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[Federal Register: November 20, 2007 (Volume 72, Number 223)]
[Notices]
[Page 65355-65357]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr20no07-83]
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training Administration
Clarification of Certain Procedures for Processing H-2A Labor
Certification Applications
AGENCY: Employment and Training Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice.
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SUMMARY: The Employment and Training Administration (ETA) is providing
additional clarification to the procedures by which State Workforce
Agencies and ETA National Processing Centers (NPC) process employer
applications for H-2A temporary agricultural labor certification issued
in the Training and Employment Guidance Letter (TEGL) No. 11-07 on
November 6, 2007. These additional clarifications have been made under
TEGL No. 11-07, Change 1, which is published below in order to inform
the public. The clarifications and requirements stated in the TEGL take
effect immediately.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
[[Page 65356]]
Training and Employment Guidance Letter No. 11-07, Change 1--
Clarification of Certain Procedures for Processing H-2A Labor
Certification Applications
1. Purpose. To modify TEGL No. 11-07 to further clarify certain
procedures for State Workforce Agencies (SWAs) and Employment and
Training Administration (ETA) National Processing Centers (NPCs)
involved in the processing of H-2A labor certification applications for
temporary agricultural employment of foreign workers in the United
States (U.S.).
2. References. Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) Section
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a); INA Section 218; 20 Code of Federal Regulations
(CFR) 651.10; 20 CFR Part 653 Subparts B and F; 20 CFR Part 654,
Subpart E; 20 CFR Part 655, Subpart B; 20 CFR Part 658, Subpart F;
Field Memorandum No. 16-00; Training and Employment Guidance Letter No.
31-01; General Administration Letter No. 1-02; Training and Employment
Guidance Letter No. 11-07 (November 6, 2007).
3. Background. The H-2A nonimmigrant visa program permits employers
to hire foreign workers to perform agricultural labor or services of a
temporary or seasonal nature. The H-2A visa classification requires the
intending employer, prior to filing a petition for one or more H-2A
workers with the Department of Homeland Security's U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services (USCIS), to apply to the Secretary of Labor for a
certification that: (1) There are not sufficient workers who are able,
willing, qualified, and available at the time and place where the H-2A
worker is to perform the work; and (2) employment of the H-2A worker
will not adversely affect the wages and working conditions of similarly
employed U.S. workers.
The NPC having jurisdiction over the state(s) in which the area of
intended employment is located is responsible for processing a request
for H-2A labor certification. NPC responsibilities include reviewing
the application for acceptance, directing the SWA to clear the job
order through the intrastate and interstate clearance system, ensuring
the employer meets positive recruitment requirements, and making a
final determination with respect to granting or denying certification
for all or some of the job opportunities requested.
The SWA serving the area of intended employment, with which the
employer files a concurrent request for H-2A labor certification, is
responsible for placing a job order, using information submitted by the
employer on its job offer for intrastate and interstate clearance, and,
where necessary, performing inspections to ensure that housing meets
the applicable standards.
4. Clarification of Procedures for H-2A Applications. This Training
and Employment Guidance Letter (TEGL) clarifies certain procedures the
SWAs and NPCs must use in processing temporary labor certification
applications under the H-2A program. These clarifications replace and
supersede prior corresponding operating procedures issued for the H-2A
program, as noted. However, these clarifications do not affect the
special procedures established by ETA for sheepherders and goatherders,
for occupations involved in the open range production of livestock, for
multi-state custom combine owners and operators, and for itinerant
animal shearing.
A. Filing
i. SWA Locations. The specific location of each SWA may be obtained
directly from the Office of Foreign Labor Certification's Web site at
http://www.foreignlaborcert.doleta.gov/contacts.cfm. Each SWA must
notify the appropriate NPC of any changes to its location or mailing
address.
ii. Worksite(s) Crossing State Jurisdictional Boundaries. In
circumstances where a fixed-site employer has one or more worksites
located in the same area of intended employment and that lie in one or
more state jurisdictions, the employer should file a single H-2A labor
certification application concurrently with the SWA in the state where
the work will begin and the NPC that covers this state. This provision
does not apply to Farm Labor Contractors (FLCs) filing as employers.
SWAs are reminded that, in circumstances where work will be performed
in multiple states, unless special procedures apply, the job order for
recruiting U.S. workers must be transmitted to all other state
jurisdictions in which any work will take place in order that they post
the opportunity in their respective job clearance system.
iii. Timing. The Secretary of Labor is required to make a labor
certification determination at least 30 calendar days before the
employer's date of need, unless the initial or modified application was
not filed timely. INA Section 218(c)(3)(A). As such, the SWA must
conduct a housing inspection, the employer must provide a recruitment
report to the NPC, and the employer must provide evidence of workers'
compensation insurance coverage to the NPC, all before the date that is
30 calendar days before the date of need.
B. Recruitment
i. Contact Information. In accordance with the regulatory
requirements at 20 CFR 655.103(d)(2)(ii), each advertisement the
employer places in a newspaper of general circulation serving the area
of intended employment must direct interested applicants to apply or
send resumes to the nearest office of the SWA for referral to the
employer's place of work. This regulatory requirement also applies to
job orders placed by the SWA in intrastate and interstate clearance to
ensure that all U.S. workers referred through such job orders are
apprised of the terms and conditions of employment.
Absent a SWA referral, however, an employer must still respond to
employment inquiries from individuals who appear at the employer's
place of business or otherwise contact the employer directly. While the
employer is not required to be consistently available to answer every
inquiry placed by an interested individual, the employer should have a
mechanism in place to take messages (e.g., an answering machine) and
should respond to such messages within 24 hours. The employer may not
reject for other than a lawful, job-related reason any U.S. worker's
application.
An employer is required to engage in positive recruitment of U.S.
workers in the area of intended employment until the foreign worker(s)
have departed for the employer's place of work (20 CFR 655.103(d)). The
Department may also require employers to recruit in other states of
``traditional or expected labor supply.'' 20 CFR 655.105(a). The
imposition of such out-of-state recruiting requirements shall be based
on current information provided by a state agency or other sources
``that there are a significant number of able and qualified U.S.
workers'' in each state designated for recruitment ``who, if recruited,
would likely be willing to make themselves available for work at the
time and place needed.'' Id. As required by regulation, the Department
will not require employers to ``recruit in areas where there are a
significant number of local employers recruiting for U.S. workers for
the same types of occupations.'' Id.
ii. Verification of Employment Eligibility. The Department's
statutory duties under the H-2A program require it to ascertain the
employment eligibility of all referred workers. INA Section
218(c)(3)(A) mandates that the Department issue a labor certification
``not later than 30 days before the date such labor or services are
first required to be performed * * * if (1) the
[[Page 65357]]
employer has complied with the criteria for certification (including
criteria for the recruitment of eligible individuals as prescribed by
the Secretary), and (2) the employer does not actually have, or has not
been provided referrals of, qualified eligible individuals who have
indicated their ability to perform such labor or services. * * *'' The
Department has fulfilled its statutory mandate by instructing SWAs via
regulation and through this guidance letter that workers cannot be
referred to employers unless the SWA has determined that the worker is
``able, willing, and eligible'' to take the job. 20 CFR 655.106(a).
Eligibility is clearly defined by statute to mean ``with respect to
employment, an individual who is not an unauthorized alien * * * with
respect to that employment.'' INA Section 218(i)(1).
The Department has also required by regulation that all local SWA
offices must ``determine whether or not applicants are MSFWs [migrant
and seasonal farmworkers] as defined at 20 CFR Sec. 651.10 of this
chapter.'' ``Farmworker'' is defined by 20 CFR Sec. 651.10 as as
``agricultural worker,'' which is in turn defined as ``a worker, whose
primary work experience has been in farmwork * * * whether alien or
citizen, who is legally authorized to work in the United States.''
Accordingly, SWAs must verify the employment eligibility of any
worker referred to an employer in response to an H-2A job order. The
Department strongly recommends that SWAs use the E-Verify Web-based
system administered by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
(USCIS). Information on the E-Verify system may be obtained directly
from USCIS by clicking on the ``E-Verify'' link at http://
www.uscis.gov. The Department is aware that many, and perhaps most,
SWAs do not currently have reliable employment verification systems in
place. Therefore, the Department will not enforce the employment
verification requirements specified in this Training and Employment
Guidance Letter against the SWAs until December 15, 2007.
SWAs should be aware that employers can rely on INA Section
274A(a)(5) only where the documentation complies with all statutory and
regulatory requirements, including 8 CFR 274a.6. SWAs are strongly
encouraged to provide this documentation. The Department will offer
training between now and December 15 to provide SWAs additional
guidance on how to comply with the applicable requirements.
iii. SWA Referrals during Contract Period. Once an employer's H-2A
workers have departed for the employer's place of work, SWAs should, in
order to minimize disruption during the H-2A contract period, first
make all reasonable efforts to refer an interested U.S. worker to a
non-H-2A job order in the area of intended employment or to an unfilled
H-2A job order in the area of intended employment in which the H-2A
workers have not yet departed for the place of employment.
C. Housing
Housing Standards. SWAs are reminded that employers must provide
housing at no cost to any worker not reasonably able to return to his/
her residence within the same day. Employer-provided housing, depending
on when it was built, must meet either the USDOL Occupational Safety
and Health Administration (OSHA) standards set forth under 29 CFR
1910.142 (standards for temporary labor camps), or the ETA standards at
20 CFR 654.404-654.417 (standards for H-2A housing), whichever are
applicable pursuant to the regulations. In circumstances where rental,
public accommodation, or another substantially similar class of
habitation is used, the housing must first meet any local standards for
such housing or, in the absence of applicable local standards, any
applicable state standards. In the absence of both local and state
standards, the housing must meet the OSHA standards for temporary labor
camps. In accordance with the Federal regulations at 20 CFR
655.102(b)(1)(vi), when it is the prevailing practice in the area of
intended employment and for the occupation to provide family housing,
the employer must provide family housing to all workers who request it.
Open range housing--for sheepherders or others engaged primarily in the
range production of livestock--must comply with OSHA housing standards
or, alternatively, DOL guidance. In the absence of OSHA standards, ETA
has added housing-related guidance to its TEGL 15-06 (February 9,
2007), which governs the processing of H-2A labor certification
applications for occupations involved in the open range production of
livestock.
i. Housing Inspections. SWAs are encouraged to perform housing
inspections in a timely manner so that processing of an employer's
application is not unduly delayed. SWAs should be prepared to conduct
housing inspections prior to the date an employer will file an H-2A
labor certification application, if so requested by the employer.
ii. Certified Housing that Becomes Unavailable. For situations in
which housing certified by the SWA later becomes unavailable for
reasons outside the employer's control, the employer may substitute
other rental or public accommodation housing that possesses a valid
certificate of occupancy. The employer must notify the SWA, in writing,
of the change in accommodations and the reason(s) for such change. The
SWA may inspect such accommodations, prior to or during occupation, to
ensure it meets applicable housing standards.
5. Effective Date. This guidance applies to all H-2A labor
certification applications pending with or received by the NPC and SWA
on or after the date this TEGL is issued.
6. Action Required. NPC Directors and SWA Administrators are
directed to provide NPC, SWA and other state staff involved in the
processing of H-2A applications with a copy of these procedures.
7. Inquiries. Questions from SWA staff should be directed to the
Office of Foreign Labor Certification at (202) 693-3010.
Signed in Washington, DC, this 15th day of November, 2007.
Emily Stover DeRocco,
Assistant Secretary, Employment and Training Administration.
[FR Doc. E7-22636 Filed 11-19-07; 8:45 am]
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