Can relatives petition family
members for labor certification?
IMMIGRATION CORNER
By Michael J. Gurfinkel, Esq.
HERE is a letter from a client for this
week’s column.
“Dear Atty Gurfinkel:
“My American citizen sister would
like to petition me, but it would take many, many years
to get a green card through a family petition. She also
has a very successful business and would like to petition
me as her employee through an employment based petition.
“Is there anything wrong or illegal
for a relative to petition a family member for a green
card through labor certification?
“Very truly yours, SF.”
Dear SF:
There is nothing wrong or illegal about
one family member petitioning another family member for
a green card through labor certification as long as:
1. The employer is financially
able to pay the alien the “prevailing wage”
for the job;
2. The alien is qualified for the
job, based on college education or previous experience;
3. The employer first makes a good
faith effort to recruit qualified American workers
for the job, but is unable to find any American worker
who is ready, willing and able to perform the job;
4. The job must be real.
The job opening must be a true, legitimate, bona fide
job opportunity. Under no circumstance can it be fixed,
fake, fraudulent or merely a “favor”; and
5. The alien must actually work
for the employer when legally able to do so.
In fact, even the laws concerning affidavits
of support for employment-based petitions specify that
family members are allowed to petition relatives, including
husbands, wives, fathers, mothers, children or brothers
or sisters.
The law states that if such a relative has a “significant
ownership interest” in the petitioning company (i.e.,
owns more than 5 percent of the company) then that relative
needs to submit an affidavit of support in connection
with the employment-based petition.
Think about it: if it were “illegal”
for relatives to petition family members, then why would
there be a law on the books, specifically allowing it,
and merely requiring that the relative also submit an
affidavit of support?
There are also cases from the Board of
Alien Labor Certification Appeals (BALCA), allowing family
members to petition relatives for labor certification.
In one case, BALCA stated that a close
family relationship between the employer and employee
does not, standing alone, establish that the job is not
bona fide or available to U.S. workers.
While a close family relationship certainly
increases the level of scrutiny (or suspicion), family
relationship between the employer and employee is only
one factor to be considered.
If the employing relative genuinely needs
an employee with the alien’s qualifications, the
job has not been tailored (or customized) to the alien
so that it appears to be a “job of convenience,”
and the employer has not been able to find a qualified
U.S. worker after good faith recruitment efforts, then
a family relationship does not, per se (or automatically),
require that labor certification be denied.
As stated by BALCA: “We did not hold
nor did we mean to imply...that a close family relationship
between the alien and the person having hiring authority,
standing alone, establishes, that the job opportunity
is not bona fide or available to U.S. workers. Such a
relationship does require that this aspect of the application
be given greater attention. But, in the final analysis,
it is only one factor to be considered. Assuming that
there is still a genuine need for an employee with the
alien’s qualifications, the job has not been specifically
tailored for the alien, the employer has undertaken recruitment
in good faith and the same has not produced applicants
who are qualified, the relationship, per se, does not
require denial of certification.”
In your situation, as long as you and your
relative play by the book, follow all the rules, and are
not creating a “job of convenience,” then
it is permissible for a relative to petition a family
member for labor certification, bearing in mind that the
case will be intensely scrutinized and investigated by
the government to make sure it is real. But if it is a
real job, then the law allows it.
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