[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 20, Volume 3]
[Revised as of April 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 20CFR655.206]

[Page 504-505]
 
                      TITLE 20--EMPLOYEES' BENEFITS
 
 CHAPTER V--EMPLOYMENT AND TRAINING ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
 
PART 655_TEMPORARY EMPLOYMENT OF ALIENS IN THE UNITED STATES--Table of 
 
 Subpart C_Labor Certification Process for Logging Employment and Non-H	
                       2A Agricultural Employment
 
Sec.  655.206  Determinations of U.S. worker availability and adverse effect 

on U.S. workers.

    (a) If the OFLC Administrator, in accordance with Sec.  655.205 has 
determined that the employer has complied with the recruitment 
assurances, the OFLC Administrator, by 60th day of the recruitment 
period, or 20 days before the date of need specified in the application, 
whichever is later, shall grant the temporary labor certification for 
enough aliens to fill the employer's job opportunities for which U.S. 
workers are not available. In making this determination the OFLC 
Administrator shall consider as available for a job opportunity any U.S. 
worker who has made a firm commitment to work for the employer, 
including those workers committed by other authorized persons such as 
farm labor contractors and family heads; such a firm commitment shall be 
considered to have been made not only by workers who have signed work 
contracts with the employer, but

[[Page 505]]

also by those whom the OFLC Administrator determines are very likely to 
sign such a work contract. The OFLC Administrator shall also count as 
available any U.S. worker who has applied to the employer (or on whose 
behalf an application has been made), but who was rejected by the 
employer for other than lawful job-related related reasons unless the 
OFLC Administrator determines that:
    (1) Enough qualified U.S. workers have been found to fill all the 
employer's job opportunities; or
    (2) The employer, since the time of the initial determination under 
Sec.  655.204, has adversely affected U.S. workers by offering to, or 
agreeing to provide to, alien workers better wages, working conditions, 
or benefits (or by offering or agreeing to impose on alien workers less 
obligations and restrictions) than that offered to U.S. workers.
    (b) (1) Temporary labor certifications shall be considered subject 
to the conditions and assurances made during the application process. 
Temporary labor certifications shall be for a limited duration such as 
for ``the 1978 apple harvest season'' or ``until November 1, 1978'', and 
they shall never be for more than eleven months. They shall be limited 
to the employer's specific job opportunities; therefore, they may not be 
transferred from one employer to another.
    (2) If an association of employers is itself the employer, as 
defined in Sec.  655.200, certifications shall be made to the 
association and may be used for any of the job opportunities of its 
employer members and workers may be transferred among employer members.
    (3) If an association of employers is a joint employer with its 
employer members, as defined in Sec.  655.200, the certification shall 
be made jointly to the association and the employer members. In such 
cases workers may be transferred among the employer members provided the 
employer members and the association agree in writing to be jointly and 
severally liable for compliance with the temporary labor certification 
obligations set forth in this subpart.
    (c) If the OFLC Administrator denies the temporary labor 
certification in whole or part, the OFLC Administrator shall notify the 
employer in writing by means normally assuring next-day delivery. The 
notice shall contain all of the statements required in Sec.  655.204(d). 
If a timely request is made for an administrative-judicial review by an 
Administrative Law Judge, the procedures of Sec.  655.212 shall be 
followed.
    (d)(1) After a temporary labor certification has been granted, the 
employer shall continue its efforts to actively recruit U.S. workers 
until the foreign workers have departed for the employer's place of 
employment. The employer, however, must keep an active job order on file 
until the assurance at Sec.  655.203(e) is met.
    (2) The State Workforce Agency (SWA) system shall continue to 
actively recruit and refer U.S. workers as long as there is an active 
job order on file.

[43 FR 10313, Mar. 10, 1978, as amended at 59 FR 41876, Aug. 15, 1995; 
71 FR 35519, June 21, 2006]