About Jason
Jason Feldman earned his B.A. from Pitzer College in 1998 and completed his J.D. at the University of San Diego School of Law in 2005. He moved from the classroom to practice in California, where he has built a career that bridges law and the medical community. His academic background combined liberal arts and legal training, and it informs how he approaches complex regulatory and immigration questions.
He became a partner at Feldman Feldman & Associates, PC in 2009. That role followed his early years after law school when he immersed himself in cases and matters that involved cross-border and regulatory issues. As a partner, he has managed litigation, administrative filings and client counseling. He has experience shepherding matters through hearings, paperwork and negotiations, often for clients whose work brings them into contact with licensing bodies and federal agencies.
His professional associations reflect a practice tied to immigration and medical credentialing. He has been a member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association since 2009. Beginning in 2010 he has also served as a speaker for the American Medical Association program for International Medical Graduates. Those presentations address the intersection of immigration rules and the needs of physicians trained outside the United States. They have led him to counsel hospitals, residency programs and individual clinicians on visa pathways and credentialing hurdles.
Colleagues describe him as thorough and practical in preparing cases and filings. He tends to break complex statutory and regulatory texts into steps clients can understand. He also spends time preparing organizational clients for administrative reviews and advising on documentation practices that reduce friction in licensing and credentialing processes.
Beyond courtroom or agency work, he has taken part in panels and continuing education seminars aimed at practitioners and program administrators. His speaking engagements for the AMA’s International Medical Graduates initiative put him in frequent contact with medical schools, residency directors and physicians navigating U.S. licensure and immigration systems. That work informs how he structures client advice and the types of referrals he develops for clinical credentialing and employment issues.
He practices in California and is a partner at Feldman Feldman & Associates, PC. His current work centers on immigration matters affecting medical professionals, credentialing issues tied to clinical practice, and related administrative advocacy.