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DHS Announces Continuation of International Entrepreneur Parole Program Details Written by Imperial Valley News
Washington, DC - U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services announced today that the Department of Homeland Security is withdrawing a 2018 notice of proposed rulemaking that proposed to remove the International Entrepreneur program from DHS regulations. The International Entrepreneur (IE) parole program, first introduced in 2017, will remain a viable program for foreign entrepreneurs to create and develop start-up entities with high growth potential in the United States. The program will help to strengthen and grow our nation’s economy through increased capital spending, innovation, and job creation.
The lawsuit alleges that Biden officials “have abandoned the pre-existing protections against the introduction into Texas and the United States of aliens infected with the SARS-CoV-2 virus during a pandemic.”
Under the administration of former President Donald Trump, officials issued a rule named Title 42 to prevent illegal immigrants from entering the United States and to deport any aliens that are caught.
The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said at the time that invoking Title 42 was to prevent migrants introducing COVID-19 into the U.S.
But as soon as Biden took office, his administration quickly rolled back the use of Title 42. This allowed unaccompanied minors to stay in the country and decreased the number of families expelled under the order.
SAMARN Chaikhamjan and Kraisorn Chaijaroen, a couple and citizens of the Kingdom of Thailand, have joined the lawsuit of nine individuals against federal officials for rejecting the plaintiffsâ petitions for long-term legal residency.
Named as defendants were U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Director Tracy Renaud.
Samarn Chaikhamjan and Kraisorn Chaijaroen, through attorney Joseph Horey, Â filed a motion to intervene as plaintiffs in the civil complaint.
Horey stated that like the original plaintiffs, the couple meet the statutory qualifications for CNMI-Long Term Resident status and submitted applications for such status to USCIS during the authorized time period for doing so.
Harvard president Lawrence Bacow has urged President Joe Biden's cohort to make it permanently easier for foreign scholars to enroll in colleges in the United States.