USCIS Updates Policy on Untimely Filed Extensions of Stay and Change of Status Applications


U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has updated its policy manual to clarify the circumstances under which the agency, in its discretion, may forgive a failure to timely file a nonimmigrant extension of stay or change of status request where the failure is the result of extraordinary circumstances beyond the applicant’s control.

Quick Hits

As a rule, USCIS does not approve an extension of stay or change of status request where an applicant has failed to maintain his or her nonimmigrant status. The USCIS Policy Manual states that the agency, “in its discretion,” may excuse such a failure where the applicant can show that:

The update to the USCIS manual makes prior practice policy and clarifies the meaning of “extraordinary circumstances” beyond the control of the applicant, explaining that such circumstances “may include, but are not limited to,” where the delay was “due to a slowdown or stoppage of work involving a strike, lockout, or other labor dispute,” or “[w]here the primary reason for the late filing is the inability to obtain a certified labor condition application or temporary labor certification due to a lapse in government funding supporting those adjudications.”


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National Law Review, Volume XIV, Number 30