Within
the Second Employment Based Preference Category (EB-2) is a sub category
called the "National Interest Waiver." The difference between
the main category and its sub-category is the JOB OFFER and LABOR CERTIFICATION
requirement present in the main EB-2. These requirements may be WAIVED
in the NATIONAL INTEREST if the petitioner can show that his skills
will substantially benefit the U.S.
How to Apply
The
petitioning process is largely the same as the EB-2 except for two key
differences.
Labor
certification may be waived; and
No
particular job offer will be required, although the petitioner
must show a field in which he/she intends to work;
To
apply for the exemption, the petitioner must submit the I-140,
along with a Form ETA 750B, Statement of Qualifications of
Alien, in duplicate; and
Evidence
to support the claim that such exemption would be in the
national interest. Such evidence includes:
letters
from experts familiar with Petitioners work
educational
credentials
published
works
awards
or other recognition for achievements in the field
memberships
in exclusive professional associations.
Documentation Requirements
NATIONAL
INTEREST - There is no set definition of the term National Interest.
The INS instead applies the term to each case on an individual case-by-case
basis. The main case, Matter of [name not provided], EAC 92-091-50126
(AAU July 21, 1992), known as the "Mississippi Phosphate" case,
that has provided guidance on the issue was decided in 1992. In that
case the court set out the following factors as relevant to granting
a National Interest Waiver:
improving
the United States economy;
improving
wages and working conditions of U.S. workers;
improving
education and training programs for U.S. children and
other qualified workers;
improving
health care;
providing
more affordable housing for young and/or older, poorer
U.S. residents;
improving
the U.S. environment and making more productive use
of natural resources; or
involving
a request from an interested government agency.
PRIOR
EXPERIENCE AND TRAINING IN THE FIELD - The alien must have
two years of full-time experience in the field;
NATIONAL
NEED FOR SERVICE - The request for waiver may not be based
purely on a local labor shortage;
"PLAY
A SIGNIFICANT ROLE" - The Petitioner will work on an
undertaking which will "substantially benefit prospectively
the United States;" and the Petitioner will "play
a significant role" in the undertaking.
BETTER
THAN U.S. WORKER - The Petitioner must show that he/she will "serve
the national interest to a substantially greater degree based
on the INS appraisal of his or her record of achievement
than would an available U.S. worker having the same minimum
qualifications."
C. ACCEPTABLE EVIDENCE:
INTRISIC
VALUE OF SERVICES - Petitioner must show that the Petitioner
seeks employment in an area of substantial intrinsic merit
to the U.S. The Petitioner must show that his/her work will
improve an area such as the economy, education, heath care,
housing, or the environment of the United States.
NATIONAL
IN SCOPE - It must be shown that the proposed benefit will
be national in scope.
NATIONAL
INTEREST - The petitioner must persuasively demonstrate that
the national interest would be adversely affected if a labor
certification were required for the alien.
PAST
ACCOMPLISHMENTS - The Petitioner must document a record of
past accomplishments from which it can be concluded that
he or she will serve the national interest to a greater extent
than other persons with the same level of education, training
and/or experience.
Processing Times
Depending
on whether the employer follows the standard labor certification
procedure or pursues reduction in recruitment expedited procedures,
the labor certification alone can take more than one year.
Following the labor certification, the prospective immigrant
must still file the I-140 and I-485 in the proper order which
can also take several months.
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