Supreme Court Term Strengthens Executive Leverage Over U.S. Immigration Policy
USCIS Extends TPS-Related Work Authorization: New July 24 and July 17 Expiry Dates Announced
DHS grants last-minute extension of work permits for TPS holders from seven countries
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Supreme Court term tilts heavily toward White House on immigration powers
A July 13 Bloomberg Law deep dive finds that Supreme Court decisions this term largely favored the administration’s restrictive immigration agenda, bolstering presidential authority to deny entry, expedite removals and limit green-card protections. The rulings are expected to influence DHS policy and heighten travel and status risks for foreign employees and assignees.
Severe Storms Force FAA Ground Stop at Houston’s Bush and Hobby Airports
The FAA ordered simultaneous ground stops at Houston’s two commercial airports on July 13, grounding departures for up to 90 minutes and triggering system-wide delays that spilled into the evening. The event underscores the rising frequency of weather-related disruptions and the need for mobility managers to strengthen contingency plans for assignees and traveling executives.
USCIS Moves TPS Employment Card Deadlines—Again—After Supreme Court Green Light
On July 13 USCIS shifted TPS-related EAD expirations to July 17 or July 24, depending on nationality, scrapping a deadline set just three days earlier. The change, prompted by the Supreme Court’s recent TPS decision, forces employers to update I-9 records yet again and highlights the volatile legal landscape facing protected workers.
Human-Rights Groups Issue Travel Warning as U.S. World Cup Visa Hurdles Mount
Amnesty International, the UN and other advocates issued a July 13 travel advisory after multiple World Cup participants and fans faced visa denials and airport detentions in the U.S. The warnings raise doubts about America’s ability to welcome global visitors and could carry financial and reputational costs for host cities and businesses planning World Cup events.
Amnesty International issues World Cup 2026 travel advisory over U.S. immigration enforcement
Amnesty International USA warned on July 13 that aggressive U.S. immigration enforcement and visa backlogs threaten to mar the 2026 FIFA World Cup, citing recent entry denials of referees, players and fans. The advisory calls on travelers and employers to brace for heightened scrutiny and urges U.S. authorities to adopt special entry procedures before the tournament.
House Hard-Liners Stall Legislative Agenda Over SAVE America Immigration Bill
Published July 13, the Washington Examiner reports that 13 GOP hard-liners are blocking House floor business until the chamber folds the SAVE America Act—mandating voter-ID and harsher deportation rules—into the defense spending bill. The impasse could slow visa-fee legislation and reshape humanitarian parole options critical to corporate relocations.
Bank Regulators Warn Lenders of Risks When Financing Undocumented Borrowers
On July 13 the OCC, FDIC and NCUA released interagency guidance cautioning banks to assess higher credit risk when lending to borrowers without legal work authorization. While not a prohibition, the notice may tighten credit access for visa holders and TPS beneficiaries, complicating relocation logistics for employers.
Bank regulators warn lenders on credit risk when financing undocumented workers
OCC, FDIC and NCUA released joint guidance advising U.S. banks to strengthen underwriting and monitoring when lending to borrowers lacking U.S. work authorization. Although lending is permitted, regulators warn that undocumented status can undermine income stability and increase default risk. The bulletin has practical implications for foreign employees and assignees whose visas or EADs may lapse mid-loan.
Labor Department Schedules Prevailing-Wage Webinar as PERM Filings Surge
OFLC will hold a technical webinar on July 22 covering how to prepare Form ETA-9141 prevailing-wage requests for PERM and H-1B cases. The training comes as prevailing-wage demand hits record levels, and errors increasingly delay green-card sponsorships. Mobility and HR teams should attend to avoid costly re-filings.
EU’s new Entry/Exit System triggers warnings of hours-long queues at French border – U.S. travellers advised to adjust itineraries
ITV News says holiday traffic combined with the EU’s new biometric Entry/Exit System could create hours-long queues at Dover and other French border points starting this weekend. U.S. travellers, now classified as third-country nationals, should budget significant extra time and expect repeated biometric capture until the system stabilises, potentially disrupting business itineraries.
Coast Guard Reopens Rota and Tinian Ports, Restoring Critical Supply Lines to U.S. Pacific Territories
Ports in Rota and Tinian reopened to commercial shipping on July 13 after a week-long closure caused by Super Typhoon Bavi, the U.S. Coast Guard confirmed. The move restores supply chains vital to U.S. military and private projects in the Western Pacific but comes with cautions about damaged aids to navigation and limited communications.
Airlines Restore Middle-East Routes as U.S.–Iran Tensions Cool, Giving U.S. Travelers More Options
Reuters data released July 13 indicate major airlines are phasing back Middle-East services suspended after U.S.–Iran hostilities, with Delta targeting a September 6 restart of JFK-Tel Aviv flights. The staggered reopenings restore vital links for U.S. business travelers but require vigilant route-monitoring and updated travel-risk protocols.
Coast Guard Reopens Port of Rota After Typhoon; Cautions Mariners on Damaged Aids to Navigation
After a week-long closure caused by Super Typhoon Bavi, the Coast Guard reopened the Port of Rota at 8 p.m. ChST on July 11. While commercial traffic may resume, damaged navigation aids and VHF outages mean operators must navigate with extreme care, and insurers are levying temporary surcharges.