New and Removed RCs

Additions to the USCIS Regional Center List, 3/23/2015 to 4/13/2015

Additions to the Terminated Regional Centers page:

  • Ariel International Regional Center (Texas)

Processing times for EB-5 petitions have been updated for April, but the numbers are identical to the previous report (I-526: 14.2 months, I-829: 12.3 months; I-924: 11.7 months).

IIUSA Day 2 (Congress, Markets, Securities, Impacts)

Additional notes from the IIUSA EB-5 Advocacy and Leadership Conference in Washington D.C. April 12-14…

Congressional Update
We heard from three members of Congress: Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI), Hon. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA19), and Hon. Darrell Issa (R-CA49). Senator Johnson encouraged us to fight the cultural tendency to cartoonishly villainize business and success, but he didn’t seem as eager to support the immigrant part of immigrant investment. As chair of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee, he has formulated a strategic plan that is all about securing borders and defending against threats, with no bullet points related to the welcome mat aspect of immigration. Lofgren and Issa did promise to support Regional Center Program reauthorization, with changes, and referred back to their respective (now dusty) IDEA Act and Skills Act proposals. Lofgren and Issa agreed that the qualifying investment amount needs to be increased and that it would be nice, if tough, to increase the visa cap. IIUSA’s advocacy panel discussed the climate in Congress generally and opined that program reauthorization is likely, but that it will likely be another extension rather than permanency, and will likely involve changes to the minimum investment amount, TEA process, and additional oversight provisions. Apparently the executive actions on immigration quelled Congress’ appetite to discuss immigration issues, especially across the aisle, and many members are unwilling to consider any other immigration measures until the executive action issues have been dealt with.
Markets Update
Panel discussions suggested that mainland China is still basically the only choice for large EB-5 capital raises (e.g. over about $20 million), because it’s the only country with infrastructure in place, though an increasing variety of other countries have supplied EB-5 investors in recent years. A change to the licensing procedure for migration agents in China has resulted in a proliferation of new agencies (over 2,000). However agencies dealing with immigration in China do still need to be licensed, and foreign parties cannot obtain such a license or legally do their own advertising or seminars in China. Provincial Entry & Exit associations continue to help oversee and organize migration agencies. The Guangdong association for example, provides training and screening and even publishes rankings for member agencies. The panel of representatives from Chinese migration agencies noted that the market for EB-5 investments in China is still strong, and that they do not anticipate demand reduction in response to the China EB-5 cut-off date or the possible increase to the EB-5 investment amount. For additional info on the China market, note recent posts on the Klasko Law Blog.
Securities Law
If only the panel with Catherine DeBono Holmes, Michael Homier, Ozzie Torres, and Lili Wang had lasted another hour or so. Such timely and critically important information! Homeier discussed the SEC’s crackdown on receipt of broker fees by unlicensed persons. The SEC has reached settlement agreements with a number of attorneys (with an announcement naming 15-25 firms expected soon), and the likely next step is SEC cases against any Regional Centers that paid impermissible finders fees. Torres reminded the audience that our SEC panelist from the previous day basically said that there is no such thing as a finders exemption. (From my notes: C. Joshua Felker called the so-called finder’s exemption “a popular belief.” He stated that somebody called a “finder” is actually a broker assuming his activity matches the defined activity of a broker, and that foreign “finders” can only be compensated as such if they provide a name only and give no investment advice.) Of course attorneys can get paid for legal services, but they cannot get paid to refer a client to a Regional Center, and they’d be wise to generally avoid transaction-based compensation, which attracts SEC attention. The panelists discussed possible exemptions to broker-dealer registration and ways to involve broker-dealers in the process of selling EB-5 investments. For better summary than I can give of the securities law details, see Catherine DeBono Holmes’ articles on the Investment Law Blog. Here is the PDF copy of the booklet Regional Centers & Sponsors and U.S. Securities Laws that Cathy was giving away at the conference.
Economic Impact
IIUSA unveiled an economic impact study of EB-5 Regional Center investments from 2010 to 2013. The report was prepared by David Kay of the Alward Institute for Collaborative Science, and uses a comprehensive data set thanks to the FOIA process, which allowed IIUSA to obtain redacted copies of Form I-924a filings for all Regional Centers. I’ll link to the summary report and charts when IIUSA posts information. The short story is that during FY2013, spending associated with Regional Center investors contributed $3.58 billion to U.S. GDP and supported over 41,000 U.S. jobs. Not bad! The impact study breaks down impacts by spending category and by geography, down to the Congressional District level.

IIUSA Day 1 (USCIS, DOS, SEC, FINRA)

I’m at the IIUSA EB-5 Advocacy and Leadership Conference in Washington D.C., where the mood is mixed. The proposed legislation and congressional champions that we applauded at last year’s conference are now gone. Journalists who get paid for sensation and senators who didn’t get their way in confirmation hearings have had a heyday with EB-5, and there’s every incentive for the news to get worse as other officials with tangential EB-5 connections (e.g. Hilary Clinton) stand for election/roasting. (EB-5 makes a great political weapon if it looks inherently bad, so purple insinuation pays.) A few real-life scandals have happened besides the political mirage ones, not helping matters. Despite this gathering gloom, however, the tone here at the conference is not that depressed. The ballroom is full of people who are continuing to raise capital, who are seeing their own projects and investors succeeding and economic development happening in their own areas, and who know enough to put media reports in context. With this concentration of positive personal experience in the room, it’s easy to forget what’s outside. But we can’t be complacent, because the general public isn’t in our conference room, and scandal-mongering sounds louder than boring business success. Former DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff discussed the Regional Center program’s vulnerability and emphasized the need to convey a message that will give people confidence that EB-5 is good for America – a message that can be supported by solid and understandable job creation metrics, rigorous vetting of people and investments in the program, quality control in overseas marketing, and cooperation with local development agencies. (PS Membership Committee: This is also a time to push to increase IIUSA membership, aligning a greater number of concerned people with the best practices and education and message of IIUSA and broadening the financial base accordingly, not a time to redefine the association as an exclusive Big Boys Club effectively limited to those who make the most money from EB-5 Regional Centers.)

A few notes from today’s conference presentations…

USCIS Updates
The USCIS Investor Program Office did not provide a representative to this year’s meeting, but we did receive updates from Maria Odom and Fredrick Troncone from the CIS Ombudsman’s office. The Ombudsman is independent of USCIS but they liaise frequently with USCIS, have more power to extract information from the agency than we do, and ask the kind of questions we’d want asked. We got a preview of statistics that will be included in the Ombudsman’s annual report to Congress (forthcoming in June) and comments on staffing and retrogression. (The following are my notes from the live presentation, and I may need to correct some details after I can review a recording.)

  • 329 I-924 Regional Center applications are currently pending at USCIS.
  • I-526 investor petition filings showed a 50% increase in 2014 over 2013 (which had about as many receipts as 2012).
  • In FY2015, USCIS received over 5,200 I-526 petitions by the end of March.
  • As of the end of March, USCIS had 585 I-526 petitions with a Request for Evidence pending, 629 petitions with decision pending after response to RFE, and over 400 I-526 petitions with an outstanding Notice of Intent to Deny.
  • USCIS currently averages, per month, about 800 I-526s received and 630 I-526s processed. That means that the backlog of I-526s awaiting adjudication — already at a faint-worthy 13,027 petitions – is growing as receipts regularly exceed decisions.
  • USCIS’s plan to address the backlog, as reported to the Ombudsman, involves adding staff and approving overtime. Ms. Odom said that IPO presently has 54 adjudicators, 18 economists and 12 program analysts, and plans to add 25 more staff by the end of the year. (She also commented that this plan hardly seemed equal to really addressing the backlog). Ms. Odom noted the effect of USCIS’s Quality in the Workplace initiative, which replaced quantitative with qualitative goals – a good move for employee morale but creating challenges for setting goals related to number of petitions adjudicated.
  • USCIS’s promised policy memo related to retrogression is reportedly in final process, but apparently, mysteriously, the memo will not focus on the specifics of retrogression but rather on the issue of what constitutes material change. Oh well, material change is an important issue too. Ms. Odom’s understanding is that the much-questioned 2.5 year job creation window, stated in the May 30, 2013 policy memo, will be reiterated in the forthcoming memo. No word on whether the new memo may cover questions related to sustaining the capital investment or priority dates and child status issues.
  • We are reminded that the CIS Ombudsman serves as “an office of last resort” when there are EB-5 case problems. If you have a case that’s pending 60 days over posted processing times (or presents special issues) and you’ve already tried contacting USCIS about the problem, you can go to the Ombudsman. See http://www.dhs.gov/case-assistance.

DOS Updates
Charles Oppenheim, Chief of the Department of State’s Visa Controls Office, announced a May 1, 2013 cut-off date for mainland China-born EB-5 visa applicants. (You can also read this news, with commentary, in the Visa Bulletin for May 2015.) Per-country limits kick in when DOS foresees running out of visa numbers for the year – a new problem for the EB-5 program, which historically didn’t get close to using its annual allocation of around 10,000 visas. Now demand is up and we have our first cut-off date (affecting mainland China-born applicants, because they use a disproportionate number of EB-5 visas). Starting next month if you (and your spouse) were born in Mainland China and you get approval of an I-526 petition filed sometime after May 1, 2013, you can’t move forward in the visa stage of the process until DOS advances the cut-off date. (Everyone else is not affected.) Mr. Oppenheim anticipates advancing the cut-off date gradually, at least in conjunction with the new visa allocation that will come with the new fiscal year starting in October. It’s also possible that he might move the cut-off date back (which I learned is the only part of this process that’s accurately termed “retrogression”) if visa numbers prove even more limited than expected (which might happen if USCIS does improve its processing speed and volume). We’re encouraged to keep an eye on Item D in the monthly Visa Bulletin for periodic updates on movement of the cut-off date. The current cut-off date involves a wait of about two years (not terribly onerous, considering how long people have to wait for I-526 processing anyway), and demand trends suggest a wait of more like three years by the end of 2016. Panelists David Hirson and Bernard Wolfsdorf (and Robert Divine) pushed for clarification on procedural questions related to securing priority dates for child status protection, and Mr. Oppenheim promised that his legal department would be addressing such questions in a memo to be released in the next few days. (He may also have answered the question himself, but you’ll have to ask Mr. Hirson to translate into English!) Mr. Oppenheim also mentioned that visa usage is about 45% principals (investors) and 55% derivatives (spouse/children) – rather different from the 1/3 to 2/3 breakdown that I’ve heard previously. He warned specifically against trusting bloggers for visa advice, but nevertheless I’m repeating links to posts that I found helpful from Robert Divine and Ron Klasko.

SEC and FINRA
We got nice presentations from C. Joshua Felker (SEC Enforcement Division Assistant Director) and James Wrona (FINRA VP and Associate General Counsel) on the relevance of their agencies for EB-5 – but no breaking news that I could perceive. Felker mentioned five EB-5 enforcement actions but only named the three from 2013/2014. He did not discuss the forthcoming action involving some fee-taking immigration attorneys (see EB-5 Analytics for discussion of this important topic). The issue of whether/when a Regional Center may need to register as an investment adviser was also not really addressed (see Holmes & Shum’s recent article for discussion of this important topic). We got the usual reminders that SEC enforcement interests do cover registration issues as well as fraud, and that something that acts like a security is a security (and that acts like a broker, is a broker) regardless of what they’re called. I learned from Wrona that FINRA currently has about 60 broker-dealers engaged in EB-5 activity, a marked increase from previous years. The number of broker-dealers at the conference reflect this welcome trend. As we know, FINRA guidelines that particularly overlap with EB-5 include the suitability rule (which must consider both investment and immigration suitability for EB-5 per the Trustmont letter), the advertising rule, Bank Secrecy Act issues, and anti-fraud issues.

OIG and the Mayorkas legacy

After listening to an EB-5 stakeholder “Conversation with Director Mayorkas” teleconference on December 3, 2012, and hearing what seemed like just more idealistic talk about building greater expertise and professionalism and transparency into the EB-5 program, I wrote a depressed post titled “Promises for the future, not today.” I ended up deleting that post a couple months later when, to my surprise, Director Mayorkas’ Quixotic promises started coming true. He was a driving force behind hiring higher-grade subject matter experts onto the USCIS EB-5 adjudication team to improve the quality of adjudications; getting the EB-5 program office moved out of California to Washington D.C, where it gained more resources and more opportunity for oversight and collaboration with partners such as the SEC and FBI; hosting regular public stakeholder meetings to improve communication and transparency; and getting out a years-overdue EB-5 policy memo that helped make adjudication policies more standardized and transparent. Objectively, these moves were good for the integrity and health of the EB-5 program, though there were side effects. Presumably quite a few California adjudicators lost their jobs, and those who stayed with the program were reorganized and got more oversight and had to work harder (just as we who prepare paperwork had to step it up based on the rising review standards). I’m sorry but not surprised that Mr. Mayorkas has ended up with a nice big target on his back, especially since his next move after shaking up the EB-5 division and trying to whip it back into shape has involved helping President Obama with the Executive Actions on immigration. If you’d like to witness people aiming at that target, you can read the March 24, 2015 edition of the Office of Inspector General’s investigation into USCIS employee complaints. Have your gas mask ready to deal with the politics. Or if you just want the summary of the media’s take on this report: Mr. Mayorkas is a bad man who intervened in the decision-making of unimpeachable career civil servants out of favoritism for evil Democrats. My take is that a few disgruntled employee complaints about ambiguous cases cannot obscure how much Mr. Mayorkas improved the quality and predictability of EB-5 adjudications during his tenure by hiring business experts and economists and attorneys, getting more resources committed to EB-5, and pushing for published policy guidance. I personally blame his standards and staffing decisions for the fact that my business plans are about ten pages longer than they were pre-Mayorkas era and festooned with footnote citations to verifiable market and industry research. I also witness and appreciate the improved professionalism that he encouraged in preparation and review of EB-5 cases.
Update: See the comments for additional commentary and links to informed articles related to the OIG report.

New and Removed RCs

USCIS continues to designate new Regional Centers and add others to the list of Terminated Regional Centers. For the past couple years, it’s been common for large operators to apply for multiple Regional Centers even if they didn’t have immanent projects for all the centers. This secured them the potential to sponsor investments over a wide geographic area, and positioned them to move forward promptly if projects were identified. Now, however, USCIS is being aggressive about terminating any Regional Centers not currently demonstrating contributions to economic growth, and we can expect to see many dormant centers being culled from the list. I have mixed feelings about this. On the one hand, I’m not comfortable with how the Regional Center list has bloated since the loose hypothetical project standard lowered the barrier to entry to for new RCs. On the other hand, I know of well-managed regional centers that have not recently sponsored a project but are committed to the program and have strong potential for future performance, and it seems a shame to nip them in the bud. Public agencies will also be less likely to consider EB-5 as a tool for the toolkit if maintaining Regional Center designation requires ensuring a constant stream of EB-5-funded projects.

Additions to the USCIS Regional Center List, 3/9/2015 to 3/23/2015

New Terminations, 3/9/2015 to 3/18/2015

  • New Jersey Regional Center, LLC (New Jersey)
  • EB-5, MRC LLC (Michigan)
  • American Life Ventures Everett, LLC (Washington)
  • Palm Coast Florida Regional Center (Florida)

What are TEAs and how do they work?

Every couple years, there’s a kerfuffle over the use and definition of the Targeted Employment Area (TEA) in the EB-5 program. People – recently Seattle Times journalists, for example – look at things like luxury hotels being built in wealthy downtown areas using EB-5 investment and ask wait a minute, is this right? Such projects nearly always get EB-5 investment in $500,000 increments (State Department stats show there’ve historically been very few Regional Center investments at the $1 million level), and the $500,000 reduced investment amount depends on the project being located within a TEA. The Seattle Times portrays the TEA reduced investment amount as a “loophole” being “exploited” by people who “gerrymander” a TEA by grouping high and low unemployment areas, then go on to develop a project in the prosperous part of the designated area. The Seattle Times editors believe that EB-5 program architects intended EB-5 investment dollars to be spent within depressed communities, that there aren’t centralized guidelines for defining TEAs, and that there’s a problem with state involvement in TEA designation. These points require some perspective.

First, the term “Targeted Employment Area” does have a set definition, articulated by Congress through law and elaborated by USCIS regulation. The term is not defined individually by states, and the term is not defined to equal “an economically depressed area.” The Immigration Act of 1990 that established the EB-5 program specifies that (in its own spelling): “the term ‘targetted employment area’ means, at the time of the investment, a rural area or an area which has experienced high unemployment (of at least 150 percent of the national average rate)” and “-The Attorney General may, in the case of investment made in a targetted employment area, specify an amount of capital required under subparagraph (A) that is less than (but not less than 1/2 of) the amount specified in clause (i)” (see PDF p 21-22 of IMMACT 1990). USCIS regulations and policy repeat this statutory definition, specify the reduced amount of capital, and elaborate practical issues in designation determinations (see the EB-5 Policy Memo p. 7-8 for discussion).

Because the TEA definition is in the law, changing the definition would be a statutory matter and a point to pursue with your Congressional representatives. But it’s worthwhile to look at the original intent. In 1990, Congress chose to define TEAs for the EB-5 program specifically in terms of employment (or rural areas). Congress could have defined TEAs based on poverty levels, crime levels, educational levels, exports, GDP growth rates, sales tax, or other metrics considered in other initiatives intended to benefit depressed areas, but it chose unemployment as the target. An area with median household income at $30,000 and unemployment of 7% would not currently qualify as a TEA; another area with median income at $100,000 and unemployment of 15% could qualify. The explicit intent with TEAs was to encourage job creation for high unemployment areas. Creating jobs for poor people and investing within poor neighborhoods are also worthy goals, but it happens that Congress did not choose to write such goals into the EB-5 law.

While the law and regulations define what constitutes a TEA, states are involved in implementation. Each state may choose an agency and give it authority to designate TEAs, which involves leeway to judge (1) appropriate boundaries of a geographic or political subdivision that constitutes the targeted employment area; and (2) which data set to use in calculating the area’s unemployment. In reviewing EB-5 petitions, USCIS generally gives deference to state designations, but double-checks that the data is acceptable and that calculations are consistent with methodologies established by the Department of Labor. The elements of state discretion lead to variation in TEA designations between states. Some state authorities will designate census tract groups and some won’t; states have different ways of deciding which geographic boundaries make sense; and a variety of unemployment data sets may be used. (Impact DataSource has a good article about state variation.) Just letting one agency decide for the nation using one yardstick would look cleaner, simpler, and more equal. But note what makes sense about local involvement. Based on population distribution and commuting patterns, for example, it might be reasonable to have a very large TEA area spanning certain suburbs, a very small one within a certain city neighborhood, and a banana-shaped one somewhere else along a busy highway. A local economic development agency could have a good basis for judging whether certain TEA boundaries make sense for the given region. I can’t visualize a federal agency coming up with one cookie cutter geography definition that fits from Alaska to Florida. Designated state agencies are typically labor departments or economic development authorities, which means their interests are aligned with the aims of the EB-5 program, making their discretion is as good as anyone’s. Of course project developers will try to draw geographic areas for their own advantage, but I can’t think of a better arbiter for this than the state authorities.

Under current rules, it’s possible to get TEA designation for an area whose average unemployment rate is high, even if parts of the area have low unemployment. So how do we feel about locating an EB-5 project in the healthiest part of the TEA? Would that subvert the intent of the EB-5 program? The Seattle Times suggests that TEA EB-5 projects in downtown Seattle fail the smell test. Let’s think about Potala Tower, which the Seattle Times describes as a $190 million hotel project in an upscale Belltown neighborhood. (Disclosure: I don’t know any more about this project than I learned from the Times.) I believe that Belltown is not depressed and that the hipsters living next door to the Potala project do not need the construction jobs or operations jobs that it will create. On the other hand, the hipsters next door probably won’t take the jobs. It seems more likely that the roofers and carpenters and housekeepers and managers who take the work will be residents of the less hip high-unemployment neighborhoods a few miles south. If Potala Tower would likely employ South Seattle residents, isn’t it reasonable to package those contiguous South Seattle neighborhoods with Belltown as a Targeted Employment Area? That’s gerrymandering, but could make economic sense, unless there’s a barrier around Belltown that isolates the jobs created and money spent there. And let’s consider the impacts of the $190 million Potala Tower project as compared with impacts of the $9 million Econolodge project that might be feasible to build smack within a depressed part of South Seattle. The luxury hotel would be a much larger new employer, but more distant from where most unemployed people reside. If I were advocating for those 20% unemployed residents of South Seattle and had to choose one project to encourage on their behalf, the Potala or the Econolodge, I’d have to consider carefully – maybe even in consultation with my good old state economic development authority. It’s not a simple question, and I wouldn’t bother asking why the upscale business can’t just locate to a downscale street. Assuming that Belltown+South Seattle can reasonably, practically be called “an area,” and that Potala Tower could make a dent in the high unemployment concentrated in South Seattle, I’m not getting bad whiffs off this situation. As the EB-5 program is currently set up, a TEA EB-5 project should not fail the smell test simply because it’s luxury or in an upscale neighborhood, but only if it seems unlikely to create jobs in a high-unemployment area.

It’s possible to argue that the current TEA rules set a bar that’s too low, allowing too many areas to qualify; or that the $500,000 reduced EB-5 investment amount is too low, considering investor visa thresholds in other countries; or that the TEA definition wrongly focuses on unemployment when other metrics may be more urgent today. Those points are worth debating. I don’t think you can argue that TEA definitions and rules do not exist or are incoherent or endemically subverted, unless you begin by not grasping what the existing definitions and rules are. To avoid debating from ignorance, consider re-reading Carolyn Lee’s article on State Designations of EB-5 Targeted Employment Areas.

And while I’m on the topic of TEA misconceptions, let me caution you about paying someone to “discover if your site qualifies as a TEA.” The variation among states means that, unless your entire county or MSA has high unemployment or you’re in a rural area outside an MSA (in which case, no special designation is required), there is no universal data source or one simple calculation that will reliably determine a TEA around your site. It’s not very helpful to buy a report predicting a favorable census tract combination based on proprietary 2014 unemployment data, for example, if your state won’t designate census tract groups and uses 2013 BLS/2011 ACS data. If in doubt about TEA possibilities for your site, I’d start by getting the policy from your area’s designated authority (there’s one list of designated agencies here). Then you can start assessing TEA qualification, and consider assistance from professionals who are current on your state’s geographic area procedures and unemployment data sets.

IPO Processing Times, 12/5 Engagement Notes, New RCs

EB-5 Processing Times
The monthly processing update for the USCIS Investor Program Office shows slight increases to processing times for all EB-5 petitions.
times

12/5/2014 Engagement Notes
USCIS has posted a summary, transcript of the Director’s statement, and slides from the December 5, 2015 EB-5 stakeholder engagement. There’s no Q&A or other content that wasn’t presented at the meeting. To review the meeting in more detail, consult Robert Divine and Melanie Walker’s summary.

New RCs
Additions to the USCIS Regional Center List, 3/4/2015 to 3/9/2015

  • California One Investment Center, LLC (California)
  • EB-5 Bonds California, LLC (California)
  • EB5 Florida Hotels & Investments Regional Center LLC (Florida)

Name change: from My EB5 Green Card Regional Center to My Florida Regional Center LLC DBA My EB5 Green Card Regional Center

EB-5 for real estate projects, New RCs

Roadmap to EB-5 as Financing for Real Estate Projects
IIUSA has posted a working draft of a paper by Professor Jeanne Calderon and Gary Friedland, Esq. of the NYU Stern Center for Real Estate Finance Research. (Update: the link now directs to the final 5/24/2015 version.)“A Roadmap to the Use of EB-5 Capital: An Alternative Financing Tool for Commercial Real Estate Projects” is a good resource for real estate people exploring the EB-5 option and looking for practical information about the program and detailed examples of how businesses have used EB-5. The authors confess the difficulty of researching this paper, and I think they occasionally put too much face value on claims by agents or Regional Centers about the greatness of their projects and wisdom of their strategies, but overall this is a very solid resource and provides useful guidance, particularly for EB-5-newcomers. I will link the paper on my Resources page and make an update when the authors publish a final draft.

New Regional Centers
Additions to the USCIS Regional Center List, 2/23/2015 to 3/4/2015

  • Regional Center Fund of America LLC (District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia): www.rcfamerica.com
  • Shrimp House US LLC (Florida)
  • Heartland Regional Center, LLC (New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania)

Removed from the list 2/23/2015 – 2/25/2015

  • Buffalo Regional Center (New York)
  • Silicon Valley Venture Investment Regional Center (California)
  • Tucker Development Corporation Regional Center (Michigan)

2/26 USCIS SOF teleconference, New RCs

USCIS Engagement on EB-5 Source of Funds
Today USCIS hosted an “EB-5 Interactive Series” teleconference on the topic of Requests for Evidence on Lawful Source of Funds for Investment. As promised in the invitation: “The topic of discussion will be lawful source of funds used for capital investment in the EB-5 program. We will discuss common reasons why petitioners receive requests for evidence and types of evidence that are helpful to submit.” The call was nicely detailed and highly technical and offered no surprises that I could spot, but then I don’t work with source of funds documentation. If this is your field and you want to review the call, you may download my recording. (See also the Klasko law blog and EB-5 Insights blog for comments on the call.) USCIS stated that it will not be posting an engagement summary, so we won’t have the convenience of just reading the prepared statements read on the call. USCIS concluded the call with four general tips for avoiding a source of funds RFE: (1) explain any inconsistencies in the documents provided; (2) if a required document is unavailable, explain why; (3) consider the probative value of evidence (ie evidence from an objective third party will be more compelling than evidence from you/your friend/your family/your company); (4) provide full translations of foreign documents. UPDATE: USCIS has posted these tips on a new EB-5 Evidence page.

New Regional Centers
Additions to the USCIS Regional Center List, 2/3/2015 to 2/23/2015

  • EB5 United West Regional Center, LLC (California)
  • North American Center for Foreign Investments, LLC (California)
  • Pacific Investment & Immigration Regional Center (California)
  • Front Range Regional Center, Inc. (Colorado and New Mexico): www.pathwayseb5.com
  • BLT TriState Regional Center LLC (Connecticut, New Jersey, New York)
  • USCFID New York LLC (Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania)
  • Midwest Regional Center, Inc. (Kentucky)
  • Northeast Monument Regional Center LLC (Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island)
  • G.R.E.E.N. Regional Center (New Jersey)
  • The New Mexico Regional Center (New Mexico)
  • U.S. Immigration Recovery Fund NY, LLC (New York)

Removed from the list: Midwest EB-5 Regional Center, LLC (Ohio, Kentucky)

Immigrant investor program comparison

To understand what the EB-5 program is and is not, it’s helpful to look at EB-5 in context of other immigrant investor programs. Last year the Migration Policy Institute published a very nice report that does just that: Selling Visas and Citizenship: Policy Questions from the Global Boom in Investor Immigration (October 2014). The report divides immigrant investor programs into two main categories and five types, as summarized (by me) in the following table.
comptable
Note that EB-5 falls within the category of private-sector business investment, and does not involve an investor-government transaction. You can give the Malta government cash in exchange for citizenship (program type #5); you can’t give the U.S. government cash for citizenship. Australia offers the option of a government investment product (government bonds) to buy in exchange for a visa (program type #3); the U.S. government does not offer EB-5 investments, leaving that to the private sector. Spain will grant a temporary visa if you purchase property (program type #2); the U.S. will not grant an EB-5 visa simply for asset acquisition. Agents trying to sell EB-5 have muddied the waters here, because potential immigrant investors like security and simplicity, and it’s not easy to sell private sector investment. Investing in a private business requires sophistication and involves risk, but that’s not such a comfortable story. So some agents try to imply that the U.S. government sponsors/underwrites EB-5 investments, and some try to peddle “secure investments” that are really only non-qualifying asset acquisitions. Do not listen to such stories. The fact is that the EB-5 and Regional Center programs fundamentally involve at-risk investment in job-creating business. You cannot buy a green card, the U.S. government does not offer or sponsor your investment (neither Regional Center approval nor project “pre-approval” constitute endorsement or underwriting by the government), and you can’t gain permanent residence simply by expending a certain amount of money. You can immigrate to the U.S. by making a qualifying investment that is spent to develop a new commercial enterprise that creates jobs. Or you can decide that the U.S. is too much trouble and go to St. Kitts & Nevis to buy citizenship.

A business investment-type program has advantages and disadvantages for governments. On the positive side (so far as domestic politics are concerned), the program can’t be criticized for simply selling green cards, and it may create jobs and spur economic growth. On the negative side, the government has a tough task in ensuring program integrity and maximizing economic impact when it doesn’t control the investment transaction. If you’re interested in this topic, I recommend reading the entire Migration Policy Institute report, which reflects thoughtfully on policy implications for each type of immigrant investor program.

Q1 2015 EB-5 processing statistics

Newly-released processing time information for the Investor Program Office shows slight increases over the previous quarter to average processing times for all EB-5 petitions and applications.
IPO22015
Data Source: USCIS Processing Time Information

The big story behind these numbers comes in the statistics on processing volume for the end of 2014 (USCIS’s Q1 2015), which shows a number of surprising trends: 1) the first fall I can remember in the number of I-526 petitions received; 2) a sizable increase in the number of I-526 petitions processed; 3) a near stand-still in I-829 adjudication. The California Service Center got 690 I-829 petitions out the door in the previous quarter, before the hand-off to IPO, and IPO has processed only 69 I-829s since taking over the task. I hope that future processing reports will show IPO getting up to speed with I-829 and able to handle the growing backlog of petitions (3,080 of them as of 12/31/2014).
I-526Q12015I-829Q12015
Data Source: USCIS Immigration and Citizenship Data

ABC News stories, New RCs, IIUSA Conference

ABC on EB-5 Investors
This has been a week of journalistic exposés of how unsavory high-net-worth people can be. The New York Times has published a series of articles unveiling shady characters who’ve been buying up prime New York real estate, the Guardian has a multi-part series on how HSBC’s Swiss private bank has facilitated financial malefactors, and ABC news has released a bunch of screamer articles and videos on EB-5 investors that ask the question “are suspected criminals, spies, terrorists buying their way into the US?”
There are a few lessons for businesspeople offering EB-5 investments. First, do be serious about vetting your investors, assuming you don’t want to end up some day with unsavory connections and cameras chasing you down a hallway. USCIS, the State Department, OFAC and their partners are much more serious and meticulous about vetting EB-5 petitioners than the ABC reports imply, but still you can’t be too careful with your own screening.
As you read the ABC stories yourself and field reactions from others, here are some points to keep in mind:

  • ABC’s key sources appear to be Senator Charles Grassley and a few disgruntled USCIS employee insiders who felt they were rushed and micromanaged;
  • Senator Grassley’s stand on immigration is to increase border security, beef up interior enforcement, oppose amnesty, scrutinize DHS, and find program abuse;
  • Each EB-5 investor’s petition currently takes an average 13.8 months to get reviewed by USCIS, which is not exactly a rush job; both the petition process and subsequent visa process involve stringent review and requirements;
  • In fact you can’t buy a green card in the US, not for $500,000 or for any other amount; some countries do have visa-for-sale programs but the US does not; the EB-5 program grants a visa in exchange for investor-funded business development resulting in job creation, not for money (to put the EB-5 program in context, see this Migration Policy Institute report on investor visa programs around the world);
  • The fact that an investigation exists is a cause for concern, but not sufficient basis for assuming that the investigation will close with a guilty verdict;
  • There are terrorists and spies and cheats in the world, but people are not terrorists because they’re Iranian and are not spies and cheats because they’re Chinese, despite ABC’s implications.

FYI: EB5info has posted a copy of the memo referenced in the story, and IIUSA and Klasko Law have issued reaction statements.

IIUSA Conference Registration
A reminder that this is the last week for early bird registration for IIUSA’s 8th Annual EB-5 Regional Economic Development Advocacy Conference on April 12-14 in Washington D.C. We’ll have a lot to advocate about this year.

New Regional Centers
Additions to the USCIS Regional Center List, 12/31/2014 to 2/3/2015

  • Dine’ Bi Keyah Regional Center, LLC (Arizona and New Mexico)
  • American Liberty Alliance (California)
  • Zhonghong Regional Center LLC (California)
  • Live in America – Colorado Regional Center LLC (Colorado): www.liveinamerica.us
  • EB5 Capital – New York Regional Center (Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania): www.eb5capital.com
  • Birch Miami Dade Regional Center (Florida): www.birchcapital.com
  • Mariana Stones Corporation Ltd. (Guam)
  • Live in America – Indiana, Michigan, Ohio Regional Center (Indiana, Michigan, and Ohio): www.liveinamerica.us
  • Live in America – South Regional Center LLC (Kentucky and Tennessee): www.liveinamerica.us
  • Diamond City Montana EB-5 Regional Center, LLC (Montana)
  • Lubert-Adler Northeast Regional Center, LLC (New Jersey and New York): lubertadler.com
  • Queens Fort New York Regional Center, LLC (New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania): queensforteb5.com
  • West Penn Regional Center (Pennsylvania)

1/12 IPO Processing Update, Terminated RCs

Today USCIS updated processing time information for the Immigrant Investor Program Office. Average I-526 processing times took a modest but welcome dip, while average I-829 and I-924 processing times continue to climb.
IPO11202014
USCIS has still not restored the Regional Center program information page to its website, but it has added a new page titled Terminated Regional Centers. The page emphasizes USCIS power to revoke Regional Center designation and gives a walk of shame for Regional Centers that have lost designation, for reasons that may range from missing paperwork to misconduct. Blameless Regional Centers simply choosing to disband should seek to do so in a way that avoids being publicly listed together with the few RCs terminated for cause.

12/2014 RCBJ, New RCs (FL, MN, NM, PR, TX, WA)

I recommend the December 2014 edition of the Regional Center Business Journal for a wrap-up of what happened in EB-5 this year. Our hopes for USCIS’s promised annual EB-5 program report must deferred to 2015.

Additions to the USCIS Regional Center List, 12/8/2014 to 12/29/2014

20132014RCapproval

FY2014 EB-5 Visa Stats by Country

The US Department of State has updated its Report of the Visa Office 2014 with the section on EB-5 visas issued: Section V Immigrant Visas Issued and Adjustments of Status Subject to Numerical Limitations (by Foreign State of Chargeability): Fiscal Year 2014, Part 3 (Employment Fifth and Totals, Grand Totals). I’m copying below my summary table, which lists all countries associated in FY 2014 with 20+ EB-5 visas. People wondering about trends in demand for EB-5 visas should study the full file carefully. They may also compare with visa office reports from previous years.
FY2014visas
PS: Keep in mind that visas are not the same as petitions. I-526 petitions are one per investor and filed with USCIS, which adjudicates them and publishes its own statistics. EB-5 visas are one per investor plus his/her spouse and minor children, and are issued by the State Department after a process that follows I-526 approval.

12/5 Meeting, I-924A, Processing Times, New RCs (CA, IL, IN, RI, WI)

12/5 EB-5 Stakeholder Engagement
USCIS provided EB-5 program updates and answered stakeholder questions at the quarterly stakeholder engagement on Friday. USCIS Director Leon Rodriguez honored the event with an appearance, and stated that he desires to be not only a manager of but also an enthusiast and champion for the EB-5 program. IPO Chief Nicolas Colucci indicated that IPO has reached 94 staff, with another 10 adjudicators to be added in the next few weeks. We learned that USCIS is preparing a retrogression policy guidance memo, that the Government Accountability Office is conducting an audit of the EB-5 program with respect to fraud risk/mitigation strategies and validity of economic model job creation (instigated by Senators Grassley, Coburn, and Corker), that USCIS continues to prioritize fraud prevention (with a 15-member Fraud Detection National Security team and plans to expand site visits and compliance review), and that additional in-person stakeholder events are planned for 2015. USCIS invited stakeholders to submit comments and ideas for the forthcoming retrogression policy guidance memo and for how to improve ELIS and the Regional Center Document Library. Division Chief Julia Harrison gave practical tips on source of funds documentation, Division Chief John Lyons made some ill-considered statements on troubled business job creation, callers brought questions that were answered from the 5/30/2013 EB-5 policy memo or not answered, and anti-immigration lobbyists took up time advertising their theories while pretending to ask questions. I will link more detailed stakeholder meeting summaries from other commentators here as available. In the meantime, I’ve uploaded my recording of the call as usual, if you’d like to review it.

I-924 Form revisions
USCIS is revising the Form I-924 and Form I-924A, and you are invited to submit your comments at regulations.gov.

I-924A Filing
If you are a Regional Center principal, do not forget to file your I-924A before December 29. USCIS terminated seven Regional Centers in 2014 for failure to file.

Executive Action and EB Visa Categories
President Obama’s executive action on immigration does not directly affect EB-5, but Robert Divine has a nice article on what it does do. See Obama Legalizes Undocumented, Tweaks EB Categories.

Processing Times
USCIS has posted its monthly update to IPO processing times. I-526 and I-924 times are about the same (14.7 and 9 months respectively) while average I-829 times are up to 8.6 months.

Additions to the USCIS Regional Center List, 11/24/2014 to 12/8/2014

  • Regional Center Enterprises I, LLC (California)
  • Central California Regional Center, LLC (California)
  • American Dream Fund Chicago Regional Center, LLC (Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin): www.adreamfund.com
  • RI EB-5 Regional Center, Inc. (Rhode Island): rieb5rc.com

2014 I-526/I-829 Processing Stats, SEC Enforcement, New RCs (AL, CA, FL, IL, IN, NY, OH, OR, TX)

Processing Statistics
USCIS has updated its Immigration and Citizenship Data page with fourth quarter FY2014 processing statistics for Form I-526 and Form I-829.The numbers show dramatic increases in the number of petitions filed and the number processed. USCIS received twice as many I-829 petitions this year as last, and also processed twice as many. USCIS increased its I-526 processing volume as well, but not enough to keep up with receipts which exceeded 10,000 this year and pushed the volume of pending petitions over 12,000. That soaring line of I-526 receipts is sobering, considering that each represents an investor and only about 10,000 EB-5 visas are available annually for investors plus their spouses and dependents. (The State Department issued 9,228 EB-5 visas in FY2014, and China-born investors face a high probability of EB-5 quota retrogression in 2015.) On the bright side, 1,603 investors removed conditions this year, representing millions of dollars successfully invested and thousands of new jobs successfully verified. The image below shows summary charts from my Excel file of the data, based on files from the USCIS page linked above.
FY2014stats

SEC Compliance
Chad Ellsworth of Fragomen, Del Rey, Bernsen & Loewy, LLP has an interesting article Emphasis on Compliance and SEC Interagency Cooperation a Year after the Appointment of Chief Nicholas Colucci to the USCIS Immigrant Investor Program (EB-5). The article summarizes the SEC’s recent EB-5-related activities and describes the content of broad subpoenas issued by the SEC to a number of Regional Centers.

Additions to the USCIS Regional Center List,11/4/2014 to 11/24/2014

  • Cornerstone Regional Center, Inc. (Alabama and Florida): www.cornerstoneregionalcenter.com
  • Golden Opportunity Regional Center (California)
  • Southern California Health and Hospitality Regional Center, LLC (California): www.eb5mg.com
  • American Advancement Capital Co. (California)
  • Success Dragon, LLC (California)
  • Clearwater Beach Resort Regional Center, LLC (Florida): www.eb5clearwaterbeach.com
  • Miami Regional Center, LLC (Florida)
  • Orlando Regional Center, LLC (Florida)
  • Crossroads Investment Partners, LLC (Illinois, Indiana, Ohio)
  • NYC Regional Center, Inc (New York)
  • American International Venture Fund – Oregon, LLC (Oregon)
  • PetroSam, LLC (Texas): petrosam.net

FAQ page, Retrogression, I-829, Processing Times, New RCs (CT, IL, IN, LA, NJ, NY, TX)

FAQ
I have started a new Frequently Asked Questions page that compiles official and unofficial USCIS answers to questions that affect business plans. So far I’ve linked in answers from USCIS policy guidance and stakeholder meetings, and I’ll be adding references to AAO decisions that treat sticky business plan questions.

Retrogression
Speaking at the IIUSA conference on October 23, Charles Oppenheim predicted that the EB-5 visa category will likely retrogress in July 2015. This remains a moving target, however. Ron Klasko’s blog has published a timely article on Surviving and Thriving in Times of EB-5 Quota Backlogs.

I-829
You may thank us at the IIUSA editorial committee for another great edition of the Regional Center Business Journal (October 2014). Three feature articles provide advice and analysis for I-829 petitions: The Latest Analysis of What USCIS Looks For in EB-5 I-829 RFEs and Denials, It’s Never Too Soon to Begin Preparing for I-829 Petition Filings, and Removal of Conditions for EB-5 Investors: Practical Guidance in Preparing I-829 Petitions.

Processing Times
The USCIS website has a sharp new look as of last week, but no new EB-5 content except a IPO processing times update. I-829 times are back to normal, while average I-526 and I-924 processing times continue to inch up.
IPO 930

IIUSA Conference
Mark your calendars for IIUSA’s 2015 EB-5 Regional Economic Development Advocacy Conference on April 12-14, 2015 in Washington, DC.

Additions to the USCIS Regional Center List, 10/20/2014 to 11/04/2014

  • EB5 Fund, Inc. (Connecticut, New Jersey, and New York)
  • Great Lakes Regional Center, LLC (Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin): www.glrceb-5.com
  • Southern Opportunity Regional Center LLC (Louisiana and Texas)
  • Premier Regional Center, LLC (Texas): www.premierregionalcenter.com

12/5 EB-5 Stakeholder Meeting (in person)

From: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
Sent: Monday, November 03, 2014 9:31 AM
Subject: USCIS Invitation: EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program Stakeholder Engagement, 12/05/2014

Dear Stakeholer,

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) invites you to participate in a stakeholder engagement session on Friday, Dec. 5, from 1 to 3:00 p.m. Eastern to discuss the Immigrant Investor Program. This engagement is part of our efforts to enhance dialogue with external stakeholders regarding the program, also known as EB-5.

During the first part of this engagement, we will provide EB-5 program updates from fiscal year 2014 and discuss initiatives for fiscal year 2015. The second part of the engagement will be a question-and-answer session. You may ask non-case specific questions or provide feedback on the EB-5 program.

You can attend this engagement either in-person or by teleconference. Please note that in-person attendance is limited to the first 80 people who register.

To register for this session, please follow the steps below:

  • Visit our registration page to confirm your participation
  •  Enter your email address and select “Submit”
  •  Select “Subscriber Preferences”
  •  Select the “Event Registration” tab
  •  Be sure to provide your full name and organization
  •  Indicate if you plan to attend in-person or by teleconference; and
  •  Complete the questions and select “Submit”

If attending in-person, please RSVP for this event no later than Friday, Nov. 14.

Once we process your registration, you will receive a confirmation email with additional details.

To submit questions before the teleconference, please:

If you have any questions regarding the registration process, or if you have not received a confirmation email within two business days after you register, please email us at Public.Engagement@uscis.dhs.gov.
Dec 5 EB5 Quarterly Stakeholder Engagement Invitation.pdf

IIUSA Conference, AILA Book, New RCs (CO, CA), Removed RCs (CO, FL)

To those in San Francisco this week for the 2014 IIUSA EB-5 Market Exchange, happy deal-making! I’m not able to make this conference, but send best wishes and look forward to sharing feedback from attendees.

To those stuck behind a desk this week, I recommend you to the virtual EB-5 masterclass that is AILA’s new Immigration Options for Investors & Entrepreneurs, 3rd Ed. I received a free copy as a contributing author (I wrote the chapter on EB-5 business plans), but can now testify that the book is worth the full price ($129 for AILA members, $199 for the rest of us). This is not a collection of quick opinions, general introductions, and veiled advertising but a set of serious articles that incorporate comprehensive research and extensive experience. If I were an immigration attorney working with EB-5, I’d buy the book for the sample documents and case materials alone, not to mention excellent articles such as Estelle McKee’s practical discussion of issues in demonstrating job creation in I-829 petitions and Carolyn Lee’s definitive analysis of the at-risk requirement. (And Suzanne Lazicki’s lucid treatment of the EB-5 business plan!)  If I were an investor or offering EB-5 investments, I probably wouldn’t buy the book for myself (it’s specialized and heavy) but I would make sure that the attorney representing me had a copy. The book works hard to make good on its promise “to provide everything you need to successfully represent clients in this highly specialized area.” Click here to preview the Table of Contents, and update your Christmas list as needed.

I expect to have important updates shortly, as USCIS is overdue to update Q4 2014 petition processing statistics, and the State Department may come out with the Report of the Visa Office 2014 any day. For now, we just know that average processing times are holding steady for I-526 (13.8 months) and I-924 (8.1 months), and have shot up for I-829 (to 15.1 months, likely in connection with the transfer from California to Washington DC).

Those interested in Targeted Employment Area issues should note the new approach to TEA designations adopted by California, which has tended to be a trendsetter.

Meanwhile, USCIS continues to add and subtract Regional Centers from its list (and continues to fail to update its FOIA reading room with designation letters for the Regional Centers approved since 2012).

Changes to the USCIS Regional Center List, 10/1/2014 to 10/20/2014

Added:

  • Dynasty Group Regional Center, LLC (California)
  • California Economic Development Fund, LLC (California)
  • California Capital Investment Regional Center, LLC (California)
  • InvestAmerica EB-5 (Colorado) www. investamericaeb5.com

Removed:

  • Invest U.S. Regional Center (Colorado)
  • Hollywood Beach Regional Center LLC (Michigan)