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Registered Users (C)
Certain Undocumented Workers may now be eligible to apply for Residency
The USCIS has entered into settlement agreements in the CSS and LULAC cases.
These proposed settlements allows members of certain groups a period of one year to apply for legalization under the 1986 IRCA. These groups included in this settlement are listed below:
FOR CSS CASES
[All persons who were otherwise prima facie eligible for legalization under §245A of the INA, and who tendered completed applications for legalization under §245A of the INA and fees to an INS officer or agent acting on behalf of the Immigration & Naturalization Service (INS), including a Qualified Designated Entity (QDE), during the period May 5, 1987 to May 4, 1988, and whose applications were rejected for filing because an INS officer or QDE concluded that they had traveled outside the United States after November 6, 1986 without advance parole. [/COLOR]
[All persons who filed for class membership under Catholic Social Services, Inc. v Reno, and who were otherwise prima facie eligible for legalization under §245A of the INA, who, because an INS officer or QDE concluded that they had traveled outside the United States after November 6, 1986 without advance parole were informed that they were ineligible for legalization, or refused by the INS or its QDEs legalization forms, and for whom such information, or inability to obtain the required application forms, was a substantial cause of their failure to timely file or complete a written application[/COLOR]
The USCIS has entered into settlement agreements in the CSS and LULAC cases.
These proposed settlements allows members of certain groups a period of one year to apply for legalization under the 1986 IRCA. These groups included in this settlement are listed below:
FOR CSS CASES
[All persons who were otherwise prima facie eligible for legalization under §245A of the INA, and who tendered completed applications for legalization under §245A of the INA and fees to an INS officer or agent acting on behalf of the Immigration & Naturalization Service (INS), including a Qualified Designated Entity (QDE), during the period May 5, 1987 to May 4, 1988, and whose applications were rejected for filing because an INS officer or QDE concluded that they had traveled outside the United States after November 6, 1986 without advance parole. [/COLOR]
[All persons who filed for class membership under Catholic Social Services, Inc. v Reno, and who were otherwise prima facie eligible for legalization under §245A of the INA, who, because an INS officer or QDE concluded that they had traveled outside the United States after November 6, 1986 without advance parole were informed that they were ineligible for legalization, or refused by the INS or its QDEs legalization forms, and for whom such information, or inability to obtain the required application forms, was a substantial cause of their failure to timely file or complete a written application[/COLOR]
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