In
the next few weeks, Congress is expected to pass legislation calling
for the continuation of the Immigrant Investor Pilot Program, a part
of the EB-5 category of immigrant investors. Later in this article,
you can find more information on that bill. We also thought running an
ABCs article on EB-5 visas this week would be appropriate as
well.
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Congress
created the EB-5 immigrant investor visa category in the Immigration
Act of 1990 in the hopes of attracting foreign capital to the US and
creating jobs for American workers in the process. There are 10,000
visas available in the category each year, 5,000 of which are reserved
for people who participate in a pilot program designed to target low
employment areas. There are three basic requirements for an EB-5 visa:
- First,
the alien must establish a business or invest in an existing
business that was created or restructured after November 19, 1990
- Second,
the alien must have invested $1 million ($500,000 in some cases)
in the business
- Third,
the business must create full-time employment for at least 10 US
workers
Since
its creation, the INS created the category very harshly, taking a
series of actions that have severely limited its use. For example, in
1998 the INS General Counsel issued a highly restrictive
interpretation regarding the validity of certain types of programs
commonly used to set up the required business enterprises.
Second, the INS has launched a series of investigations against
companies that assist people in setting up their investments. Lawsuits
were filed to attempt to force the INS into reversing its position,
but they did not succeed.
Congress stepped in, however, and in 2002 it ordered the INS to
reconsider its decision.
Establishing
or Expanding a Business
An
EB-5 investor must create or expand a business by making the required
investment and creating ten new jobs. There are three ways of meeting
the requirement a qualifying business:
1.
the creation of an original business;
2.
the purchase of an existing business with simultaneous
restructuring or reorganization such that a new commercial
organization results; or
3.
expansion of an existing business created after November 1990
through the investment of the required amount and the creation of ten
new jobs.
Any
for-profit entity formed for the ongoing conduct of lawful business
may serve as a commercial enterprise, including sole proprietorships,
partnerships, holding companies, joint ventures, corporations,
business trusts, etc. A holding company with its subsidiaries would
also qualify if each subsidiary is engaged in the active conduct of
business. Noncommercial activities, such as home ownership, do not
qualify. Also, the alien must be actively involved in the business,
and cannot be a passive investor.
Investment
The
investment can be in the form of cash, equipment, inventory, other
tangible property, cash equivalents and indebtedness secured by assets
owned by the alien provided that he or she is personally and primarily
liable and the assets of the new commercial enterprise are not used to
secure any of the indebtedness. The definition specifically excludes
capital acquired by unlawful means.
The
basic investment amount is $1 million. The required investment is
$500,000 for a business established in a "targeted employment
area." Targeted employment areas include:
1.
rural areas, defined as any area other than one within a
metropolitan statistical area or within the boundary of a city or town
with a population of 20,000 or more; and
2.
areas having an unemployment rate that is at least 150% of the
national average.
Each
state notifies the INS of the qualifying areas within the state. The
current regulations set the required investment for a targeted
employment area at $500,000.00.
Aliens
can invest the required amount alone, create the qualifying business
with another immigrant investor, or even create the business with US
citizens or other people not seeking classification as an immigrant
investor. In such cases, each person seeking classification as an
immigrant investor must have invested the required amount, but each
person can use the same employees to reach the required 10 new
positions.
Job
Creation
The
investment must create at least 10 full-time jobs for US citizens,
lawful permanent residents or other immigrants lawfully authorized to
be employed in the United States. Full-time employees are defined to
include workers working at least thirty-five hours per week. This
includes conditional residents, temporary residents, asylees,
refugees, and recipients of suspension of deportation, but does not
include nonimmigrants. In calculating the required number of
employment positions, the investor may not include spouses or
children, but may include other family members who are employed by the
business.
The
10 positions must be full time. This means employment of a qualified
employee in a position that requires a minimum of 35 working hours per
week. Although two employees may share a full-time position, part-time
employment is specifically excluded. Therefore, a combination of two
or more part-time positions will not qualify, even if they
collectively meet the 35-hour per week requirement.
Immigrant
Investor Pilot Program
As
a result of a disappointing response to the basic immigrant investor
program, Congress enacted a five-year immigrant investor pilot
program, which commenced on October 1, 1993. Originally there were
only 300 visas available for the pilot program, but it was recently
increased to 5000.
The
requirements of the pilot program are essentially the same as in the
basic investor program, with certain exceptions. In order to qualify
under the pilot program, an investment of at least $500,000 must be
made in a commercial enterprise located within an approved
"regional center," defined by the regulations as "any
economic unit, public or private, which is involved with the promotion
of economic growth, including increased export sales, improved
regional productivity, job creation and increased domestic capital
investment."
The
immigrant investor pilot program expired on September 30, 2003.
However, the Immigrant Investor Pilot Program may
receive another five year extension after a bill to extend the program
was passed by the Senate unanimously on October 3, 2003.
The bill, S. 1642, will extend the duration of the immigrant
investor regional center pilot program for five years.
It was referred to the House on October 7, 2003
The
bill that passed in the Senate also included a requirement for a GAO
report in one year after the enactment of the bill.
The General Accounting Office will provide information
concerning the number of immigrant investors that have received visas
under the program, the country of origin of the investors, the
localities where these immigrants are settling, the number of
investors that have sought to become U.S. citizens, the types of
commercial enterprises the investors are involved in, and the type and
number of jobs created.
Conditional
Permanent Residence
In
order to deter fraud, immigrant investors, their spouses and dependent
children are subject to conditional permanent residence for a two-year
period. The alien must file a petition to remove the conditions during
a 90-day period prior to the second anniversary of the alien’s
lawful admission as a permanent resident. The INS will examine the
business at the end of the two-year period to determine whether or not
the alien has complied with all of the requirements.
When
the immigrant investor application is submitted to the INS, it must
include the following:
·
Evidence to show that a new
commercial enterprise has been established, such as articles of
incorporation, business license, or evidence of the transfer of the
required amount of capital when purchasing an existing business.
·
Evidence that the proper
amount of capital has been placed at risk, such as bank statements
showing the deposit of funds into the business’s account, evidence
of equipment purchased for use in the business; evidence of property
transferred to the business, and evidence of money transferred to the
business in exchange for shares of stock. This stock cannot include
terms requiring the business to redeem the stock at the holder’s
request.
·
Evidence demonstrating that
the capital invested was lawfully gained, such as foreign business
registrations, tax returns, or certified copies of criminal or civil
judgments, where appropriate.
·
Evidence that the investment
has created at least ten full-time jobs, such as tax records, Forms
I-9, or if employees have not yet been hired, a detailed business plan
demonstrating that the nature of the business will require the hiring
of ten employees within two years. If the business is a troubled
business, the applicant must submit evidence that the currently
existing number of employees will be maintained for at least two
years.
·
Evidence that the investor
will be engaged in the management of the enterprise, such as evidence
that the applicant is a corporate officer or member of the board of
directors. If the business is a limited partnership, the applicant
will be considered to have a management position only if the
partnership agreement provides that the applicant will have the
rights, powers and duties normally granted to limited partners under
the Uniform Limited Partnership Act.
If
the application is granted, the alien is given conditional permanent
residence and after two years is eligible to file for removal of the
conditions. The alien must also show that he or she "sustained
the actions required for removal of the conditions" during his or
her residence in the United States. An alien entrepreneur will have
met this requirement if he or she has "substantially met"
the capital investment requirement and has continuously maintained
this investment during the conditional residence period. The
entrepreneur’s residence may be terminated at the end of the
two-year period or earlier if it is found that the business was not
established, or was established solely to evade immigration laws or
that the requirements were otherwise violated. If, in the application
to removed conditions, the alien demonstrates that the business was
established, that the required amount of capital was invested, and
that 10 full-time jobs either have been or will be created, the
conditions will be removed and the alien granted full permanent
residence.