Sponsor Your Workers Strengthen Your Workforce
As a nonprofit, we partner with employers to sponsor low-wage workers for green cards—helping employers attract and retain valued employees while expanding access to a permanent immigration pathway for workers.
We offer both:
Contact Us to Get Started – info@myimmigrantpathway.org
WHY WORK WITH A NONPROFIT
We are a 501(C)(3) nonprofit organization focused on expanding access to immigration pathways for low-wage workers—people who are often left out of traditional systems.
Working with us means:
You receive high-quality legal support
Your partnership directly advances equitable workforce practices
You help create long-term stability for your employees
Green Card Sponsorship — How it works
We make the process clear and manageable:
1.
We assess
eligibility
We identify whether your workers may qualify
2.
We handle the
legal process
Including PERM labor certification
and immigration filings
3.
We support you throughout
So you stay informed and compliant
Ready to explore sponsorship for your workers?
Email us to start the conversation:📧 info@myimmigrantpathway.org
We’ll help you understand your options and next steps.
Additional Legal Guidance for Employers
We offer 30-minute legal consultations for $150 to help employers get clear, practical answers on business immigration and I-9 compliance.
Get trusted guidance
Make informed decisions
Support our nonprofit, mission-driven work
Your partnership helps create lasting pathways to permanence for low-wage immigrant workers—while strengthening your business.
Pathway for Immigrant Workers, Inc.
There are millions of foreign-born workers in the U.S. Permanent residence is available to individuals in family and employment-based categories. Some also obtain permanent residence through the diversity lottery or as an asylee or refugee.
However, many people who are in the U.S. lawfully have no avenue to a green card because they are in low-wage occupations where employers are unable to spend the legal fees necessary to sponsor them.
Many such workers have temporary statuses or permission to remain in the U.S. and work such as DACA, TPS, and pending asylum applications. What they lack is an avenue to an immigrant visa. We formed Pathway for Immigrant Workers to provide that avenue.