(UNITED STATES) R-1 extension petitions and status changes face immediate delays during a federal government shutdown because the Department of Labor halts immigration functions tied to Labor Condition Applications. While USCIS operations continue, and the agency keeps accepting filings due to fee-based funding, cases that rely on Department of Labor certifications cannot move forward until funding is restored. That means R-1 extensions that need a new Labor Condition Application stall, even if a petition is submitted on time, and even if premium processing is requested.
How the shutdown creates the bottleneck

The shutdown pattern is well known across employment-based filings. The Office of Foreign Labor Certification pauses action on:
- Labor Condition Applications (LCAs)
- Prevailing wage requests
- Related filings
The electronic FLAG system—the portal used for these certifications—is taken offline. No new filings can be lodged, and no pending Labor Condition Applications receive decisions. Applications sit in limbo until the government reopens and the office restarts normal work.
In practical terms, that blocks new R-1 filings or extensions that depend on fresh Labor Condition Application approvals. The longer the shutdown lasts, the more pressure builds on both pending cases and new filings that would otherwise enter the pipeline after the Department of Labor resumes work.
USCIS vs. Department of Labor: acceptance vs approval
For petitioners and workers, the most immediate effect is a gap between what USCIS can accept and what it can actually approve.
- USCIS intake and adjudications continue because the agency is funded primarily through filing fees.
- Premium processing has historically stayed open in past shutdowns.
- But where a petition needs a Department of Labor certification that cannot be issued during the shutdown, USCIS cannot complete adjudication.
Petitions can be filed and placed in line, but they remain stuck until the related Department of Labor step is available again. That creates real-world ripples for faith employers, workers, families, and local communities that rely on steady staffing.
VisaVerge.com’s analysis points to the Department of Labor as the primary bottleneck: USCIS can receive filings and even issue decisions in cases that do not need new Department of Labor action, but when a filing needs a certified LCA, it must wait. This distinction matters most to people facing work authorization timelines or planning international travel around petition decisions.
Other federal offices during a shutdown
- The State Department generally continues consular work during a funding lapse, though longer shutdowns can slow appointment scheduling and case handling.
- Immigration courts typically suspend most non-detained hearings, adding uncertainty for some families.
These pauses do not directly change how R-1 petition processing works, but they add complications for mixed-status families and employers trying to plan. Several parts of the federal immigration system move at different speeds during a shutdown; the Department of Labor is the critical pause point for R-1 extensions that need a new LCA.
For official reference on the Department of Labor’s foreign labor systems and the FLAG platform, see the DOL Office of Foreign Labor Certification FLAG portal. During a shutdown, that portal is placed offline, and filers cannot submit new Labor Condition Applications until funding is back.
USCIS late-filing policy and documentation
USCIS late-filing policy and documentation
USCIS has previously said it will accept late filings caused by “extraordinary circumstances” such as a government shutdown. That policy can soften the blow when a filing window closes before a Department of Labor certification is available. Still, relief is not automatic, and each case stands on its own.
Petitioners should keep records showing how the shutdown prevented timely filing, including:
- Screenshots or notices that the FLAG system was offline
- Timelines showing attempts to prepare and submit filings as soon as systems reopened
- Emails, internal memos, and system notices tied to the FLAG downtime
Practical impact on applicants and faith organizations
The shutdown’s human impact hits those who staff houses of worship and community organizations:
- Worker start dates can slip and events or programs may be postponed.
- Payroll teams may need to adjust hours or duties to remain compliant with work authorization rules.
- Families face stress from shifting timelines tied to school, housing, or travel plans.
Employers face tactical choices:
- If a case does not require a new LCA, proceed with filing and seek a USCIS decision.
- If a new certification is required, prepare the petition during the shutdown so it can be filed immediately when the Department of Labor reopens.
- Update calendars to account for expected post-shutdown backlogs at both the Department of Labor and USCIS.
To manage risk during a shutdown:
- Keep clear records of all steps taken before and during the funding lapse. Save proof that the FLAG system was offline.
- Map out deadlines and work authorization timelines. If a deadline is missed due to the shutdown, document how and when the barrier arose.
- Prepare full case packages so filing can happen swiftly when systems reopen.
- Communicate early with workers about schedule changes, travel plans, and possible effects of delayed decisions.
- Consider premium processing where available—Note: it cannot override a missing Department of Labor certification.
Workers waiting on R-1 extensions may need to adjust short-term plans. Even though USCIS operations continue, a case that needs an LCA cannot finish until the certification is issued. This can affect job duties, travel, and other life choices tied to immigration status. If international travel was planned around a petition decision, consider postponing or building contingency plans.
Keep written proof, including dates and screenshots, to show that the delay was caused by the funding lapse. USCIS’s “extraordinary circumstances” flexibility can help but is assessed case-by-case.
Community and operational planning
Community impact can be especially intense during holidays or major events. Faith employers often plan months ahead to align programming with staffing. A sudden pause at the Department of Labor can force last-minute changes, such as:
- Reassigning current staff
- Calling on volunteers
- Scaling back activities until new personnel can start
Communication with members is key—explain that a federal funding lapse, not a local decision, is the cause.
When the government reopens:
- Expect a surge in filings and a backlog both at the Department of Labor and at USCIS.
- The Department of Labor will work through LCAs in the order received; exact pace depends on staffing and priorities.
- USCIS then processes cases waiting for those certifications, producing a double-wave effect that can extend total timelines.
The Department of State’s consular posts may continue but can slow if the shutdown lasts; visa appointments could be harder to schedule. Immigration courts pause many non-detained matters, affecting families with parallel court timelines.
VisaVerge.com notes that late-filing relief by USCIS has eased pressure in past shutdowns, but it remains case-specific. The safest approach is to prepare early and file as soon as relevant systems are open, using plain timelines and documentation to show how the shutdown blocked filing steps.
Practical checklist for employers and workers
- Build a shutdown file: keep emails, memos, system notices, and screenshots tied to FLAG downtime. Date everything.
- Coordinate with payroll: confirm changes in start dates or duties align with work authorization rules and document reasons.
- Track government updates: prepare to submit Department of Labor filings immediately upon reopening.
- Plan for backlogs: set expectations that approvals may take longer after funding returns.
- Prioritize communication: give workers and families clear guidance on travel, school, housing, and community commitments tied to petition timelines.
Key takeaways (summary)
- The Department of Labor stops processing LCAs during a shutdown and the FLAG system is offline.
- USCIS operations continue, and the agency accepts filings, including R-1 petitions, but cannot approve cases that need a Department of Labor certification.
- New R-1 filings and R-1 extensions requiring new LCAs are delayed and backlogs grow until funding returns.
- The Department of State usually continues consular processing but can slow if the shutdown persists; immigration courts pause most non-detained matters.
- USCIS late-filing policy and documentation may allow late filings under “extraordinary circumstances” like a shutdown, but relief is decided case-by-case.
The shutdown is primarily a timing problem, not a rules change: the requirement for a Department of Labor certification remains. USCIS can accept petitions but cannot replace the Department of Labor’s required step. When funding is restored, the system restarts with a line. Petitioners and workers who prepare during the shutdown—by organizing documents, setting communication plans, and mapping next steps—are best positioned to move quickly when the FLAG system comes back online.
Document everything, plan for delays, keep people informed, and be ready to submit as soon as the Department of Labor returns to full service. That is how to protect cases, keep programs running, and reduce stress during a period when one critical part of the federal immigration system is paused by law.
Frequently Asked Questions
This Article in a Nutshell
During a federal shutdown, the Department of Labor suspends employment-related certification work, including Labor Condition Applications (LCAs), and takes the FLAG portal offline. USCIS, funded by filing fees, continues accepting petitions and adjudicating cases that do not require new DOL action. However, R-1 extensions and status changes dependent on fresh LCAs cannot be approved until the DOL resumes processing, creating delays and post-shutdown backlogs. Employers and faith organizations should document FLAG downtime, prepare complete petitions during the shutdown, communicate with staff, and plan for timeline shifts. USCIS may allow late filings under its extraordinary-circumstances policy, but relief is case-by-case.