On March 30,1980, Ramona Zamora-Garcia was found to be a deportable alien who had entered the United States without valid entry documents in 1973. She filed for a Suspension of Deportation under 8 U.S.C. § 1254 on that same date. On April 6, 1982, the Immigration Judge (ILJ) denied her request, she appealed this decision, and her appeal was dismissed-by order of the Board of Immigration Appeals (Board) on May 18, 1983. The Board’s dismissal was originally before us on appeal for a determination of whether the Board abused its discretion in failing to find that deportation would cause appellant “extreme hardship” sufficient to invoke the relief provided by § 1254. We have reconsidered our original unpublished opinion in light of the Board’s petition for rehearing, and find the issues worthy of further consideration as well as publication. The petition for rehearing is therefore GRANTED, and we substitute *490 the following published opinion in lieu thereof.
Facts
Ramona Zamora-Garcia is a 32 year old unmarried native citizen of Mexico. She came to the United States in 1969, when she was 17 or 18 years old, and since then has lived with and been employed by Ms. Marilyn Chrisman. Ramona is the Chris-mans’ housekeeper, and has cared for the two Chrisman children since they were very small. Ms. Chrisman testified in Ramona’s behalf in 1982 at the suspension hearing, and stated that the Chrismans consider Ramona “a member of our family.” Ramona has lived with the Chrismans continuously since 1969, with the exception of a three week visit to her family in Mexico in 1973. Although she receives a two week vacation each year and has saved $4500, Ramona has chosen not to return to Mexico for her vacations because she no longer feels welcome in her father’s home.
The relative to whom Ramona feels closest is her sister, Elia Zamora, who also came to the United States in 1969 and was initially found to be deportable along with Ramona. Elia, however, was granted a Suspension of Deportation because she had married a lawful permanent resident. Besides her father, who has remarried, Ramona’s relatives in Mexico include three married sisters and brothers and one unmarried brother. Ramona stated that if she returned to Mexico, she could not live with her father because he lives in her stepmother’s house and the two women are estranged. This is why she has not returned to Mexico for a visit in more than ten years. She further stated that her sisters and brothers now have lives of their own, and she could not live with them either.
To be considered for a Suspension of Deportation, the respondent has a duty to prove three things — first, that she has been physically present in the United States for a continuous period of not less than seven years; second, that she has been a person of good moral character during that time; and third, that deportation would cause her extreme hardship. See 8 U.S.C. § 1254. There is no dispute that Ramona meets the first two criteria. However, the Board affirmed the IU’s finding that she had failed to meet her burden of demonstrating extreme hardship. She therefore was not considered for a Suspension of Deportation.
Standard of Review
We recognize from the outset that the “decision whether to suspend the deportation of an alien who satisfies the three statutory requirements is discretionary, and is subject only to a most restricted judicial review.”
Ramos v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
Although we held in
Ramos
that there was little opportunity for “substantive” judicial review of adverse determinations of extreme hardship, we may review these determinations “procedurally” to ensure that the complaining alien has received full and fair consideration of all circumstances that give rise to his or her claims.
Id.
at 186. Under such circumstances, Courts of Appeal have remanded to the Board for reconsideration in light of
*491
the relevant factors it may have failed to consider.
See, e.g., Prapavat v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
We held in
Ramos
that for the Attorney General properly to fulfill his discretionary obligation, he or his delegates must
actually consider
“the facts and circumstances respecting each petitioner’s claim of extreme hardship.”
Ramos, supra,
Extreme Hardship: Relevant Factors
It is well established that the adverse economic impact of deportation alone is insufficient to justify a finding of extreme hardship. In this case the IU found, and the Board affirmed, that the “most that can be said of respondent’s case is that deportation to Mexico would result in economic hardship because employment opportunities in that country are not equal to ours.” The IU found that Ramona’s case was “not unlike”
Pelaez v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
First, both petitioner and her friend and employer, Ms. Chrisman, testified that Ramona is considered a member of the Chris-man family. She has “reared” the Chris-man children for 14 years now, and she participates in family activities. Ms. Chris-man was concerned by the fact that Ramona did not wish to return to Mexico for her vacations and took it upon herself to speak to Ramona’s father about the problem, which has never been resolved. When Ramona became involved in some minor trouble with the police, 1 the Chrismans were fully supportive of her and now vouch for her complete honesty and high moral character.
The estrangement from her natural family, coupled with the development of close ties with her “American” family calls into question the IU’s finding that Ramona has no “close family ties in this country.”
2
We are in accord with the First
*492
Circuit in finding that it “is unrealistic as well as unjust to adopt such a rigid view of the family unit” as to find that only blood relations may constitute “family.”
Antoine-Dorcelli v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
Antoine-Dorcelli, like Ramona, had living family members in her native country. The Government attempts to distinguish the case by emphasizing that Antoine-Dor-celli had had “little or no contact” with her family in Haiti since she was a small child, whereas Ramona left Mexico as a young teenager and has since maintained some contact with her family. The Government further stresses the fact that Ramona is paid a salary and receives a vacation, while Antoine-Dorcelli’s “needs” were provided for by the Craigs as they arose. We do not find Ramona’s status as an employee dis-positive — indeed, the Antoine-Dorcelli Court pointed out Antoine-Dorcelli’s non-employee status solely for the purpose of illustrating that she would suffer economic hardship if deported in addition to the emotional trauma of separating from the Craigs. Similarly, we find that despite Ramona's infrequent contact with her family in Mexico, her situation is not so vastly different from Antoine-Dorcelli’s that we can say the Board’s failure to consider the emotional hardship posed by separation from the Chrisman family was proper. We add that it appears from the facts of Antoine-Dorcelli that the Haitian woman did not leave her country until she was roughly 36 years of age, whereas Ramona left at age 17 or 18, during the more critical years of young adulthood.
The
Antoine-Dorcelli
Court also pointed out that if there had been evidence that Antoine-Dorcelli’s relationship with the Craig children “ ‘closely resembled that of parent to child,’ ” then “consideration of the harm suffered by [the Craig] children as a result of petitioner’s deportation might also have been merited.”
Antoine-Dorcel-li, supra,
Tovar
extended the statutory language of § 1254 to include hardship not only to the deportee’s “spouse, parent, or child, who is a citizen of the United States” but also to the deportee’s grandchild. The
To-var
Court held that the proper focus was whether the deportee’s relationship to her grandchild “so closely resembled that of parent to child” that the hardship to the grandchild from the grandmother’s deportation should be considered.
Tovar, supra,
In its petition for rehearing, the INS argues that in
Contreras-Buenfil v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
Thus, although we may find an abuse of discretion in the Board’s utter failure or refusal to consider relevant hardship factors, we recognize that we lack the authority to determine the weight, if any, to be afforded each factor. Similarly, we may not assess the credibility of the witnesses or evidence that purport to prove the existence of each factor. We do not think that our review, so limited, constitutes a substitution of our view for that of the Board in a manner forbidden by Jong Ha Wang. We are thus unpersuaded by the Ninth Circuit’s reasoning in Contreras-Buenfil.
However, that is not the only argument set out in the petition for rehearing. The INS also argues that our direction that the hardship to the Chrisman children be considered impermissibly expands the language of § 1254(a)(1) beyond its terms. We concede that the plain language of the statute provides only for consideration of extreme hardship “to the alien or to his spouse, parent, or child, who is a citizen of the United States or an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residency.” 8 U.S.C. § 1254(a)(1). On rehearing, we think our earlier liberal interpretation of the statute, then in accord with
Antoine-Dorcelli, Tovar,
and the spirit of
Vergel,
is precluded by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Immigration & Naturalization Service v. Phinpathya,
— U.S. -,
In reviewing the “continuous physical presence” requirement of § 1254(a)(1), the Supreme Court declined to apply any interpretation other than the “plain meaning” approach to the 32 year old statute. — U.S. at-,
*493 “aliens [who] are deliberately flaunting our immigration laws by ... gaining admission into the United States illegally ... with the intention of establishing themselves in a situation in which they may subsequently have access to some administrative remedy to adjust their status to that of permanent residents.”
Phinpathya, supra, — U.S. at-,104 S.Ct. at 590 ,78 L.Ed.2d at 409-410 , citing
*494 Although the Supreme Court’s ruling only specifically has an impact upon the “continuous physical presence” requirement, we — without so deciding — have doubts that the Court would approach the “extreme hardship” requirement any differently. We therefore recognize — although perhaps reluctantly — that the Board need not consider the hardship to the Chrisman children posed by the possibility of Ramona’s deportation. We emphasize, however, that we do require consideration of the hardship to Ramona posed by the possibility of separation from, the Chris-mans. 5
In its reconsideration on remand the Board should also take into account the Ninth Circuit’s decision in
Santana-Figueroa v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
In conclusion, we reiterate that it is not our purpose here to hold that the presence of these noneconomic factors requires the Board to reverse its decision. We reverse and remand for the sole purpose of directing the Board to consider and then make appropriate findings on these factors along with the economic factors previously before it consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Ramona and her sister Elia were arrested for shoplifting in a supermarket on April 18, 1980. Ramona had taken items worth less than $5.00, and the charges were dismissed after she participated in Project Detour, a rehabilitation program for first-time offenders. This incident was considered by the ILJ, who found it no bar to a finding of good moral character.
. We recognize, as should the Board, the nature of the hardship posed by the separation of family members. In
Mejia-Carrillo v. Immigration & Naturalization Service, 656 F.2d
520, 521-22 (9th
*492
Cir. 1981), the Ninth Circuit held that the "most important single factor [in determining extreme hardship] may be the separation of the alien from family living in the United States____sepa-ration from family alone may establish extreme hardship.”
Id. See also Bastida v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
. The Vergel Court concluded that it had no jurisdiction to review the original deportation order because a timely appeal was lacking, and could find no abuse of discretion in the denial of the motion to reopen because the petitioner could not meet the statutory seven years’ residency requirement. Id. at 757.
. The relevant portions of the Act have not changed significantly since 1962, when the words "exceptional and extremely unusual hardship" were changed to merely "extreme hardship."
We recognize, as did the Eighth Circuit in
Rios-Pineda v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
The bill, however, is not yet law, having gone from the House floor to a conference committee for negotiation of possible revisions. We, like the Eighth Circuit, therefore "have no choice but to decide this case based on an immigration policy embodied in laws passed in substance over two decades ago.”
Rios-Pineda, supra,
We do not question the Board’s sincerity in attempting to implement the immigration policy which languishes in our federal statutes. We do require that [the present] policy be followed to the letter and in a spirit of total fairness to those persons who may be permanently exiled from our shores as a result of its implementation.
Id. at 534.
. In considering the hardship to Ramona, it is irrelevant that the Chrismans are not — under the plain meaning approach required by
Phin-pathya
— within the group of family members specified in § 1254(a)(1).
See Antoine-Dorcelli, supra,
at 21-22 & n. 2;
Barrera-Leyva v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
. We point out that the Board, while recognizing that Ramona's sister Elia may now remain in the United States, failed to consider this separation as a factor in determining extreme hardship to Ramona. Elia is the relative to whom Ramona feels closest. While the other members of the immediate family live in Mexico, Elia has been in the United States since 1969, when she and Ramona arrived together. Under
Antoine-Dorcelli
and
Santana-Figueroa,
this factor warranted a more "fact sensitive inquiry.”
Antoine-Dorcelli, supra,
. We also point out that our own opinion in
Vargas-Gonzales v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
