This is the second in
a series of articles on immigration terminology.
This article will cover terms and ideas that expand upon the
basic vocabulary of an immigration attorney.
Alien Labor
Certification – Certification by the U.S. Department of Labor
that there is an insufficient number of
U.S.
workers who are able, willing, qualified, and immediately available at
the place of proposed employment.
The certification also provides that employment of the alien
seeking certification will not adversely affect the wages and working
conditions of
U.S.
workers similarly employed.
Alien Registration
Receipt Card – The official name used in immigration law for a
green card.
Attestation
– Sworn statements that employers must make to the U.S. Department
of Labor before being able to bring foreign workers to the
United States
. These statements may be
that the employer is trying to hire more Americans, or simply be that
foreign workers will be paid the same as
U.S.
workers.
Diversity Visa
(the "green card lottery") – Generic name given to the
immigrant visa lottery program established by the Immigration Act of
1990 that makes available up to 50,000 immigrant visas per federal
fiscal year to persons from low-admission states and low-admission
regions. The Diversity
USA (DV) program is administered by the U.S. Department of State,
which established the rules for the lottery and tracks the available
visa numbers.
I-94 card –
A card given to all nonimmigrants when they enter the U.S to serve as
evidence that a nonimmigrant has entered the country legally.
Before the I-94 card is handed out, it is stamped with a date
indicating how long the nonimmigrant may stay for that trip.
It is this date, not the expiration date of the visa, that
controls how long a nonimmigrant can remain in the
U.S.
Each time a nonimmigrant
legally enters the
U.S.
, he or she receives a new I-94 card with a new date.
Inadmissible
– Potential immigrants who are disqualified from obtaining visas or
green cards because they are judged by the U.S. government to be in
some way undesirable are called inadmissible (formerly
“excludable”). Most
of these individuals are inadmissible because they have criminal
records, certain health problems, commit certain criminal acts, are
thought to be subversive, or are unable to support themselves
financially.
Parole –
Under certain circumstances, a person may be allowed to enter the
U.S.
for humanitarian purposes, even when he or she does not meet the
technical visa requirements. Those
who are allowed to come to the
U.S.
without a visa in this manner are granted parole, and are known as
parolees. Advance Parole
may be granted to a person who is already in the
U.S.
but needs to leave temporarily, and return without a visa.
This is the most common when someone has a green card
application in process and must leave the
U.S.
for an emergency or on business.
Permanent Resident
– A permanent resident is a non-U.S. citizen who has been given
permission to live permanently in the
U.S.
If you acquire permanent
residence, you will be issued a green card; therefore, the terms
permanent resident and green card holder are synonymous.
As a permanent resident, you may travel as much as you like,
but your place of residence must be in the
U.S.
and you must keep that resident on a permanent basis.
Priority Date –The
date on which you first entered the immigration application process is
called the Priority Date. Since
only a limited number of green cards are issued each year, you must
wait your turn behind the others who have filed ahead of you.
Your Priority Date marks your place in the waiting line.
Each month the U.S. Department of State makes green cards
available to all those who applied on or before a certain priority
date. You can get a green
card only when your date comes up on the DOS list.
Quota –
Certain categories of qualified green card applicants are allowed into
the
U.S.
in unlimited numbers. Certain
other categories are restricted by a quota.
Approximately 400,000 green cards can be issued each year under
the quota, with no more than 25,000 going to applicants from any one
country. If there are
more green card applicants than there are green cards allocated under
the quota each year, a backlog is created and applicants must wait
their turns. It is
because of the quota that it can often take years to get a green card.
Removal
Proceedings – Removal (formerly “deportation”) Proceedings
are carried on before a special immigration judge to decide whether or
not an immigrant will be allowed to enter or remain in the country.
While a person typically cannot be expelled without first going
through a removal hearing, someone arriving at the border or a port of
entry can be forced to leave without a hearing or ever seeing a judge.
Temporary
Protected Status (TPS) – A temporary protected status is for
persons already in the
U.S.
who came from certain countries experiencing conditions of war or
natural disasters. TPS
allows someone to live and work in the
U.S.
for a period of not less than six months or no more than 18 months,
but it does not lead to a green card.
TPS is presently available to persons from
Burundi
,
Nicaragua
,
El Salvador
,
Sierra Leone
,
Honduras
,
Somalia
,
Liberia
,
Sudan
, and
Montserrat
.
Visa
Waiver Program - The
Visa Waiver Program (VWP) allows foreign nationals from certain
countries to be admitted to the
U.S.
under limited conditions and for a limited time without obtaining a
visa. The VWP permits
nationals from designated countries to apply for admission to the
United States
for ninety (90) days or less as nonimmigrant visitors for business or
pleasure without first obtaining a nonimmigrant visa.
The following countries are presently participants in this
program:
Andorra
,
Austria
,
Australia
,
Belgium
,
Brunei
,
Denmark
,
Finland
,
France
,
Germany
,
Iceland
,
Ireland
,
Italy
,
Japan
,
Liechtenstein
,
Luxembourg
,
Monaco
, the
Netherlands
,
New Zealand
,
Norway
,
Portugal
,
San Marino
,
Singapore
,
Slovenia
,
Spain
,
Sweden
,
Switzerland
, and The United Kingdom.