
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) quietly rolled out a package of policy changes that together amount to the biggest overhaul of its security-vetting playbook since 2021. In guidance dated March 30 but only posted to the agency’s website over the weekend, USCIS details a multilayer review process—nicknamed “Operation PARRIS”—that synchronizes biometric, social-media and financial-network checks across the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI. Effective immediately, the agency has begun releasing hundreds of cases that have languished in a “national-security hold” queue for months. The first wave includes inter-country adoption petitions, certain rescheduled naturalization oath ceremonies, refugee registrations for South African nationals, and—most notably—immigration benefits for licensed medical doctors. Physicians were added to the exempt list on April 30 after hospital groups warned of staffing shortages if foreign medical graduates could not renew visas or work permits in time for the July residency cycle.
For applicants unsure how these shifting rules might affect their travel or immigration plans, VisaHQ’s U.S. team can step in to coordinate filings, schedule biometrics, and monitor case status in real time. Their online platform (https://www.visahq.com/united-states/) centralizes document uploads and deadline alerts, giving both employers and individuals a single dashboard to keep pace with Operation PARRIS and any future policy tweaks.
Case officers must now run every benefit request from applicants tied to 39 travel-ban countries through enhanced data fusion tools. Documents flagged for possible identity or criminal-history discrepancies trigger an internal three-office review before release. At the same time, USCIS has shortened the validity of many Employment Authorization Documents from two years to one so that background checks cycle more frequently. For employers, the change means that petitions previously frozen—with no ability to upgrade to premium processing—may finally move. But attorneys caution that new cases from high-risk countries filed after April 27 could still be routed to the hold queue until the backlog clears. Individuals planning to file Form I-485 adjustment applications this summer should build in time for additional biometric appointments and possible interview requests. USCIS stresses that the tighter screening is “permanent, not a surge measure.” Companies running large summer internship intakes are advised to stagger start dates and budget extra time for work-authorization renewals. Foreign nationals, especially from the designated countries, should avoid international travel unless they hold valid advance parole or a visa that will not require re-issuance on return.
For applicants unsure how these shifting rules might affect their travel or immigration plans, VisaHQ’s U.S. team can step in to coordinate filings, schedule biometrics, and monitor case status in real time. Their online platform (https://www.visahq.com/united-states/) centralizes document uploads and deadline alerts, giving both employers and individuals a single dashboard to keep pace with Operation PARRIS and any future policy tweaks.
Case officers must now run every benefit request from applicants tied to 39 travel-ban countries through enhanced data fusion tools. Documents flagged for possible identity or criminal-history discrepancies trigger an internal three-office review before release. At the same time, USCIS has shortened the validity of many Employment Authorization Documents from two years to one so that background checks cycle more frequently. For employers, the change means that petitions previously frozen—with no ability to upgrade to premium processing—may finally move. But attorneys caution that new cases from high-risk countries filed after April 27 could still be routed to the hold queue until the backlog clears. Individuals planning to file Form I-485 adjustment applications this summer should build in time for additional biometric appointments and possible interview requests. USCIS stresses that the tighter screening is “permanent, not a surge measure.” Companies running large summer internship intakes are advised to stagger start dates and budget extra time for work-authorization renewals. Foreign nationals, especially from the designated countries, should avoid international travel unless they hold valid advance parole or a visa that will not require re-issuance on return.
More From United States of America
View all
DHS reverses course and exempts foreign physicians from travel-ban visa freeze
ICE detention outside Brooklyn hospital sparks clash and nine arrests, reigniting ‘sanctuary city’ debate