Neufeld Memo (04/30/2008) re Revised Guidance for Child Status Protection
Act (CSPA).
Green Cards > Family Immigration
> Neufeld Memo (04/30/2008) re Revised Guidance for Child Status
Protection Act (CSPA).
TO: Field Leadership
FROM: Donald Neufeld /s/
Acting Associate Director, Domestic Operations
SUBJECT: Revised Guidance for the Child Status Protection Act (CSPA)
AFM Update: Chapter 21.2(e) The Child Status Protection Act of 2002 (CSPA)
(AD07-04)
1. Purpose
This guidance significantly modifies a prior interpretation of certain
provisions of the CSPA. In particular, it changes how the agency interprets the
statute to apply to aliens who aged out prior to the enactment date of the CSPA.
It also permits those individuals who were ineligible under the prior policy to
file a new application for permanent residence. Under certain circumstances,
this guidance also permits those individuals who were previously denied for CSPA
to file motions to reopen or reconsider without filing fee. It also explains
what steps certain aliens who do not automatically benefit from the CSPA can
take to protect their status as a child.
This guidance contained in the AFM update below replaces the following two
memoranda:
The Child Status Protection Act, issued September 20, 2002; and
The Child Status Protection Act – Memorandum Number 2, issued February 14,
2003
This guidance does NOT affect:
Form I-539 adjudications for V status; or
The memorandum, Clarification of Aging Out Provisions as They Affect
Preference Relatives and Immediate Family Members Under the Child Status
Protection Act Section 6 and Form I-539 Adjudications for V Status, issued June
14, 2006
2. Field Guidance and AFM Update
Accordingly, AFM chapter 21.2(e) is revised in its entirety to read as
follows:
(e) The Child Status Protection Act of 2002 (CSPA)
The CSPA amended the Immigration and Nationality Act (Act) to permit an
applicant for certain immigration benefits to retain classification as a child
under the Act, even if he or she has reached the age of 21. The CSPA added
section 201(f) for applicants seeking to qualify as Immediate Relatives and
section 203(h) for applicants seeking to benefit under a preference category,
including derivative beneficiaries.
(1) CSPA Coverage
(i) Adjustment as an Immediate Relative (IR). The CSPA amended section 201(f)
of the Act to fix the age of an alien beneficiary on the occurrence of a
specific event (e.g. filing a petition). If the alien beneficiary is under the
age of 21 on the date of that event, the alien will not age out and continue to
be eligible for permanent residence as an IR. It does not matter whether the
alien reaches the age of 21 before or after the enactment date of the CSPA, when
the petition was filed, or how long the alien took after petition approval to
apply for permanent residence provided the alien did not have a final decision
prior to August 6, 2002 on an application for permanent residence based on the
immigrant visa petition upon which the alien claims to be a child.
(A) Petition Initially Filed as Immediate Relative (IR) Child. If an alien is
seeking to adjust status on the basis of being the beneficiary of an approved
petition for classification as an IR (or IR self-petitioner under VAWA) and the
petition was initially filed for classification as an IR, then the alien’s age
for CSPA purposes is the age of the alien on the date on which the petition for
classification as an IR (or IR self-petitioner under VAWA) was filed. If the
alien was under the age of 21 at the time a petition was filed on his or her
behalf for classification as an IR (or IR self-petitioner under VAWA), the alien
will not age out. For an IR self-petitioner under VAWA, officers are to follow
the guidance (except footnote 1 and 2 relating to the retroactivity of the CSPA)
issued August 17, 2004 entitled Age-Out Protections Afforded Battered Children
Pursuant to the Child Status Protection Act and the Victims of Trafficking and
Violence Protection Act.
(B) Petition Initially Filed as Child of a Lawful Permanent Resident (LPR).
If an alien is seeking to adjust status on the basis of being an immediate
relative child, and the petition serving as the basis for the adjustment was
first filed for classification as a family-sponsored immigrant based on the
parent being a lawful permanent resident and the petition was later converted,
due to the naturalization of the parent, to a petition to classify the alien as
an IR, then the age of the alien on the date of the parent’s naturalization is
the alien’s age for CSPA purposes. If the alien was under the age of 21 on the
date of the petitioning parent’s naturalization, the alien will not age out.
(C) Petition Initially Filed as Married Son or Daughter of a U.S. Citizen (USC).
If an alien is seeking to adjust as an immediate relative child, and the
petition serving as the basis for such adjustment was first filed for
classification as a married son or daughter of a U.S. citizen, but the petition
was later converted, due to the legal termination of the alien’s marriage, to a
petition to classify the alien as an immediate relative, then the age of the
alien on the date of the termination of the marriage is the alien’s age for CSPA
purposes. If the alien was under the age of 21 on the date of the termination of
the marriage, the alien will not age out.
(ii) Adjustment Under a Preference Category. The beneficiary’s CSPA age is
determined using the formula below. If the petition is approved and the priority
date becomes current before the alien’s CSPA age reaches 21, then a one-year
period begins during which the alien must apply for permanent residence in order
for CSPA coverage to continue.
It does not matter if the alien aged out before or after the enactment date
of the CSPA, so long as the petition is filed before the child reaches the age
of 21 provided the alien did not have a final decision prior to August 6, 2002
on an application for permanent residence based on the immigrant visa petition
upon which the alien claims to be a child.
(A) CSPA Age Formula. Determine the age of the alien on the date that a visa
number becomes available. The date that a visa becomes available is the later of
(a) the first day of the month of the Department of State (DOS) Visa Bulletin,
which indicates availability of a visa for that preference category or (b) the
petition approval date if a visa number is already available on the approval
date. Subtract the number of days the petition was pending as described in
paragraphs (B), (C) and (D) below. This is the alien beneficiary’s CSPA age. If
the alien beneficiary’s CSPA age is under 21, he or she remains a child for
purposes of the application for permanent residence provided the beneficiary
properly applies for permanent residence, based on the subject petition, within
one year of visa availability and notwithstanding the alien’s CSPA age on the
date of adjudication of such application.
(B) Direct Beneficiaries. The number of days that a petition is pending is
the number of days between the date that it is properly filed (receipt date) and
the date an approval is issued on the petition, including any period of
administrative review.
In the case of a petition where adjustment is sought as the child of an LPR
(F2A) and it is determined that the age of the beneficiary is over the age of 21
for CSPA purposes, if the petitioner naturalizes then the petition is to be
automatically converted to the appropriate first or third family preference
category for that petitioner and beneficiary (so long as marriage occurred after
the naturalization of the petitioner). The beneficiary will retain the priority
date in this case.
(C) Derivative Beneficiaries – Family and Employment-Based. The number of
days that a petition is pending is the number of days between the date that the
petition is properly filed (Form I-140 is considered properly filed on the
receipt date and not priority date) and the date an approval is issued on the
petition, including any period of administrative review. If the petition was
approved and the priority date becomes current before the child’s CSPA age
reaches 21, the alien must, within one year of the visa availability date, apply
for adjustment of status, an immigrant visa, or be the beneficiary of an I-824
in order for the CSPA coverage to continue.
Note: An alien may benefit from the CSPA if the alien “sought to acquire” the
status of an LPR within one year of visa number availability. USCIS has
determined that an alien has “sought to acquire” permanent residence if he or
she files an application for adjustment of status or an immigrant visa, or is
the beneficiary of an I-824 within one year of the immigration petition approval
date (or visa becoming available subsequent to petition approval date, whichever
is later). Adjudicators are reminded that an I-824 can be concurrently filed
with Form I-485 Application To Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status. A
previously filed I-824 that was denied because the principal alien's adjustment
of status application had not yet been approved can serve as evidence of having
“sought to acquire” LPR status. USCIS has made this determination because the
CSPA language requires the alien to have “sought to acquire” LPR status
subsequent to visa availability, which is a product of visa petition approval.
Consequently, neither a labor certification nor a visa petition will satisfy the
“sought to acquire” LPR status requirement because these actions are an integral
part of the visa petition approval process and will necessarily precede visa
availability.
(D) Derivative Diversity Visa (DV) Applicants. For the purpose of determining
the period during which the “petition is pending,” officers should use the
period between the first day of the DV mail-in application period for the
program year in which the principal alien has qualified and the date on the
letter notifying the principal alien that his/her application has been selected
(the congratulatory letter). That period should then be subtracted from the
derivative alien’s age on the date the visa became available to the principal
alien.
(2) CSPA Coverage for Specific Aliens Not Covered Under Previous Guidance
(i) Limited CSPA Coverage for K4 Aliens. The CSPA does not apply to aliens
obtaining K2 or K4 nonimmigrant visas or extensions.
An alien in K4 status may utilize the CSPA upon seeking adjustment of status
because a K4 alien seeks to adjust as an IR on the basis of an approved Form
I-130, which is filed under section 204 of the Act. This is because the USC
petitioner who filed the nonimmigrant visa petition on behalf of the K3 parent
must file a Form I-130 on behalf of the K4 alien before the K4 seeks to adjust
status pursuant to 8 CFR 245.1(i). This necessarily requires the existence of a
parent-child relationship between the USC and the K4 alien. Accordingly, the
CSPA should be applied to K4 applicants as described in paragraph 21.2(e)(1)(i).
(ii) Limited CSPA Coverage Option for K2 Aliens. An alien in K2 status does
not have a visa petition filed on his or her behalf under section 204.
Consequently, a K2 alien cannot utilize the CSPA when seeking to adjust status.
Although not required, USCIS may accept a Form I-130 filed by the USC petitioner
based on a parent-child relationship between the USC petitioner and the K2 alien
(e.g. where the USC petitioner has married the K1 and K2 is not yet 18 years
old). This will allow an alien who once was a K2 to adjust on the basis of a
petition filed under section 204 of the Act and will allow him/her to utilize
the CSPA when seeking to adjust status in some cases.
Exercising this option requires: (1) an existing parent-child relationship
between the USC petitioner and the K2 alien, and (2) paying the requisite fees
associated with Forms I-130 and I-485, Application To Register Permanent
Residence or Adjust Status. This guidance does not create a petitionable
relationship for K2s or K4s where none exists.
(iii) CSPA coverage for preference aliens who did not have an application for
permanent residence pending on August 6, 2002 and who subsequently filed an
application for permanent residence that was denied solely because he or she
aged out. An alien on behalf of whom a visa petition had been approved prior to
August 6, 2002 and who filed an application for adjustment of status after
August 6, 2002 may file a motion to reopen or reconsider without filing fee if:
(a) the alien would have been considered under the age of 21 under applicable
CSPA rules; (b) the alien applied for permanent residence within one year of
visa availability; and (c) the alien received a denial solely because he or she
aged out.
(iv) CSPA coverage for preference aliens who did not have an application for
permanent residence pending on August 6, 2002 and did not subsequently apply for
permanent residence. An alien whose visa became available (as defined in
paragraph 21.2(e)(1)(ii)(A)) on or after August 7, 2001 who did not apply for
permanent residence within one year of the petition approval and visa
availability, but would have qualified for CSPA coverage had he or she applied
but for prior policy guidance concerning the CSPA effective date, may apply for
permanent residence.
(3) CSPA Section 6 Opting-Out Provisions. Beneficiaries of 2nd preference
I-130 petitions that were automatically converted to family first preference
upon the petitioning parent’s naturalization may exercise the “opt-out”
provision of section 6 even if the petition in question was originally filed in
the F2A category but has now converted to F2B. Aliens seeking to utilize this
opt-out provision should file a request in writing with the District Office
having jurisdiction over the beneficiary’s residence. Adjudicators do not need
to determine the age of the alien when a section 6 opt-out request is received.
<link to section 6, 6-14-06>
(4) Visa Availability Date Regression. If a visa availability date regresses,
and an alien has already filed a Form I-485 based on an approved Form I-130 or
Form I-140, the officer should retain the Form I-485 and note the date a visa
number first became available. Once the visa number again becomes available for
that preference category, determine whether the beneficiary is a “child” under
paragraph 21.2(e)(1)(ii) using the visa availability date marked on the Form
I-485, as long as the I-485 was filed within one year of that visa availability
date.
If, however, an alien did not file a Form I-485 prior to the visa
availability date regressing, and then files a Form I-485 within one year of
when the visa availability date again becomes current, the alien’s CSPA age is
determined using the subsequent visa availability date.
(5) Inapplicability of the CSPA. The CSPA applies only to those immigrant
visas expressly specified in the statute. Nothing in the CSPA provides
protection for nonimmigrant visas (e.g. K or V), NACARA, HRIFA, Family Unity,
Cuban Adjustment Act, and Special Immigrant Juvenile applicants and/or
derivatives not specifically provided in the CSPA. This list is not exhaustive.
3. Contact Information
Questions regarding the guidance contained in this memorandum should be
directed to Fred Ongcapin, Domestic Operations Directorate and Andrew Perry,
Office of Policy and Strategy through the appropriate supervisory channels.
4. Use
This memorandum is intended solely for the guidance of USCIS personnel in
performing their duties relative to adjudications of applications. It is not
intended to, does not, and may not be relied upon to create any right or
benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law by any individual or
other party in removal proceedings, in litigation with the United States, or in
any other form or manner.
Memorandum for Field Leadership, et al.
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