Tag Archive for: Defensor v. Meissner

Comment to Proposed H-1B Rule Expressing Concern Over New Definition of Specialty Occupation

December 22, 2023

Submitted via www.regulations.gov

DHS Docket ID No. USCIS-2023-0005

Department of Homeland Security

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services

Office of Policy and Strategy

5900 Capital Gateway Dr.

Camp Springs, MD 20588-0009

 

Attn: Charles L. Nimick

Chief, Business and Foreign Workers Division

Re:      Regulatory Proposal for Modernizing H–1B Requirements, Providing Flexibility in the F–1 Program, and Program Improvements Affecting Other Nonimmigrant Workers – Comment on Proposed Changes to H-1B Registration Process at 8 CFR 214.2(h)(8)(iii)

Dear Mr. Nimick:

Cyrus D Mehta & Partners PLLC (“CDMP”) is a New York law firm that focuses its practice mainly in the area of US immigration law and represents many clients in H-1B visa matters. CDMP also advocates on behalf of its clients to achieve fairer and just immigration laws, and also posts articles on its widely read The Insightful Immigration Blog, https://blog.cyrusmehta.com, in furtherance of this objective.  CDMP is accessible at www.cyrusmehta.com.

CDMP limits its comments to the proposed new definition of “specialty occupation” and the proposal that the USCIS will look to the  end client’s requirements to determine whether the position qualifies as a specialty occupation.  These are the NPRM that are cause for  concern.

The NPRM’s New Definition of “Specialty Occupation” Contradicts the INA

We commend DHS for clarifying in the proposed regulation that in order for a particular bachelor’s degree to be normally considered the minimum requirement, “normally does not mean always” and that the agency will not differentiate “normally” from the equivalent terms such as “mostly” or “typically” used in the DOL’s Occupational Outlook Handbook (“OOH”) and other sources of information describing the preparatory requirements for occupations. This is consistent with Innova Sols., Inc v. Baran, 983 F.3d 428 (9th Cir. 2020) where the court held that “ … there is no daylight between typically needed, per OOH, and normally required, per regulatory criteria. ‘Typically’ and ‘normally’ are synonyms.”

However, we are deeply concerned that the provision in the NPRM that requires specialized studies to be “directly related” to the position impermissibly exceeds the statutory requirements of the Immigration and Nationality Act  (“INA”). The NPRM at 8 CFR 214.2(h)(4)(ii) states,

A position is not a specialty occupation if attainment of a general degree, such as business administration or liberal arts, without further specialization, is sufficient to qualify for the position. A position may allow a range of degrees or apply multiple bodies of highly specialized knowledge, provided that each of those qualifying degree fields or each body of highly specialized knowledge is directly related to the position.

There is no requirement in the INA provision that the required specialized studies must be “directly related” to the position. Under § 214(i)(1) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”) a “specialty occupation” is  defined as an occupation that requires

  • Theoretical and practical application of a body of highly specialized knowledge, and
  • Attainment of a bachelor’s or higher degree in the specific specialty (or its equivalent) as a minimum for entry into the occupation in the United States

Therefore, in contrast to the requirement in the NPRM that the degree must be “directly related” to the position, the statute at INA § 214(i)(1) clearly provides a substantially broader standard, stating that a requirement of a degree in the specialty or its equivalent can form the basis of a specialty occupation. A federal court explicitly stated that the statutory language defining a specialty occupation includes not only a required degree in the specialty but also other combinations of academic and experiential training that would qualify a beneficiary to perform the duties of the specialty occupation. In Tapis International v INS, the court held that a position may qualify as a specialty occupation if the employer requires a bachelor’s degree or its equivalent. For the “equivalent” language to have any reasonable meaning, it must encompass … various combinations of academic and experience based training. It defies logic to read the bachelor’s requirement of “specialty occupation” to include only those positions where a specific bachelor’s degree is offered.

Tapis International v INS, 94 F. Supp. 2d 172 (D. Massachusetts 2000).  The holding of Tapis International therefore specifically precludes the impermissible limitations that the agency seeks to impose in the NPRM by limiting employers to require only degrees that are “directly related.” The language in INA § 214(i)(1) that defines a specialty occupation by the requirement of either a bachelor’s degree or higher in the specific specialty “or its equivalent” as a minimum for entry into the occupation is distinct from the statutory requirement of the qualifications that the H-1B beneficiary must possess to qualify for the specialty occupation. The statute sets forth distinct requirements at INA § 214(i)(2) for the beneficiary to establish his or her qualifications for the specialty occupation, such as completion of a bachelor’s degree or experience in the specialty through progressively responsible positions relating to the specialty.

Therefore, the phrase in the statutory definition of specialty occupation at INA § 214(i)(1), which includes both a bachelor’s degree or higher in the specific specialty and the alternative of “its equivalent” broadens the permissible requirement for a specialty occupation to “not only skill, knowledge, work experience, or training … but also various combinations of academic and experience based training.” See Tapis, supra. Thus, under the statutory language, a position can qualify as specialty occupation not only on the basis of a specialized degree requirement, but also where the occupation requires a non-specialized degree combined with specialized experience, training or coursework as the equivalent of a specialized degree to serve as the minimum requirement for entry into the occupation. The rigid standard in the NPRM that the agency seeks to impose with its requirement that every permissible degree must be “directly related” contradicts the clear language of the statute and is therefore ultra vires and impermissible.

Another area of significant concern to our organization is the agency’s misplaced and impermissible attempt to exclude positions requiring business degrees from the definition of specialty occupation. In its focus on excluding these positions from the definition of specialty occupation, USCIS appears to base its analysis on outdated notions that positions requiring a business degree are too generalized to qualify for H-1B classification. On the contrary, graduates of undergraduate and graduate business programs typically gain high-demand, sought-after skills in specialized STEM and business areas, including data analysis, technology management, accounting, financial forecasting and analysis, and many other disciplines. For many years the agency’s practice has been to provide employers with the opportunity to establish that a position’s requirements and the beneficiary’s qualifications were sufficient to qualify as a specialty occupation through either a business degree with a formal concentration or, alternatively, through a specific combination of coursework, or in some cases specialized professional experience. We urge the agency to recognize this important and long-established policy and practice and continue to allow employers to build a record to establish the specialized needs of sponsored positions to qualify as specialty occupations.

Similarly, we have significant concerns with the language in the preamble to the rule that would disqualify positions that require an engineering degree, without specialization, from qualifying as a specialty occupation. The NPRM states that “a petition with a requirement of any engineering degree in any field of engineering for a position of software developer would generally not satisfy the statutory requirement” as the petitioner may not be able to demonstrate that a range of fields of engineering would qualify the H-1B worker to perform the duties of a specialty occupation. This interpretation is impermissibly narrow and subverts the intent and the plain language of the statute. When a federal court recently overturned an agency denial of an H-1B petition based on the employer’s requirement for a non-specialized engineering degree, the court explained that the statute does not require specialty occupations to be subspecialties. In its analysis, the court stated:

 

Importantly, the INA defines professions — the basis of the H-1B Regulation’s specialty occupation requirement — at the categorical level (e.g., “lawyers” and “teachers,” 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(32), rather than “tax lawyer” or “college English professor,” see id.) and specifically includes “engineers,” id. In addition, the specialty occupation provision arose from a need “to meet labor shortages . . . in occupational fields, such as nursing, engineering, and computer science.” 1988 Proposal, 53 FR 43217-01, at 43218 (emphasis added). Put simply, in contrast to a liberal arts degree, which the Service deemed “an [in]appropriate degree in a profession” because of its “broad[ness],” 1990 Rule, 55 FR 2606-01, at 2609, an engineering degree requirement meets the specialty occupation degree requirement.

InspectionXpert Corp. v. Cuccinelli, 1:19cv65, 58 (M.D.N.C. Mar. 5, 2020).

The decision in InspectionXpert, in addition to explaining that the statute disallows the requirement of specialized engineering degrees, aligns with the reality of the workplace and the skills gained in engineering degree programs. While there are many types of engineering disciplines, engineering degree programs provide a common core of advanced quantitative and technological skills that prepare the worker to perform the technical duties of a range of positions in specialty occupations such as Operations Research Analyst, Software Developer or Computer Systems Analyst. Again, we urge USCIS to recognize the long-established practice of allowing employers to build a record to establish the specialized needs of their positions to qualify as specialty occupations, including those where the employer believes that the requirements of a particular position includes a number of engineering degrees or a non-specified engineering degree.

Moreover, the disfavoring of business management and engineering degrees in qualifying a position for H-1B classification flatly contradicts the Biden Administration’s National Security guidance and strategy on “attracting and retaining the world’s best talent” and the President’s October 30, 2023, Executive Order on the “Safe, Secure and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence.” Executive Order (“EO”) 14110. In studying the AI workforce, experts have found that primary degrees required for core AI job duties are business administration, computer science, engineering, mathematics, and statistics.[i] Yet, USCIS has chosen to provide an example in the preamble explanation of the NPRM cautioning employers about requiring the type of quantitative and problem-solving skills developed in an engineering degree as unlikely to be “directly related” to a qualifying H-1B position, and has proposed codifying in regulation that positions requiring business administration studies should not qualify for H-1B status. This creates unnecessary hurdles for employers engaging in on-campus recruitment in the U.S. where international students account for more than 50% of graduate engineering degrees [ii] and are among those completing a Master of Business Administration or Bachelor of Business Administration,[iii] and deprives our economy of the precise types of AI, technology and national security talent that the Biden Administration is making significant effort to attract and retain.

In conclusion, the proposal to redefine “specialty occupation” will not only contravene the statutory provisions defining the H-1B criteria, but it will make it unnecessarily restrictive and run counter to the Administration efforts to boost our competitive advantage and our economy. See Stuart Anderson’s Biden Immigration Rule Copies Some Trump Plans to Restrict H-B Visas, Forbes (October 23, 2023), which provides examples of emerging occupations vital to U.S. economic growth and competitiveness that may not qualify under the proposed definition of specialty occupation. The views of the undersigned are also reflected in this article.

Therefore, CDMP proposes that USCIS delete the language in proposed 8 CFR § 214.2(h)(4)(ii) stating that “[t]he required specialized studies must be directly related to the position” and “A position is not a specialty occupation if attainment of a general degree, such as business administration or liberal arts, without further specialization, if sufficient to qualify for the position.”

We request that the regulatory language remains consistent with the definition of “specialty occupation” under  INA § 214(i)(1) that  requires “[a]ttainment of a bachelor’s or higher degree in the specific specialty (or its equivalent) as a minimum for entry into the occupation in the United States.” Also, the proposed regulation should allow for a specific body of knowledge required to perform the job duties of the position to properly interpret “or its equivalent” in INA § 214(i)(1). For instance, if the position of management analyst requires a bachelor’s degree and specialized experience or training, it ought to be considered a “specialty occupation” for H-1B classification if the beneficiary possesses a bachelor’s degree in a liberal arts field and also has experience or training in marketing. Similarly, the position ought to also qualify as a specialty occupation if the candidate possesses a bachelor’s degree in liberal arts but has significant course work in quantitative fields such as statistics and data analytics that would allow the beneficiary to perform the duties of the position of marketing analyst.

 

The End Client’s Requirements Should Not Determine the Degree Requirement

Under the NPRM, for a worker who will be “staffed” to a third-party client site, the client rather than the employer would need to establish that it would normally require a U.S. bachelor’s degree in a directly related specific specialty. We believe that this requirement is unduly burdensome in the normal course of business as it would be difficult for the sponsoring employer to obtain such documentation from a client.

The agency’s reliance in the NPRM on the 5th Circuit’s holding in Defensor v Meissner, 201 F. 3d 384 (5th Cir. 2000) is misplaced. In Defensor, the Court treated the client as a co-employer. In contrast, the H-1B regulations contemplate only the petitioner as the employer. The client does not supervise the H-1B worker or evaluate their job performance. The clients of the petitioner would certainly not want to be viewed as a co-employer and incur potential liability from a claim by the H-1B worker.

Under the NPRM, it is important to note that the educational requirements of the third party would only be taken into account and would only apply if the H-1B worker is contracted in a “staff augmentation” arrangement to the third party as opposed to providing services to the third party.  Defensor v. Meissner involved a staffing agency for nurses that filed the H-1B petitions and contracted the nurses to hospitals. There is a critical distinction between the nurse in Defensor v. Meissner and a software engineer who is providing services to the client rather than being staffed to the client. The absence of clear guidance on this key distinction is likely to result in a proliferation of RFEs resulting in burdens for the employer and inefficient use of government resources.

For these reasons, CDMP proposes that the phrase “or third party if the beneficiary will be staffed to that third party” in 8 CFR 214.2(h)(4)(iii) be deleted.

Sincerely,

 

Cyrus D. Mehta

Managing Partner

 

 

 

 

[i] Autumn Toney and Melissa Flagg, U.S. Demand for AI-Related Talent Part II: Degree Majors and Skill Assessment (September 2020), Center for Security and Emerging Technology, p. 3.

[ii] See e.g., National Science Foundation, Science & Engineering Indicators 2022, “International S&E Higher Education and Student Mobility,” which reported that students on temporary visas earned 50% of engineering Master’s degrees in the United States and over half of U.S. doctoral degrees in engineering (State of U.S. Science & Engineering 2022, National Science Board).

[iii] Higher-ed institutions commonly offer four different types of Business degrees: Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science degrees in Business, which have different distribution requirements and different options for “specialization” as compared to a Bachelor in Business Administration and a Master in Business Administration. The proposed regulatory text would permit an adjudicator to start with a presumption that a Bachelors or Masters in Business Administration cannot be qualifying, based on the label of the degree, and by default ignore a completed minor or concentration, for example, as not being a “specialization,” without obligating the adjudicator in all cases to review and give weight to the transcript.

Denial of H-1B Cases: The Occupational Outlook Handbook is Not the Holy Grail

By Cyrus D. Mehta and Gianna Boccanfuso∗

The USCIS continues to strictly scrutinize H-1B petitions. According to an NFAP report, denial rates for H-1B petitions have increased significantly, rising from 6% in FY 2015 to 33% through the second quarter of FY 2019 for new H-1B petitions for initial employment. In recent times, seeking review of an H-1B denial in federal district court has led to successful outcomes such as in Relx v. Baran.  Often times, after filing a complaint in federal court under the Administrative Procedures Act alleging that the decision was arbitrary and capricious, the USCIS reopens the denial and approves the case, or issues another Request for Evidence (RFE). Upon responding to the RFE, as has been our experience in one matter, the USCIS approved the H-1B.

While many have experienced success, there have also been a spate of H-1B decisions mostly from federal district courts in California that have gone the other way. In these denials, the courts have upheld the USCIS’ interpretation of the description of the occupation in the Occupational Outlook Handbook. For example, in Xiaotong Liu v. Baran, 2018 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 222796, the Central District of California upheld the USCIS’ denial of an H-1B petition for an Event Manager to oversee the functions of business conference coordination and event gathering for the petitioning company, Innsight. The USCIS decision concluded that:

As shown in the OOH, although a baccalaureate level training is generally required, the position of Meeting, Convention or Event Planner is an occupation that does not require a baccalaureate level of education in a specific specialty as a normal, minimum for entry into the occupation. There is no apparent standard for how one prepares for a career as a Meeting, Convention or Event Planner and no requirement for a degree in a specific specialty. The requirements appear to vary by employer as to what a course of study might be appropriate or preferred.

As in most decisions, the District Court of the Central District of California analyzed whether the Plaintiff satisfied one of the four prongs of the following regulatory criteria:

  1. A baccalaureate or higher degree or its equivalent is normally the minimum requirement for entry into the particular position;
  2. The degree requirement is common to the industry in parallel positions among similar organizations or, in the alternative, an employer may show that its particular position is so complex or unique that it can be performed only by an individual with a degree;
  3. The employer normally requires a degree or its equivalent for the position; or
  4. The nature of the specific duties are so specialized and complex that knowledge required to perform the duties is usually associated with the attainment of a baccalaureate or higher degree.

8 CFR § 214.2(h) (4) (iii) (A).

Looking at only the first and second criteria of 8 C.F.R. §214.2(h) (4) (iii) (A) the court found that the USCIS’ denial of Innsight’s H-1B petition was not arbitrary and capricious and therefore granted Defendant’s motion for summary judgment.  The court  held that the  government’s denial was not arbitrary and capricious in regards to the first criterion, a bachelor’s degree as a minimum requirement, because there was a rational basis for the conclusion that the position of Event Manager did not require a degree in a specific field or its equivalent when the OOH demonstrates a preference for prerequisite course work that does not amount to a necessity when it states that “other common fields of study include communications, business, and business management” but does not mention particular course work as essential.

The court also acknowledged that “[d]istrict courts appear somewhat split on whether the fact that some positions do not require a bachelor’s degree is enough to provide a rational connection between the OOH language and a failure to prove that a position is a specialty occupation. Compare Ajit Healthcare Inc. v. United States Dep’t of Homeland Sec., No. CV131133GAFJPRX, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 186258, 2014 WL 11412671, at *4 (C.D. Cal. Feb. 7, 2014) (finding “a ‘rational  connection’ between the Handbook description of the job in question and the conclusion that a [position] would not normally require a baccalaureate degree or higher” when the OOH provided that “[a]lthough bachelor’s and master’s degrees are the most common educational pathways work in this field, some facilities may hire those with on the-job experience instead of formal education”) (internal citation omitted) with Next Generation Tech., Inc. v. Johnson, 328 F. Supp. 3d 252, 267 (S.D.N.Y. 2017) (“Even affording appropriate deference to the Government’s interpretation of the statutory and regulatory requirements, this Court is at a loss to see a ‘rational connection’ between the evidence indicating that ‘most computer programmers have a bachelor’s degree’ and USCIS’ determination that ‘computer programmers are not normally required to have a bachelor’s degree.'”).” In Xiaotong Liu v. Baran, unfortunately, the court sided with the USCIS’s interpretation of the OOH.

On the second criterion, the court found based on job postings from similar organizations submitted by the Plaintiff, that a reasonable fact finder could have concluded that job requirements vary based on employee when only two out of four listings required a bachelor’s degrees in hospitality or even management therefore making the USCIS decision, that a specific degree is not required in parallel positions among similar employers, not arbitrary or capricious.

In making its determination, the court distinguished Tapis Int’l v. I.N.S. 94 F. Supp. 2d 172, 176 (D. Mass. 2000) and Residential Fin. Corp. v. U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Servs., 839 F. Supp. 2d 985, 996 (S.D. Ohio 2012). In Tapis the court determined that the INS abused its discretion when it found that a Showroom Manager position at an interior design firm was not a specialty occupation even when the record indicated that the position “required a bachelor’s degree from a limited number of academic fields in addition to design experience.” However, the court also held that “a generalized bachelor’s degree requirement, without more, is not enough to make the position a ‘specialty occupation.’” Tapis Int’l v.I.N.S., 94 F. Supp. 2d 172, 176 (D. Mass. 2000).The Xiaotong Liu court found that the reasoning in Tapis is not relevant or applicable since in Tapis no specific degree was available in the field of interior design showroom management but there is a specific degree in the field of event management. In Residential Finance, the court found USCIS’ denial of Plaintiff’s petition due to its failure to prove that the Market Research Analyst position was a specialty occupation was arbitrary, capricious and an abuse of power. USCIS had acknowledged several errors in the denial and the record in the case indicated that “a market and survey researcher is a distinct occupation with a specialized course of study that includes multiple specialized fields.” 839 F. Supp. 2d 996-97. The Xiaotong Liu court distinguished the finding in Residential Finance, finding that the OOH did not suggest that any particular course work is essential for the position of Event Manager, but rather it stated that “planners who have studied meeting and event management or hospitality management may start out with greater responsibilities than those from other academic disciplines.”  The court also used the First Circuit holding in Royal Siam Corp. v Chertoff, 484 F.3d 139 ((1st Cir 2007) against Plaintiff. In Royal Siam, the court rejected the argument that a restaurant manager required a degree in business administration, even though Plaintiff in Xia0tong Liu valiantly demonstrated that a bachelor’s degree is normally required for an Event Planner under the OOH and Liu in fact had a bachelor’s degree in business management with a degree in hospitality management. Additionally, the court held that while USCIS did not explicitly analyze the expert opinion letter under the complexity of the position prong, it did not abuse its discretion when finding that Innsight failed to meet its burden of proof because USCIS demonstrated review of the letter through its use of the content in its analysis of other prongs. Therefore the court found that the conclusion did not rise to the level of arbitrary and capricious. In regard to the prior use of the expert letter by USCIS, the court stated that USCIS should weigh the probative value of an expert opinion as one factor in determining whether an industry requires a degree even when it may conflict with the OOH since the OOH is also but one factor in making the determination. However, the court did find that USCIS had a rational basis for concluding that the expert letter did not explain how the expert opinion from a business professor “determined that a bachelor’s degree in hospitality management or a related field is a standard requirement within the industry for parallel positions among  similar organizations” when he stated that he “observed standard hiring practices as they pertain to a variety of positions in … event planning” but only indicated that he was familiar with the general related field and not practices  specifically among similar employers.

Unfortunately, every argument that Plaintiff made was shot down because it could not overcome the obstacle imposed on the event planner occupation in the OOH, or at least the faulty USCIS’ interpretation of it that a bachelor’s degree in a specific specialty was a normal requirement for entry into the event planning field. In that sense the court’s decision was also faulty. Hotel management, which is analogous to event management, has long been considered a professional position in Matter of Sun, Interim Dec. 1816 (1966). The reasoning in Matter of Sun justifying hotel management was far more elegant in 1966 than in Xiaotong Liu in 2019 as there was a recognition that occupations continue to expand from the traditional professions of law, medicine and theology. This sort of commonsensical and pragmatic reasoning was conspicuously absent for the occupation of Event Planner in Xiaotong Liu.

In Innova Sols., Inc. v. Baran, 2019 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 134790, the District Court for the Northern District of California found that the Plaintiff’s (Innova) position of Programming Analyst, falling under the OOH’s Computer Programmer classification, did not satisfy the requirements of a specialty occupation when the OOH’s description for Computer Programmer did not describe the normal minimum educational requirement in a categorical  fashion instead stating that “most” Computer Programmers have a bachelor’s degree but “some employers hire workers with an associate’s degree” Id at 17. The court then found that USCIS’ conclusion that Innova failed to show the position of Programmer Analyst normally required a bachelor’s degree was not arbitrary or capricious when the Plaintiff did not challenge the decision in their motion for summary judgment nor present any evidence showing a common degree requirement in the industry in parallel positions among similar organizations. Further, the court found that evidence provided by Innova to prove the position of Programmer Analyst is so complex or unique that it can only be performed by an individual with a degree, was not probative and therefore USCIS was not arbitrary and capricious in concluding that Innova failed to present sufficient evidence. The court found that Innova submitted a letter from their attorney describing the anticipated duties and a letter from the end client which incorrectly identified  the position and listed duties inconsistent with those in the attorney’s letter. The end client letter also described the beneficiary as leading and directing the work of others, although this contradicted with the duties described in the attorney letter and also because the beneficiary was being paid a Level 1 entry level wage.  The court also cast doubt whether an attorney could make representations on behalf of clients.  The court then turned to the third criterion under 8 CFR § 214.2(h)(4)(iii)(A), whether the employer normally requires a degree or its equivalent for the position, and found that since Innova did not challenge USCIS’ decision they did not have a basis to conclude whether the decision was arbitrary or capricious or constituted an abuse of discretion. With respect to the fourth criterion, whether nature of the specific duties are so specialized and complex that knowledge required to perform the duties is usually associated with the attainment of a baccalaureate or higher degree, the court found that, in their respective briefs, the parties discussed it together with the second clause of the second criterion and therefore for the same reasons the court found that Innova had not shown the USCIS’ denial to be arbitrary and capricious or an abuse of discretion.

The facts were weak and contradictory in Innova, and thus it is hardly surprising that the court affirmed the USCIS’ denial, even though the court accepted USCIS’ interpretation of the OOH entry for Programmers  as not always requiring a bachelor’s degree. The other  arguments made by Plaintiffs under the second and fourth criteria were not strong enough to overcome the OOH description for Programmers.

Finally, in Altimetrik Corp. v. USCIS, 2019 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 141512, the District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, Southern Division found that USCIS’ decision was not arbitrary or capricious, nor an abuse of its discretion when it determined that that Plaintiff actually sought the beneficiary as a Systems Analyst even though the position in the H-1B petition was for a Software Developer. The USCIS found that the duties matched those of a Systems Analyst, and according to the OOH entry for systems analysts, “a bachelor’s degree in a computer or information science field is common, although not always a requirement. Some firms hire analysts with business or liberal arts degrees who have skills in information technology or computer programming.” The court did not seem to disagree with the USCIS’s change of occupation.  This tactic of switching occupations is often used by USCIS as the description for Computer Systems Analyst in the OOH, with respect to educational requirements,  is not as favorable as Software Developers, thus providing more ammunition to USCIS to disagree that that it is a specialty occupation.  The court also  did not find that the duties were complex and unique under the second criterion or specialized and complex under the fourth criterion. With respect to the third criteria, although Plaintiff provided proof of educational and pay documents for 20 of the 70 employees whom it hired as software developers, the court agreed with the USCIS’s reliance on Defensor v. Meissner, 201 F.3d 384 (5th Cir. 2000) that the Plaintiff did not provide proof of the client entity’s requirement of a bachelor’s degree for the position. Plaintiff also  failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the beneficiary would be preforming actual work that would qualify his job as a specialty occupation and therefore denied the petition. The court found that USCIS was correct in determining the evidence provided did not establish that beneficiary would be preforming actual duties requiring the skills of someone with a bachelor’s degree or higher when the only project the beneficiary was assigned to had ended, the description of the second project that the beneficiary would be working on did not align with the job duties listed by the Plaintiff, and that promotional material referenced by Altimetrik as proof of various projects that the company was engaged in did not indicate if the projects were ongoing, whether the specific office the beneficiary would be working in was involved or that there were positions on the projects for the beneficiary that involved qualifying specialty occupation work.

In Altimetrik Corp, it was problematic that the court agreed with the USICS’s characterization of the position being akin to that of a systems analyst even though the Plaintiff had designated it as a software developer. Also problematic was that the court relied on Defensor v. Meissner in shooting down Plaintiff’s contention that it has hired other employees with the similar educational qualifications because it was not able to prove the educational requirements of the client that would ultimately employ the beneficiary. Defensor v. Meissner involved a nurse staffing agency where the nurses were always assigned to hospitals that were clients of the staffing agency, and the Fifth Circuit considered the hospitals as the actual employers of the nurses. Unfortunately, Defensor v. Meissner  is used broadly to nix claims by employers that they hire others with the same educational credentials even where they can show they are the actual employers who control the employment. Indeed, in all H-1B petitions, it is the petitioner that must demonstrate an employer-employee relationship with the H-1B worker, and this has been affirmed by the Neufeld Memo. If the client is the actual employer and not the petitioner, then the H-1B petition can never be filed by the petitioning entity ever.  Defensor v. Meissner is thus a contradiction as it considered the client as the employer rather than the petitioner, which  is now liberally used by USCIS, and also affirmed by courts, to deny H-1B petitions even where the petitioner is the actual employer. Of course, the facts in Altimetrik regarding its inability to show continuing employment were less than ideal, and this was not the appropriate case to overcome objections under Defensor v. Meissner, leave alone challenge the USCIS’s reliance on the OOH with respect to systems analysts.

Though Xiaotong Liu, Innova and Altimetrik may paint a bleak picture for challenges to H-1B denials in federal court, with petitioners being defeated by the deference given to USCIS’ determinations, there have been recent cases which provide guidance and hope. In Next Generation Tech. Inc. v. Johnson the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York found that USCIS disregarded or failed to explain why it discounted substantial evidence in the record that could have supported a determination that petitioner had met the requirements for an H-1B visa and therefore its decision to revoke the initial petition and denial of petitioner’s second amended petition were arbitrary and capricious. Starting with the first criterion, the position’s requirement of theoretical and practical application of a body of specialized knowledge, the court found that USCIS failed to give adequate reasons as to why the position description did not require theoretical and practical application of a body of highly specialized knowledge by failing to articulate why the enumerated duties were incompatible with a specialty occupation  when petitioner provided a bulleted list of duties and subsequently a project description that described the roles and responsibilities for each position needed for the project, specifically stating that beneficiary’s role would be that of “ Sr. Programmer/Programmer” and would include “technical program coding; developing the functional program; algorithm development; and debugging the existing programs.” Id at 26. Turning to the second criterion, the position requirement of attainment of a bachelor’s or higher degree in the specific specialty, the court found that USCIS’ determination was arbitrary and capricious when the USCIS disregarded pertinent evidence in the record and failed to articulate a satisfactory explanation for its action when determining that the programmer position being offered was not a specialty occupation. The court stated that there was no rational connection between evidence from the OOH stating that “most computer programmers have a bachelor’s degree” and USCIS determining that computer programmers are not normally required to have a bachelor’s degree.  Additionally, the court noted that USCIS acted in direct contradiction to an internal USCIS memorandum which stated that USCIS will “generally consider the position of programmer to qualify as a specialty occupation.”  The court additionally evaluated USCIS’ determination that petitioner and beneficiary would not be in a valid employer-employee relationship. In doing so, the court went through all eleven factors in the  Neufeld Memo to find that based on evidence provided by Next Generation Tech, many if not all of the factors weighed in their favor and USCIS seemingly did not gather all the evidence or consider all the relevant factors in analyzing it.  The decision in Next Generation helps to combat the decision in Innova specifically in regard to USCIS’ use of the OOH. While it is advisable to build a case on the other prongs of the statutory requirement and not simply on the OOH, the decision in Next Generation displays a common sense approach to the language used in OOH listings by recognizing the use of most when speaking to those who have bachelor’s degrees in a position can rationally constitute a normal requirement.

In Raj & Co. v. United States Citizenship & Immigration Servs., 85 F. Supp. 3d 1241, the court came down with another positive decision. The court in Raj found that USCIS had abused its discretion when it impermissibly narrowed the plain language of the statute by requiring a single specifically tailored and titled degree and therefore reading plain language out of the statue when determining, “although a baccalaureate level of training is typical, the position of a Market Research Analyst is an occupation that does not require a baccalaureate level of education is a specific specialty as a normal, minimum for entry into the occupation,” The court went on to say that there was evidence in the record which showed that the proffered position required a specialized degree in “market research” or an equivalent technical degree accompanied by relevant coursework in “statistics, research methods, and marketing” as a minimum for entry. Furthermore, the court noted that “While judicial review of agency decisions is highly deferential, it is not without teeth. Agency action cannot survive judicial review where the agency fails to ‘articulate a satisfactory explanation for its action including a rational connection between the facts found and the choice made.’” Another positive outcome for H-1B petitioners came in Relx v. Baran, Case No. 19-cv-1993. In Relx the court found that USCIS was arbitrary and capricious in its determination that the offered position of Data Analyst under the occupational title of Business Intelligence Analysts was not a specialty occupation solely on the fact that the OOH did not contain a detailed profile for the position and the use of O*NET, therefore standing alone, failed to establish the occupation as a specialty occupation. The court pointed out that the OOH did in fact provide the information needed to classify the position as a specialty occupation, and contained the O*NET cross reference, therefore holding that USCIS’ conclusion to be “factually inaccurate and not supported by the record.” Furthermore, in response to USCIS’ claim that the position of Data Analyst would never be specialized because multiple fields of education appear to be acceptable for entry into the position, the court stated that, “there is no requirement in the statute that only one type of degree be accepted for a position to be specialized.” Both cases provide reassuring reminders on the limits of deference especially following the decisions in Xiaotong Liu, Innova and Altimetrik.

In conclusion, it is inappropriate for the USCIS to blindly defer to the OOH as a basis to deny an H-1B petition. We have blogged about this particular behavior previously, here, calling attention to the fact that there is no existing regulation designating the OOH as sole authority for classifying specialty occupations and that the OOH itself includes a disclaimer stating that, “the OOH, therefore, is not intended to, and should never, be used for any legal purpose.” Our previous post on the matter also details the way in which the OOH is a cumbersome tool. With the DOL having not amended its LCA to accept 8 digit SOC codes, it therefore forces petitioners to rely on more general occupational titles with 6 digit SOC codes, such as Computer Occupations, All Other , which results in inappropriate denials from USCIS, as we saw in Relx. Even the authors of the OOH, which is the DOL, did not intend for USCIS to use the OOH in this manner. A DOL FOIA response found at AILA Doc # 19101011 states: “In response to your request for ‘guidance,’ the BLS OOH program provides staff who receive inquires on this topic with the following guidance: we have known for several years that the U.S. Customs and Immigration Service (USCIS) occasionally uses education and training information in the OOH to establish strict education requirements for H-1B eligibility. This is an incorrect use of the OOH information and we discourage this practice.”  Additionally, in correspondence provided in the FOIA, BLS employees include the OOH disclaimer linked above in their responses to inquiries about OOH and even explicitly state that, “making legal decisions about whether a position qualifies as a specialty occupation is an erroneous use of the OOH. The purpose of the OOH is for use by students and adult jobseekers in the United States for career planning.”  It is unfortunately clear that USCIS’ reliance on the OOH as a basis to deny H-1B petitions, though inappropriate and contrary to the purpose of the OOH, will continue. While there are some cases which have correctly overturned USCIS due to this practice, it would be beneficial for more petitioners to challenge these denials in court – of course bring cases only with strong facts –  in hopes of obtaining more positive holdings overturning USCIS decisions that uphold its slavish reliance on the OOH.

∗Gianna Boccanfuso is a JD student at Brooklyn Law School and is currently an Extern at Cyrus D. Mehta & Partners PLLC