Today, October 1, 2025, the federal government officially shut down after Congress failed to agree on a spending bill. For millions of Americans, the term “government shutdown” has become all too familiar. But for immigrants, their families, and the communities that depend on immigration services, this shutdown carries a unique set of consequences. What happens …
How Will the $100,000 H-1B Visa Application Fee Affect You?
If your future in the U.S. now carries a $100,000 price tag, what choices do you make? Do you push ahead with the H-1B despite the cost, or look for a different visa? If you’re an employer, can you justify that investment for every new hire, or do you scale back and risk losing the …
Supreme Court Greenlights ICE to Stop Anyone Based on Race, Language, or Job and What That Means for You
The U.S. Supreme Court recently decided that immigration agents can continue conducting raids in Los Angeles without needing “reasonable suspicion” to stop individuals. This means that factors like speaking Spanish, looking a certain way, or simply being in a location where undocumented immigrants are often found, like a bus stop or construction site can now …
475 Workers Detained in ICE Raid at Hyundai Site: Can ICE Detain You at Work?
In a massive enforcement action at a Hyundai manufacturing facility in Georgia, federal immigration agents detained 475 individuals suspected of working without lawful status. The raid wasn’t small, accidental, or isolated. It was judicially authorized, coordinated across agencies including ICE, Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), the FBI, and the DEA and it’s a clear sign of …
600 Military Attorneys as Judges? What This Means for Immigration Cases
Imagine you’re facing an immigration hearing tomorrow. You’ve prepared, gathered documents, maybe even hired a lawyer. But when you step into court, the judge sitting in front of you isn’t from the immigration bench. They’re wearing a military uniform. They’re not a judge by profession, they’re a military attorney, temporarily assigned to decide your future. …
Big Change: USCIS Now Accepts Bank Transfers for Immigration Fees
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has just announced a major change that could impact how thousands of immigration applicants pay their filing fees. Effective immediately, applicants can now authorize USCIS to debit their U.S. bank account directly by submitting Form G-1650, Authorization for ACH Transactions, along with their application, petition, or request. This change …
Connecticut Named in Trump’s Immigration Crackdown: Know Your Rights
The Trump administration is stepping up its efforts to punish jurisdictions that limit cooperation with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). A newly published list names cities, counties, and states, including Connecticut, as “sanctuary” jurisdictions. The list is part of an executive order signed by President Trump on April 28 and is tied to a broader …
Medicaid Data Shared with ICE Puts Immigrants at Risk
The Trump administration has taken yet another step that puts immigrant families at greater risk. This time, it involves turning over private health care data to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). On Monday as reported by the Associated Press, an agreement was signed, without any public announcement, giving ICE access to the Medicaid enrollment information …
How the One Big Beautiful Bill Act Will Impact Immigration Fees and Enforcement
On July 4, President Trump signed into law the so-called One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The name may sound like something from a political rally, but for immigrant families across the United States, the impact is serious and immediate. This new law is not a symbolic gesture or just another budget deal. It is a …