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  • Resistance To Coercive Population Control (CPC) Programs


    Overview
    How Will I Be Notified that My Conditional Grant Status Has Been Lifted?
    What Should I Do if I Have Not Yet Received a Notice Lifting My Conditional Grant Status?
    Will I Need to Notify the BCIS or EOIR if My Address Changes?
    Will I Need to Be Fingerprinted Again if I Have a Conditional Grant of Asylum?
    Will I Be Eligible to Work?
    Will I Be Able to Apply for Lawful Permanent Resident Status?
    What Will Happen to My Family Members?
    What Will Happen if My Child Turns 21?
    Will I Be Able to Travel Outside the United States While in Conditional Grant Status?


    Overview
    Section 601 of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 expanded the definition of “refugee” to include individuals who have been persecuted or have a well-founded fear of persecution on account of resistance to a coercive population control (CPC) program. The expanded definition, found in section 101(a)(42)(B) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), provides that a person who has been:
    • forced to abort a pregnancy
    • undergo involuntary sterilization
    • persecuted for failure or refusal to undergo such a procedure or for other resistance to a coercive population control program, or
    • has a well-founded fear that he or she will be forced to undergo such a procedure or subject to persecution for such failure, refusal, or resistance
      shall be deemed to have been persecuted or have a well-founded fear of persecution on account of political opinion.
    Pursuant to section 207(a)(5) of the INA, no more than a total of 1,000 individuals per fiscal year may be granted asylum or admitted as a refugee solely on this ground. Because the number of individuals eligible for asylum based on CPC has been greater than 1,000 annually, these individuals remain in conditional grant status until one of the 1,000 final approval authorization numbers, issued annually, becomes available.

    An individual who is found eligible for asylum based solely on grounds related to coercive population control methods will be placed on a waiting list to receive a CPC authorization number when one becomes available. Individuals are listed chronologically based on the date USCIS or the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) issued the conditional grant and are issued authorization numbers in chronological order based on the date of conditional grant and completion of final identity, background and security checks. Due to the extent of the waiting list, an authorization number may not become available for several years after conditional grant status has been issued.

    On EOIR’s website is a press release that provides the date of the last conditional grant for which an authorization number was issued. An individual who received his or her conditional grant prior to that date should have been issued his or her final CPC authorization number by USCIS provided all identity, background and security checks were completed and the individual remains eligible for a grant of asylum. Read the latest EOIR press release.

    A conditional grant remains in effect as long as the individual continues to maintain asylum eligibility and until the individual is notified that he or she has been issued a final grant of asylum. The conditional grant includes the individual’s dependents who are present in the United States, were included in the individual’s asylum application, and for whom the individual has established a qualifying relationship by a preponderance of the evidence. For more detailed information on the affirmative asylum process see The Affirmative Asylum Procedures Manual.


    How Will I Be Notified that My Conditional Grant Status Has Been Lifted?
    You will be notified by mail. Given the significant number of persons already on the waiting list for available numbers, USCIS anticipates that notices will be issued annually.


    What Should I Do if I Have Not Yet Received a Notice Lifting My Conditional Grant Status?
    If you were granted conditional asylum by either USCIS or EOIR, and have not received a notice advising that a CPC authorization number is available, you may check on the status of your asylum grant by sending a letter with a copy of the order granting conditional asylum to the office with jurisdiction over your case. The addresses are as follows:

    Conditional Grant issued by an Immigration Judge:
    Central Operations Unit
    The Office of the Chief Immigration Judge
    5107 Leesburg Pike, Suite 2500
    Falls Church, VA 22041


    Conditional Grant issued by the Board of Immigration Appeals:
    Board of Immigration Appeals
    The Clerk’s Office
    P.O. Box 8530
    5201 Leesburg Pike, Suite 1300
    Falls Church, VA 22041


    Conditional Grant issued by an asylum office:
    The addresses of the eight asylum offices can be found on the Field Offices Home Page.


    Will I Need to Notify USCIS or EOIR if My Address Changes?
    Yes, you will need to notify USCIS of any changes of address within 10 days from the date of the change by submitting a Form AR-11, Alien’s Change of Address Card. You should also notify in writing the asylum office with jurisdiction over your case of any change of address. More information is available in the document, How Do I Report a Change of Address to USCIS?

    You will also need to notify EOIR (either the Immigration Court or the Board of Immigration Appeals, whichever last had jurisdiction over the matter) within 5 days from the date of the change of address if you received a conditional grant from EOIR. You will need to submit either Form EOIR-33/BIA or EOIR-33/IJ, Change of Address Form, which are available at the Immigration Courts or from the EOIR Internet website at http://www.usdoj.gov/eoir/formslist.htm.

    USCIS and EOIR will notify you of fingerprinting appointments and final approvals at the address you provide. Failure to properly notify USCIS, and where applicable, EOIR, of a change of address may result in a delay or termination of your eligibility for a final grant of asylum.


    Will I Need to Be Fingerprinted Again if I Have a Conditional Grant of Asylum?
    Yes, you will receive an appointment notice for re-fingerprinting. Because a CPC authorization number may not become available for several years, you will need to be re-fingerprinted because the results of the initial confidential background check will have expired by the time a CPC number becomes available. You must comply with the instructions in the fingerprint notice or you may risk losing your eligibility for a final grant of asylum.


    Will I Be Eligible to Work?
    Yes, you and your dependents who were included in the asylum decision, if any, will be eligible to apply for work authorization while you remain in conditional grant status. To work in the United States, you must apply for and obtain an Employment Authorization Document (EAD). If authorized, you may accept employment subject to any restrictions in the regulations or on the card. You and your qualifying family members are not required to pay a fee with your initial request(s) for employment authorization. However, when you submit an application to renew your employment authorization, you must pay a fee or request a fee waiver under 8 CFR § 103.7(c). To obtain an EAD, you and any dependents who wish to receive work authorization must submit separate applications on Form I-765, Application for Employment Authorization, to the appropriate USCIS Service Center. The instructions to the Form I-765 provide the address of the Service Center where you should send the form, based on where you reside.


    Will I Be Able to Apply for Lawful Permanent Resident Status?
    No, you may not apply for lawful permanent resident status under section 209(b) of the INA while in conditional grant status. A conditional grant is not a final approval of asylum. Any time accrued while you are in conditional grant status does not count towards the one-year period that you must be physically present in the United States after a grant of asylum in order to apply for permanent resident status.


    What Will Happen to My Family Members?
    The conditional grant does not entitle your spouse or children outside the United States, or those who are in the United States but are not included in your asylum application, to receive derivative asylum status or to be admitted to the United States. If you receive a final approval of asylum, you will be entitled to request derivative asylum for any spouse or unmarried children under 21 years of age as of the date you filed the asylum application, as long as your asylum application was pending on or after August 6, 2002, by filing a Form I-730, Refugee and Asylee Relative Petition. The I-730 will enable any spouse or unmarried children under 21 years of age as of the date you filed the asylum application, as long as your asylum application was pending on or after August 6, 2002, to come to the United States or allow those already in the United States to remain here.


    What Will Happen if My Child Turns 21?
    On August 6, 2002, President Bush signed the Child Status Protection Act into law enabling children who turn 21 years of age while in conditional grant status to continue to be classified as children for asylum adjudication purposes. If your child received a conditional grant of asylum as a derivative based on being included on your asylum application, then your child will continue to be eligible for asylum provided that the following two conditions are met: 1) Your child was under 21 years of age when you filed for asylum, and 2) your asylum application was pending on or after August 6, 2002. If these conditions are not met, then your child will have aged out and will no longer be eligible for asylum as a dependent on your asylum application.


    Will I Be Able to Travel Outside the United States While in Conditional Grant Status?
    If you and/or your qualifying family members leave the United States, you should first obtain permission to return to the United States before leaving this country or you may not be permitted to re-enter the United States. This advance permission is called advance parole. If you leave the United States without first obtaining advance parole, it may be presumed that you abandoned your request for asylum. You may apply for advance parole by filing a Form I-131, Application for Travel Document, with the USCIS District Office having jurisdiction over your place of residence. If you leave the United States with advance parole and return to the country of claimed persecution, you will be presumed to have abandoned your asylum request, unless you can show compelling reasons for the return.
    Last Modified 10/30/2003