Operational Guidance for EB-5 Cases Involving Tenant-Occupancy
Prior to
issuing the February 2012 RFEs, USCIS determined that the tenant-occupancy
methodology can satisfy the EB-5 program requirement of presenting a “reasonable
methodology” that is “supported by economically or statistically valid
forecasting tools,” if the applicant presents in “verifiable detail” information
sufficient to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the tenant jobs
have resulted from the EB-5 enterprise (i.e., that the creation of tenant jobs
were facilitated by the EB-5 enterprise, for example through a showing of
constraint on the supply of appropriate commercial space or of excess demand for
such space).
In regional center cases that rely on tenant occupancy models, as in any other
regional center cases, USCIS requires evidence that the claimed jobs result,
directly or indirectly, from the economic activity of the EB-5 commercial
enterprise. Jobs that are merely re-located rather than created do not count.
With respect to indirect job creation, the task for the applicants and
petitioners is to project the number of newly created jobs that would not have
been created but for the economic activity of the EB-5 commercial enterprise. In
making that projection, they are to use economically and statistically valid
forecasting tools.
Whether an applicant or petitioner has demonstrated that an EB-5 enterprise
caused the creation of indirect tenant jobs will require determinations on a
case-by-case basis and will generally require an evaluation of the verifiable
detail provided and the overall reasonableness of the methodology as presented.
To claim credit for tenant jobs, applicants and petitioners may present evidence
backed by reasonable methods that map a specific amount of direct, imputed, or
subsidized investment to such new jobs. However, for applicants and petitioners
that instead seek to utilize a facilitation-based approach, USCIS will not
require an equity or direct financial connection between the EB-5 capital
investment and the employees of prospective tenants. Rather, facilitation-based
tenant job credit will depend on the extent to which applicants or petitioners
can demonstrate that the economic benefits provided by a specific space project
will remove a significant market-based constraint. One way applicants and
petitioners can make this showing is to indicate how a specific space project
will correct market imperfections and generate net new labor demand and income
that will result in a specified prospective number of tenant jobs that will
locate in that space. In high unemployment areas in which new projects are not
likely to significantly displace other income or labor, applicants and
petitioners should generally indicate how a specific project will fill an
existing investment void in that area to generate new demand for the tenant
business. Prospective tenant jobs demonstrated by reasonable methods and
supported by verifiable evidence pursuant to the above approaches may be used as
direct inputs into appropriate regional growth models to generate the number of
indirect and induced jobs that result from the credited tenant jobs.
Where applications for regional centers are approved based on their use of
tenant-occupancy projections, the approval notices should contain appropriate
language regarding the assumptions underlying the approval, which if not borne
out may impact related adjudications at the I-526 or I-829 stages.1 For example,
a Form I-924 with I-526 exemplar may be approved where no specific tenant has
been identified to occupy space but where the applicant or petitioner reasonably
projects that a restaurant will eventually lease the premises.2 If, after
approval of the I-924, the space is leased to a different type of tenant (i.e.,
a type of restaurant that yields different expected employment or a
non-restaurant), or fails to achieve previously projected occupancy rates, such
a change alone will not generally constitute a material change that triggers the
elimination of deference in an actual Form I-526 or negates any possibility of
individual investors removing their conditions at the Form I-829 stage.3
However, while such modified tenancy arrangement(s) may be permissible under
EB-5 program rules, they could nevertheless impact the project’s ultimate job
creation numbers. Therefore, the approval notice should caution that the
approved job creation estimates are based on a restaurant occupying that space,
and that if no tenant or a different type of tenant eventually occupies the
space, the economic impact analysis and ultimate job creation numbers will be
revisited in future adjudications that relate to that project.
USCIS
will issue separate guidance on crediting jobs in a situation where more than
one EB-5 entity may be seeking credit for the identical job position. In the
interim, where only one case filed with USCIS has sought credit for a specific
job position, that case should be credited with the job, provided that all
program requirements have been satisfied.
Adjudication of cases involving tenant-occupancy should proceed based on these
principles.
Source:AILA