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EB-5 reform stymied by Schumer (and allies); most investors' capital simply bolsters profits, doesn't jump-start projects

In a 12/22/15 article, How Efforts to Overhaul Visa Program Failed on Capitol Hill: Sen. Grassley, allies pushed hard for reform, but developersā€™ lobby prevailed, the Wall Street Journal's Eliot Brown explained how even relatively modest reforms of the EB-5 investment visa program failed:
For more than a year, U.S. Sen. Charles Grassley had been pushing to overhaul a controversial program that gives green cards to foreigners who invest at least $500,000 in certain businesses. So when congressional leaders last week moved forward with a 10-month extension of the so-called EB-5 program without any changes, the Iowa Republican was less than pleased.
ā€œMaybe it is only here on Capitol Hillā€”an island surrounded by realityā€”that we can choose to plug our ears and then refuse to listen to commonly accepted facts,ā€ he said in a 33-minute diatribe on the Senate floor Thursday. The program, he said, is ā€œriddled with flaws and corruption.ā€
Despite broad agreement that EB-5 is in need of changes amid mounting allegations of fraud and abuse, lawmakers last week failed to reach an accord over just how to go about reform. Among the contested issues was a changeā€”urged by Mr. Grassley and strenuously resisted by real-estate developersā€”that would have made it harder for luxury projects to benefit from a provision meant for economically ailing neighborhoods. In addition, developers worried about a provision that would have disrupted some EB-5 financed projects already under way, people briefed on discussions said.
Though industry leaders agreed on tightening rules regarding the so-called Targeted Employment Area--the oft-gerrymandered map (as with Atlantic Yards and the "Bed-Stuy Boomerang") used to designed a "high unemployment" area--big money, and influence with legislators like Sen. Chuck Schumer, preserved the status quo.

For now, there's only a 10-month renewal, leading to--potentially--further discussions of reform. Or, if Grassley's diatribe left him permanently soured--I doubt it, given the assistance reform would give to projects in his state, Iowa--the end of the program.

ā€œNow Iā€™m not so sure reforms are possible,ā€ Grassley said. ā€œIt may be time to do away with EB-5 completely.ā€

Unlikely reforms, but reasons remain

I don't see that as likely, given the gravy train for developers, lawyers, migration agencies, and the intermediaries/loan packagers known as regional centers. But if/when there is some true national leadership, maybe we can rethink a program that I think is riddled with dishonesty and should go.

As I wrote earlier this year, perhaps the clearest summary of the lure and sketchiness of the program--in which developers/entrepreneurs get cheap loans if they dangle a purportedly job-creating investment--came in a February 2012 quote from an EB-5 fundraiser to The Daily: ā€œItā€™s just a way of being able to get free money, basically, to build all sorts of projects.ā€

Or, to quote an essay/editorial in the 5/27/15 Immigration Daily, an online newspaper for the immigration law field:
As best as we can estimate, currently the bulk of the EB-5 investment (85%) is taking place in the "Extra Profits" category of projects where only a small sliver of EB-5 capital is used to lower the overall cost of capital. Remaining 15% is distributed evenly between the category of projects that would not be built but for EB-5 capital, Hands on investments and pooled direct investments. The EB-5 program was originally conceived to be focused on the "But For" and "Hands on" projects and has expanded radically to include these four different flavors.

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