Labor Immigration Law

United States Labor Immigration Law News and Analysis

GAO Report on USCIS Fees

The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has produced another set of two excellent and very revealing reports – one reviewing the Immigration and Naturalization Fees and one suggesting improvements for the setting of USCIS fees.

The two reports are very revealing in describing USCIS’s budgetary items, its heavy reliance on filing fees to finance operations and some inefficiencies created by the fact that USCIS is self-funding to a large extent.  The reports also criticize the July 2007 fee increase which resulted in an enormous spike in applications and, according to the GAO, surprised USCIS.  One of my favorite examples was:

USCIS’s lack of timely, comprehensive fee reviews prior to 2007 led to the need for an average fee increase of 86 percent. This contributed to a surge in application volume as applicants attempted to submit their applications before the fee increase took effect, resulting in costly operational challenges. For example, the number of applications submitted increased an unprecedented 100 percent in July 2007 over the prior month, exceeding storage capacity. At the Texas Service Center unprocessed applications were stored outside in six rented 10-by-40-foot containers, double-locked, and monitored by a full-time security guard.

Yes, according to the GAO, at least some of the applications filed at the Texas Service Center were stored outside, in a 10-by-40 container (like this one), exposed to weather and other elements.

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This article is presented by the Capitol Immigration Law Group PLLC, an immigration law firm serving individual and corporate clients in the Washington, D.C. area and nationaide. We specialize in U.S. labor immigration law and we have successfully represented individuals from more than 30 countries and Fortune 100 companies. The article should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a licensed attorney. For more information, please contact us.