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DOL Transition Watch : BEC Letters & Case Transfers
Posted
Dec 10, 2004
BEC 45-Day Letters
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The U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) announced that the Dallas and
Philadelphia Backlog Elimination Centers (BECs), sometimes referred to as
the Backlog Reduction Centers or BRCs, would be issuing approximately 10,000
Receipt Notification Letters during the week of December 6, 2004. These
letters require sponsoring employers to respond within the stated time. If
no response is received, the case will be closed.
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These DOL-issued receipt notification letters request certain information
from sponsoring employers and have a response deadline of 45 days. If the
DOL does not receive a response to a letter within the 45-day deadline, the
case will be closed. These letters should normally be sent to the employer's
representative. If the employer receives the letter directly but has an
attorney, the employer should speak to the attorney regarding the letter
immediately.
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Case Transfers from SWAs to BECs
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Cases from the Atlanta and Chicago National Processing Centers (NPCs) are
next on the list to be sent to the BECs. Note that these are the cases that
came from the regions already and are not expected to include cases filed
after January 1, 2005.
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SWA Timeframes for Case Transfers
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The DOL released instructions to the State Workforce Agencies (SWAs) on
December 3, 2004 regarding how to ship their unopened cases to the BECs.
SWAs are directed to send all unopened cases with receipt dates prior to
2003 to the assigned BECs by December 31, 2004. Those remaining cases that
the SWAs have not started to process as of January 1, 2005, must be sent to
the BECs in a second shipment that is due by March 31, 2005.
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Separate Processing for Regular and RIRs
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The DOL
directs the SWAs to put the labor certification (LC) cases into boxes by
First-In / First-Out (FIFO) order. The RIR cases are to be boxed separately
from the Regular (Non-RIR) cases.
The SWAs must report to
the DOL by December 13, 2004 regarding the transmission of cases. They must
identify an SWA point of contact and provide a complete mailing address.
They must give an approximate number of cases that are expected to be
included in Shipment 1 as well as in Shipment 2, the approximate date range
of cases to be sent, the preferred shipping dates and anticipated time
required to complete all shipments. There are also extensive quality control
procedures at both ends of the packing and receiving process to avoid the
loss of files.
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Atlanta National Processing Center
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The Atlanta Regional Office is scheduled to move into the Atlanta National
Processing Center December 9 and 10, 2004. The Atlanta National Processing
Center is scheduled to open a few days later, on December 13, 2004. The
Federal Register will carry a Notice with the new Atlanta address for the
NPC and contact information within the next few weeks.
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Conclusion
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Many changes are now taking place with labor certification processing and
will continue beyond 2005 with a vision to streamline the LC process and
make it more efficient. We at The Law Office of Sheela Murthy hope that the
uniformity among the states with the NPCs and the reduction / elimination of
backlogs yields results that make the system work efficiently for our
clients as well as all those undergoing the process.
©
2004 The Law
Office of Sheela Murthy, P.C. All Rights Reserved

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