HIGHLIGHTS OF THE
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President signed the Omnibus Appropriations Bill (H.R. 4328). Included
in this comprehensive bill, which incorporates the spending bills of eight
federal agencies, are several immigration-related provisions, including the
H-1B bill, Haitian Relief, and a delay of implementation of Section 110 of
IIRAIRA.
AILA ALL MEMBER FAX
October 21, 1998
Omnibus Bill Signed By President
Today, October 21, 1998, President Clinton signed into law the FY99
Omnibus Appropriations Bill (H.R. 4328). Included in this comprehensive bill, which
incorporates the spending bills of eight federal agencies, are several immigration-related
provisions, including the H-1B bill, Haitian Relief, and a delay of implementation of Section
110 of IIRAIRA. Several of these provisions are effective upon enactment. We summarize key
elements below. Full text of the relevant sections of the bill will be available shortly. More detailed practice advisories will be forthcoming.
H-1B Bill Effective Dates
- Increased visas are available immediately.
- New attestations for H-1B dependent
employers and willful violators are not effective until final regulations are published.
- New $500 fee not effective until December
1, 1998.
- "No benching," equal benefits, and prohibition on departure penalties are effective immediately upon enactment.
(These are not attestations, but employers must comply with these requirements as of the date of enactment, or they could be subject to penalties if
investigated.)
- New penalty scheme is effective for final determinations issued on or after date of enactment.
- New
Hathaway fix for colleges, universities and non-profit research institutions is effective for applications for permanent labor certification and
LCAs filed on or after the date of enactment. New Hathaway fix also applies for applications awaiting final decision on a wage appeal on or after
date of enactment.
Haitian Relief Major Provisions
- Provides eligibility for adjustment of status to Haitian nationals
who were present in the U.S. on December 31, 1995, have been continuously present in the U.S. since December 31, 1995 and who:
- Filed
for asylum before December 31, 1995; or
- Were paroled into the United States before December 31, 1995, after having been identified as having
a credible fear of persecution, or paroled for emergent reasons or reasons deemed strictly in the public interest; or
- Were a child (under 21)
at the time of arrival in the U.S. and on December 31, 1995 and are orphans or have been abandoned.
- Absences from the U.S. of less
than an aggregate of 180 days do not break the required period of continuous physical presence.
- Applications must be filed before April
1, 2000.
- Filing an application for adjustment of status under this Act shall allow a beneficiary to seek a stay of removal or exclusion.
- Spouses, children, and unmarried sons or daughters of beneficiaries under this Act are also eligible for adjustment if:
- They
also are Haitian nationals; and
- For unmarried sons and daughters, they also meet the physical presence requirement.
Section
110 Major Provisions
- Provides that an automated entry-exit control system to track all non-U.S. citizens must be implemented at airports
by October 15, 1998. (Airports already have the technology in place.)
- Delays implementation at land borders and sea ports until March
30, 2001.
- Requires that system implemented at land borders will not significantly
disrupt trade, tourism or other legitimate cross-border.

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