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Protecting Children of Long-Term Visa Holders Act of 2023
3/6/2024, 8:15 AM
Summary of Bill HR 3442
The key provisions of the bill include ensuring that children of long-term visa holders have access to essential services, such as education, healthcare, and social services. It also seeks to prevent the separation of families by allowing children to remain in the United States even if their parents' visas expire or are revoked.
Additionally, the bill addresses the issue of children aging out of their parents' visas by providing a pathway to legal status for these individuals. This would allow them to continue living and working in the United States without fear of deportation. Overall, the Protecting Children of Long-Term Visa Holders Act of 2023 aims to protect the rights and well-being of children in immigrant families, ensuring that they have the opportunity to thrive and contribute to society.
Congressional Summary of HR 3442
America's CHILDREN Act of 2023 or the Protecting Children of Long-Term Visa Holders Act of 2023
This bill provides lawful permanent resident status to certain college graduates who entered the United States as children and addresses other immigration-related issues.
Specifically, this bill allows a non-U.S. national (alien under federal law) to apply for lawful permanent resident status if the individual (1) was lawfully present in the United States as a dependent child of an individual admitted for employment, (2) was in the United States with such status for at least eight years, (3) has graduated from an institution of higher education in the United States, and (4) is not deportable or otherwise inadmissible. In addition, the individual must have been lawfully present in the United States for at least 10 years at the time of the application.
The bill also modifies various provisions related to calculating an individual's age for immigration purposes and the priority date of certain immigration-related applications. For example, to determine whether an individual is a dependent child for certain immigration petitions, the individual's age at the time a petition is filed shall be the age used for that determination. (Currently, this determination for some petitions is based on the individual's age at the time a visa becomes available, so it is possible for an individual to be a dependent child when filing a petition but become too old to qualify by the time the visa is available.)





