EB-5 groups settle lawsuits, allow program to permanently restart

The on again, off again storyline is back on

Colin Behring (Getty Images, Behring Companies)
Colin Behring (Getty Images, Behring Companies)

The federal EB-5 program is back in business.

Two major lawsuits brought by industry groups reached a settlement with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, which will allow existing regional centers — a key piece of the EB-5 program — to permanently operate again.

The rise from the ashes storyline is a familiar one for a program once referred to as the “crack-cocaine” of real estate financing.

Last Summer, Congress failed to reach an agreement to reauthorize the regional center program. The stalemate all but killed EB-5 since regional centers act as the middleman between foreign investors and American businesses, including real estate projects. Under the program rules, foreign investors are able to obtain a green card by investing in American enterprises and creating jobs.

In March, Congressional legislators were finally able to strike a deal to reauthorize the regional center initiative. The agreement resolved long-held concerns by Sen. Chuck Grassley and Sen. Patrick Leahy over fraud and abuse. Under the deal, the minimum investment amount increased to $800,000 from $500,000 in high unemployment regions. Other areas require a minimum investment of $1.05 million.

The bipartisan legislation was a relief to the EB-5 industry since it inked permanent legislation after the program was consistently being approved on a short-term basis.

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But that relief was short-lived.

The USCIS, the federal arm overseeing the program, said that the act deauthorized previously approved regional centers. This resulted in the deauthorization of about 600 existing EB-5 centers and required them to submit a new application, Form I-956, to be authorized. It also left EB-5 investors in limbo.

EB-5 groups sued and a federal judge in California allowed existing regional centers to continue to operate while the litigation continued.

The settlement between the USCIS and EB-5 groups now allows for regional centers to keep their authorization.

“This settlement with USCIS puts a positive end to the effort to rightfully bring back the regional center program. We have succeeded in putting the Regional Center program on stable ground for the first time in a decade,” said Colin Behring, who leads the Behring Regional Center, which was one of the plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the USCIS.

Developers flocked to the EB-5 program for cheap financing after the financial crisis. But over the past few years interest has waned in part because of the program’s issues, but also because traditional financing has become more available.