Many people who come
to the US as J-1 Exchange Visitors are subject to a requirement that
precludes them from changing to many other major non-immigrant visa
categories or adjusting to permanent resident status unless they have
spent two years after completing their stays in J-1 status in their
home country, or country of last permanent residence.
The IAP-66 Form or
SEVIS Form DS-2019 issued by a J-1 program sponsor provides for a
consular or immigration official to make a preliminary determination
regarding the applicability of the home residency requirement.
This determination may also be stamped or written next to the
visa stays in the passport. Note,
however, that this determination is only preliminary and should not
necessarily be relied on without carefully reviewing with an attorney
whether the J-1 visa holder falls into one of three exclusion
categories.
Am I subject to
the home residency requirement?
Three categories of
J-1 visa holders are subject to the home residency requirement.
The first category is for J-1s whose field of training and
expertise appears on a Skills List maintained by the State Department.
The list is periodically revised by the State Department (most
recently on March 17, 1997) and includes countries where various
skills are in short supply. Most
industrialized countries do not appear on the Skills List.
A J-1 visitor is subject to the home residency requirement if
his skill was on the Skills List at the time the J-1 entered the US,
even if the skill is later removed.
J-1 s who receive
funding either from their home government or a US government agency
for participating in their J-1 program are also subject to the home
residency requirement. Any
amount of funding triggers the requirements.
Financing includes monetary payments, even in the form of
loans, as well as other forms of financial aid such as covering
expenses for tuition, books, insurance, etc.
Finally, any J-1 who
enters the US to receive "graduate medical education or
training" is subject to the two-year home residency requirement.
Such education or training includes residency or fellowship
programs involving health care services to patients.
Programs involving observing, consulting, researching or
teaching with no patient care are not considered "medical
education or training." The
Educational Commission on Foreign Medical Graduates sponsors J-1
medical education or training programs.
Am I eligible for
a Waiver?
Waivers of the home
residency requirement are available in a few situations:
- the
requirement would result in exceptional hardship to a US citizen
or permanent resident alien spouse or child,
- the
requirement will result in persecution to the alien on the basis
of race, religion or political opinion,
- the
alien's home country government indicates no objection to the
alien's remaining in the US (it is important to note that
physicians cannot obtain a waiver with this method), or
- an
interested government agency recommends the waiver as being in the
national interest.
In order to
demonstrate exceptional hardship to a US citizen or permanent resident
spouse or child, the J-1 might try and document medical hardship,
persecution of the US citizen or permanent resident if they go to the
J-1's home country, as well as other unusual hardships.
Lesser hardships such as spousal separation, separation from
children and language problems by themselves may not be enough to
prove hardship. Rather,
the totality of hardship must be measured.
A greater degree of hardship must be found in cases involving
foreign medical graduates or those receiving U.S. government funding. Also,
the hardship must arise both upon a separation of family members or if
the family is together in the J-1's home country.
A waiver is available
if the J-1 will face persecution in his or her home country due to
race, religion or political opinion. The
criteria are similar to asylum claims.
However, the burden of proof in a persecution-based waiver
claim is higher than for an asylum claim.
Consequently, most people pursue asylum applications rather
than a J-1 waiver based on persecution.
Furthermore, asylum claims usually lead to permanent residency
status while this is often not true for a J-1 waiver.
One instance where a persecution-based waiver may be favored is
when an asylum claim is unavailable due to the applicant waiting
longer than a year after entering to apply.
Waivers may be
granted if a J-1 visa holder obtains a "no objection" letter
from the exchange visitor's country of nationality or last permanent
residence. The "no
objection" letter is a formal, diplomatic statement from the home
country to the State Department.
Most foreign embassies in Washington have officials designated
to handle these statements. The
procedures vary widely from country to country and may take up to a
year or more. Note that a
"no objection" letter is not a basis for a waiver when the
exchange visitor came to the US to receive "graduate medical
education or training."
A statement from a US
government agency to the State Department that the granting of a
waiver would be in the public interest and that two years of home
residency would jeopardize the agency's interests is a basis for a
waiver. This is usually
available if the agency employs the J-1, but an agency may request a
waiver even if it does not employ that individual.
Waivers are almost always granted in these cases.
One exception would be in the case of funding from an agency
like the Fulbright Commission of U.S.A.I.D.
A statement from a US
government agency to the State Department that the granting of a
waiver would be in the public interest and that two years of home
residency would jeopardize the agency's interests is a basis for a
waiver. This is usually available if the agency employs the J-1, but
an agency may request a waiver even if it does not employ that
individual. Waivers are almost always granted in these cases. One
exception might be in the case of funding from an agency like the
USAID.