... in response to This may be new., posted by Jamie on Feb 24, 2005"They also told them what to do if they found themselves in an abusive situation, the consequences of staying past the 90 days, etc."
I hope this is a new requirement rather than just a few people in the INS deciding on their own to do it. The legislation people have been pushing has been aimed at forcing the agencies to do this with a potential $20,000 per incidence fine as a penalty for non-compliance. This would only tend to favor foreign owned agencies over agencies owned by US citizens and result in the ladies never being informed at all after the US owned agencies go out of business and the foreign owned ones take up the slack. If they make it part of the immigration process, then the information will actually get to the women.