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Settlement reached in asylee adjustment lawsuit

Immigrants' Rights Update, Vol. 19, No. 3, June 30, 2005


     A federal district court in Minnesota has approved the settlement of litigation on behalf of a nationwide class that challenged delays on the part of the former Immigration and Naturalization Service (now U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, or CIS) in adjudicating applications for adjustment of status filed by asylees.  If approved, the settlement will require CIS to grant an additional 31,000 asylee adjustment applications over the next three years.

     At the time that the lawsuit was filed in 2002, section 209 of the Immigration and Nationality Act set a cap of 10,000 on the number of asylee adjustment applications that could be granted in a single year.  Asylees can apply for adjustment to lawful permanent residence after they have been physically present in the U.S. for one year after having been granted asylum.  However, because substantially more than 10,000 noncitizens are granted asylum each year, a significant backlog has developed.  The plaintiffs alleged that the INS added to this backlog by mismanaging the allocation of available adjustments and failing each year to use the 10,000 asylee adjustment numbers allowed under the cap.  In 2004, the district court ruled in favor of the plaintiffs (Ngwanyia v. U.S. Attorney General, 302 F. Supp. 2d 1076 (D. Minn. 2004)), and the defendants appealed.  The parties then negotiated and reached the settlement that has now been provisionally approved by the court.

     Under the agreement, the parties estimate that 31,000 asylee adjustment numbers were available and not used in prior years, and these will be used over the next three fiscal years, in addition to the 10,000 numbers per year under the cap, which must also be used, beginning with the year in which the settlement takes effect.  After the settlement was approved, President Bush signed the REAL ID Act (on May 11, 2005), which eliminated the statutory cap on asylum adjustment (see “REAL ID Enacted: Imposes Rigid Driver’s License Requirements,” p. 1).  However, it should be noted that the settlement provides a significant benefit on top of the elimination of the cap.  While the statute does not require the government to grant any particular number of asylee adjustments each year, the settlement requires CIS to adjust at least 61,000 asylees over the next three years.

     The settlement also requires CIS to establish a method for asylee adjustment applicants to contact the agency to determine the status of their applications, which is likely to be available by email.

     The plaintiffs also challenged the INS’s requiring asylees to apply for employment authorization documents (EADs), since asylees are authorized to work incident to their status.  After the litigation was brought, the INS published guidance to clarify that asylees are authorized to work whether or not they have an EAD, while also noting that an EAD provides a secure and useful form of proving work authorization.  Under the settlement, CIS affirms the inherent employment authorization of asylees and also agrees to establish a process by which asylees may apply for EADs valid for multiple-year periods, up to five years.  The agreement also requires CIS to establish a process by which asylees can make inquiries regarding the status of applications for EADs.

     The full agreement and further information is available on the USCIS website, http://uscis.gov/graphics/index.htm.

Ngwanyia v. U.S. Attorney General, No. 02-502 (RHK)
(D. Minn., settlement approved, June 15, 2005).

By Linton Joaquin, NILC executive director

 

 

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