Xie Law Offices, LLC


Summary of New PERM Labor Certification System


Before the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) may approve petition requests and the Department of State (DOS) may issue visas and admit certain immigrant aliens to work permanently in the United States, the Secretary of Labor must certify to the Secretary of State and to the Secretary of Homeland Security: 

(a) There are not sufficient United States workers who are able, willing, qualified, and available at the time of the application for a visa and admission into the United States and at the place where the alien is to perform the work; and

(b) The employment of the alien will not adversely affect the wages and working conditions of similarly employed United States workers. 8 U.S.C. 1182(a)(5)(A).

If the Secretary of Labor, through the Employment and Training Administration (ETA), determines there are no able, willing, qualified, and available U.S. workers and employment of the alien will not adversely affect the wages and working conditions of similarly employed U.S. workers, DOL so certifies to the Department of Homeland Security and to the Department of State by issuing a permanent alien labor certification.

If DOL can not make both of the above findings, the application for permanent alien employment certification is denied.

The process for obtaining a permanent labor certification has been criticized as being complicated, time consuming, and requiring the expenditure of considerable resources by employers, State Workforce Agencies and the Federal government. The US Department of Labor has been working on re-engineering of the labor certification process since sometime in 1999 and release the final PERM rule on December 27, 2004, to replace the existing labor certification process on March 28, 2005.

The new system is designed to streamline processing and ensure the most expeditious processing of cases, using the resources available.

The new PERM system requires employers to conduct recruitment before filing their applications. Employers are required to place a job order and two Sunday newspaper advertisements. If the application is for a professional occupation, the employer must conduct three additional steps that the employer chooses from a list of alternative recruitment steps published in the regulation. The employer will not be required to submit any documentation with its application, but will be expected to maintain the supporting documentation specified in the regulations. The employer will be required to provide the supporting documentation in the event its application is selected for audit and as otherwise requested by a Certifying Officer.

This final PERM rule also provides employers with the option to submit their forms either electronically or by mail directly to an ETA application processing center. The new form--Application for Permanent Employment Certification (ETA Form 9089)--has been designed to be completed in a web-based environment and submitted electronically or to be completed by hand and submitted by mail.

To accommodate electronic filing, a complete application will consist of one form. The new form, ETA Form 9089, will contain additional ``blocks'' to be marked by the employer to acknowledge that the submission is being made electronically and that information contained in the application is true and correct. We have developed a customer-friendly Web site that can be accessed by employers to electronically fill outand submit the form. The Web site includes detailed instructions,prompts, and checks to help employers fill out the form. The Web site also provides an option to permit employers that frequently file permanent applications to set up secure files within the ETA electronic filing system containing information common to any permanent application they file. Under this option, each time an employer files an ETA Form 9089, the information common to all of its applications, e.g., employer name, address, etc., will be entered automatically, and the employer will have to enter only the data specific to the application at hand.

Electronic submission and certification requires ETA Form 9089 be printed out and signed by the employer immediately after DOL provides the certification. A copy of the signed form must be maintained in the employer's files, and the original signed form must be submitted to support the Immigrant Petition for Alien Worker (DHS Form I-140).

The employer will not be required to provide any supporting documentation with its application but must maintain and, when requested by the Certifying Officer, furnish documentation to support its answers, attestations and other information provided on the form. The standards used in adjudicating applications under the new system will be substantially the same as those used in arriving at a determination in the current system. The determination will still be based on: whether the employer has met the procedural requirements of the regulations; whether there are insufficient U.S. workers who are able, willing, qualified and available; and whether the employment of the alien will have an adverse effect on the wages and working conditions of U.S. workers similarly employed.

But the employer will be required to keep the supporting documents for five years for possible future auditing. US DOL is concerned about the potential for fraud, misrepresentation, and non-meritorious applications in an attestation-based system. Some, but not all, of the measures have taken to minimize these problems, include: a review of applications, upon receipt, to verify the existence of the employer and to verify the employer has employees on its payroll, and the use of auditing techniques that can be adjusted as necessary to maintain program integrity.

State Employment Agencies (SWAs) will no longer be the intake point for receipt of applications for permanent alien employment certification and will not be required to be the source of recruitment and referral of U.S. workers as they are in the current system. The required role of SWAs in the redesigned permanent labor certification process will be limited to providing prevailing wage determinations (PWD). Employers will be required to obtain a PWD from the SWA before filing their applications with DOL.

The SWAs will, as they do under the current process, evaluate the particulars of the employer's job offer, such as the job duties and requirements for the position and the geographic area in which the job is located, to arrive at a PWD.

The combination of pre-filing recruitment, providing employers with the option to complete applications in a web-based environment, automated processing of applications including those submitted by mail, and elimination of the SWA's required role in the recruitment process will yield a large reduction in the average time needed to process labor certification applications. The redesigned system should also eliminate the need to institute special resource-intensive efforts to reduce backlogs, which have been a recurring problem.

After ETA's initial review of an application has determined that it is acceptable for processing, a computer system will review the application based upon various selection criteria that will allow problematic applications to be identified for audit. Additionally, as a quality control measure, some applications will be randomly selected for audit without regard to the results of the computer analysis. DOL has incorporated identifiers into the processing system, which are used to select cases for audit based upon program requirements. In some instances, DOL will be confirming specific information with employers.

If an application has not been selected for audit, and satisfies all other reviews, the application will be certified and returned to the employer. An electronically filed application not selected for audit will have a computer-generated decision within 45 to 60 days of the date the application was initially filed. The employer must immediately sign the application and then submit the certified application to DHS in support of an employment-based I-140 petition.

If an application is selected for audit, the employer will be notified and required to submit, in a timely manner, documentation specified in the regulations to verify the information stated in or attested to on the application. Upon timely receipt of an employer's audit documentation, it will be reviewed by ETA personnel. If the employer does not submit a timely response to the audit letter, the application will be denied. If the audit documentation is complete and consistent with the employer's statements and attestations contained in the application, and not deficient in any material respect, the application will be certified the employer will be notified. If the audit documentation is incomplete, is inconsistent with the employer's statements and/or attestations contained in the application, or if the application is otherwise deficient in some material respect, the application will be denied and a notification of denial with the reasons therefore will be issued to the employer. However, on any application, the CO will have the authority to request additional information before making a final determination.

The CO may also order supervised recruitment for the employer's job opportunity, such as where questions arise regarding the adequacy of the employer's test of the labor market. The supervised recruitment that may be required is similar to the current regulations for recruitment under basic processing, which requires placement of advertisements in conjunction with a 30-day job order by the employer. The recruitment, however, will be supervised by ETA COs instead of the SWAs. At the completion of the supervised recruitment effort, the employer will be required to document in a recruitment report the outcome of such effort, whether successful or not, and if unsuccessful, the lawful job-related reasons for not hiring any U.S. workers who applied for the position. Upon review of the employer's documentation, the CO will either certify or deny the application.

In all instances in which an application is denied, the notification will set forth the deficiencies upon which the denial is based. The employer will be able to seek administrative-judicial review of a denial by the Board of Alien Labor Certification Appeals (BALCA).

Above is only a brief summary of the new PERM system that will become effective on March 28, 2005. During the whole PERM process I will work closely with the employer as the agent for the employer even though the employer is not paying for the legal service. Although I will do most of the work to complete the process for the alien employee, I am not permitted to make the decision for the employer in some instances or take over the job the employer is required to do during the PERM process.  More specifically the employer must conduct the recruitment activities after the advertisements are placed.  For example as the attorney or agent, I cannot do the screening or interviews on the employer's behalf; I cannot instruct the applicants to send resumes or applications to my office, etc. However I will provide legal assistance to the employer as the law permits.  Please feel free to contact me if the employer has any questions regarding the process.


What recruitment is the employer required to have?
 


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