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Home > Immigration reform's potential impact

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Immigration reform's potential impact

Head of Fragomen's compliance group discusses how legislation might affect the firm and its clients

By Tom Huddleston Jr. All Articles 

The Am Law Daily

January 31, 2013

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Throughout his re-election campaign, President Barack Obama promised that overhauling the nation's immigration laws would be at the top of his legislative agenda should he win a second term. Now, with that second term under way and momentum for reform building, the legal community is sitting at attention.

In a speech Tuesday at a Las Vegas high school, the president addressed what has been a knotty political issue. The speech came a day after a bipartisan group of U.S. senators crafted a package of proposals that includes both stricter border security and a pathway to U.S. citizenship for the millions of illegal immigrants now residing in the United States. Obama praised the group's proposals but challenged Congress to act swiftly on immigration reform.

A second set of lawmakers, according to The New York Times, is set to introduce its own bill sometime this week aimed at tackling the issue of how to increase the number of visas available to highly skilled legal immigrants who work in the technology and science arena.

For law firms focused on immigration law—including Am Law 200 firm Fragomen, Del Rey, Bernsen & Loewy—any reform legislation could have a major impact. The Am Law Daily. a Daily Report affiliate, spoke with Washington, D.C.–based Bo Cooper, a Fragomen partner who heads the firm's government strategies and compliance group, about immigration reform's potential implications for the firm and its clients. What follows has been condensed and edited for grammar, style and clarity.

How is Fragomen preparing for potential changes to immigration laws?

Helping clients that have major needs for foreign talent shape this legislation is a big part of what we're doing all day, every day, right now. Our clients range from those who just want to get their antennae up and know what might be coming, so that they can plan and anticipate and know what to look out for, to clients for whom it is very, very, very important to go and shape these changes so that they can more easily get the foreign talent they need and help defend against changes that would be harmful to their talent needs.

What are some of the implications of potential reforms for your clients in that second category?

Most of our firm's clients have a need for professional talent—usually with high levels of education and usually in specific fields. Often those are fields where we've got a skills gap in the United States. So, for example, we've got clients who are creating more jobs in the STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) space than they can fill with those who have the appropriate degrees among the American pool.

What those clients are proposing is, they're trying to go and help ensure that Congress will modernize access to the visa programs that they need to hire this professional talent. Most of those programs are subject to limits that were set in 1990, 23 years ago, and they were set for the 1990 economy. And they just don't stretch as far as demand in our economy today.

Then there are a lot of compliance issues that employers need to be alert to. Immigration compliance is already a fairly complex endeavor, ranging from taking the appropriate steps to ensure that your workforce is authorized to work to making sure that you have observed the complex wage and other kinds of terms and conditions [and] requirements that surround many of these complex visa programs. Compliance is a tough thing to be sure you're on top of and it takes a lot of resources and a lot of time. So, understanding and helping to shape changes to those kinds of rules are also important to clients.

How does the firm make sure its lawyers are up to speed on any changes to immigration laws?

We have a process for keeping the lawyers in our firm abreast of what's happening, but there's a lot of daylight between where things are today and where things [will end up] if, and when, there is actual legislation. We'll be focused on making sure that our colleagues in the firm and our clients are up to date on what's happening as things evolve.

Once things begin to take a final shift, there's all kinds of things that people are going to have to learn in a great deal of detail—both clients and attorneys in the firm. For example, clients are going to need to know what it's going to do to their recruitment cycles: when they can recruit; when they're going to have access to visas; what, if any, additional requirements they'll have to fulfill before having access to certain visas; what additional steps they're going to have to take to verify the eligibility of their workforce to be employed.

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Firms mentioned

    
  • Fragomen, Del Rey, Bernsen & Loewy

Companies, agencies mentioned

    
  • Bernsen & Loewy
  • New York Times Company

Key categories

    
  • Immigration Law
  • Law Firm Profitability
  • Law Firm Administration

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