PIP Program: Temporary Block Extended By Judge

By Nita Nicole Upadhye

Table of Contents

A US judge has extended the temporary block on the Biden Administration’s Keeping Families Together Parole in Place (KFT PIP)” policy.

 

Temporary Block Extended

 

The KFT PIP program, which aims to provide a citizenship path for nearly 500,000 undocumented immigrants married to US citizens, is now subject to an extended pause until September 23, 2024. During this period, US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) can still accept applications for Parole in Place requests under Keeping Families Together, although it cannot approve them.

The extension allows for more time to review the policy’s legality, following a lawsuit by 16 Republican-led states, which claim the program is unconstitutional. The legal challenge argues the policy worsens illegal immigration and creates financial burdens for states, while supporters emphasize its humanitarian value.

A decision on the case is expected after October 10, 2024.

The policy, an expansion of “parole in place,” would allow undocumented spouses and stepchildren of US citizens to stay in the US and potentially apply for green cards without leaving the country. Under the expanded program, eligibility requires continuous US residency for at least 10 years, marriage to a US citizen by June 17, 2024, and no criminal disqualifications.

Eligible individuals can still apply without penalty, although no decisions will be made until the outcome of the legal challenge has decided.

 

 

Author

Founder & Principal Attorney Nita Nicole Upadhye is a recognized leader in the field of US business immigration law, (The Legal 500, Who's Who Legal and AILA) and an experienced and trusted advisor to large multinational corporates through to SMEs. She provides strategic immigration advice and specialist application support to corporations and professionals, entrepreneurs, investors, artists, actors and athletes from across the globe to meet their US-bound talent mobility needs.

Nita is an active public speaker, thought leader, immigration commentator, and immigration policy contributor and regularly hosts training sessions for employers and HR professionals.

This article does not constitute direct legal advice and is for informational purposes only.

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For specialist advice on your query, get in touch with our team of US immigration attorneys.​

Need legal advice?

For specialist advice on your query, get in touch with our team of US immigration attorneys.

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For specialist advice on a US immigration or nationality matter for your business, contact our US immigration attorneys.

For specialist advice on a US immigration or nationality matter for your business, contact our US immigration attorneys.