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Travel after
Change-of-Status Approval with Future Start Date
Posted
May 06, 2005
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The USCIS has clarified the issue regarding the continued validity of a
previously filed and approved change-of-status petition with a future start
date, when a person travels abroad after such approval but seeks to enter on
a prior status.
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This clarification is useful as many employers have,
since April 1, 2005, filed H1B petitions reflecting future start dates under
the FY2006 H1B quota; effective from October 1, 2005 in many instances.
Although most lawyers advise their clients against international travel
after filing petitions with changes of status, recent clarification from the
USCIS may help individuals to travel more freely than before, without
jeopardizing the previously-approved petition and change of status effective
with a future start date.
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How Does the Last-Action Rule Apply During
International Travel?
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The basic question posed was, "What happens if the USCIS has approved a
person's status and petition with a future start date and, thereafter, the
person travels outside of the United States, reentering in the present
(unchanged) status prior to the future start date?" We know that, for a
person who has obtained, for example, an H1B petition approval with a change
of status and who remains in the U.S. until the H1B start date, that
person's status would change as of the date listed on the H1B approval
notice. So, the question is whether the intervening international travel
changes the equation under the "last-action rule" where the last action of
the USCIS governs one's status.
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The USCIS responded that the travel does not change the equation. The USCIS,
through Efren Hernandez, Chief, Business and Trade Services Branch, reasoned
that the last action would not be the travel and reentry in the prior
status, but the previously-approved petition and change of status with a
future start date. The travel does not invalidate the previously-approved
USCIS change of status effective from a future date. This is because the
last action regarding the person's status governs.
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Example - Filing a COS from F-1 to H1B with
Future Start Date
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The question posed to the USCIS assumes that a person is in F-1 status and
an employer is filing for a change of status to H1B with a start date six
months after the time of filing. So, on April 1, 2005,
the employer files for an H1B with an October 1, 2005 start date. Premium
processing is used, so the case is approved on May 1, 2005, with a change of
status from F-1 to H1B. The I-94 reflecting the change of status is attached
to the approval notice. The person's F-1 (presumably Optional Practical
Training) is valid, so s/he decides to travel outside the U.S. after May 1,
2005, returning to the U.S. on the F-1 on September 1, 2005, one month prior
to the H1B start date of October 1, 2005.
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So, the
question posed is whether, after the international travel, the
previously-approved change of status from F-1 to H1B, with an effective date
from October 1, 2005, is still valid, or is the last action of the USCIS
considered to be the F-1 stamp made on I-94 card at the U.S. port of entry
on September 1, 2005.
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USCIS Reasoning of "Later in Time" Governs
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The USCIS stated that the change of status would automatically take effect
on the effective date of the H1B petition / change-of-status Notice of
Action of October 1, 2005, in this example. The intervening admission to the
U.S. does not override this later effective date. The "last action" rule
does not change this fact because the last action that has been taken is the
effective date of the H1B petition and change of status approval. Although
the I-94 card reflecting the H1B change predates the latest I-94 card given
at the Port of Entry, the change of status to H1B does not become effective
until October 1, 2005, after the person's entry into the United States.
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USCIS Letter Guidance Helpful but Not Legally
Binding
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This analysis was provided by the USCIS in the form of letter guidance. Such
guidance does not carry the binding force of law or regulation and generally
is given less weight than even a USCIS policy memo. In the absence of any
other USCIS guidance, however, it is a useful resource that is available and
the only option for a person who needs to travel abroad under such
circumstances. We also find that the USCIS and Legacy INS have given
considerable weight to such guidance letters and enforced them. Many complex
issues of U.S. immigration law have only such letters as this on which
people can rely on in the absence of law or regulations.
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Distinguish from Travel While Change of Status
Pending
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This guidance should not be confused with the rule that a person who travels
abroad and attempts to reenter the United States while a change of status is
pending abandons the request for the change of status. In the question
posed, the petition and the change of status had been approved before the
person departed the U.S. While the example used was a change from F-1 to
H1B, there are other scenarios in which the same logic presumably could
apply.
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Conclusion
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This Hernandez letter is another helpful clarification on an issue that was
previously not entirely clear. The conclusion is logical and it avoids the
need for employers or individuals to make additional, extraneous filings or
the need to travel abroad again to get back into legal status.
©
2005 The Law
Office of Sheela Murthy, P.C. All Rights Reserved

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