Congressional Updates

Public Law 114-113, Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016

On 12/18/15, the President signed into law the omnibus appropriations bill for 2016. The Senate adopted the Omnibus Appropriations Act by a vote of 65-33; the House did so by a 316-113 tally. Several immigration-related issues were highly debated in the run-up to the bill's passage. Some of those immigration issues include:

  • Business Immigration: The bill extends the EB-5, Conrad 30, Special Immigrant Religious Workers, and E-Verify programs through the end of FY2016.

    It also includes the following changes to the currently expired H-1B/L-1 fees for companies with more than 50 employees and companies where 50% or more of the employees hold H-1B or L-1 status:
    • Supplemental L-1 fees for 50/50 companies increase from $2,250 to $4,500;
    • Supplemental H-1B fees for 50/50 companies increase from $2,000 to $4,000;
    • Fees must be paid on initial petitions and extension petitions;
    • Fees are authorized for ten years, running through September 30, 2025; and
    • The funds generated by these fees will be split between the 9-11 programs and the Biometric Entry-Exit program.
    The bill also makes certain changes to the H-2B program by providing:
    • Flexibility for H-2B workers in the seafood industry regarding when they can start working;
    • Use of private wage surveys;
    • Added flexibility to the definition of “temporary need”;
    • Limitations on the Department of Labor's ability to implement some aspects of the interim final rule; and
    • Exempting H-2B returning workers from the 66,000 annual cap for FY2016.
  • Refugees: The bill does not contain proposals that harm, restrict, defund, or end the U.S. refugee program's resettlement of Syrian and Iraqi refugees.
  • Visa Waiver Program: The bill includes the House-passed bill reforming the Visa Waiver Program (VWP), which contains categorical exclusions for nationals of Syria, Iraq, Iran, and Sudan, as well as people who travel to those countries.
  • Detainers: The bill does not include proposals that would defund or harm so-called "sanctuary" cities.
  • DAPA/DACA:The bill does not include proposals that would block the Administration from continuing the operation of original DACA or defending the DAPA or expanded DACA programs in the ongoing litigation.
  • Detention: The bill does not include language mandating the detention for all noncitizens who fall under enforcement Priority 1 and Priority 2 set forth in DHS Secretary Johnson's November 20, 2014, memo.

 

Timeline of Events Relating to CR:

 

  • H.J. Res. 78 / Public Law 114-100 - signed by President Obama on December 16, 2015, amended the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2016 (P.L. 114-53) to fund the government until December 22, 2015.
  • H.R. 2250 / Public Law 114-96 - signed by President Obama on December 11, 2015, amended the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2016 (P.L. 114-53) to fund the government until December 16, 2015.
  • H.R. 719/Public Law 114-53 - funded the government until December 11, 2015 (AILA Doc. No. 15092310)

 

 

To learn more, read AILA's statement, and watch this AILA Quicktake on the omnibus appropriations bill.
 

 

 

Cite as AILA Doc. No. 15121601.