EB-5 visa

The EB-5 visa for Immigrant Investors is a United States visa created by the Immigration Act of 1990.

Overview

The EB-5 visa provides a method of obtaining a green card for foreign nationals who invest money in the United States.[1] To obtain the visa, individuals must invest $1,000,000 (or at least $500,000 in a Targeted Employment Area - high unemployment or rural area), creating or preserving at least 10 jobs for U.S. workers excluding the investor and their immediate family.[1] Initially, under the first EB-5 program, the foreign investor was required to create an entirely new commercial enterprise; however, under the Pilot Program investments can be made directly in a job-generating commercial enterprise (new, or existing - "Troubled Business"[2]), or into a "Regional Center" - a 3rd party-managed investment vehicle (private or public), which assumes the responsibility of creating the requisite jobs. Regional Centers may charge an administration fee for managing the investor's investment.

If the foreign national investor's petition is approved, the investor and their dependents will be granted conditional permanent residence valid for two years.[2] Within the 90-day period before the conditional permanent residence expires, the investor must submit evidence documenting that the full required investment has been made and that 10 jobs have been maintained, or 10 jobs have been created or will be created within a reasonable time period.[2]

In 1992, Congress created a temporary pilot program designed to stimulate economic activity and job growth, while allowing eligible aliens the opportunity to become lawful permanent residents.[3] Under this pilot program, foreign nationals may invest in a pre-approved regional center, or "economic unit, public or private, which is involved with the promotion of economic growth, including increased export sales, improved regional productivity, job creation, or increased domestic capital investment". Investments within a regional center provide foreign nationals the added benefit of allowing them to count jobs created both directly and indirectly for purposes of meeting 10-job creation requirement.[3]

Foreign investors' use of the EB-5 program had been far less than originally anticipated by Congress.[4] In 2005, a Government Accountability Office report found that investors were not utilizing the program because of “an onerous application process; lengthy adjudication periods; and the suspension of processing on over 900 EB-5 cases—some of which date to 1995—precipitated by a change in USCIS’s interpretation of regulations regarding financial qualifications.”[5] However, in 2011, USCIS began making a number of changes to the program in hopes of increasing the number of applicants.[6] By the end of the 2011 fiscal year, more than 3,800 EB-5 applications had been filed, compared to fewer than 800 applications in 2007.[7] The program reached capacity for the first time in August 2014 when the State Department stopped issuing EB-5 visas until the beginning of the next fiscal year, October 2014.[8]

Targeted Employment Areas

USCIS defines a Targeted Employment Area (TEA) as an area which, at the time of investment, is a rural area (not within either a metropolitan statistical area (MSA) (as designated by the Office of Management and Budget) or the outer boundary of any city or town having a population of 20,000 or more), OR an area within an MSA or the outer boundary of a city or town having a population of 20,000 or more which has experienced unemployment of at least 150% of the national average rate.[9]

If the location of the proposed new business is not a TEA, the investor has the option to gather the relevant publicly available state or federal statistics on their own and submit it with their petition for USCIS to have a new TEA determination made. In California, the investor may petition the state government for designating a particular subdivision of the area as an area of high unemployment (over 150% the national average); however, this designation is not made by USCIS.[10]

There is no centralized list of targeted employment areas. State agencies in California,[10] Florida[11] and Washington[12] maintain lists of TEAs.

EB-5 Regional Center projects

USCIS maintains a list of approved (but not necessarily endorsed or guaranteed) EB-5 Regional Centers by state, but without specific details.[13] EB-5 Funding has helped rebuild the Las Vegas economy. Las Vegas has seen a recent boom in using regional centers and EB-5 funding to build new casino projects. In 2013 the first EB-5 project the Downtown Grand was built followed by SLS formerly the Sahara Hotel. Additional new casino projects obtaining EB-5 funding on the Las Vegas Strip include the Lucky Dragon Hotel and Casino, Dynasty Hotel Casino, Clarion Hotel, and Resorts World Las Vegas.[14] Foreign investors are also being solicited to invest in Las Vegas' SLS Hotel & Casino.[15]

Major developers have begun to form their own regional centers with the goal of soliciting EB-5 investments. Silverstein Properties, for example, has marketed their Downtown Manhattan The Four Seasons Restaurant as an "EB-5 investment opportunity" on their website. Other projects that have received EB-5 Regional Center funding include the Hudson Yards Redevelopment Project, the George Washington Bridge Bus Terminal, and the New York Wheel.[16]

References

  1. 1 2 U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. "Green Card Through Investment". Retrieved 2012-02-08.
  2. 1 2 3 "EB-5 Immigrant Investor Process". USCIS. Retrieved 2012-02-08.
  3. 1 2 U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. "EB-5 Regional Center". USCIS. Retrieved 2011-11-17.
  4. Thiele, Leslie K. L.; Decker, Scott T. (2010), "RESIDENCE IN THE UNITED STATES THROUGH INVESTMENT: REALITY OR CHIMERA?", Albany Government Law Review, 3 (1): 103–147
  5. United States Government Accountability Office (2005), IMMIGRANT INVESTORS: Small Number of Participants Attributed to Pending Regulations and Other Factors (PDF), retrieved 2011-12-13
  6. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (2011), A Work in Progress: Towards A New Draft Policy Memorandum Guiding EB-5 Adjudications (PDF), retrieved 2011-12-13
  7. McGeehand, Patrick (2011), "Rules Stretched as Green Cards Go to Investors", The New York Times, retrieved 2011-12-21
  8. (PDF) http://travel.state.gov/content/dam/visas/Statistics/Immigrant-Statistics/China%20Employment%20Fifth%20Preference.pdf. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  9. "§ Sec. 204.6 Petitions for employment creation aliens.". TITLE 8 OF CODE OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS (8 CFR) \ 8 CFR PART 204 -- IMMIGRANT PETITIONS. USCIS. Retrieved 2012-02-08.
  10. 1 2 "Certified List of Targeted Employment Area (TEA) in California". California Governor's Office of Business and Economic Development. Retrieved 2016-09-22.
  11. "Florida targeted employment areas". Retrieved 2012-02-08.
  12. "Washington targeted employment areas".
  13. "Immigrant Investor Regional Centers". USCIS. Retrieved 2012-02-08.
  14. "Why China loves Las Vegas". Las Vegas Sun.
  15. "Closed Casino Banks on U.S. Program". WSJ. Retrieved 2015-04-13.
  16. "EB-5 Investment and the Impact on Commercial Real Estate". Savills Studley. Retrieved 2015-04-13.

External links

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