The Department of State (“DOS”) published its updated fee schedule for Consular Services – Nonimmigrant and Special Visa Fees. Beginning May 30, 2023, there will be an increase in fees charged for nonimmigrant visas (“NIVs”) and border crossing cards (“BCCs”). The good news is that the fee increases are less than “originally proposed for all categories of NIVs.”
Read moreUSCIS Completes Electronic Registration for FY2024 H-B Cap
On March 27, 2023, United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (“USCIS”) announced they had received enough initial electronic registrations for the fiscal year 2024 (“FY24”) H-1B cap, including the advanced degree exemption (master’s cap). Consequently, the Service has notified all prospective petitioners whose registrations were randomly selected that they are eligible to file cap-subject H-1B petitions for the named beneficiary in the selected registration.
Read moreIt's Her Strength
USCIS Ends COVID Related Flexibilities for Responses to Agency Requests
United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (“USCIS”) announced that effective March 23, 2023, the service’s deadline extension policy initially instated in March 2020 will be terminated. As of March 23, 2023, petitioners and applicants no longer have an additional sixty days to respond to agency requests. Instead, responses must be addressed by the deadline specified in the USCIS notice.
Read moreSafari in the City
To commemorate the start of Spring, we went in search of blooming buds and flowers. Much to our dismay, we did not find any (yet) to share but instead came across this giraffe springing out of the bushes in Mount Street Gardens in Mayfair. Grazing upon the greens of the 19th century churchyard garden, sits a small bronze giraffe. Who would have thought that our morning jaunt for flora would take us on an urban safari?
Our Evolving Landscape
90” Triacontahedron by Anthony James


In London’s Berkeley Square, 90” Triacontahedron by Anthony James beckons the passerby. A British-American artist, based in Los Angeles, Mr. James uses specialized glass, LED, and steel to draw spectators into his work. Hailed as of one of the world’s leading light artists, he incorporates an array of industrial objects, vitrines of steel, aluminum, and waste and debris, to illuminate and reflect on themes of light and dark, death, destruction, and rebirth in his brilliant pieces. As light and color frolic within the panels of the sculpture, 90” Triacontahedron transports us to another dimension, even on the greyest of London days.
Living the American Dream
The Fourth Plinth Sculpture: “Antelope” by Samson Kambalu


Trafalgar Square, one of London’s most visited landmarks, is marked by four plinths, upon which rests three permanent sculptures. For years an empty fourth plinth stood until Dame Prue Leith, then chair of the Royal Society of Arts suggested the plinth should host art work. After much debate, the Mayor of London’s Fourth Plinth Programme was born, hosting contemporary sculptures on rotation. Recently, Samson Kambalu, a renowned contemporary artist and author who hails from Malawi and is based in Oxford won the opportunity to exhibit under the Fourth Plinth Programme, resulting in “Antelope.”
Based on a photograph of Baptist preacher and pan-Africanist, John Chilembwe, and European missionary, John Chorley, taken in 1914 at the opening Chilembwe’s new church in Nyasaland, now Malawi, “Antelope” commemorates the moment by restaging the photograph. Kambalu portrays Chilembwe larger than life upon the plinth as he keeps his hat on, in defiance of the colonial rule forbidding Africans from wearing hats in front of white people. Chorley maintains life-size, thereby elevating Chilembwe’s story and bringing awareness to the “hidden narratives of underrepresented peoples” and calling attention to “distortions in conventional narratives of the British empire.”
Reverse Migration of Undocumented Immigrants
As news outlets report on record numbers of undocumented immigrants risking their lives to cross into the United States at our southern borders, especially during the temporary suspension of Title 42 which granted entry to those seeking asylum in the US, other undocumented immigrants are leaving the country after years of residency and integration. Their exodus from the US is one of many reasons why the total number of undocumented immigrants in the country has remained relatively stable according to demographers, notwithstanding the increase in applications at the southern border. There is a vital misconception, perpetuated by political rhetoric in our media outlets, that underlies discussions of immigration to the US dictating that “everyone wants to come, but no one leaves” as reported by Robert Warren, a senior visiting fellow at the Center for Migration Studies.
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