Government Shutdown: What H-2A Employers Need to Know
Published on Wednesday, October 1, 2025
By Daniel Ross
Congress has not yet passed a federal budget for Fiscal Year 2026, and the government has officially shutdown as of October 1, 2025. We are optimistic that a deal will quickly be reached to get the government back online, but until that happens, this is what employers should expect:
What is a government shutdown?
A government shutdown occurs when Congress does not approve the funding bills necessary to keep federal agencies operating. Without approved funding, many agencies must suspend “non-essential” operations until a budget agreement is reached. The shutdown will end once a deal is reached to fund the government.
Impact on Agencies Involved in H-2A:
Department of Labor (DOL)
The Office of Foreign Labor Certification (OFLC) would suspend all case processing.
Systems such as FLAG and PERM would be unavailable.
Applications—including H-2A job orders and labor certifications, H-2B certifications and prevailing wage determinations, as well as H-1B LCAs, and PERM filings—would not be accepted or processed until funding resumes.
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)
USCIS is primarily fee-funded, so most operations will continue during a shutdown.
Programs that rely on congressional appropriations (e.g., E-Verify, Conrad 30 J-1 doctors, and certain religious worker programs) may be temporarily suspended, but H-2A petitions should not be affected.
Form I-129 petitions and most H-2A and H-2B filings should continue without interruption.
Department of State (DOS)
Visa and passport services are fee-funded and will generally continue.
However, if fee revenue becomes insufficient at a specific consular post, operations may be severely limited.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP)
Inspection and law enforcement personnel are considered essential.
Ports of entry will remain open, and passenger processing will continue.
However, applications filed at the border may face delays.
Immigration Courts (EOIR)
Detained docket cases will generally proceed, but non-detained docket cases will generally be postponed until after funding resumes, with new hearing notices issued.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
Enforcement and removal operations will continue.
ICE attorneys will generally focus on detained cases.
The Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP) will generally remain open, as it is fee-funded.
What this means for Seso clients
DOL filings are the most vulnerable and critical area affected in the event of a government shutdown—H-2A job orders and labor certifications cannot be filed or processed until the government reopens. Everything will stay “on ice” until the shutdown ends.
USCIS filings and consular processing will mostly proceed as usual, but programs tied to appropriated funds (such as E-Verify) could be disrupted.
E-Verify - The system is not fee-funded and will be offline during the shutdown.
Seso will continue to monitor developments and provide updates as soon as they are available. If you have a case in progress or an upcoming filing deadline, please contact your case manager to discuss contingency planning.
Categories: Legal
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