Home International News Catholic dioceses throughout the U.S. impacted by changes to religious worker visas:...

Catholic dioceses throughout the U.S. impacted by changes to religious worker visas: ‘There is a genuine need’

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Father Raj Nalazala celebrates Palm Sunday Mass at Blessed Sacrament Church in Jonesboro, Ark., March 24, 2024. He is one of six priests in Arkansas that could be impacted by changes in visa allocations. (OSV News photo/courtesy Father Raj Nalazala)

Unexpected changes in the federal government’s allocation of EB-4 visas could negatively impact six priests from other countries serving the Diocese of Little Rock.

Two types of visas are available to religious workers from the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.

— The EB-4 (employment-based category 4) visa includes special immigrant religious workers. It allows qualified workers to stay in the U.S. on a permanent basis and potentially become U.S. citizens.

— The R-1 nonimmigrant visa only allows religious workers to stay in the country for up to five years.

Concerns came about following the State Department’s unexpected decision in March 2023 regarding the allocation of EB-4 visas. At that time, the EB-4 visa category, which includes religious workers, was flooded with additional applicants from Central and South American countries, predominantly unaccompanied minors and refugees.

This change lengthened the timeline for qualifying and receiving an EB-4 visa. Religious workers, like international priests, seeking to switch from the temporary R-1 visa to the permanent EB-4 visa will have to leave the United States when their R-1 status expires, before they are eligible to apply for an EB-4 visa.

Deacon Matt Glover, chancellor for canonical affairs for the Diocese of Little Rock, told Arkansas Catholic, the diocesan news outlet, that the immigration slowdown could impact the state.

“All of a sudden, those people also got dumped into this category of EB-4 visas for green cards, which dramatically increased the number of people then automatically who were seeking what was already a limited pool of available green card visas,” Glover said.

“Every year there’s only a certain amount of visas within all of these different categories,” he said. “And so for religious workers, there was already a backlog in processing. And then all of a sudden, kind of arbitrarily, the U.S. State Department decided that this other group had been miscategorized and really needed to be categorized this other way. And that impacted the priority dates that determine when someone is eligible to get their green card.”

The priority date for individuals seeking this type of visa — including priests from international dioceses — became backdated by several years. Once a religious worker’s priority date becomes current, they can file for the second step of the green card process, which is the I-485 and the I-765, which allows for employment authorization while waiting for the green card to be processed.

The Diocese of Little Rock has been dealing with this predicament since 2022 where several priests affected by the visa delays had to leave the country for a year. But the situation has worsened.

Unfortunately, for newer R-1 religious workers, the backlog is so long that they are unlikely to be able to apply for the second step of the green card process within the five-year period. The Diocese of Little Rock isn’t the only diocese that will be affected by the change — nearly 90% of U.S. dioceses rely on international clergy.

In a lawsuit filed Aug. 16 against the State Department, the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, along with their directors, the Diocese of Paterson, New Jersey, said the unexpected change could lead to five priests “abandoning their congregations” when the visas expire.

The diocese alleged in the lawsuit that the federal government’s policy change is discriminatory against religious employers and favors nonreligious ones.

Bishop Kevin J. Sweeney of Paterson, N.J., is seen participating in the Via Crucis, or the Way of the Cross, near the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Paterson on Good Friday, April 7, 2023. The Paterson Diocese and five of its diocesan priests filed a lawsuit against federal agencies Aug. 8, 2024, in the U.S. District Court in Newark, N.J., arguing a rule change in religious worker visas means the foreign-born priests are in the position of having to “count the days until they have no lawful choice but to abandon their congregations” in the U.S. (OSV News photo/Gregory A. Shemitz)

“The Patterson lawsuit, which I’ve reviewed, is a creative and interesting effort at trying to force some change. … It’s anybody’s guess as to whether it’ll be successful,” Glover said. “I hate to speculate on the likelihood of it succeeding, but I’m hopeful that it will succeed.”

If the lawsuit is unsuccessful, Glover said that in order to fix this issue in time, it would fall to internal administrative changes at the USCIS or Congress to increase the number of visas available within this category.

Glover said the shortage of priests resulting from immigration issues will put a strain on many parishes.

“And the problem then becomes — especially for guys that are pastors at the time that that five years hits — because then that throws the administration of that parish into turmoil,” he said.

“We have to find a different pastor or at least find a temporary pastor … but it’s still really problematic, because a parish has gotten used to that particular priest,” he continued. “It takes a while, especially for guys that have never been to the United States before, for them to get acclimated and used to things and for the parishes to get used to them. And so by the time they get the ground underneath their feet, all of a sudden they’re having to leave after just five years.

“It’ll be constant turnover in certain parishes, and we already have enough constant turnover just because of low vocations.”

Several priests in the diocese will be affected if the lawsuit is not successful, if the USCIS does not make internal changes or if Congress does not pass legislation.

Father Joel Ibebuike, a priest from the Diocese of Orlu in Nigeria and associate pastor at St. Peter the Fisherman in Mountain Home, began serving in Arkansas this year. His R-1 visa will run out in 2029, at which point he will have to leave the U.S. for one year before returning here on a new R-1.

He told Arkansas Catholic in an email that it should be easier for foreign citizens to immigrate to the United States, a process that he has seen become increasingly more challenging in recent years.

“Foreign citizens ought to be welcome in any country when there is a need for their presence to enhance the lives of the citizens of the host country,” he wrote. “The coming of such foreign citizens ought to be legal and seamless. An immigrant who comes to another country ought to be welcome and allowed to stay. The person ought to be allowed to render his or her services so long as the citizens need the services.”

“There is a genuine need for my services because of the insufficient number of priests ministering to the people of God in the Diocese of Little Rock,” he added. “More so, the people of God have expressly shown that the diversity I bring to the table positively impacts their faith and broadens their understanding of the universality of the Catholic Church. The immigration concern puts a lot of pressure on me in terms of having long-term planning. It affects my mental health.”

Father Raj Nalazala, administrator of St. Norbert Church in Marked Tree and associate pastor of Blessed Sacrament Church in Jonesboro, came in 2023, so his five-year R-1 period will run out sometime in 2028..

“It makes me sad,” said Father Nalazala, who is from the Diocese of Nellore, India. “I have to leave in 2028. … That is my year of returning back to India, staying in India for one year, getting a new visa and coming back. I’m not at all happy regarding that situation.”

Father Kiran Ingilela, associate pastor of Sacred Heart Church in Morrilton and St. Elizabeth Church in Oppelo, will be affected too. Also from the Nellore Diocese, he arrived this year, so his R-1 time period will expire in 2029.

“Coming to Arkansas all the way from India, after living in my home country for 42 years, and serving there for 12 years in the priesthood … is really a different perspective on life for us, learning about the people and culture and language,” he said. “And it takes time for us to get adjusted to this field of service here. There’s a lot of things to learn — learning about driving and living your own life here.

“It’s a very good thing, but it’s like receiving all of this training, and when you’re ready for employment, you’re asked to leave the country.”

Katie Zakrzewski is associate editor of Arkansas Catholic, the news outlet of the Diocese of Little Rock.