OPINION
In this unfоrtunate immigration case, petitioner does not dispute that she is de-portable. She instead seeks suspension of deportation, a type of discretionary relief conditioned on, among other criteria, continuous presence in this country. The Board of Immigration Appeals found her ineligible because she could not show the requisite seven years’ stay. The Board calculated petitioner’s time in residence based upon immigration provisions enacted while her case was pending. Petitioner now contends that these legislative changes unconstitutionally deprived her of the opportunity to apply for suspension of deportation. We find that Congress intended the retroactive reach of the law and ■that its classification scheme is rationally related to legitimate federal interests. We therefore affirm.
I. Facts
Mrs. Teresa Bartoszewska Zajac was nearly 18 years old when she entered this country on February 18, 1989. As a non-immigrant tourist visitor, she was admitted for six months. She has never requested an extension of stay and has never applied for asylum. She married another Polish national here in 1993. She now has two children, both born in and citizens of the United States.
The Immigration and Naturalization Sеrvice (INS) served petitioner with an *712 order to show cause on August 24, 1994, initiating deportation proceedings. She then had been in the United States for five and a half years. At that time, foreign nationals could apply for discretionary relief by showing hardship, good moral character, and continuous physical presence in the United States for at least seven years. See 8 U.S.C. § 1254(a) (1994) (repealed 1996). Applicants facing expulsion could accumulate the statutory seven years even during deportation proceedings. On May 20, 1996, Mrs. Bartoszewska-Zajac filed a Motion to Reopen. Before a hearing сould be held on her petition, however, Congress changed the law concerning discretionary relief.
The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (“the Illegal Immigration Act” or “IIRIRA”) made sweeping revisions of immigration policy. Pub.L. No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009, 546-724 (1996) (codified as amended in scattered sections of 8 U.S.C.). Section 309(c)(5) is an important exception to the prospective reach of the Act, setting forth a transitional rule for pending cases. Petitioner falls in this class. Under the new law, continuous residence ends when the foreign national is served with an INS charging document. This “stop-time” rule prevents a foreign natiоnal from accumulating the seven years’ physical presence during deportation proceedings. It applies whether the charging document was issued before or after passage of the Illegal Immigration Act. Illegal Immigration Act § 309(c)(5).
Immigrant communities protested that the new law unfairly subjectеd them to higher standards for discretionary relief. In response, Congress passed the Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central American Relief Act of 1997 (“the Nicaraguan Act” or “NACARA”). Pub.L. No. 105-100, 111 Stat. 2160, 2193-2201 (1997), amended by Pub.L. No. 105-139, 111 Stat.. 2644 (1997). This law lifted the stop-time bar for certain foreign nationals, allowing them to accrue seven years’ presence еven during deportation proceedings. Nationals of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union qualified under the 1997 law if they had filed for asylum on or before December 31,1991.
II. Discussion
The Board of Immigration Appeals found petitioner ineligible for relief under its interpretation of the 1996 and 1997 laws. We review this legal dеtermination
de novo. Kabongo v. INS,
A. Retroactivity of the Illegal Immigration Act
Basic principles of fairness and notice underlie a judicial skepticism of statutory retroactivity.
Landgraf v. USI Film Products,
The Board of Immigration Appeals has previously concluded that the stop-time rule applies to suspension of deportation cases.
In re Nolasco Tofino,
Interim Decision 3385 (BIA 1999) (en banc),
available at
In
Ashki v. INS,
we first considered the effect of these changes in immigration law.
Ashki v. INS,
In following
Ashki,
we also note the several other circuits that have upheld the retroactive reach of the stop-time provision.
See Rojas-Reyes v. INS,
*714 B. The Equal Protection Challenges
In matters of immigration, equal protection challenges warrant very deferential review.
Mathews v. Diaz,
Petitioner makes two equal protection arguments. First, petitioner claims that imposition of the stop-time rule to pending cases creates two classes of foreign nationals seeking suspension of deportation. Nationals who еvaded immigration authorities for seven years can apply for relief, she contends, while those served before their seventh year are now ineligible. This argument is unpersuasive. In 1996, Congress intended to expedite the removal of foreign nationals illegally present in this country. It recognized that permitting nationals to accumulate time in residence during deportation only invited delay.
See
H.R. Rep. No. 104-469, at 122 (1996) (“Suspension of deportation is often abused by aliens seeking to delay proceedings until 7 years have accrued.”). Removing this incentive is a legitimate government interest. To effectuate it, Congress sоught a clear-cut terminus of continuous presence. Service of the INS charging document provides notice to the foreign national and initiates removal proceedings. This is a reasonable point to end physical presence. Applying the rule to pending petitions only furthers the goal of discouraging delay in a greater number of cases. Under our deferential review, that is all we require.
See Newton v. INS,
Second, petitioner claims that the 1997 amendments violate equal protection because they remove the stop-time bar for only certain foreign nationals. Niсaraguan Act § 203(a)(1), amending § 309(c)(5) of the Illegal Immigration Act. Among other eligible classes, Poles who filed for asylum on or by December 31, 1991, could still accrue time in residence towards the requisite seven years, even during deportation proceedings. Though a native of Poland, Mrs. Bartoszewska Zajac is not eligible under this provision because she never applied for asylum. She came to the United States for a “better quality of life.” Reply Br. of Pet’r at 10. Seeking economic opportunity rather than political refuge, petitioner “did not file for asylum[ ] because it was and still is inappropriate. Shе easily could have filed, but was honest enough not to file.” Id. In contrast, petitioner notes, Poles who filed weak, frivolous, or unsuccessful asylum petitions would be eligible under the Nicaraguan Act. Petitioner claims that this is an unconstitutional distinction.
Congress passed the Nicaraguan Act to help refugees from civil war and the fall of Communism.
See
Senate Explanatoey Memorandum Regarding Title II of the D.G. APPROPRIATIONS Bill, 143 Cong. Rec.
*715
S12266 (1997),
available at
Here, Congress sought to help foreign nationals fleeing violence and unrest. It did not relieve those who had never filed for asylum, excluding Poles such as petitioner who came to this country to improve their economiс status rather than escape persecution. The Immigration and Naturalization Service need not elucidate the true intent of Congress to justify this grouping. “Rational basis review does not require us to identify the legislature’s actual rationale for the distinction; rather, we will uphold the statute if ‘there are plausible reasons for Congress’ action.’ ”
Hamama v. INS,
Although the NACARA exemptions clearly do not cover all aliens who will face hostile conditions in their homelands, this fact does not make these exemptions irrational. There are a myriad of political and foreign policy reasons that might explain why aliens from certain nations were initially encouraged to stay in the U.S. and later exempted from the stop time provision and other aliens were not. Petitioner has offered no evidence that the Congressional exemptions were irrational or that they were based on an impermissible motivation. Therefore, this court will not second guess the line that Congress has drawn.
Ashki,
III. Conclusion
Suspension of deportation is strictly discretionary.
INS v. Yueh-Shaio Yang,
Notes
. We do not decide today whether petitioner could accrue the requisite seven years in a period of continuous presence starting after August 24, 1994.
