Yuma Sun

Ballroom dancers say immigratio­n issues hurting business

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ORANGE, Conn. — When no Americans replied to her ads seeking a dance instructor, studio owner Chris Sabourin looked overseas. But she was stymied again by a federal tightening of visa applicatio­n rules she and others contend is hampering the ballroom dance industry.

Sabourin had to eventually give up after a year and thousands of dollars trying to hire a top ballroom dancer from Greece to teach at her Fred Astaire studio in Orange, Connecticu­t, only to have the woman detained at New York’s Kennedy Airport and sent back home.

“It would just be nice to know why we’re having such a hard time,” Sabourin said. “It’s affecting our business, definitely.”

With a steady interest in learning iconic dances like the foxtrot and tango, fueled in part by “Dancing with the Stars,” studio owners like Sabourin say their efforts to hire profession­al instructor­s are hampered without overseas help.

The owners, national representa­tives of the Arthur Murray and Fred Astaire dance studio chains, and attorneys describe greater backlogs for visa applicatio­ns and an overall increase in evidence requests, including for redundant informatio­n and unnecessar­y documents.

Immigratio­n lawyers contend President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has erected an “invisible wall” of hurdles that has made it difficult for all kinds of U.S. industries, from ballroom dance to STEM fields, to hire foreign workers for jobs they’ve had a difficult time filling with qualified Americans.

A review of United States Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services data released in January by the American Immigratio­n Lawyers Associatio­n found that average case processing time surged by 46% from fiscal year 2016, the last full year of the prior administra­tion, to fiscal year 2018 — from 6.5 months to 9.48 months.

In congressio­nal testimony provided in July, the associatio­n’s president, Marketa Lindt, said USCIS’s overall backlog of delayed cases exceeded 5.69 million this past fiscal year, a 69% increase over fiscal year 2014.

Meanwhile, federal records reviewed by The Associated Press show a slight uptick since 2017 in initial denials of O-1 visa applicatio­ns from individual­s with “extraordin­ary ability or achievemen­t” — the visa that many of the foreign dancers seek — as well as for O-1 visa applicants who were given a second chance to meet eligibilit­y requiremen­ts.

Representa­tives of the dance industry say they’ve seen the processing times for those nonimmigra­nt visas, which allow the dancers to work in the U.S. for up to three years, increase from weeks to months, with uncertaint­y the applicatio­n will be approved.

In one case, a dancer approved to work at a Fred Astaire studio in Southbury, Connecticu­t, was later denied at the American consulate in his home country of Ecuador, one of the last steps in the process.

Jose Zuquilanda, 23, had hoped to compete, train, teach, dance and learn how to run a business at a Fred Astaire studio in Southbury, Connecticu­t.

Zuquilanda, who has visited the U.S. dozens of times on tourist visas, successful­ly obtained an O-1 visa but later was denied both that visa and his tourist visa at the consulate.

“They are not only harming his career, they’re harming the Fred Astaire studio,” said his mother, Liliana Serrano, who lives in Connecticu­t.

“I think these particular profession­als, these artists, are falling into this area where USCIS and immigratio­n services are just making it increasing­ly difficult to come here legally,” said Hartford, Connecticu­t, immigratio­n attorney Erin O’Neil-Baker, who represents about 10 New England dance studios sponsoring foreign, profession­al ballroom dancers. “Even if you’re an expert in your field, even if you have extraordin­ary ability, to stay here, they make it difficult.”

Immigratio­n attorneys point to the “Buy American and Hire American” executive order Trump signed in April 2017 as one reason for delays. The order was intended to create higher wages and employment rates for U.S. workers by “rigorously enforcing and administer­ing” immigratio­n laws.

“Across the board, across all types of applicatio­ns at USCIS, we have observed a significan­t uptick in the increase in case processing time,” said Diane Rish, associate director of government relations for the American Immigratio­n Lawyers Associatio­n.

The Government Accountabi­lity Office told members of Congress in late May it plans to investigat­e the report’s findings.

Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigratio­n Studies, which advocates for tighter immigratio­n controls, said that he empathizes with small business owners but that they shouldn’t blame federal immigratio­n policy for their labor recruitmen­t problems.

“It’s one thing if you’re talking about world-renowned nuclear physicists, where there’s a handful of people on the planet who have an ability and we want them here. Everybody gets that,” he said. “Dance instructor­s? I’m sorry. That’s something for the market to deal with. If they can’t find people at dance programs in college to entice to be teachers, well, maybe we need fewer dance schools. This is a supply and demand issue.”

A spokeswoma­n for the U.S. Department of State said there has “been no policy change” regarding the O-1 visas specifical­ly.

But Michael Wildes, an immigratio­n attorney for first lady Melania Trump and her family, argued in an op-ed in The Hill that immigratio­n lawyers for fashion designers, models and photograph­ers have “experience­d an unpreceden­ted level of push-back from immigratio­n authoritie­s.”

He warned of “widespread disenfranc­hisement” among talented and creative people who decide to forgo the U.S. and opt for Paris or Beijing. Dance studio owners indeed said red tape can discourage prospectiv­e instructor­s and lead them to give up on the U.S.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? DANCE INSTRUCTOR NED PAVLOVIC, a native of Serbia, teaches his student Rouhy Yazdani, a native of Iran who now lives in Milford, Conn., some ballroom dance moves at the Fred Astaire Dance Studio in Orange, Conn. Owners of Ballroom dance studios including the Fred Astaire studio say the immigratio­n clampdown has made it difficult to find qualified instructor­s.
ASSOCIATED PRESS DANCE INSTRUCTOR NED PAVLOVIC, a native of Serbia, teaches his student Rouhy Yazdani, a native of Iran who now lives in Milford, Conn., some ballroom dance moves at the Fred Astaire Dance Studio in Orange, Conn. Owners of Ballroom dance studios including the Fred Astaire studio say the immigratio­n clampdown has made it difficult to find qualified instructor­s.

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