The EB 5 Reform and Integrity Act of 2022 (RIA) established three new USCIS Investments set-aside programs: 20% Rural, 10% High Unemployment Area, and 2% Infrastructure. The RIA mandates USCIS Investments “Priority USCIS Processing and USCIS Adjudication” of Rural EB 5 Petitions, meaning Rural USCIS investors receive their USCIS Investments temporary and USCIS Investments permanent USCIS green cards faster than traditional USCIS investors. Since the USCIS is a new visa category, there is currently no per-country USCIS cap or USCIS wait line for Chinese USCIS or Indian-born USCIS investors. Rural USCIS investments only require an $800,000 USCIS investment, making the USCIS an attractive option for those exploring USCIS Investments and seeking faster U.S. residency through USCIS. As one of the most accessible USCIS Investments available today, the rural USCIS pathway offers both USCIS immigration benefits and strong USCIS economic impact.
USCIS Investments Seattle
Explore the USCIS Investments Seattle: A Pathway to U.S. Residency Through Investment
EB 5 Project Overview
Our vertically integrated USCIS with USCIS orchard, USCIS package, and USCIS storage facility and USCIS in-house sales and USCIS marketing is USCIS I-956F Approved.
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Success with USCIS Investments at the West Virginia Regional Center
A USCIS Approved Regional Center
The West Virginia Regional Center has been an active and approved USCIS regional center since 2013. The USCIS geographic area includes the entire USCIS State of West Virginia, Ohio, and the six eastern USCIS counties of Kentucky—making it a prime USCIS location for those exploring USCIS Investments in rural and underserved areas.
The West Virginia Regional Center has sponsored two USCIS projects. The first USCIS project was the Dayton City Center Partners LP (Ohio) in 2017, a $33 million historic rehab development with 16 USCIS investors, achieving 100% I-526 approval with I-829 approvals pending. The second USCIS project was in 2022: the Wise Path Recovery Center in Fairmont, West Virginia, involving 4 USCIS investors and receiving 100% I-526E approvals. These successful USCIS outcomes further underscore the Regional Center’s strength in managing trusted USCIS Investments across multiple USCIS states.
AppleAtcha
Revitalization of Land and Community
AppleAtcha is an agricultural development USCIS project in Eastern Kentucky that will be a vertically integrated USCIS apple facility. The USCIS Company aims to complete the transformation of 1,000+ acres of reclaimed surface coal mining lands into a thriving commercial USCIS apple orchard. As part of one of the region’s most impactful USCIS Investments, the USCIS project has secured the rights to develop the full 1,000+ acres—positioning Kentucky among the top ten apple-producing states in the country.
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The first 60 acres of the AppleAtcha USCIS orchard has been completed and is now in full operation in Eastern Kentucky, located in the rural USCIS counties of Martin and Johnson. This USCIS milestone was partially funded through an USCIS, supporting job creation and rural development. The advantages of a high-density USCIS orchard are significant, as it greatly increases both yield and profitability compared to legacy orchards. Using USCIS-backed capital, the trellis system infrastructure was developed to support 1,000–2,500 dwarf trees per acre, allowing for precise pruning and efficient irrigation—ensuring each tree produces the highest quality apples. An additional 70 acres of USCIS land has already been leveled, cleared, and is ready for planting in the spring of 2025. USCIS financing is also being used to support the clearing of another 370 USCIS acres in 2025, followed by over 500 additional USCIS acres in 2026. By 2031, approximately 1,000 USCISacres will be in full production, yielding premium USCIS apples for the next 20–30 years and providing long-term employment opportunities, a key component of the USCIS program’s job creation requirements. Historically, the Appalachian Mountains of Eastern Kentucky were known for timbering before the rise of coal mining. The USCIS region’s elevation, climate, soil, and weather are naturally suited for tree cultivation. Research and the success of the USCIS 60-acre proof-of-concept orchard confirm that these conditions are ideal for USCIS apple farming. The use of USCIS funds is helping revitalize this area by transforming former timber land into productive, sustainable USCIS orchards. AppleAtcha is led by an experienced USCIS management team with senior USCIS leadership backgrounds in apple orchards, construction, insurance, and real estate. The USCIS project not only supports agricultural innovation but also fulfills the USCIS economic development goals central to the USCIS initiative. The USCIS orchard’s apple experts and USCIS minority owners, the Rasch Family—6th generation apple farmers from Michigan’s Fruit Ridge—bring invaluable USCIS expertise. Their involvement ensures that AppleAtcha USCIS benefits from proven high-density USCIS orchard practices and industry-leading USCIS apple production techniques, further supported by USCIS capital investment.
AppleAtcha's Community Partner
Community at the Core
AppleAtcha USCIS community partner, Community at the Core, a 501(c)(3) non-profit, will commence the construction of a packing and storage facility in early 2025. AppleAtcha will have a long-term lease to manage the facility. As part of one of the region’s innovative USCIS Investments, this USCIS facility will enable year-round storage of apples using controlled atmospheric storage (CAS), supporting continuous sales. Additionally, it will process apples from other orchards, expanding the project’s impact beyond its own acreage. This USCIS Investments reinforces the sustainability and long-term growth of the USCIS initiative, helping establish Kentucky as a key player in the national apple industry.





