USCIS has also amended regulations to better enable U.S. employers to hire and retain certain foreign workers who are beneficiaries of approved employment-based immigrant visa petitions and are waiting to become lawful permanent residents.
According to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) "specifically, the final rule provides various benefits to participants in those programs, including the following: improved processes and increased certainty for U.S. employers seeking to sponsor and retain immigrant and non-immigrant workers; greater stability and job flexibility for those workers; and increased transparency and consistency in the application of DHS policy related to affected classifications."
Many of these changes are primarily aimed at improving the ability of U.S. employers to hire and retain high-skilled workers who are beneficiaries of approved employment-based immigrant visa petitions and are waiting to become lawful permanent residents, while increasing the ability of those workers to seek promotions, accept lateral positions with current employers, change employers, or pursue other employment options/
Among other things, DHS is amending its regulations to:
- Clarify and improve longstanding DHS policies and practices 
implementing sections of the American Competitiveness in the 
Twenty-First Century Act and the American Competitiveness and Workforce 
Improvement Act related to certain foreign workers, which will enhance 
USCIS’ consistency in adjudication.
 - Better enable U.S. employers to employ and retain high-skilled 
workers who are beneficiaries of approved employment-based immigrant 
visa petitions (Form I-140 petitions) while also providing stability and
 job flexibility to these workers. The rule increases the ability of 
these workers to further their careers by accepting promotions, changing
 positions with current employers, changing employers and pursuing other
 employment opportunities.
 - Improve job portability for certain beneficiaries of approved Form 
I-140 petitions by maintaining a petition’s validity under certain 
circumstances despite an employer’s withdrawal of the approved petition 
or the termination of the employer’s business.
 - Clarify and expand when individuals may keep their priority date 
when applying for adjustment of status to lawful permanent residence.
 - Allow certain high-skilled individuals in the United States with E-3, H-1B, H-1B1, L-1 or O-1 non-immigrant status, including any applicable grace period, to apply for employment authorization for a limited period if:
 
- They are the principal beneficiaries of an approved Form I-140 petition,
 - An immigrant visa is not authorized for issuance for their priority date, and
 - They can demonstrate compelling circumstances exist that justify DHS issuing an employment authorization document in its discretion.
 
- Clarify various policies and procedures related to the adjudication 
of H-1B petitions, including, among other things, providing H-1B status 
beyond the six year authorized period of admission, determining cap 
exemptions and counting workers under the H-1B cap, H-1B portability, 
licensure requirements and protections for whistle-blowers.
 - Establish two grace periods of up to 10 days for individuals in the 
E-1, E-2, E-3, L-1, and TN non-immigrant classifications to provide a 
reasonable amount of time for these individuals to prepare to begin 
employment in the country and to depart the United States or take other 
actions to extend, change, or otherwise maintain lawful status.
 - Establish a grace period of up to 60 consecutive days during each 
authorized validity period for certain high-skilled non-immigrant workers
 when their employment ends before the end of their authorized validity 
period, so they may more readily pursue new employment and an extension 
of their non-immigrant status.
 - Automatically extend the employment authorization and validity of 
Employment Authorization Documents (EADs or Form I-766s) for certain 
individuals who apply on time to renew their EADs.
 - Eliminate the regulatory provision that requires USCIS to adjudicate the Form I-765, Application for Employment Authorization, within 90 days of filing and that authorizes interim EADs in cases where such adjudications are not conducted within the 90-day timeframe.
 

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