 45-day letter
system created its own work and new set of problems. Once the DOL actually
did begin adjudicating the LC cases, the case approvals trickled in slowly,
and the promised method of First-In / First-Out (FIFO) was nonexistent. It
was difficult to see how this task would ever be completed.
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Conclusion
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In the end, the DOL did get through this enormous undertaking of relocating
all pending labor certification filings, from both state and regional
offices, to the two BPCs, and then adjudicating them in two and a half
years. This backlog reduction effort and the new PERM system for labor
certification filings have made the labor certification system much fairer,
in terms of processing times. In the past, the location of the LC filing
made the difference between a processing time measured in months, and one
measured in years. With PERM, while there are still marked differences
between the processing times at the two centers, the processing is measured
in months, if not weeks. We at the Murthy Law Firm congratulate the DOL on
the completion of this daunting task and on the improvements that are now in
place, in terms of timing and consistency in the labor certification
process.

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