[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 8, Volume 1]
[Revised as of January 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 8CFR210.1]

[Page 169-171]
 
                     TITLE 8--ALIENS AND NATIONALITY
 
      CHAPTER I--DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY (IMMIGRATION AND 
                             NATURALIZATION)
 
PART 210_SPECIAL AGRICULTURAL WORKERS--Table of Contents
 
Sec.  210.1  Definition of terms used in this part.

    (a) Act. The Immigration and Nationality Act, as amended by the 
Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986.
    (b) ADIT. Alien Documentation, Identification and Telecommunications 
card, Form I-89. Used to collect key data concerning an alien. When 
processed together with an alien's photographs, fingerprints and 
signature, this form becomes the source document for generation of Form 
I-551, Permanent Resident Card.
    (c) Application period. The 18-month period during which an 
application for adjustment of status to that of a temporary resident may 
be accepted, begins on June 1, 1987, and ends on November 30, 1988.
    (d) Complete application. A complete application consists of an 
executed Form I-700, Application for Temporary Resident Status as a 
Special Agricultural Worker, evidence of qualifying agricultural 
employment and residence, a report of medical examination, and the 
prescribed number of photographs. An application is not complete until 
the required fee has been paid and recorded.

[[Page 170]]

    (e) Determination process. Determination process as used in this 
part means reviewing and evaluating all information provided pursuant to 
an application for the benefit sought and making a determination 
thereon. If fraud, willful misrepresentation of a material fact, a false 
writing or document, or any other activity prohibited by section 
210(b)(7) of the Act is discovered during the determination process the 
Service shall refer the case to a U.S. Attorney for possible 
prosecution.
    (f) Family unity. The term family unity as used in section 
210(c)(2)(B)(i) of the Act means maintaining the family group without 
deviation or change. The family group shall include the spouse, 
unmarried minor children who are not members of some other household, 
and parents who reside regularly in the household of the family group.
    (g) Group 1. Special agricultural workers who have performed 
qualifying agricultural employment in the United States for at least 90 
man-days in the aggregate in each of the twelve-month periods ending on 
May 1, 1984, 1985, and 1986, and who have resided in the United States 
for six months in the aggregate in each of those twelve-month periods.
    (h) Group 2. Special agricultural workers who during the twelve-
month period ending on May 1, 1986 have performed at least 90 man-days 
in the aggregate of qualifying agricultural employment in the United 
States.
    (i) Legalization Office. Legalization offices are local offices of 
the Immigration and Naturalization Service which accept and process 
applications for legalization or special agricultural worker status, 
under the authority of the district directors in whose districts such 
offices are located.
    (j) Man-day. The term man-day means the performance during any day 
of not less than one hour of qualifying agricultural employment for 
wages paid. If employment records relating to an alien applicant show 
only piece rate units completed, then any day in which piece rate work 
was performed shall be counted as a man-day. Work for more than one 
employer in a single day shall be counted as no more than one man-day 
for the purposes of this part.
    (k) Nonfrivolous application. A complete application will be 
determined to be nonfrivolous at the time the applicant appears for an 
interview at a legalization or overseas processing office if it 
contains:
    (1) Evidence or information which shows on its face that the 
applicant is admissible to the United States or, if inadmissible, that 
the applicable grounds of excludability may be waived under the 
provisions of section 210(c)(2)(i) of the Act,
    (2) Evidence or information which shows on its face that the 
applicant performed at least 90 man-days of qualifying employment in 
seasonal agricultural services during the twelve-month period from May 
1, 1985 through May 1, 1986, and
    (3) Documentation which establishes a reasonable inference of the 
performance of the seasonal agricultural services claimed by the 
applicant.
    (l) Overseas processing office. Overseas processing offices are 
offices outside the United States at which applications for adjustment 
to temporary resident status as a special agricultural worker are 
received, processed, referred to the Service for adjudication or denied. 
The Secretary of State has designated for this purpose the United States 
Embassy at Mexico City, and in all other countries the immigrant visa 
issuing of office at which the alien, if an applicant for an immigrant 
visa, would make such application. Consular officers assigned to such 
offices are authorized to recommend approval of an application for 
special agricultural worker status to the Service if the alien 
establishes eligibility for approval and to deny such an application if 
the alien fails to establish eligibility for approval or is found to 
have committed fraud or misrepresented facts in the application process.
    (m) Preliminary application. A preliminary application is defined as 
a fully completed and signed application with fee and photographs which 
contains specific information concerning the performance of qualifying 
employment in the United States, and identifies documentary evidence 
which the applicant intends to submit as proof of such employment. The 
applicant must be otherwise admissible to the United

[[Page 171]]

States and must establish to the satisfaction of the examining officer 
during an interview that his or her claim to eligibility for special 
agriculture worker status is credible.
    (n) Public cash assistance. Public cash assistance means income or 
needs-based monetary assistance. This includes but is not limited to 
supplemental security income received by the alien or his immediate 
family members through federal, state, or local programs designed to 
meet subsistence levels. It does not include assistance in kind, such as 
food stamps, public housing, or other non-cash benefits, nor does it 
include work-related compensation or certain types of medical assistance 
(Medicare, Medicaid, emergency treatment, services to pregnant women or 
children under 18 years of age, or treatment in the interest of public 
health).
    (o) Qualified designated entity. A qualified designated entity is 
any state, local, church, community, or voluntary agency, farm labor 
organization, association of agricultural employers or individual 
designated by the Service to assist aliens in the preparation of 
applications for Legalization and/or Special Agricultural Worker status.
    (p) Qualifying agricultural employment. Qualifying agricultural 
employment means the performance of ``seasonal agricultural services'' 
described at section 210(h) of the Act as that term is defined in 
regulations by the Secretary of Agriculture at 7 CFR part 1d.
    (q) Regional processing facility. Regional Processing Facilities are 
Service offices established in each of the four Service regions to 
adjudicate, under the authority of the Directors of the Regional 
Processing Facilities, applications for adjustment of status under 
sections 210 and 245a of the Act.
    (r) Service. The Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS).
    (s) Special agricultural worker. Any individual granted temporary 
resident status in the Group 1 or Group 2 classification or permanent 
resident status under section 210(a) of the Act.

[53 FR 10064, Mar. 29, 1988, as amended at 54 FR 50339, Dec. 6, 1989; 63 
FR 70315, Dec. 21, 1998]