ICE Recruitment Drive Stumbles as Over One-Third of New Trainees Fail Basic Standards
USCIS Narrows Scope of Controversial $100,000 H-1B Fee
State Department Expands Visa-Bond Pilot to Six African Nations
Latest News
California Universities Must Now Alert Campus Community of ICE Presence
California’s SB 98—effective Oct 24—requires colleges and universities to send immediate alerts when federal immigration-enforcement agents are confirmed on campus. The law seeks to protect undocumented and international students but forces institutions to craft new notification protocols that balance transparency with privacy and federal-state legal conflicts.
EU Entry/Exit System Launch Brings Biometric Border Checks for U.S. Travelers
Europe’s EES biometric system went live this month, and on Oct 23 authorities confirmed U.S. travelers must register fingerprints and facial images on first entry. Expect longer border queues through early 2026 while coverage ramps up. The shift demands earlier airport arrivals and updated corporate travel policies, though no advance application or fee is required.
USCIS Clarifies $100,000 H-1B Surcharge: Applies Only to Consular Filings After Sept 21
On October 23 USCIS confirmed that the new US $100,000 H-1B surcharge applies only to petitions filed abroad on or after September 21 — not to extensions, amendments or transfers for workers already in the U.S. The agency’s clarification averts widespread over-payments but leaves employers recruiting overseas talent facing a massive fee increase while lawsuits proceed.
U.S. Consulate Chennai Reopens, Restoring Full Visa Services for India
The U.S. Consulate in Chennai reopened on October 23 after a 24-hour security pause, immediately resuming all visa interviews. Automatic rescheduling of cancelled appointments and weekend interview drives aim to prevent new backlogs. The post also rolled out stricter social-media vetting rules, offering a preview of security upgrades slated for other consulates. The restart is critical for Indian tech talent, student flows and U.S. businesses with December travel plans.
FAA Imposes Year-Round No-Fly Zone Over Mar-a-Lago, Altering Palm Beach Flight Paths
A new FAA notice effective Oct 23 establishes a permanent one-nautical-mile no-fly bubble over Mar-a-Lago, affecting general aviation and some commercial approaches into Palm Beach International. Operators must reroute or secure waivers, adding minor time and complexity to South Florida flights.
DHS Issues Proposal to Revamp EB-5 Fees and Codify Integrity Act Measures
A DHS notice of proposed rulemaking on October 23 details new EB-5 filing fees—lower for individual investors but higher for project sponsors—and embeds 2022 Integrity Act safeguards such as annual audits and escrow controls. Public comments are due by December 22. The reshuffle aims to fund fraud-detection operations and modernize case systems, while giving investors modest relief from rising capital thresholds.
White House Warns Government Shutdown Could Spark Holiday Air-Travel Chaos
With the shutdown in its fourth week, the administration warned on Oct 23 that unpaid air-traffic controllers and TSA agents could cripple holiday travel. Absences already account for more than half of nationwide delays, and industry leaders fear a repeat of the 2019 meltdown if funding isn’t restored soon.
State Department Drops Mali from Visa-Bond Pilot, Expands List to Four New Countries
The State Department’s October 23 update removes Mali from, and adds Mauritania, São Tomé & Príncipe and Tanzania to, the controversial B-1/B-2 visa-bond pilot. Nationals of the six listed countries must now lodge US $5k–15k bonds, affecting corporate travel budgets and routing choices. Malian travelers, however, regain standard processing without financial guarantees.
Air Canada Unveils Four New U.S. Routes from Toronto Billy Bishop After CBP Pre-Clearance Approval
Air Canada will launch four transborder routes from downtown Toronto’s Billy Bishop Airport in 2026 after securing CBP pre-clearance, the carrier revealed on Oct 23. The move promises faster door-to-door times for U.S. and Canadian business travelers and intensifies competition on Northeast city-pairs.