Lead Opinion
Opinion by Judge BOOCHEVER; Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge RYMER.
Nidia Del Rosario Urbina-Osejo appeals the denial of her motion to reopen immigration proceedings. The Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) concluded that she abandoned her right to apply for asylum and withholding of deportation by failing to appear at her deportation hearing eight years earlier, and that she had failed to demonstrate the extreme hardship required to establish prima facie eligibility for suspension of deportation. Urbina argues that she had reasonable cause for her failure to appear because she never received notice of her deportation hearing, and that she did not know she was required to inform the INS of her change of address;- the BIA did not address this issue. Urbina also argues that the BIA’s refusal to reopen her suspension claim was an abuse of discretion, because its consideration of the relevant factors for establishing extreme hardship was cursory. We agree that the BIA should have considered the first issue, and that its ruling on the suspension claim did not show proper consideration of all the relevant factors. We therefore remand to the BIA.
FACTS
On October 24, 1986, Nidia Del Rosario Urbina-Osejo (“Urbina”), a Nicaraguan citi
In January 1987, Urbina moved to San Francisco, California, where some of her brothers and sisters lived. Three months after Urbina moved, the INS mailed notice of her deportation hearing, set for July in Texas, to Urbina’s Miami address. Urbina declared that she never received the notice, which was not returned to Texas as undeliverable. She did not appear for the hearing. The immigration judge conducted the hearing in absentia and ordered Urbina deported. The warrant of deportation and the deportation notice subsequently were mailed to the Miami address. The mail was returned to Texas.
Urbina settled in San Francisco and finished high school. She worked briefly as a janitor. At the time of her motion to reopen, she was living with her sister, working as a self-employed housekeeper and taking care of her niece while her sister worked.
In November 1994, Urbina filed a motion to reopen her deportation proceedings, requesting the opportunity to apply for political asylum, withholding of deportation, and suspension of deportation. The Immigration Judge (“IJ”) denied the motion. Urbina appealed to the BIA, which dismissed her appeal in June 1995.
DISCUSSION
I. “Reasonable cause” for failure to attend deportation hearing
This court reviews for an abuse of discretion the BIA’s denial of Urbina’s motion to reopen. Sharma v. INS,
Under 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b) as in effect at the time of the hearing, an IJ could hold a deportation hearing in absentia if the alien had been given a reasonable opportunity to be present and “without reasonable cause fail[ed] or refuse[d] to attend” the proceedings. A motion to reopen a deportation hearing which was held in absentia would be granted if the alien showed “reasonable cause” for her absence from the hearing. Sharma,
In her motion to reopen before the IJ, Urbina argued that the reasonable cause for her failure to appear was that she had not received notice of the 1987 hearing. As the IJ noted, she did not submit any affidavits or other evidence on the issue. On appeal to the BIA, however, Urbina repeated her claim of lack of notice and added a declaration, stating that she never received the notice of the hearing because “my family relocated me from Miami Florida to San Francisco, California. I was a minor at that time and I had no knowledge of the need to report nor of an actual report informing the government of our change of address.” The BIA agreed to consider the declaration, and the INS did not object.
The BIA found that Urbina had not demonstrated reasonable cause for her failure to appear. Because Urbina did not notify the IJ of her change of address, the BIA reasoned, it was Urbina’s fault that she did not receive the notice. The BIA did not address her statement that she did not know she needed to report her change of address, nor did it call her to testify.
On this appeal from the BIA’s decision, Urbina asserts that there was no evidence that she was advised of the requirement that she report any change in address, and that her declaration is evidence that she did not know she had the responsibility to report her
A. Jurisdiction
The INS asserts that we have no jurisdiction to review the change-of-address issue, because Urbina did not raise it before the BIA. See Rashtabadi v. INS,
B. Notice
“[N]otice of a deportation hearing sent by regular mail to the last address provided by the alien to the INS satisfies the requirements of constitutional due process----” Farhoud v. INS,
Regulations in effect now and at the time of Urbina’s entry into the United States require that when an officer personally serves an order to show cause, as occurred in this case, “the contents of the order to show cause shall be explained.” 8 C.F.R. § 242.1. Whether an explanation occurred in this case is not in the record. Even if the officer had explained the OSC to Urbina, however, the OSC in this ease makes no mention of the statutory requirement that the alien must report to the INS any change in .address. See 8 U.S.C. § 1305(a) (alien must notify Attorney General of change of address within ten days).
Urbina stated in her declaration “I had no knowledge of the need to report ... informing the government of our change of address.” Urbina’s declaration thus raised the issue whether she had notice of the change-of-address requirement. The requirement did not appear in the OSC, and there is no evidence that the INS officer explained the requirement to Urbina. In fact, the only evidence in the record is to the contrary, as Urbina stated that she did not know of the requirement.
We conclude that there is reasonable cause for failure to appear when an alien has not received notice of the time and place of the hearing due to a change of address, and the alien was not informed of a requirement to advise the INS of any change of address.
II. Suspension of deportation
The BIA can deny petitioner’s motion to reopen on any of three independent grounds: (1) “failure to establish a prima facie case for the relief sought,” (2) “failure to introduce previously unavailable, material evidence,” or (3) “a determination that even if these requirements were satisfied, the movant would not be entitled to the discretionary grant of relief which he sought.”
Watkins v. INS,
The grounds for granting suspension of deportation are: The alien has been physically present in the United States for at least seven years; is of good moral character; and, his deportation would result in extreme hardship to the alien, or to a spouse, parent or child who is a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident. 8 U.S.C. § 1254(a)(1); Watkins,
The BIA found that Urbina established prima facie eligibility on the first two factors, but failed to show a prima facie case of extreme hardship. Urbina claimed she would have difficulty adjusting to life in Nicaragua, because she had become so acculturated; the BIA found that insufficient to show “extreme hardship,” as similar hardship is experienced by most aliens who spend time in another country. Urbina asserted that she faced economic hardship if she were forced to return to Nicaragua and find work in its struggling economy; the BIA found that ordinary economic hardship did not suffice to establish extreme hardship. Finally, Urbina argued that she feared retaliation for her family’s political affiliation with the Somoza regime in Nicaragua. She submitted an affidavit stating that her family was strongly identified with the Somoza government, that her father was jailed, that she had been pressured in school and elsewhere to join the Sandinistas, that she was once beaten by a Sandinista youth group, and that one uncle had been killed, and several other uncles had been persecuted, by the Sandinistas. The BIA found that political conditions alone do not justify a finding of extreme hardship, without other factors that make deportation particularly detrimental to the alien.
The BIA’s consideration of each of Urbi-na’s assertions of extreme hardship was cursory. In considering her claim of acculturation, the BIA mentioned the presence of Urbina’s nuclear family in the United States, but it did not explain how it weighed that factor. “[T]he most important single [hardship] factor may be the separation of the alien from family living in the United States.” Gutierrez-Centeno,
The BIA’s treatment of Urbina’s fear of political retaliation was similarly cursory. Without examining Urbina’s specific allegations of actions by the Sandinistas against herself and her family in Nicaragua, the BIA
Further, the BIA entirely failed to consider Urbina’s special assistance to the community, which “is a relevant factor for suspension of deportation.” Id. at 1534. The record shows that Urbina worked as a volunteer telephone counselor for the San Francisco Aids Foundation, teaching AIDS prevention to Spanish-speaking callers. This merited “the most serious consideration,” id., and received none at all.
Finally, the BIA did not explicitly consider the cumulative effect of the family ties, the difficult readjustment, economic hardship, and political persecution feared by Urbina. We have held that “the BIA must consider the total cumulative effect on th[e] petitioner of all the relevant factors.” Gutierrez-Centeno,
‘When important aspects of the individual claim are distorted or disregarded, denial of relief is arbitrary. Without prescribing any final result, we must remand such eases for proper consideration.” Tukhowinich v. INS,
On remand, the BIA must review each relevant factor as described above, and show that it has properly evaluated each factor. Gutierrez-Centeno,
CONCLUSION
We REMAND to the BIA for a determination whether Urbina had notice of the change-of-address requirement,, and for a review of Urbina’s claim of extreme hardship, evaluating each relevant factor alone and cumulatively.
Notes
. Under the current statute, which applies to notices of hearings after June 13, 1992, an order to rescind is warranted only if the alien can demonstrate "exceptional circumstances” for the failure to appear. 8 U.S.C. § 1252b(c)(3); see Farhoud v. INS,
. The current statute, however, requires that the OSC clearly specify that the alien must immediately provide the Attorney General with a written record of any change of address or telephone number, and the consequences for failing to provide the information. 8 U.S.C. § 1252b(a)(l)(F)(i)-(iii). Under the current statute, an explanation of the OSC would therefore necessarily include an explanation of the change-of-address requirement.
. None of the cases cited by the dissent involves a claim that the INS’s failure to inform the alien of the change-of-address requirement constituted reasonable cause for the failure to appear at the hearing. In Farhoud,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part, dissenting in part:
I dissent from the majority’s unprecedented conclusion that there is reasonable cause for failure to appear when an alien has not received notice of the hearing (sent to her last known address) and the INS hasn’t told the alien to tell the INS when her address changes. This holding turns the alien’s statutory duty to notify the INS of a change of address upside down, 8 U.S.C. § 1305(a), and it is out of sync with our own precedent and that of other circuits. It depends, moreover, on an argument that Urbina has never made.
Urbina did not argue to the BIA that she missed her deportation hearing because the INS failed to explain her statutory duty to notify it of a change of address. Nor did she argue that she did not know that she was required to tell the INS when she moved. Rather, Urbina argued to the BIA that she had reasonable cause to miss her deportation hearing because she did not receive actual notice of her deportation hearing, and that “[e]ven if she did not advise the Service of her change of address, she was not in conscious violation of the deportation order, since she never received it.” It was to support this argument — not the one on which the majority opines — that Urbina submitted a declaration indicating that she “had no knowledge of the need to report nor of an actual report informing the government of our change of address.” Thus, the BIA had no obligation to address her statement except to consider it in connection with the issue that Urbina actually raised. That the BIA did. Evidence in the abstract does not preserve an issue for appeal, and we shouldn’t forage around the record to find one. In any event, Urbina’s petition for review in this court does not raise the issue that the majority decides, either; instead, her petition argues that there is no reasonable assurance that Urbina understood that she was in deportation proceedings in the absence of evidence showing that the Order to Show Cause was explained to her or that she was provided with a Spanish translation of it. There is no evidence that Urbina did not know she had been placed in deportation
Even assuming that the issue wasn’t waived, it is incorrectly decided. The law is clear that an alien released from INS custody on her own recognizance has to keep the INS apprised of a change of address. As 8 U.S.C. § 1305(a) provides:
Each alien required to be registered under this subchapter who is within the United States shall notify the Attorney General in writing of each change of address and new address within ten days from the date of such change and furnish with such notice such additional information as the Attorney General may require by regulation.
See also 8 C.F.R. § 265.1 (same). There are no exceptions in the statute or regulations.
Although we have not previously addressed the precise issue the majority decides, we have held that “notice of a deportation hearing sent by regular mail to the last address provided by the alien to the INS satisfies the requirements of constitutional due process____” Farhoud v. INS,
I therefore dissent from Part I in that we lack jurisdiction to consider the issue, and I concur in the result of Part II.
. While I think the BIA implicitly considered the cumulative effects of hardship on Urbina, it did not do so explicitly. I have no quarrel with remanding to the BIA for this purpose only.
