On February 26, 2014, USCIS staged a long overdue meeting with EB-5 stakeholders by telephone only. The discussion of data and a range of issues gives me an excuse to prepare this assessment of the EB-5 program at present. I place my own editorial comments in [brackets] to distinguish from my summary of what the USCIS leaders said (as I heard it).
USCIS Leadership. The new chief of the USCIS EB-5 Program Office
is Nichols Colucci, who moved over to USCIS from the Department of
Treasury, where he was a director in the FinCEN program (http://www.fincen.gov/)
that investigates, regulates and prosecutes money laundering and before that
held leadership roles in the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (http://www.atf.gov/)
-- law enforcement agencies. He was described on the call as someone who has
managed people well in working together with other federal agencies. On the
call, he articulated goals not only about integrity (enforcement) but also
efficiency, transparency, customer service, and even predictability. [Those are
good words, and from someone with an MBA. His selection seems to reflect an
Administration preference at this point for serious accountability toward
program integrity, avoiding use of the program by money launderers, and
coordination with other agencies that enforce laws associated with money
laundering, securities, etc. Stakeholders should appreciate the program's
leadership by someone who understands enforcement and particularly money
laundering, which can help diffuse recently rampant innuendo that the program is
fraught with investments by terrorists and money launderers.]
The Deputy Chief of the EB-5 Program Office is Robert Cox, who moved to
that role from the Office of Chief Counsel (which I once oversaw). [By all
accounts and from personal interaction, Mr. Cox is very bright, and from his
discussion of the more substantive legal policy issues he conveys a meaningful
awareness of the most important issues, even if he sidestepped some aspects of
the trickiest pressing questions for which the agency probably has not made
policy decisions.]
Dan Renaud is the Deputy Associate Director of Field Operations for USCIS
and is the boss of Mr. Colucci. [Mr. Renaud previously was the interim Chief of
the EB-5 program and the spearhead (with former Director Mayorkas) for the May
30, 2013 policy memo that began to address longstanding issues and made some
very sensible policy changes and clarifications. (For my assessment of that
memo, go to
http://iiusablog.org/government-affairs/key-points-uscis-eb5-policy-memo-published-30-2013-robert-divine-iiusa-vp/.)
Mr. Renaud is as business savvy as well as any government official I know, and
stakeholders should take comfort that the EB-5 program has landed under his
care.]
Personnel and Processing. In February 2014 USCIS completed the
transfer of all pending I-526 filings to the new Washington, D.C. area EB-5
adjudication team, which now employs 53 people, including 20 economists and 25
adjudicators, with plans for continued growth to 75 by September 2014 and 100 by
several months later.
USCIS took I-526 cases away from 35 trained adjudicators who remain in
California. I-526 petitions grew from 5,000 in October 2012 to 7,131 in October
2013. [It is staggering to think that USCIS consciously took away so many
adjudicators who could be whacking away at the backlog.] California adjudicators
continue to work on I-829 filings, whose backlog reduced from 1,300 to just over
1,000 during this same period. The average I-526 processing times are about 11
months [a figure that must really annoy investors and their developers with
petitions pending over two years with no action at all]. Average I-829
processing times are about the same: 11 months. Average I-924 regional center
applications are taking 12 months on average.Mr. Colucci promised to correct the
posted processing times reports as to EB-5 filings. He said I-526 processing
times probably will get worse before they get better. [We have heard this many
times before, but for years they have only gotten worse. Once USCIS does make
meaningful progress on the I-526 backlog, unless there is a high denial rate the
approvals will use up the available visa numbers and trigger a "retrogression"
in cutoff dates from the "current" designation we have always known in this
category. With their family members, about 3,500 investors would use up a year's
10,000 numbers.]
The USCIS leaders stated that they are "taking steps" to implement more
consistently a "first in-first out" approach to I-526 adjudication [perhaps a
nod to the pending allegations that USCIS gave favor to politically connected
regional centers and projects], but they stated they intend to keep "balancing"
this goal with the efficiency that can be gained, for instance, with a practice
of adjudicating together the petitions of investors in a particular project.
They also expressed their sense of "urgency" about long-pending petitions but
provided no specific steps being taken in that regard.
Electronic Filing. Mr. Colucci announced that USCIS had
implemented the use of the online case filing system, ELIS, for the intake of
I-526 petitions. [No one I know had heard of this before Mr. Colucci stated
this. I looked at www.uscis.gov/i-526, and indeed the option to "File Online"
was present, with no explanation about whether the voluminous documents for an
I-526 can be filed electronically in the process and how they will be organized
in doing so. Mr. Colucci announced that some other accomplishment has been made
to allow the filing of project documents that I-526 petitioners can share, but
he did not explain any details, and the page at
www.uscis.gov/I-924 contains no
reference to this. Yet when one seeks to "Create an Account" on the ELIS system
at
https://elis.uscis.dhs.gov/cislogin/login, the option is available to create
a third type of account (in addition to Applicant or Legal Representative) as a
"Regional Center or New Commercial Enterprise Document Manager" who then can
create an account for the RC or NCE entity and then load "Deal Packages" that an
online filer of I-526 can link to in order to avoid separately loading the same project documents.]
Mr. Colucci stated that further details will come in some further stakeholder
interaction, with no dates or details. [About a year ago, Dan Renaud (then
interim EB-5 Chief) and the people running the USCIS Transformation Program
(which Renaud previously directed) met with stakeholders about the parameters
for online filing. That meeting contained very encouraging discussions about the
prospect of filing project documents once and having I-526 petitioners link to
such repository in a way that reflected that they had read and agreed to the
exact same documents, thus eliminating the need for each investor to file the
project documents. The idea makes complete sense for efficiency and ecology, but
the mechanics are maddeningly challenging, and implementation will inject
important new dynamics into the relationships between investors, agents, new
commercial enterprises, and regional centers.]
Mr. Colucci hinted that those who try the electronic filing might receive faster adjudication during the experimental stage that seems to have begun without fanfare. [So far, very few immigration lawyers have used the ELIS online system, because it was only available for a very small array of case types in which few lawyers file volumes of applications. EB-5 lawyers now will be scrambling to establish their ELIS online accounts and scouring the system, seeing what RC/NCE and I-526 clients want to try it.]
Substantitive Issues
Mr. Cox addressed a significant number of questions, most of which were posed by IIUSA and written by yours truly. USCIS had received volumes of questions and had chosen some of the more frequently asked questions. [Some of the most important aspects of a few issues seemed consciously avoided, as discussed below.]
Hypothetical Detail. Mr. Cox stated that a regional center
application always needs to include a project with an economic analysis
predicting indirect job creation supported by "verifiable detail" but for a
hypothetical project the range of assumptions can be broader for hypotheticals,
and while the application must verify how the jobs will be created, there can be
less verification and less detail than for an "exemplar" project that will
receive deference in future I-526 petitions. Mr. Cox did not describe how or how
much the verifiable detail can be relaxed. [Thus, applicants seeking the "low
bar" for regional center applications still will have to find it by the "trial
and error" method.]
Sale of Regional Centers. Mr. Cox confirmed that sale of the
entity operating an approved regional center is not prohibited. [This seems
consistent with previous stakeholder meeting statements that a regional center
designation is not an asset that can be sold separate from the entity that
received approval and with statements inserted into recent regional center
approvals that the designation is "not transferable."] Mr. Cox said that after a
transfer of ownership, a regional center entity must notify USCIS within 30 days
by email in keeping with the following statement on page 4 of the I-924
instructions:
Designated Regional Centers must notify USCIS within 30 days of a change of
address, contact information, regional center principal(s), contracting agents
or similar changes in the operation or administration of the Regional Center.
Notification can be made by sending an e-mail to the EB-5 Program mailbox at:
USCIS.ImmigrantInvestorProgram@dhs.gov.
Mr. Cox said that in response to the email, USCIS may require an I-924A. [See
www.uscis.gov/i-924a. 8 CFR
204.6(m)(6) requires regional centers to "provide USCIS with updated information
…" and provides that "such information must be submitted to USCIS on an annual
basis, on a cumulative basis, and/or as otherwise requested by USCIS, using a
form designated for this purpose." Ostensibly, the I-924A is now deemed the form
for this purpose, but the form does not seem well-suited for it.]
Mr. Cox stated that, also in keeping with the instructions to Form I-924 (see
www.uscis.gov/i-924, page 1, item
2.A.2.), a regional center may also file I-924 reflecting the transfer, but
importantly, he did not state that USCIS can or will require such filing. [There
is a huge difference between filing I-924A, which is a reporting mechanism, and
I-924, which is an application seeking USCIS approval. In the past some regional
centers whose ownership has changed have reported it to USCIS by email with
varying responses. Some responses have stated to the effect: "Thanks, we will
put this in the file," and others have responded to the effect: "Thanks. You
need to file an I-924 (not I-924A)." With hope, USCIS leadership has provided
guidance to those manning the USCIS EB-5 email inbox with the same guidance Mr.
Cox gave stakeholders.] Mr. Cox gave no indication of any standard by which
USCIS might reject a change of ownership or even the considerations. [New owners
might be well-advised to tell USCIS about themselves and their plans for using
the regional center to grow the regional economy when they give the email notice
in order to avoid requirements to file more and in order to receive some
response that sounds like acceptance.]
Targeted Employment Areas. Mr. Cox addressed several questions
about this critical topic.
Collections of TEAs. Mr. Cox confirmed that an investor can use the
$500,000 level if the new commercial enterprise is principally doing business in
a collection of TEAs, and not necessarily just one TEA. This means that the job
creating enterprises receiving the EB-5 funds must be principally located in and
creating jobs in the collection of targeted employment areas. It means that
there may be locations and existing or new jobs outside of the TEAs, and there
does not need to be one TEA in which the predominant location and most of the
jobs are created. Given that the regulations refer to "a targeted employment
area" in the singular, this is a very helpful policy clarification, and it needs
to be the subject of a USCIS writing.
High Unemployment TEAs. Mr. Cox fielded a question frequently asked for a
long time: whether a high unemployment area that is not a county or MSA as a
whole, but instead is some collection of census tracts or other type of area can
be presented with current data using proper DOL/BLS methodology without official
designation by a state. Mr. Cox referred to the regulations [8 CFR
204.6(j)(6)(ii)] and the May 30, 2013 policy memo [page 8] to confirm that such
a designation must be established by a letter from an agency of a state to which
such authority is designated by the governor. [This throws into question some
projects that may have used "private" designations (typically a letter from an
economist with supporting data). Investors in such projects will need to think
about whether and how a corrective action or interfiling can be made before a
debacle at the I-829 stage. Some states are becoming a little more
self-conscious with their designations, and developers will need to advocate
their TEA requests carefully.]
TEA Timing. Mr. Cox fielded a few questions from the floor about the
point at which TEAs are assessed. He acknowledged that USCIS might adjudicate a
TEA claim in an I-924 exemplar project filing, but he confirmed that the
individual investor still needs to establish TEA qualification as of the time of
the investment (or, if escrow is used, the time of I-526 filing). [USCIS has
been issuing RFEs to investors whose TEA designation letter was based on data
that was not the most current at the time the I-526 was filed. It is not clear
whether USCIS will accept a responsive filing of a TEA designation using more
recent data but issued after the I-526 was filed.]
RC Geography Standard. The biggest game changer in the May 30,
2013 policy memo was USCIS' recognition that regional centers can sponsor
projects beyond the industry and geography for which they already have been
approved. This gave rise to two related questions: how far away from the
approved area can a new project be, and what is the standard upon which a
request for expansion will be adjudicated? Mr. Cox stated that the standard is
the same for initial RC applications for expansion: the areas sought must be
contiguous (and thus a new area must be contiguous to the approved area), and
the "proposed economic activity" must be shown to promote economic growth in the
proposed area. As stated in the May 30, 2013 policy memo [page 14], this does
not require a county-by-county analysis, and the focus tends to be on the supply
chain and labor pool associated with proposed projects. Mr. Cox declined to
provide further clarifying detail, but he did say that a California regional
center cannot sponsor a New York project. [Especially given some recent regional
center designations of multi-state areas based on proposed sets of projects that
do not seem likely to have predicted impact to every corner of all the states,
the exact standard appears unclear.] Mr. Cox stated that predictability can be
obtained by filing and waiting for an approval on a I-924 to expand a regional
center's territory, and he repeated the USCIS goal to continue improving those
processing times.
Public Works Projects. Mr. Cox confirmed that as long as the EB-5
investors make an investment in a "new commercial enterprise" for profit, using
regional center sponsorship, the NCE may invest or loan the money to a separate
job creating enterprise which may be not-for-profit and could include a public
works project if it meets the job creation parameters for the EB-5 investors.
[Holding in my hand my client's long-approved exemplar designations of such
projects, I resumed breathing.]
Redemption/Call Options. Mr. Cox was less than clear about the
nagging question whether or not it is a prohibited "redemption" if a new
commercial enterprise agreement gives the enterprise the option to buy back the
investor's interests after the end of conditional residence. The question Mr.
Cox addressed posed an option to pay a set price. [We might have hoped that the
question had included the alternative of an option to pay what would be deemed
at the time (ostensibly by some objective means) a fair market value for the
EB-5 investor's interest.] Mr. Cox stated that the arrangement would be
scrutinized not only for whether there was a promise to buy the investor's
interest (clearly prohibited) but also whether the investor had a risk of loss
and a chance for gain. [USCIS' theory for denial may be that by having the
option to buy out the EB-5 investor at or near his investment price in the event
that the company does well, the enterprise has the contractual opportunity to
eliminate the investor's chance for gain. That theory, carried to extremes,
could wreak havoc in the industry.]
Bridge Financing. Mr. Cox read only a small part of an important
question that was posed about any temporal requirements that may be associated
with the opportunity to use EB-5 funds to replace bridge financing. Mr. Cox
simply repeated that the plan to replace the bridge financing with EB-5 capital
must be shown to have existed before the original financing was injected, and
that EB-5 funds cannot be used to refinance longer term debt that was not really
contemplated to be used temporarily. [He avoided two questions that had been
posed: First, can be bridge financing be advanced well before any I-924 or I-526
is filed? Ostensibly, the answer is yes, but the longer the period that the
bridge financing lasted before any immigration filing may effect USCIS'
assessment of temporariness. Second, can an I-526 be filed even after a project
has been completed using bridge financing? It seems clear enough that it should
be acceptable for an I-526 to be approved, and thus funds held in
approval to be released for repayment of bridge financing, even after the
project was completed, because USCIS adjudication times have been exceeding the
period of some projects, and a stricter rule would eviscerate the whole idea of
bridge financing. But it is a different situation for investors to file
their I-526 (and ostensibly to have made the investment) after the project was
completed. We have seen in the market projects being openly advertised to EB-5
investors stating that they are safe from developmental risks because they are
already completed. USCIS has stated in its response to the recent report of the
DHS Office of Inspector General that "USCIS has denied and will continue to deny
cases where a project is already completed and circumstances do not warrant
attribution of jobs to a proposed late-stage investment." Such a temporal
limitation was not stated in the May 30, 2013 policy memo, and I was surprised
to see Mr. Cox avoid articulating some temporal backstop consistent with USCIS'
statement to the OIG.]
Guest Expenditures. Mr. Cox stated that EB-5 investors could
possibly count the jobs created by the expenditures of guests in a hotel built
with EB-5 funds if a market study and economic analysis demonstrated one or more
of three things he articulated: (1) unmet aggregate demand (high occupancy rate
-- he did not say how high); (2) differentiated product for a market segment (no
comparable facility exists); or (3) response to the demand generated by another
establishment such as a sports arena. [We know of a few projects that have been
credited with jobs from guest expenditures after USCIS began attacking such
arrangements in 2012, but the bar seems fairly high.]
Job Creation Evidence at I-829. Mr. Cox confirmed that investors,
whose I-526 predicted direct jobs or predicted indirect jobs based on the number
of direct jobs, must demonstrate at I-829 stage the actual employment of full
time workers through payroll, tax, I-9 and other documents. Importantly,
however, he stated that if jobs had been predicted based on operational revenues
or on the amount of space to be occupied by certain industries, then investors
at I-829 stage may show the jobs by presenting evidence of the revenues or the
requisite occupancy. [This seemed to validate the modern practice of economists
in using operational revenues or occupancy square footage to derive not only
indirect and induced jobs but also what an economist would consider direct jobs
in relation to the project. (Remember, in a technical immigration sense, a
direct job is only an employee of the new commercial enterprise or its 100%
subsidiary.) This seems to reflect a USCIS strategic decision to allow everyone
to avoid the drudgery of submitting job-by-job evidence in larger projects, even
when parties associated with the new commercial enterprise may have some level
of control over the operation of the job creating enterprise. This all sounded
good, particularly for developers and investors who wonder whether the direct
jobs that could be shown with real people in a job creating enterprise would
amount to as many jobs as the "direct" jobs predicted from revenues or square
footage based on a model, but parties should be cautious. The May 30, 2013
policy memo at page 7, after accepting the practice of predicting "indirect
jobs" through economic models without regard to whether they are full time or
permanent, added "USCIS may, however, request additional evidence to verify that
the direct jobs will be or are full-time and permanent, which may include a
review of W-2s or similar evidence at the form I-829 stage." Mr. Cox did not
state in the stakeholder meeting that he was refuting any aspect of the May 30,
2013 memo.
Sustaining Investment. Mr. Cox explicitly withheld any policy
pronouncement about the critical question of what it means to "maintain" or
"sustain" the investment as required for removal of conditions on permanent
residence at the I-829 stage. [The problem is that projects may be successfully
developed with the requisite job creation but then sold or refinanced before the
end of conditional residence. Does an investor fail to "maintain the investment"
if the job creating enterprise repays the loan or returns capital to a new
commercial enterprise before the end of conditional residence even if the jobs
were created? Is it enough if the new commercial enterprise holds the money in a
bank account without distributing to investors before the end of their
conditional residence? Would it be enough if the NCE received the payout from
the JCE and reinvested it in another kind of project, and if so would there be
specific job creation, TEA/RC area, or other requirements associated with that
re-deployment of capital? All of these questions are exacerbated by the time it
takes USCIS to adjudicate I-526 petitions, as mentioned in the question posed to
Mr. Cox.] Mr. Cox demonstrated his awareness of the issue when he brought up on
his own the further problematic implications of the visa retrogression we can
expect as soon as USCIS starts working off the I-526 backlog. So he said USCIS
is thinking about this question. [A great deal rides on it.]
Conclusion. USCIS does not consider itself bound by these oral
stakeholder meetings or even the "Executive Summaries" it tends to write up
months afterwards, but we are encouraged.
By Robert C. Divine of Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz, P.C.