Skokie Employment-Based Immigration

Skokie Employment-Based Immigration

Employment-Based Immigration Skokie, IL

If you are an employer trying to hire foreign national talent, or a professional seeking to build a career and eventually a permanent life in the United States, the employment-based immigration system is one of the most complex federal regulatory frameworks you will encounter. Visa categories, annual caps, per-country backlogs, labor certification requirements, employer compliance obligations, and the path from temporary work authorization to permanent residence all interact in ways that require careful planning from the very beginning. The help and guidance of our Skokie, IL employment-based immigration lawyer can make the process significantly easier for you, reducing the likelihood that an error or omission will delay approval or cause your work visa to be denied.

The Dworsky Law Group has been handling employment-based visa and green card cases for over 25 years, representing employers and foreign national professionals across a wide range of industries and visa categories. Contact us to discuss your situation.

Why Choose Dworsky Law Group for Employment-Based Immigration in Skokie, IL?

A Practice Built Around Business Immigration

Ashley Dworsky founded Dworsky Law Group with an explicit emphasis on business immigration alongside family-based work, and employment-based cases have been central to the practice since the beginning. He earned his law degrees from the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa, and is admitted to the State Bars of Illinois and New York, the United States Federal Court for the Northern District of Illinois, the Seventh and Ninth Circuit Courts of Appeals, the South African Bar, and the United States Supreme Court.

Employment-based immigration cases do not always stay at the USCIS level. A wrongly denied I-140 immigrant petition, a Department of Labor audit that escalates, or an employer facing debarment proceedings may require federal court intervention. Ashley Dworsky’s federal court admissions mean those options remain available when a case requires it. For clients seeking an immigration lawyer in Skokie, IL, his range of capacity matters from the very first filing.

25 Years Across Every Employment-Based Category

Ashley Dworsky has been handling employment-based immigration for over 25 years. H-1B specialty occupation petitions. L-1A intracompany transfers for executives and managers. O-1 extraordinary ability visas. EB-1A and EB-1C employment-based green cards. PERM labor certification cases. EB-2 National Interest Waivers. EB-3 skilled worker petitions. Investor visas. The breadth of that experience matters because employment-based cases rarely stay in one lane. An H-1B worker today may be an EB-2 green card candidate tomorrow, and the strategic choices made at the nonimmigrant visa stage affect the green card pathway years later.

He tracks every development that directly affects this practice area. H-1B lottery changes for FY 2027 and beyond have fundamentally changed how employers and workers approach cap-subject petitions. PERM labor certification pitfalls that trip up less experienced practitioners can add years to a green card case. Changes affecting employment authorization documents have added complexity to employers’ management of their foreign national workforce. Staying current on all of it is part of the work, and it ensures that our clients have the most up-to-date information and advocacy.

Representation for Both Employers and Workers

Dworsky Law Group represents both employers who sponsor visa petitions and foreign national professionals whose careers depend on those petitions being handled correctly. For employers, we handle petition preparation, Labor Condition Agreement compliance, I-9 and LCA compliance obligations, and the long-term workforce immigration planning that connects individual visa decisions to broader business strategy. For workers, we handle individual petitions, status changes, and the full arc from initial work authorization through permanent residence. One client put it simply:

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

“We needed to obtain a work visa for a prospective employee who is a non-USA citizen. The Dworsky Law firm explained all our options with different types of visa applications. We went with their suggestion and obtained the visa in record time. Saurabh Sharma and Ashley Dworsky advised us through the whole process. Everything they mentioned happened. This is the second time we have utilized their services and once again their service, opinions and professional advice were top quality! We will definitely continue using this Law Firm!” — Brian Birkan

Read more reviews on our Google Business Profile.

Types of Employment-Based Immigration Cases We Handle in Skokie

Employment-based immigration covers a wide range of visa categories and green card pathways. The right strategy depends on the worker’s qualifications, the employer’s situation, and the long-term goal. Here is what we handle.

  • H-1B Specialty Occupation Visas. The H-1B is the most widely used work visa for professionals in specialty occupations, including technology, engineering, finance, medicine, and law. It requires a sponsoring employer, a qualifying job offer, and a bachelor’s degree or higher in a relevant field. Cap-subject H-1B petitions go through an annual lottery, now weighted by wage level under the new selection system. Cap-exempt employers, including universities and nonprofit research organizations, are not subject to the cap or the lottery.
  • L-1A Visas. Multinational companies that need to transfer managers or executives from a qualifying foreign entity to a U.S. office use the L-1A. It is not subject to a numerical cap, does not require a Labor Condition Application, and provides a direct pathway to the EB-1C employment-based green card for qualifying executives and managers. New office L-1A petitions are available for companies establishing a first U.S. presence.
  • O-1 Visas. The O-1 is for individuals who have risen to the very top of their field in sciences, arts, education, business, or athletics. It is not subject to a numerical cap, does not require a labor certification, and is renewable indefinitely in one-year increments. It is also a common bridge visa for individuals pursuing an EB-1A extraordinary ability green card.
  • E-2 Investor and Treaty Trader Visas. Citizens of treaty countries who invest a substantial amount in a U.S. business, or who are engaged in substantial trade between the United States and their home country, may qualify for E-2 or E-1 status. These visas are renewable indefinitely as long as the qualifying business remains active. We have written on E-2 visa options for various applicant categories.
  • EB-1A Extraordinary Ability Green Cards. The EB-1A allows individuals who have demonstrated sustained national or international acclaim in their field to self-petition for a green card without an employer sponsor or PERM labor certification. It is the first-preference employment-based category and has historically had visa numbers available for most nationalities without extended wait times.
  • EB-1C Multinational Executive and Manager Green Cards. Executives and managers who have been employed by the petitioning U.S. employer for at least 1 year in the past 3 years may pursue an EB-1C green card. Like the EB-1A, it does not require PERM labor certification. It is the natural endpoint of the L-1A pathway for qualifying transferees and for executives sponsored directly by their U.S. employer.
  • EB-2 National Interest Waiver. Foreign nationals with advanced degrees or exceptional ability in their field may self-petition for an EB-2 green card by demonstrating that their work is in the national interest of the United States. The National Interest Waiver bypasses the PERM labor certification requirement and the need for a specific employer sponsor, making it particularly attractive for researchers, scientists, physicians, and entrepreneurs. We track the current processing environment for EB-2 NIW cases to advise clients on realistic timelines.
  • PERM Labor Certification and EB-3 Green Cards. Most employer-sponsored green cards in the EB-2 and EB-3 categories require PERM labor certification from the Department of Labor before the I-140 immigrant petition can be filed. PERM involves a supervised recruitment process designed to test the labor market for qualified U.S. workers. Errors in the recruitment process or in the PERM application itself can result in audits or denials that require a fresh start. The PERM pitfalls that generate the most problems are often avoidable with proper preparation.
  • Investor Visas. The EB-5 immigrant investor program and the E-2 treaty investor visa are both available for foreign nationals who invest in U.S. businesses. The EB-5 leads to permanent residence; the E-2 is a non-immigrant category. Both require specific capital investment thresholds and documentation of the investment’s legitimacy and potential to create jobs.
  • I-9 and LCA Sanctions Compliance. Employers who sponsor work visas take on ongoing compliance obligations that extend well beyond the initial petition. Form I-9 must be completed for every employee and maintained correctly. Labor Condition Agreement public access files must be maintained and available on request. ICE audit activity has increased significantly, and the penalties for I-9 violations are substantial. We help employers build compliance systems that hold up under scrutiny.

Federal Legal Requirements for Employment-Based Immigration in Illinois

Employment-based immigration is governed by the Immigration and Nationality Act, with nonimmigrant work visa categories defined under INA Section 101(a)(15) and employment-based immigrant preference categories established under INA Section 203(b), codified at 8 U.S.C. § 1153(b). Each category has distinct eligibility requirements, filing procedures, and processing timelines. What applies to an H-1B petition has no bearing on how an EB-1A case is evaluated.

For H-1B petitions, the sponsoring employer must file a Labor Condition Application with the U.S. Department of Labor before submitting the petition to USCIS. The LCA certifies that the employer will pay the required prevailing wage and that hiring the foreign worker will not adversely affect similarly employed U.S. workers. The H-1B annual cap is set at 65,000 visas per fiscal year, with an additional 20,000 reserved for holders of U.S. master’s degrees or higher, under 8 U.S.C. § 1184(g).

For PERM labor certification, the employer must conduct a supervised recruitment process in accordance with federal law to demonstrate that no qualified U.S. workers are available for the position. The Department of Labor’s FLAG system is the primary portal for PERM filings. Audit rates have increased in recent years, and the consequences of a PERM audit that identifies errors in the recruitment process can include denial and a requirement to restart the entire process.

Visa number availability for employment-based green cards is governed by the per-country annual limits established under INA Section 202, which cap the number of visas available to nationals of any single country at seven percent of the total employment-based visa allocation per year. For nationals of India and China, this creates backlogs in the EB-2 and EB-3 categories that can extend for decades. The State Department publishes monthly Visa Bulletin updates showing current priority dates, and monitoring those dates is part of managing an employment-based green card case for nationals of high-demand countries.

Illinois employers who sponsor work visas are also subject to state-level employment law obligations administered by the Illinois Department of Labor that interact with federal immigration requirements in areas such as wage payment, worker classification, and anti-discrimination protections. Federal immigration law preempts state immigration law, but Illinois employment law applies to all workers regardless of immigration status in most circumstances.

Alien registration requirements currently in effect apply to many foreign nationals in the United States, including those on work visas and those with pending employment-based green card applications. Employers whose foreign national workforce includes individuals with pending applications or conditional status need to be aware of how these requirements interact with their compliance obligations.

Important Aspects of a Skokie Employment-Based Immigration Case

Visa Category Selection

Choosing the wrong visa category is a costly mistake that can affect not just the immediate petition but the long-term green card timeline. An applicant who qualifies for both an H-1B and an O-1 may be better served by pursuing the O-1, which is not subject to the lottery and has no annual cap. A multinational company that automatically defaults to an H-1B for every foreign hire may overlook L-1A eligibility for workers who have been employed abroad. A researcher with a strong publication record may be an EB-1A candidate who can bypass the PERM process entirely. We evaluate all available categories before recommending a course of action, because the choice made at the visa stage sets the trajectory for everything that follows.

The H-1B Lottery and Cap Planning

The H-1B lottery has become increasingly competitive and increasingly unpredictable. The wage-weighted selection system that took effect for FY 2027 registrations fundamentally changed the calculus for employers and workers. Higher-wage positions now have a better chance of selection than lower-wage positions in the same occupational group. Employers who historically relied on H-1B sponsorship as their primary hiring tool need to reassess that strategy and understand what alternative categories are available for workers who are not selected in the lottery. We advise employers on cap-gap planning, alternative visa strategies, and how to structure compensation for H-1B registered positions under the new system.

PERM Labor Certification

PERM is the stage where employment-based green card cases most commonly go wrong. The recruitment process must comply precisely with Department of Labor regulations. Job requirements in the PERM application must reflect the actual minimum requirements for the position, not the specific worker’s qualifications. Advertisements must be placed in the required media during the required window. Resumes from U.S. applicants must be evaluated and rejected only for lawful, job-related reasons that are documented in the recruitment report. An audit can challenge any of these elements. We prepare PERM cases with the audit record in mind from the beginning, because the documentation standards for an audit response are higher than what is needed simply to file. Recent immigration enforcement priorities have affected how Department of Labor audits are conducted and resolved.

Priority Dates and Visa Backlogs

For workers in the employment-based preference categories who are nationals of high-demand countries, the priority date system means that an approved I-140 petition does not translate into an immediate green card. The worker must wait until their priority date, which is the date the PERM application or I-140 petition was filed, becomes current in the Visa Bulletin before they can file for adjustment of status or proceed with consular processing. For Indian nationals in the EB-2 category, the current wait time is decades long. Planning around the priority date system, including strategies to preserve and advance a worker’s place in line, is essential for any employer or worker aiming for long-term permanent residence.

Maintaining Status During the Green Card Process

Foreign national workers in employment-based green card proceedings often spend years in H-1B or other non-immigrant status while their priority date becomes current. Maintaining valid nonimmigrant status throughout that period requires careful management of extension filings, changes in employer, changes in job duties, and periods of travel. The portability provisions available to workers with I-485 applications pending for more than 180 days allow them to change employers or positions without losing their place in line, within limits. Understanding these rules and how to use them strategically is part of managing a long-term employment-based case.

Employer Compliance and Audit Exposure

Sponsoring a work visa is not a one-time event. It creates ongoing compliance obligations that must be managed throughout the worker’s authorized period of stay. LCA obligations require payment of wages at or above the prevailing wage throughout the H-1B period. I-9 records must be maintained for every employee and updated when work authorization expires. Public access files must be maintained and produced on request. ICE worksite enforcement activity has increased significantly in recent years, and employers who have not built systematic compliance programs face meaningful audit exposure. We help employers establish and maintain compliance systems that address all of these obligations systematically rather than reactively. Recent DHS policy changes have added further layers to employers’ management of work authorization for their foreign national workforce.

Contact Dworsky Law Group

Employment-based immigration touches every part of a business’s relationship with its foreign national workforce, from the initial visa decision through the green card process and ultimately to citizenship. Getting those decisions right from the beginning saves time, reduces compliance exposure, and keeps talented workers authorized and productive. Non-compliance can result in legal headaches, but don’t worry. Part of the representation services from our Skokie employment-based immigration lawyer includes a compliance risk assessment of your situation.

Dworsky Law Group has been handling employment-based immigration for over 25 years, representing employers and workers across all categories and levels of complexity. Whether you are navigating your first H-1B petition, planning a transition from L-1A to EB-1C, or building a compliance program for a growing workforce, contact us to schedule a consultation and talk through your options.

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