Important Updates
Important Updates
April 1, 2026 | Czech RepublicCzech Republic: Registration and Deregistration Process Streamlined
April 2, 2026 | CanadaCanada: New Recruitment Requirements for Low‑Wage Positions under Temporary Foreign Worker Program
April 1, 2026 | United StatesBloomberg Law: DOL Wage Overhaul Adds to H-1B Sticker Shock for Employers
April 1, 2026 | CanadaCanada: Permanent Residence and Citizenship Filing Fees Increased
April 1, 2026 | United KingdomCare Talk Business: What the Casey Commission Means for Social Care’s Workforce
April 1, 2026 | Czech RepublicCzech Republic: Registration and Deregistration Process Streamlined
April 2, 2026 | CanadaCanada: New Recruitment Requirements for Low‑Wage Positions under Temporary Foreign Worker Program
April 1, 2026 | United StatesBloomberg Law: DOL Wage Overhaul Adds to H-1B Sticker Shock for Employers
April 1, 2026 | CanadaCanada: Permanent Residence and Citizenship Filing Fees Increased
April 1, 2026 | United KingdomCare Talk Business: What the Casey Commission Means for Social Care’s Workforce
April 1, 2026 | Czech RepublicCzech Republic: Registration and Deregistration Process Streamlined
Subscribe
Fragomen.com home
Select Language
  • English
  • French
  • French - Canadian
  • German

Select Language

  • English
  • French
  • French - Canadian
  • German
ContactCareersMediaClient Portal
Search Fragomen.com
  • Our Services
    For EmployersFor IndividualsBy IndustryCase Studies
  • Our Tech & Innovation
  • Our People
  • Our Insights
    Worldwide Immigration Trends ReportsMagellan SeriesImmigration AlertsEventsMedia MentionsFragomen NewsBlogsPodcasts & Videos
  • Spotlights
    Travel and Mobility Considerations: Situation in the Middle EastNavigating Immigration Under the Second Trump AdministrationImmigration Matters: Your U.S. Compliance RoadmapCenter for Strategy and Applied InsightsVietnamese ImmigrationView More
  • About Us
    About FragomenOfficesResponsible Business PracticesFirm GovernanceRecognition

Our Services

  • For Employers
  • For Individuals
  • By Industry
  • Case Studies

Our Tech & Innovation

  • Our Approach

Our People

  • Overview / Directory

Our Insights

  • Worldwide Immigration Trends Reports
  • Magellan Series
  • Immigration Alerts
  • Events
  • Media Mentions
  • Fragomen News
  • Blogs
  • Podcasts & Videos

Spotlights

  • Travel and Mobility Considerations: Situation in the Middle East
  • Navigating Immigration Under the Second Trump Administration
  • Immigration Matters: Your U.S. Compliance Roadmap
  • Center for Strategy and Applied Insights
  • Vietnamese Immigration
  • View More

About Us

  • About Fragomen
  • Offices
  • Responsible Business Practices
  • Firm Governance
  • Recognition
Select Language
  • English
  • French
  • French - Canadian
  • German

Select Language

  • English
  • French
  • French - Canadian
  • German
ContactCareersMediaClient Portal
  • Insights

United States: Federal Immigration Agencies Issue Regulatory Agendas

July 30, 2021

insight-news-default

Country / Territory

  • United StatesUnited States

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

At a glance

  • The agenda reflects the regulatory priorities of the Biden Administration for the coming months.
  • The Department of Homeland Security is planning a proposed rule to amend aspects of the H-1B program, including a redefinition of the employer-employee relationship, rules for the longstanding site visit program, and clarification of petition amendment requirements.
  • A forthcoming DHS regulation is expected to implement recent legislation expanding the USCIS premium processing program.
  • The Department of Labor is proceeding with a proposal to increase prevailing wages for the H-1B and PERM programs, among others.
  • A forthcoming State Department regulation seeks to eliminate the use of the B-1 business visitor category in lieu of H-1B.

The issue

The Departments of Homeland Security, Labor and State have issued their new regulatory agendas – the first for the Biden Administration.  The agendas reveal each agency’s rulemaking priorities and timelines for the coming months. The agendas of the Departments of Homeland Security and Labor appear in today’s Federal Register; the State Department agenda is expected to be published in the Federal Register soon, and currently appears on the website of the federal Office of Management and Budget.

The following summarizes key employment-based immigration items on the agencies’ agendas. The details of proposed and final regulations are confidential until each regulation is released for publication. In addition, agencies routinely bypass projected publication dates of items on their regulatory agendas.

H-1B program modernization

The Department of Homeland Security intends to pursue a new proposed rule to amend aspects of the H-1B category.  The rule is intended to redefine the H-1B employer-employee relationship, establish regulations for the longstanding Fraud Detection and National Security (FDNS) site visit program, and further clarify cap-gap benefits for F-1 students awaiting a change of status to H-1B.  The agency also intends to clarify when a material change to H-1B employment occurs, necessitating an amended petition, as well as streamline the required notification to USCIS when an H-1B employee changes to a new worksite location.  The proposed regulation is slated for publication in December 2021.

Expansion of USCIS Premium Processing

The Department of Homeland Security is planning a final regulation to implement legislation that authorizes USCIS to broaden premium service to a number of additional employment-based immigration benefits applications and petitions, including Form I-140 petitions for EB-1 multinational managers and executives and those seeking a National Interest Waiver of the labor certification requirement, including EB-2 physicians; applications for employment authorization on Form I-765; and applications to change or extend status for the dependents of H-1B, L-1 and other principal nonimmigrant categories on Form I-539. The final regulation is slated for publication in September 2021.

Prevailing wage increases

The regulatory agenda does not add any new Labor Department proposals on skills-based immigration, though it does confirm the agency’s plan to move ahead with a rule to raise prevailing wage rates for H-1B, H-1B1, E-3 and PERM programs. A final prevailing wage rule had been scheduled to take effect on November 14, 2022; however, a federal court in June vacated the Trump-era regulation, with the Labor Department’s consent.  Though the regulation has been vacated, DOL is expected to promulgate a new prevailing wage regulation, taking into consideration the feedback it received in a request for public comments conducted this past spring.  Based on that feedback, DOL could make changes to the methodologies used in the prior version of the rule to compute the different wage levels. Publication of the proposal is slated for November 2021.

Renewed effort to preserve DACA

The Biden Administration plans to promulgate new regulations that seek to reinstate and strengthen the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, following a recent federal court decision imposing a permanent injunction against the DACA program.  DHS projects that by August 2021 it will propose a DACA rule that follows notice and comment rulemaking procedures.  Separately, bills pending in Congress seek to create a legislative solution for DACA beneficiaries and DACA-eligible foreign nationals. 

State Department request for feedback on barriers to immigration

Consistent with a February 2021 executive order issued by President Biden, the State Department plans to formally request comments from the public on identifying barriers that impede access to immigration benefits and to fair, efficient adjudications of these benefits.  The request for comments was slated to be published in June.

Public charge

The State Department will also seek comments from the public on its public charge interim final rule, which was published in October 2019, and subsequently enjoined by federal court. The agency reports that a request for public comments is scheduled for September 2021.  The State Department’s interim final rule mirrored a Department of Homeland Security public charge rule that is no longer in effect.  This week, DHS sent an advance notice of proposed rulemaking on public charge to the Office of Management and Budget for review, meaning the agency will seek public comments even before publication of a proposed regulation.  Publication of the advance notice is slated for August 2021, so it is likely there will be further coordination between the agencies on a new public charge rule. Based on the descriptions in each agency’s regulatory agenda, the new versions of the rules are expected to differ significantly from the Trump-era public charge rules.   

B-1/B-2 visitor visas

The State Department continues to support a rule that would eliminate the B in lieu of H-1B and H-3 visa classifications.  Published as a proposal in late 2020 by the Trump administration, the rule is now slated for final publication January 2022.  The Biden State Department has decided not to pursue a separate Trump-era B visa regulation that would have revised B eligibility criteria more generally.

Immigrant visa applicants

The State Department also plans to issue two rules affecting immigrant visa applications at U.S. consulates abroad.  In response to significant consular backlogs and reduced consular operations at worldwide, a forthcoming temporary final rule would permit consular officers to waive the in-person interview for certain repeat immigrant visa applicants whose applications were approved on or after September 2019.  The rule is slated for September 2021 and would be in effect until 180 days after the COVID-19 national emergency declaration is terminated.  Another immigrant visa rule scheduled for publication in September 2021 would create a limited exception to the in-person interview and oath requirement for certain immigrant visa applicants; details on who might qualify are not yet known.

What’s ahead: the regulatory timeline and impact on current immigration programs

The regulatory agenda is an indication of the Biden Administration’s agency priorities in the coming months.  If the Administration follows standard rulemaking procedures, most regulations would first be published in proposal form, with a 30- to 60-day public feedback period. Such rules could only be implemented after the Administration gives meaningful consideration to the feedback it receives and then clears a review by the Office of Management and Budget. The normal rulemaking process takes at least several months. Interim and temporary final rules may be implemented in an expedited manner in some circumstances.

Fragomen is closely monitoring the progress of anticipated regulations. If your organization wishes to advocate in connection with a regulation, please contact your designated Fragomen professional or the firm’s Government Strategies and Compliance Group.

This alert is for informational purposes only. If you have any questions, please contact the immigration professional with whom you work at Fragomen.

Country / Territory

  • United StatesUnited States

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Share

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Explore more at Fragomen

Work authorization

EU Entry/Exit System (EES) and Schengen Overstays: New Risks and Legal Solutions

Senior Associate Tugba Ozyakup and Senior Immigration Manager Andreia Ghimis explore how the EU’s Entry/Exit System is reshaping Schengen overstay enforcement, the risks facing travellers and employers and the legal remedies available to challenge or prevent adverse outcomes.

Learn more

Video

Welcome to the Great White North—Immigration Behind the Beautiful Game | #FragomenFC - Ep. 16

Partner Rick Lamanna, Senior Associate Jake Paul Minster and Senior Manager Sergio Flores discuss Canada’s entry requirements for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, including visa-required and visa-exempt nationals, visitor entry rules and key planning considerations for fans, teams, media and volunteers.

Learn more

Media mentions

Bloomberg Law: DOL Wage Overhaul Adds to H-1B Sticker Shock for Employers

Partner Kevin Miner discusses the DOL’s proposed H-1B wage rule and its potential to add significant unplanned costs for US employers.

Learn more

Media mentions

Care Talk Business: What the Casey Commission Means for Social Care’s Workforce

Manager Asif Hanif, Senior Immigration Consultant Georgia Marshall and Immigration Consultant Inderjit Kaur examine how the Casey Commission could reshape workforce models, immigration policy and international recruitment in UK adult social care.

Learn more

Video

Staatsangehörigkeit Allgemein | #MobilityMinute

Senior Associate Isabel Schnitzler highlights key pathways to German citizenship, including descent-based eligibility and standard naturalization requirements and outlines important considerations for individuals exploring their options.

Learn more

Media mentions

The Caterer: How to Safeguard Your Sponsor Licences

Senior Manager Louise Senior outlines key compliance considerations for UK hospitality sponsors as regulatory expectations continue to evolve.

Learn more

Media mentions

Times of India: US Proposes Sharp Hike in H-1B, PERM Wage Thresholds; May Adversely Impact Entry-Level Hiring

Senior Counsel Mitch Wexler said proposed H-1B and PERM wage increases could raise hiring costs and apply only to new and pending applications.

Learn more

Work authorization

Falling Demand, Rising Fees: Reassessing the UK’s 2026 Immigration Policy

UK Government Affairs Strategy Director Shuyeb Muquit explores the latest UK immigration fee increases and their wider implications for migration trends, labour supply and workforce planning.

Learn more

Video

FIFA Pass for the 2026 World Cup | #MobilityMinute

Partner Karine Wenger outlines US visa considerations for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, including the FIFA Pass priority scheduling system and the importance of early planning.

Learn more

Media mentions

RNZ Asia: Immigration Experts Divided Over Skilled Migrant Residency Reform

Business Immigration Supervisor Fiona Zhou says the restructured Skilled Migrant Category creates clearer pathways and retains skilled workers.

Learn more

Video

Navigating Outbound Services from Germany | #MobilityMinute

Senior Associate Isabel Schnitzler highlights key considerations for managing outbound assignments from Germany, including planning, visa requirements and coordinated global support. 

Learn more

Video

Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP) | Staying in Canada Post-Graduation

Partner Jack Kim discusses one of many immigration pathways for staying in Canada post-graduation, the Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP).

Learn more

Work authorization

EU Entry/Exit System (EES) and Schengen Overstays: New Risks and Legal Solutions

Senior Associate Tugba Ozyakup and Senior Immigration Manager Andreia Ghimis explore how the EU’s Entry/Exit System is reshaping Schengen overstay enforcement, the risks facing travellers and employers and the legal remedies available to challenge or prevent adverse outcomes.

Learn more

Video

Welcome to the Great White North—Immigration Behind the Beautiful Game | #FragomenFC - Ep. 16

Partner Rick Lamanna, Senior Associate Jake Paul Minster and Senior Manager Sergio Flores discuss Canada’s entry requirements for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, including visa-required and visa-exempt nationals, visitor entry rules and key planning considerations for fans, teams, media and volunteers.

Learn more

Media mentions

Bloomberg Law: DOL Wage Overhaul Adds to H-1B Sticker Shock for Employers

Partner Kevin Miner discusses the DOL’s proposed H-1B wage rule and its potential to add significant unplanned costs for US employers.

Learn more

Media mentions

Care Talk Business: What the Casey Commission Means for Social Care’s Workforce

Manager Asif Hanif, Senior Immigration Consultant Georgia Marshall and Immigration Consultant Inderjit Kaur examine how the Casey Commission could reshape workforce models, immigration policy and international recruitment in UK adult social care.

Learn more

Video

Staatsangehörigkeit Allgemein | #MobilityMinute

Senior Associate Isabel Schnitzler highlights key pathways to German citizenship, including descent-based eligibility and standard naturalization requirements and outlines important considerations for individuals exploring their options.

Learn more

Media mentions

The Caterer: How to Safeguard Your Sponsor Licences

Senior Manager Louise Senior outlines key compliance considerations for UK hospitality sponsors as regulatory expectations continue to evolve.

Learn more

Media mentions

Times of India: US Proposes Sharp Hike in H-1B, PERM Wage Thresholds; May Adversely Impact Entry-Level Hiring

Senior Counsel Mitch Wexler said proposed H-1B and PERM wage increases could raise hiring costs and apply only to new and pending applications.

Learn more

Work authorization

Falling Demand, Rising Fees: Reassessing the UK’s 2026 Immigration Policy

UK Government Affairs Strategy Director Shuyeb Muquit explores the latest UK immigration fee increases and their wider implications for migration trends, labour supply and workforce planning.

Learn more

Video

FIFA Pass for the 2026 World Cup | #MobilityMinute

Partner Karine Wenger outlines US visa considerations for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, including the FIFA Pass priority scheduling system and the importance of early planning.

Learn more

Media mentions

RNZ Asia: Immigration Experts Divided Over Skilled Migrant Residency Reform

Business Immigration Supervisor Fiona Zhou says the restructured Skilled Migrant Category creates clearer pathways and retains skilled workers.

Learn more

Video

Navigating Outbound Services from Germany | #MobilityMinute

Senior Associate Isabel Schnitzler highlights key considerations for managing outbound assignments from Germany, including planning, visa requirements and coordinated global support. 

Learn more

Video

Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP) | Staying in Canada Post-Graduation

Partner Jack Kim discusses one of many immigration pathways for staying in Canada post-graduation, the Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP).

Learn more

Stay in touch

Subscribe to receive our latest immigration alerts

Subscribe

Our firm

  • About
  • Careers
  • Firm Governance
  • Media Inquiries
  • Recognition

Information

  • Attorney Advertising
  • Legal Notices
  • Privacy Policies
  • AI Transparency Statement
  • UK Regulatory Requirements

Our firm

  • About
  • Careers
  • Firm Governance
  • Media Inquiries
  • Recognition

Information

  • Attorney Advertising
  • Legal Notices
  • Privacy Policies
  • AI Transparency Statement
  • UK Regulatory Requirements

Have a question?

Contact Us
  • LinkedIn
  • Youtube
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

© 2026 Fragomen, Del Rey, Bernsen & Loewy, LLP, Fragomen Global LLP and affiliates. All Rights Reserved.

Please note that the content made available on this site is not intended for visitors / customers located in the province of Quebec, and the information provided is not applicable to the Quebec market. To access relevant information that applies to the Quebec market, please click here.