If the individual
does not qualify for an H visa classification, he or she may qualify
under the J-1 category. The J-1 visa can be used by any U.S. companies
primarily in an entry-level position to gain work experience and training
in his or her field.
The primary purpose
of the alien’s J-1 visa is to improve his or her knowledge of American
techniques and operation in any U.S. industry and take this experience
back to their home country to utilize upon returning home. A person must have at
least one year of experience or a degree in the field in order to qualify
for a J-1 visa. The J-1 visa is valid for the length of time the employer
requires the alien’s services, up to a maximum of 18 months with no renewal.
Of all the possible
visas by which foreign nationals can come to the United States to work
or study, none is as problematic as the J or "exchange visitor" visa.
The major
drawback of the J visa is that many exchange visitors are permitted
to enter the U.S. only on the condition that they exit this
country for a minimum of two years after their program is completed.
It is exceedingly difficult to obtain a "J waiver," or
exception, to this two-year foreign residency requirement.
This is true even if the foreign national has married a U.S.
citizen during the course of his or her stay in the United
States.
Nevertheless,
in many cases, J visaholders can obtain waivers.
MISCONCEPTIONS
Prior to discussing
waivers, it is important to clarify several misconceptions about
the J visa. First, most J programs do not subject the foreign national
to the two-year residency requirement. Only three types of programs
contain this requirement. One of these programs is for aliens who
obtain J status in order to receive graduate medical education
or training in the U.S. The second is for all persons whose
J programs are financed by the U.S. government or by the visaholder's
government. The last is for persons whose occupations or courses
of study appear on the Exchange-Visitor Skills
List published by the U.S. Information Agency (USIA),
the agency which administers all J programs. Foreign countries
in need of certain skills place them on the list, thereby subjecting
exchange visitors who participate in a program involving designated
skills to the foreign residency requirement.
In addition,
many people assume that the affected alien must return to his
home country for two years immediately following the completion
of the program, and may not set foot in the U.S. during those
two years. In reality, the foreign residency requirement bars
the alien, for a period of two years, solely from obtaining H
(temporary worker), L
(intracompany transferee), or permanent residence
status in the U.S. The alien may return to his home country
and reenter the U.S. in visitor, student or other status. However,
any time spent in the U.S. or a third country does not count
toward the two-year residency requirement. For example, if
an International Medical Graduate (IMG), after finishing a
medical residency in the U.S. moves to Canada to avoid the
two-year residency requirement and now wishes to re-enter the
U.S., he will still be obstructed by the two-year rule.
It also should
be noted that the foreign residency requirement attaches not
only to the principal alien, but to the spouse and children
who are present in the U.S. in dependent J-2 status. However,
if the spouse and children never obtained J-2 status, they
are not subject to the foreign residency requirement.
OBTAINING
WAIVERS
There are four
methods by which a foreign national may obtain a waiver of the
two-year residency requirement. Each method requires the approval
of one or more U.S. government agencies.
1. THE "NO
OBJECTION" LETTER
The government
which financed the alien's program, or which requested that the
alien's skill be placed on the Skills
List, may write a letter to the USIA stating that it
has no objection to a waiver of the foreign residency requirement
for a particular alien. If both the USIA and the Immigration & Naturalization
Service (INS) concur, the waiver is granted. However, graduates
in medical education are ineligible to receive a waiver based upon
a no objection letter.
2. THE HARDSHIP
WAIVER
The alien may
obtain a waiver if the imposition of the foreign residence requirement
would impose "exceptional hardship" on his or her U.S.
citizen or permanent resident spouse or children. For example,
a hardship waiver might be granted if the alien were married to
a U.S. citizen, had one or more citizen children, and the family
would be forced by the residency requirement either to separate
or to reside together in a war-torn country. A hardship waiver
might also be granted if a family member were suffering for a life-threatening
disease for which treatment was not available in the country where
the alien was a citizen. Persons facing dramatically negative situations
due to family conditions or conditions in their home country may
consider this option.
3. THE ASYLUM
WAIVER
The foreign
residency requirement may be waived by the INS where it is determined
that the alien cannot return to his country of nationality or last
residence because of persecution he or she would be likely to encounter,
based on race, religion or political opinion.
4. THE INTERESTED
GOVERNMENT AGENCY WAIVER
An agency of
the U.S. government may write to the USIA requesting a waiver of
the foreign residency requirement for a particular alien. For instance,
the Department of Health and Human Services could write such a
letter on behalf of a scientist if it was shown that the scientist's
research might lead to a vaccine or cure for a serious disease.
If the USIA and the INS agree, and they almost invariably do, the
waiver would be granted.
Besides the
Department of Health and Human Services, the other government
agencies most likely to write such letters on behalf of IMGs
are the Veterans Administration (VA), the Appalachian Regional
Commission (ARC), the Department of Agriculture (USDA) and
the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
Since 1994,
individual states may sponsor up to 20 physicians per year
for J waivers through their departments of health. Over 30
states have established such programs.
ADJUSTMENT
OF STATUS
INS rules allow
most persons who have received a recommendation that the two-year
home residency requirement be waived by USIA to submit their J-1
waiver request simultaneously with their application for adjustment
of status with the INS.
CONCLUSION
It is very
difficult, though not impossible, to obtain a waiver of the two-year
residency requirement. Before obtaining J status, persons should
determine whether they will be subject to the residency requirement
and, if so, whether any alternative immigration status is readily
available to them.
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