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NEW AFFIDAVIT OF SUPPORT REQUIREMENTS
The 1996 immigration law provides creates a new requirement that family-sponsored immigrants
and certain employment-based immigrants (where a close family member owns a substantial portion
of the petitioning employer receive a legally-binding affidavit of support signed by their
petitioner. This requirement also applies to the beneficiary of an employment-based petition
if the petition is submitted by a relative or by a company in which a relative holds a
significant ownership interest.
Requirements for the Affidavit
For the affidavit of support to be acceptable to government, the affidavit must be
executed as a contract:
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in which the sponsor agrees to support the immigrant at an amount not
less than 125% of the
federal poverty guidelines
unless either the immigrant becomes a citizen of the U.S. or until the immigrant
(or the immigrant's spouse or parent) been employed in the U.S. for a minimum of
10 years (or 40 qualifying calendar quarters);
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which is legally enforceable against the sponsor by each of the following
persons or entities: the immigrant, the federal and the state government, or by
another entity which provides means-tested public assistance to the immigrant;
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where the sponsor agrees to accept the jurisdiction of any federal or state
court.
Who May be a Sponsor?
A sponsor must meet each of the following four requirements: (1) be a U.S. citizen
or permanent resident; (2) be at least 18 years of age; (3) be domiciled in the U.S.;
and (4) be filing a visa petition on behalf of the immigrant (See above) or accept
joint and several liability together with the petitioner.
Normally, a sponsor must show the ability to maintain an annual income of at least
125% of the federal poverty guidelines. However, if the sponsor is an active duty
member of the U.S. Armed Forces, he or she need demonstrate an income equal to
100% of the federal poverty guidelines.
In order to prove that the sponsor has fulfilled the above requirements, he must
either:
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Provide certified copies of his federal income tax returns for the past three
years and a written statement under oath the copies are certified copies of such
returns; or
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Provide evidence of significant assets of the immigrant or of the sponsor
which are available for the support of the sponsored alien.
Sponsors are obligated to inform both the INS and the state of the immigrant's
residence of any change of address within 30 days. Failure to do so could result in
a fine of up to $2,000. If the sponsor is aware that the immigrant has received a
public benefit, the amount of the fine may be raised to $5,000.
Court Actions
If a governmental agency receives notice that an immigrant has received a means-tested public benefit, it may request reimbursement from the sponsor. If the
sponsor does not respond within 45 days, the agency may bring a court action
against the sponsor. The immigrant may also bring an action against the sponsor.
Certain government assistance programs are exempted from the law. These include
school lunch programs, child nutrition benefits, emergency medical benefits and
non-cash emergency disaster relief.
A statute of limitations applies where the immigrant last received a benefit over 10
years ago.
In addition, the above sanctions are inapplicable to persons who sponsored
immigrants using the old affidavit of support form (I-134).
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