On August 17, 2015, USCIS released a new Policy Memorandum titled "L-1B Adjudications Policy (PM-602-0111),"1 which builds upon previous agency guidance for adjudicating L-1B Intracompany Transferee Visa petitions, especially with regard to the requirement that the beneficiary possess "specialized knowledge" in order to be eligible. The memorandum notes that while "specialized knowledge" is a statutory term, it is not particularly well defined by statute for purpose of adjudicating L-1B Visa petitions. The following, found in INA § 214(c)(2), is the most clear statutory definition of "specialized knowledge" with which any USCIS guidance or regulations must conform:
"[A]n alien is considered to be serving in a capacity involving specialized knowledge with respect to a company if the alien has a special knowledge of the company product and its application in international markets or has an advanced level of knowledge of processes and procedures of the company."
While the memo does not change previous regulatory definitions of "specialized knowledge," it seeks to consolidate the already-existing definitions, add to them, and provide new guidance on how L-1B petitions should be adjudicated. I will explain the key points of the new memorandum in this post and further explain what they may mean for future L-1B Visa petitions.
SPECIALIZED KNOWLEDGE
Section IV of the memo instructs adjudicators to evaluate a beneficiary's eligibility for L-1B status by the "preponderance of the evidence" standard as opposed the more restrictive "clear and convincing evidence" or "beyond a reasonable doubt" standards. Thus, in order to have an L-1B petition approved, the petitioner must simply demonstrate that the beneficiary is more likely to be eligible than ineligible, rather than to remove any possible doubt that the beneficiary is ineligible.
In section V of the memo, it restates that in order to be eligible for L-1B status, the petitioner must show that:
- the beneficiary possesses "specialized knowledge";
- the position being offered involves that "specialized knowledge";
- the beneficiary has at least one continuous year of employment abroad, within the past three years, in a managerial, executive, or special knowledge capacity with the petitioning employer and/or any qualifying organization.
- special knowledge, which is knowledge of the petitioning organization's product, service, research, equipment, techniques, management, or other interests in its application in international markets that is distinct or uncommon in comparison to that generally found in the particular industry;
- advanced knowledge, which is knowledge of or expertise in the petitioning organization's specific processes and procedures that is not commonly found in the relevant industry and is greatly developed or further along in progress, complexity and understanding than that generally found within the employer.
Both the "special" and "advanced" knowledge requirements put the onus on the petitioner to demonstrate that the beneficiary has particular expertise for the job that the petition is for. It is possible that certain beneficiaries may be able to demonstrate both "specialized" and "advanced" knowledge. In order to determine which type of knowledge is more likely to satisfy the requirements for L-1B status in a given case, an L-1B petitioner should consult with an experienced immigration attorney who may assess the circumstances of the beneficiary and determine which qualifications are more likely to meet the threshold for L-1B eligibility.
In section V.B., USCIS provides a non-exhaustive list of factors that adjudicators are advised to consider in determining whether a beneficiary's knowledge is specialized:
The beneficiary possesses knowledge of foreign operating conditions that is of significant value to the petitioning organization's U.S. operations.The beneficiary has been employed abroad in a capacity involving assignments that have significantly enhanced the employer's productivity, competitiveness, image, or financial position.
- The beneficiary's claimed specialized knowledge normally can be gained only through experience with the petitioning organization.
- The beneficiary possesses knowledge of a product or process that cannot be easily transferred or taught to another individual without significant economic cost or inconvenience.
- The beneficiary has knowledge of a process or product that either is sophisticated or complex, or of a highly technical nature, although not necessarily unique to the petitioning organization.
- The beneficiary possesses knowledge that is particularly beneficial to the petitioning organization's competitiveness in the marketplace.
- The petitioner may support the application by demonstrating that significant economic cost or inconvenience would be incurred in imparting specialized knowledge to a different employee; however, depending on the facts of the case, the petitioner may demonstrate that the beneficiary has specialized knowledge without appealing to cost or inconvenience.
- Consistent with previous USCIS guidance, specialized knowledge need not be "proprietary or unique" to the petitioning organization.
- Determining whether the beneficiary's knowledge is not generally or commonly held within the petitioner's industry does not require a test of the U.S. labor market.
- In determining specialized knowledge for L-1B eligibility, the existence of "knowledge" takes precedence rather than the beneficiary's position or proposed pay.
- While specialized knowledge may be commonly held in the petitioning organization, the knowledge being commonly held may, depending on the facts, call into question whether the knowledge is, in fact, "specialized."
- That the beneficiary may be eligible for another nonimmigrant status [e.g., H1B or O-1], does not affect his or her eligibility for L-1B status.
In section C of the memo, USCIS discusses evidence that may support the claim that a beneficiary possesses specialized knowledge. Pursuant to USCIS regulations found in 8 C.F.R. § 214.2(l)(3)(ii), the petitioner must submit "a detailed description of the services to be performed." Furthermore, pursuant to subsection (iv), the petitioner must submit evidence that the beneficiary's "prior education, training, and employment qualifies him/her to perform the intended services in the United States." In addition to those requirements, USCIS provides in the same section of the memo a non-exhaustive list of evidence that the petitioner may submit to support a beneficiary's eligibility for L-1B status:
- Documentation of training, work experience, or education establishing the number of years the individual has been using or developing the claimed specialized knowledge as an employee of the petitioning organization or in the industry;
- Evidence of the impact, if any, the transfer of the individual would have on the petitioning organization's U.S. operations;
- Evidence that the alien is qualified to contribute significantly to the US. Operation's knowledge of foreign operating conditions as a result of knowledge not generally found in the petitioning organization's U.S. operations;
- Contracts, statements of work, or other documentation that shows that the beneficiary possesses knowledge that is particularly beneficial to the petitioning organization's competitiveness in the marketplace;
- Evidence, such as correspondence or reports, establishing that the beneficiary has been employed abroad in a capacity involving assignments that have significantly enhanced the petitioning organization's productivity, competitiveness, image, or financial position;
- Personnel or in-house training records that establish the beneficiary's claimed specialized knowledge normally can be gained only through prior experience or training with the petitioning organization;
- Curricula and training manuals for internal training courses, financial documents, or other evidence that may demonstrate that the beneficiary possesses knowledge of a product or process that cannot be transferred or taught to another individual without significant economic cost or inconvenience;
- Evidence of patents, trademarks, licenses, or contracts awarded to the petitioning organization based on the beneficiary's work, or similar evidence that the beneficiary has knowledge of a process or a product that either is sophisticated or complex, or of a highly technical nature, although not necessarily proprietary or unique to the petitioning organization; and
- Payroll documents, federal or state wage statements, documentation of other forms of compensation, resumes, organizational charts, or similar evidence documenting the positions held and the compensation provided to the beneficiary and parallel employees in the petitioning organization.
OFF-SITE EMPLOYMENT
Section VI of the memo provides guidance on how USCIS is to interpret the statutory requirement [found in INA § 214(c)(2)(F)] that in cases where an L-1B beneficiary would be working primarily at the worksite of an unaffiliated employer, the beneficiary will both "[not be] controlled and supervised principally [by the unaffiliated employer]" and "[will be placed] in connection with the provision of a product or service which has specialized knowledge specific to the petitioning employer is necessary." This provision is to prevent petitioning organizations from obtaining L-1B Visas for workers who will then effectively work for a different employer.
The memo explains that USCIS has interpreted the "control and supervision," provision, that is that the unaffiliated employer cannot control and supervise the L-1B employee, to require that the beneficiary must be controlled and supervised principally by the petitioning organization. In order to demonstrate this, the petitioning organization may show, among other things, that the petitioning organization will have the authority to dictate the manner in which work is performed, reward or discipline the beneficiary for performance, and provide the beneficiary's salary and benefits. In addition, the beneficiary must be otherwise eligible on account of having "specialized" or "advanced" knowledge, and must be using the requisite knowledge in his or her employment while on L-1B status.
READJUDICATION
In section VII of the memo, USCIS extends existing regulations that, when there is an application for extension of L-1B status involving the same parties and at the same place of employment with the same underlying facts, USCIS adjudicators should give deference to the prior determination of eligibility. The memo instructs USCIS officers to re-examine eligibility only when:
- there was a material error with regard to the original approval of the petition;
- there has been a significant change in circumstances since the original petition was approved;
- there is new information that may adversely affect eligibility.
Since this memorandum generally focuses on consolidating past agency guidance and judicial precedent, it is unclear what significant effects, if any, it will ultimately have on L-1B adjudication. The memo did note that USCIS will continue to apply the preponderance of evidence standard, which places a lower burden on the petitioner than would a higher required standard of proof. However, the lower standard does not mean that petitioners can assume that their petitions will be successful, for when a claim is not well-supported, the petition may easily fail the preponderance of evidence test.
In looking for where the Memo may come into play, focusing on the new definitions provided for "specialized knowledge" and "advanced knowledge" promises to be instructive for assessment. The memo does not discuss in detail "advanced knowledge," but does include a robust description of factors that should be considered in determining whether a beneficiary has "specialized knowledge." Therefore, one section to focus on will be the extra provisions in section V.B. describing scenarios for determining whether specialized knowledge exists, particularly the provision about the potential negative effect on demonstrating specialized knowledge in situations where the knowledge is very widespread at the petitioning organization's U.S. operations. While in many scenarios, this will likely not lead to the denial of a petition, especially since specialized knowledge need not be relative to employees in the petitioning organization, the memo adds in a footnote that this may way negatively on an L-1B petition, if, for example, the beneficiary's knowledge is widespread at the petitioning organization in the United States and the proposed pay for the beneficiary is "substantially less" than the other employees.
Regardless of whether the memo ultimately has significant effects on how L-1B petitions are adjudicated, it does comprehensively bring previous immigration agency guidance together in one source and updates its guidance such that it is consistent with the most current laws and precedent. The memo should serve as a helpful guide for petitioners in determining the types of evidence they should provide USCIS so that their L-1B petitions are approved. However, given the complexity of L-1B adjudication and the fact-specific nature of each case, petitioning organizations are very well advised to retain an experienced immigration attorney to help make it more likely than not that they can obtain L-1B Visas for their intracompany transferees.
Please visit the nyc immigration lawyers website for further information. The Law Offices of Grinberg & Segal, PLLC focuses vast segment of its practice on immigration law. This steadfast dedication has resulted in thousands of immigrants throughout the United States.
- [1] USCIS Policy Memorandum, "L-1B Adjudications Policy (PM-602-0111)" [follow link to download a PDF of the memorandum]
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