dismissed EB-2 NIW

dismissed EB-2 NIW Case: Accounting

๐Ÿ“… Date unknown ๐Ÿ‘ค Individual ๐Ÿ“‚ Accounting

Decision Summary

The appeal was dismissed because the petitioner failed to demonstrate that her proposed endeavor, an accounting consulting firm, had national importance. The AAO agreed with the Director that the petitioner did not establish that the endeavor's impact would extend beyond her company and clients or that it would have substantial positive economic effects or significant employment potential on a national scale.

Criteria Discussed

Substantial Merit National Importance Well-Positioned To Advance The Proposed Endeavor

Sign up free to download the original PDF

View Full Decision Text
U.S. Citizenship 
and Immigration 
Services 
Non-Precedent Decision of the
Administrative Appeals Office 
Date: DEC. 05, 2024 In Re: 34871941 
Appeal of Texas Service Center Decision 
Form 1-140, Immigrant Petition for Alien Workers (National Interest Waiver) 
The Petitioner, an accounting specialist and entrepreneur, seeks employment-based second preference 
(EB-2) immigrant classification as a member of the professions holding an advanced degree, as well 
as a national interest waiver of the job offer requirement attached to this classification. See 
Immigration and Nationality Act (the Act) section 203(b)(2), 8 U.S.C. ยง 1153(b)(2). 
The Director of the Texas Service Center denied the petition, concluding that the record did not 
establish that the Petitioner is eligible for a waiver of the job offer requirement in the national interest. 
The matter is now before us on appeal pursuant to 8 C.F.R. ยง 103.3. 
The Petitioner bears the burden of proof to demonstrate eligibility by a preponderance of the evidence. 
Matter ofChawathe , 25 I&N Dec. 369, 375-76 (AAO 2010). We review the questions in this matter 
de novo. Matter of Christo 's, Inc., 26 I&N Dec. 537, 537 n.2 (AAO 2015). Upon de novo review, 
we will dismiss the appeal. 
I. LAW 
To qualify for the underlying EB-2 visa classification, a petitioner must establish they are an advanced 
degree professional or an individual of exceptional ability in the sciences, arts, or business. Section 
203(b)(2)(A) of the Act. 
If a petitioner establishes eligibility for the underlying EB-2 classification, they must then demonstrate 
that they merit a discretionary waiver of the job offer requirement "in the national interest." 
Section 203(b )(2)(B)(i) of the Act. While neither the statute nor the pertinent regulations define the 
term "national interest," Matter of Dhanasar, 26 I&N Dec. 884, 889 (AAO 2016), provides the 
framework for adjudicating national interest waiver petitions. Dhanasar states that U.S. Citizenship 
and Immigration Services (USCIS) may, as matter of discretion, 1 grant a national interest waiver if 
the petitioner demonstrates that: 
1 See Flores v. Garland, 72 F.4th 85, 88 (5th Cir. 2023) (joining the Ninth, Eleventh, and D.C. Circuit Courts (and Third 
in an unpublished decision) in concluding that USCIS' decision to grant or deny a national interest waiver is discretionary 
in nature). 
โ€ข The proposed endeavor has both substantial merit and national importance; 
โ€ข The individual is well-positioned to advance their proposed endeavor; and 
โ€ข On balance, waiving the job offer requirement would benefit the United States. 
Id. 
TI. ANALYSIS 
The Director found that the Petitioner qualifies as a member of the professions holding an advanced 
degree and she is well positioned to advance the proposed endeavor.2 The remaining issue to be 
determined is whether the Petitioner has established that a waiver of the requirement of a job offer, and 
thus a labor certification, would be in the national interest. The first prong of the Dhanasar analytical 
framework requires the Petitioner to establish the proposed endeavor has both substantial merit and 
national importance. We agree with the Director that the submitted documentation establishes the 
Petitioner's proposed endeavor has substantial merit. For the reasons discussed below, we conclude 
that the Petitioner has not sufficiently demonstrated the national importance of her proposed endeavor 
under the first prong of the Dhanasar analytical framework. 
With respect to her proposed endeavor, the Petitioner's business plan provides "[t]he endeavor proposed 
by [the Petitioner] relies on developing.__ ___________________ __. 
~-------~ an [sic] finance and accounting consulting services firm that provides 
bookkeeping and accounting services, tax preparation services, payroll services, accounts payable 
agreement assignments, tax planning and consulting, audit review and annual reports services and 
financial statement preparation services planned to be headquartered in Florida with two business unit in 
Georgia and California." 
In addition to the business plan, the Petitioner previously submitted industry articles and reports on 
accountants, letters of intent, an investor letter, company records, financial records, recommendation 
letters, education records, and a resume. 
The Director listed the evidence submitted by the Petitioner and reviewed the record in finding that 
the Petitioner did not establish that the proposed endeavor has national importance. The Director 
emphasized that the relevant question discussed in Dhanasar is not the importance of the field, 
industry, or profession, rather it is the importance of the proposed endeavor. Id. , at 889. The Director 
referenced analysis of the Petitioner's business plan from a request for evidence (RFE), including her 
qualifications, company location, industry data, employment projections, and profit projections. 
Specifically, the Director found that the Petitioner did not demonstrate how hiring 44 employees would 
equate to the potential to significantly hire U.S. workers and the record did not show how the benefits 
to the national economy from the proposed endeavor would reach the level of substantial positive 
economic effects. Next, the Director reviewed the Petitioner's response to the RFE, in which she 
discussed the same figures listed in the RFE, and found that she did not demonstrate that the proposed 
2 We will not address whether the Director correctly made these findings, as the determination that the proposed endeavor 
lacks national importance is dispositive of the appeal. See INS v. Bagamasbad, 429 U.S. 24, 25 (1976) ("com1s and 
agencies are not required to make findings on issues the decision of which is unnecessary to the results they reach"); see 
also Matter ofL-A-C-, 26 I&N Dec. 516, 526 n.7 (BIA 2015) (declining to reach alternative issues on appeal where an 
applicant is otherwise ineligible). 
2 
endeavor would have substantial positive economic effects or the potential to significantly hire U.S. 
workers. The Director addressed government data and determined that the proposed endeavor would 
not impact any government initiatives. The Director also discussed an investor letter, letters of intent, 
and letters of recommendation, and their respective evidentiary deficiencies in relation to a finding of 
national importance. The Director determined that the Petitioner did not establish the proposed 
endeavor would have broader implications in her field, or that the proposed endeavor has implications 
beyond her company, business partners, alliances, or unidentified clients at a level demonstrating 
national importance. 
The Director concluded the decision by finding that the Petitioner did not provide sufficient evidence 
of the prospective endeavor's potential prospective impact, including broader implications, or national 
or global implications within the field; significant potential to employ U.S. workers; substantial 
economic effects, particularly in an economically depressed field; broad enhancement of societal 
welfare; or broad enhancement of cultural or artistic enrichment. Therefore, the Director concluded 
that the Petitioner did not establish the proposed endeavor is of national importance. 
We adopt and affirm the Director's decision as it relates to prong one of the Dhanasar analysis 
regarding national importance. See Matter ofBurbano, 20 I&N Dec. 872, 874 (BIA 1994); see also 
Giday v. INS, 113 F.3d 230, 234 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (noting that the practice of adopting and affirming 
the decision below has been "universally accepted by every other circuit that has squarely confronted 
the issue"); Chen v. INS, 87 F.3d 5, 8 (1st Cir. 1996) (joining eight circuit courts in holding that 
appellate adjudicators may adopt and affirm the decision below as long as they give "individualized 
consideration" to the case). The Director reviewed evidence submitted by the Petitioner, discussed 
the evidentiary deficiencies in detail, and correctly analyzed the Petitioner's national importance 
claim. On appeal, the Petitioner has not overcome the findings made by the Director. 
First, the Petitioner argues that the Director erroneously imposed a stricter standard ofproof With respect 
to the standard of proof in this matter, a petitioner must establish that they meet each eligibility 
requirement of the benefit sought by a preponderance of the evidence. See Matter of Chawathe, 25 
I&N Dec. at 375-76. In other words, a petitioner must show that what they claim is "more likely than 
not" or "probably" true. To determine whether a petitioner has met their burden under the 
preponderance standard, USCIS considers not only the quantity, but also the quality (including 
relevance, probative value, and credibility) of the evidence. Id. at 376; Matter ofE-M-, 20 I&N Dec. 
77, 79-80 (Comm'r 1989). Here, the Petitioner does not specifically identify statements in the 
Director's decision applying a higher standard of proof or imposing novel substantive and evidentiary 
requirements beyond those set forth in the Dhanasar framework. 
Second, the Petitioner asserts that that the Director did not give due regard to her resume, business 
plan, work experience, letters of recommendations, and industry articles and reports. The Petitioner 
discusses her academic and professional experience; mentions projected economic figures and the 
generation of 44 jobs; and refers to industry articles and reports about the economic importance of 
immigrant entrepreneurs. 
As discussed above, the Director listed the evidence submitted by the Petitioner; referenced the content 
of the business plan, investor letter, letters of intent, and letters of recommendation; and discussed 
their deficiencies in detail. The Petitioner has not rebutted any of these findings. We note the 
3 
Petitioner's academic and professional experience. However, the Petitioner's knowledge, skills, and 
abilities relate to the second prong of the Dhanasar framework, which "shifts the focus from the 
proposed endeavor to the foreign national." Id. at 890. The issue here is whether the specific endeavor 
that she proposes to undertake has national importance under Dhanasar 's first prong. Finally, 
regarding industry articles and reports, the relevant question discussed in Dhanasar is not the 
importance of the field, industry, or profession, rather it is the importance of the proposed endeavor. 
Id. at 889. 
The Petitioner has not established that she meets the requisite first prong of the Dhanasar analytical 
framework. Therefore, she has not demonstrated eligibility for a national interest waiver. Since this 
issue is dispositive of the Petitioner's appeal, we decline to reach and hereby reserve the appellate 
arguments regarding her eligibility under the third prong outlined in Dhanasar. See Bagamasbad, 429 
U.S. at 25; see also L-A-C-, 26 I&N Dec. at 526 n.7. 
ORDER: The appeal is dismissed. 
4 
Using this case in a petition? Let MeritDraft draft the argument →

Avoid the mistakes that led to this denial

MeritDraft learns from dismissed cases so your petition avoids the same pitfalls. Get arguments built on winning precedents.

Avoid This in My Petition →

No credit card required. Generate your first petition draft in minutes.