EB-5 GREEN CARD BY INVESTMENT
The EB-5 Category is an excellent opportunity for many foreign nationals
to become permanent residents of the United States.
A person investing $1 million in a business that creates 10 jobs (or
$500,000 in certain circumstances) may be granted EB-5 permanent resident
status. The basic criteria for this status are:
• Investment must be in a business, not a passive security such as the
stock market;
• Invested funds must be the individual's, but may be a gift or a loan
from a parent or other person,;
• The business must have been created after November 29, 1990 or the
investment must substantially change an older business;
• The amount of investment may be $500,000 in a rural or high unemployment
area; and
•
Create 10 jobs - no direct job creation is required if the investment
is in a "Regional Center".
The Regional Center Program
To encourage immigration through the EB-5 category, Congress
created a Regional Center program in 1990. 5,000 visas have been
set aside each year
for people to invest at least $500,000 in designated Regional
Centers. The Regional Centers program does not require the immigrant
investor enterprise
itself to employ 10 U.S. workers. Instead, it is sufficient if
10 or more jobs are created directly or indirectly as a result
of the investment.
Procedures
EB-5 Permanent Resident status involves making the investment,
filing the appropriate petition at a CIS Service Center, and applying
for an Immigrant Visa at a United States consulate or applying
for Adjustment
of Status in
the U.S. After "Conditional" Resident Status (Green
Card) is granted,
the individual must wait one year and nine months to file an application
to remove the "conditional" status. With this application,
evidence of the creation of the 10 jobs, if necessary, is required as
well
as proof the entire investment has been made. Upon approval of
the application by
CIS, the applicant is granted Permanent Resident status.
Process
It will be necessary to prove a lawful source of funds, after
which an Application may be filed with USCIS. There is at present
no Premium Processing
for this Visa. Once the initial petition is approved, the Visa
will either be processed at the Consular Level at the US Embassy
where the investor normally
resides. If the investor is already present in the US, the next
stage will involve filing an application to adjust status. Once
approved, the (Conditional)
green card will be issued for a two year period. After 21 months,
the Investor files a further petition to remove conditions and,
upon proof that the jobs
have been created and that the investment was made, an unconditional
green card is issued.
After 5 years of lawful permanent residence, the Investor and
all immediate family members (Spouse and Children (once they
reach 18) may apply for US
Citizenship.
Investing in a new commercial enterprise ($1 million)
The law requires the investor-petitioner is investing in a "new" commercial
enterprise, which must have been one established after November 29, 1990.
However, contribution of capital to an "existing" business
(that was formed prior to November 29, 1990) may be acceptable
in two situations:
• First, the investor may substantially reorganize or restructure the
existing business. The mere change in ownership, cosmetic changes
to the decor of the business site, and implementation of a new marketing strategy
are insufficient changes to constitute establishment of a new commercial
enterprise. A complete transformation of the nature of the business
is likely
to be considered sufficient.
• Second, the investor may expand an existing business resulting in an
increase of at least 40 percent of the net worth or number of employees
of the business. CIS requires evidence of the change in business in the form
of income tax returns, audited financial statements, and employment
tax returns.
The investment must be in a "commercial" enterprise.
Any for-profit entity formed for the ongoing conduct of lawful business
may serve
as a commercial enterprise. This includes sole proprietorships,
partnerships (whether limited
or general), holding companies, joint ventures, corporations,
business trusts, or other entities publicly or privately owned. This
definition
includes a
holding company and its wholly owned subsidiaries, if each
subsidiary is engaged in a for-profit activity formed for the ongoing
conduct
of a lawful business. However, the term new commercial enterprise does
not include
noncommercial
activity such as owning and operating a personal residence
or buying stock on the stock exchange.
Engaging in a new commercial enterprise
While the law requires the investor to be engaged in a new commercial
enterprise, CIS regulations state that if the investor is a
corporate officer or board member or, in the case of a limited
partnership, a
limited partner,
then the investor satisfies the management criteria.
Investing capital
The law requires an investor-petitioner to have invested in
or be in the process of investing the required capital.
Amount of capital
The amount of required capital is at least $1 million. The
minimum investment is reduced to $500,000 in cases of investment
in "targeted
employment areas," which are rural areas or areas which have experienced
unemployment of at least 150 percent of the national average rate. A "rural
area" is an area not within either a metropolitan statistical
area or the outer boundary of any city or town having a population
of
20,000 or more. The assessment of whether the investment
is in a targeted employment
area
is based on statistical information relating to the time
of investment and the location where the enterprise is principally
doing business.
Equity capital
To "invest" is to contribute equity capital to the enterprise.
Loans of capital by the investor to the enterprise do
not qualify as an appropriate investment. The investor cannot receive
any bond,
note, or
other debt arrangement
from the enterprise in exchange for the contribution
of
capital.
Type of capital
"
Capital" may include cash and cash equivalents, equipment, inventory,
and other tangible property. Although capital does
not include loans made by the petitioner to the enterprise, the investor
may borrow
the investment money if it is secured by assets owned
by
the investor, provided the
investor
is personally and primarily liable for repayment of
the loan, and the assets of the enterprise upon which the petition
is based are
not
used to
secure
any of the indebtedness.
" At risk"
CIS requires proof that the capital invested is "at risk." CIS
focuses on actual and intended uses of capital to
confirm that it will be used for job creation and profit-generating
activity. CIS
requires more than
a deposit of funds into a business account; it also
requires evidence
of
the actual undertaking of business activity. CIS
has held that use
of capital for partnership expenses and reserve accounts unrelated
to job creation is
insufficient.
Tracing and lawful source of funds
Documentary proof is required to show that capital is invested
by the investor petitioner. Thus, an investor petitioner
should present evidence
that traces capital from the petitioner directly to the enterprise.
CIS also requires that an investor petitioner provide evidence
to prove that the source of funds was procured by legal means.
CIS requires evidence
of the investor's past five years of income tax returns and
financial statements to prove the investor has sufficient
lawful sources for
the capital invested.
Gifted funds
The applicant may receive a gift of the funds.
Creating or saving jobs
The investor must create full-time employment for at least
10 U.S. workers. The investor and his or her spouse
and children do not
count toward the 10-employee minimum. Note that non-immigrants
(i.e.,
those
with E, H,
L, and other temporary worker visas) are also excluded
from the 10-employee requirement. An "employee" is
an individual who provides services or labor for the new
commercial enterprise
and receives
wages or
other remuneration directly from the new commercial
enterprise.
Independent contractors
are
excluded under this definition.
Types of jobs
The jobs created must be full-time, i.e., positions that
require a minimum of 35 working hours per week. Part-time jobs
do not
count. However,
job-sharing arrangements where two or more qualifying employees
share one full-time position will be counted.
When jobs must exist
The petitioner may base the petition on proof that the required
jobs have been created or on proof that the required jobs
will be created before
the end of the two-year period of conditional residence.
In the latter case the investor must support the petition with
a comprehensive
business plan
demonstrating a need for at least 10 employees before the
end of the conditional residence period.
Troubled business/saving jobs
Special rules govern investments in "troubled" businesses.
A troubled business is one that has been in
existence for at least two years,
has incurred a net loss for accounting purposes
during the 12 or 24 month
period before
the petition was filed, and the loss for
such period is equal to at least 20 percent of the businesses net worth
before the
loss.
If the petition
is
based on investment in a troubled business,
the investor is not required to create 10 new jobs. Instead, the
petition
may be based on
proof
that the business will maintain the number
of existing
employees during the conditional
status period.
REGIONAL CENTER INVESTMENTS ($500,000)
To encourage immigration through investment, and to concentrate
investment in specific regions, Congress
created a temporary Pilot Program
in 1993, directing CIS to set aside visas
for people who invest in a designated "Regional
Center. The Pilot Program does not require
that the immigrant investor enterprise employ 10 U.S. workers
as long as
the investor
can reasonably
demonstrate
that the investment in the Regional Center
has indirectly created 10 or more jobs and has resulted in improved
regional
productivity. The CIS
has designated
a number of Regional Centers located throughout
the country and
these usually provide the relevant information
to the satisfaction of USCIS.
The 10-employee requirement deters many immigrant investors.
To resolve this, in 1993, an option was created
whereby immigrants may invest $500,000 or more in CIS-designated "Regional Centers" in
a high unemployment area.
In this program, a promoter makes a proposal to the CIS.
If the CIS finds it will benefit a regional economy and shows potential
for
providing
significant indirect employment, the project will be designated
a Regional Center. With CIS approval, the promoter forms
a
limited partnership or corporation.
Investors may apply for green cards upon investing in the
relevant Program.
Investors in a Regional Center need not have day-to-day management
responsibility nor are they required to prove that the business
employs 10 people. Instead, they are entitled to rely on
a statistical model provided
by the relevant Regional Center Management. A Regional Center
means that the CIS is satisfied with the job creation potential.
We can provide you
with information about specific Regional Center Investments
for you to perform due diligence analysis.
Potential Investors should note that most, if not all of
the Regional Center Programs charge an Administrative Fee (usually
$50,000) and that this
does not include the cost of immigration legal fees for the
Investor and his family.
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