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NONIMMIGRANT EMPLOYEES AT TEMPLE UNIVERSITY

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Title: NONIMMIGRANT EMPLOYEES AT TEMPLE UNIVERSITY


1
NONIMMIGRANT EMPLOYEESAT TEMPLE UNIVERSITY
  • International Student and
  • Scholar Services

2
International Student and Scholar Services (ISSS)
Contact Information
  • PHONE 215-204-7708
  • FAX 215-204-6166
  • www.temple.edu/isss
  • Staff Information
  • Martyn J. Miller, Ph.D., Senior Director
  • mjmiller_at_temple.edu 1-4682
  • Joan McGinley, Assistant Director
  • joanw_at_temple.edu 1-1272
  • Sharon Loughran, Immigration Services Specialist
  • sharonl_at_temple.edu 1-3805

3
  • U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) DHS
    combined 22 different federal departments and
    agencies into a unified, integrated cabinet
    agency in 2002 www.dhs.gov/
  • US Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS)
    Branch of DHS which has authority over all aliens
    in the US www.uscis.gov
  • US Department of Labor (DOL) Government Agency
    that has authority over Labor Condition
    Application (LCA) needed for H-1B and O-1
    Petitions /E-3 Visa www.dol.gov
  • US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Branch of
    DHS responsible for admitting internationals into
    the US www.cbp.gov
  • US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
    enforces federal laws governing border control,
    customs, trade and immigration to promote
    homeland security and public safety oversees
    SEVIS, the software system used for F and J
    students/scholars https//www.ice.gov/
  • US Department of State Authority over issuances
    of all US non-immigrant and immigrant visas
    http//travel.state.gov/content/visas/english.html

4
Application Process
  • Please ensure that all required materials are
    submitted ISD at one time (checks (if applicable)
    should be sent separately)
  • Missing information will cause unnecessary delays
    in processing of immigration documents
  • KNOW YOUR DATES! Make sure that they are the
    dates that you really want. Check with all
    parties involved PI/Faculty Mentor/Supervisor,
    International Applicant, etc

www.temple.edu/isss/international/index.html
5
ISSS DOES NOT DECIDE JOB TITLE / POSITIONS
  • Please note that ISSS does not determine job
    titles (paid/unpaid) or salaries. We are the
    final stage in facilitating the appropriate visa
    classification once the department has determined
    these factors and a prospective employee has been
    identified.
  • Departments need to work with their HR
    Generalist, the Postdoctoral Affairs Office and
    the Senior Vice Provost for Faculty Development
    and Faculty Affairs to determine the job title

6
Know the answers to these questions before
contacting ISSS
  • Is applicant currently in the US? If yes, is s/he
    already employed by TU? If so, what is the
    foreign national's immigration status? Current
    job title?
  • What Is the Highest Degree the Applicant Holds?
    Does Applicant Meet Minimum Degree Requirement
    for position?
  • Does Applicant Have the Minimum number of years
    of experience required?
  • REALISTIC Expected Start Date of appointment?
  • How long will you employ applicant? On a yearly
    basis? Permanently?
  • Foreign national's country of citizenship?
  • Has the potential employee applied for a Green
    card?
  • Does the applicant plan to travel abroad in the
    near future? (This will affect both visa timing
    and procedure)

7
Contact
  • Sharon Loughran for J-1 Scholars, H-1B Employees,
    E-3 Australian Specialty Workers and TN Temporary
    Workers.
  • Martyn Miller for an O-1 Worker
  • Joan McGinley for a J-1 Student Intern who will
    receive academic credit from a University abroad
    for research performed at TU
  • Nina Campellone regarding Post Doctoral Fellows
    and Visiting Research Scholars.
  • Faculty Affairs for information on hiring
    Faculty.
  • HR Department's HR Generalist to
    invite/appoint/hire anyone not listed above.
  • Karen Ward (University) regarding TU Sponsorship
    for a green card. Please note that ISSS is unable
    to assist with the green card process.

8
General Non-Immigrant Process
  • Pre-entry includes visa processing at a U.S.
    consulate as well as any other preliminary steps
    that occur in the US relating to the planned
    nonimmigrant activity. Some examples of other
    preliminary steps areAdmission to a school and
    issuance of a SEVIS I-20
  • Acceptance by an exchange visitor program and
    issuance of a SEVIS DS-2019
  • A U.S. employer securing the approval of an
    employment-based nonimmigrant worker petition
    (Form I-129)
  • Obtaining a Visa Stamp from a US Consulate
    Outside the US
  • Entry includes inspection and admission to the
    United States by an immigration inspector. Some
    key entry steps areOffice of Biometric Identity
    Management processing
  • Namecheck clearances
  • Review and processing of status eligibility
    documents
  • Issuance of Form I-94

9
General Non-Immigrant Process (cont)
  • Status includes compliance with the terms and
    conditions of the particular nonimmigrant
    category in which the nonimmigrant was admitted.
    Some key maintenance of status steps
    areComplying with deadlines and reporting
    requirements
  • Engaging in required activity
  • Avoiding prohibited activity
  • Exit includes satisfactory departure from the
    United States when the nonimmigrant activity is
    completed. Some key exit steps are
  • Departing the United States before the period of
    authorized admission has expired
  • Complying with any applicable exit procedures

10
Identifying nonimmigrant documents
        
  • Four types of documents are generally associated
    with nonimmigrant status
  • Passports
  • Visas
  • Enabling documents
  • I-20, DS-2019, LCA, I-797 Approval
  • I-94 cards www.cbp.gov/i94

11
VISA Stamp
  • Issued by a Consular Officer (US Department of
    State)
  • Only "used" when an alien presents her/himself to
    an immigration inspecting officer when applying
    for admission to the US. Once the alien is
    admitted to the US, the visa ceases to have a
    function until the next time the alien enters the
    US.
  • Can expire while the nonimmigrant is inside the
    U.S., with no negative effect on the person's
    nonimmigrant status.
  • Must be valid for if individual departs the US
    and wishes to return. If the visa has expired,
    the individual must obtain a new visa at a U.S.
    consular office before re-entering.
  • If an individual is admitted to the U.S. on the
    basis of one visa, and then changes status to
    another nonimmigrant status while still in the
    U.S., the only thing that has changed is the
    person's nonimmigrant status, not the person's
    visa stamp. If a person travels outside the U.S.
    after a change of status, he or she will have to
    obtain a new visa in the new category in order to
    be readmitted to the U.S. in the new status.

12
Enabling Documents
  • Enabling documents include documents like an I-20
    (issued by a designated school authorized to
    enroll F-1 students) or DS-2019 (issued by a
    designated J-1 exchange visitor program). An
    enabling document serves different purposes
  • To evidence the parameters of an alien's
    nonimmigrant status
  • To evidence eligibility to receive a nonimmigrant
    visa or be admitted to the U.S. in a nonimmigrant
    status
  • To implement changes or updates to a
    nonimmigrant's status once they hold a status.
  • Some enabling documents (like an I-20 or DS-2019)
    are issued directly to an alien by an individual
    authorized to issue them. Other enabling
    documents, such as Form I-797, are issued by
    USCIS only after USCIS has adjudicated and
    approved an official petition that was filed on
    the alien's behalf by a U.S. employer.

13
Presumption of Immigrant Intent
  • Every alien (other than a nonimmigrant described
    in subparagraph (H)(i) or (L) of Section
    101(a)(15)) shall be presumed to be an immigrant
    until he establishes to the satisfaction of the
    consular officer, at the time of application for
    a visa, and the immigration officers, at the time
    of application for admission, that he is entitled
    to a nonimmigrant status under 101(a)(15).

14
  • The way to prove you do not have immigrant intent
    is to prove that you do qualify for a
    nonimmigrant classification.
  • Nonimmigrant must
  • Have an Un-abandoned residence abroad
  • Be entitled to a particular non-immigration
    classification
  • Be admissible to the US long list of reasons
    someone might be Inadmissible like criminal
    records or contagious diseases

15
Nonimmigrant Status
  • Nonimmigrant status is a legal condition, not a
    physical thing. It is also dynamic, not static,
    which means that a person's nonimmigrant status
    must be acquired and maintained, and can be
    changed or lost. In many respects, nonimmigrant
    status is a relationship with the U.S.
    immigration system, with actions, events, and
    data in the "real" world contributing to the
    acquisition, maintenance, change, or loss of the
    nonimmigrant relationship.
  • These actions, events, and data are often
    recorded and presented in relation to one another
    in the form of
  • Documents, including immigration documents
  • Electronic records, stored in a database. Like
    documents, there can be electronic immigration
    records, such as SEVIS, CLAIMS 3, NIIS, ADIS,
    US-VISIT, CCD, and IBIS, just to name a few, and
    electronic ancillary records, such as a school's
    student database, an institution's HR database,
    etc.

16
Passports
  • Most aliens seeking admission to the US in
    nonimmigrant status must have a valid passport or
    they are ineligible for admission.
  • A passport permits its bearer to return to the
    issuing country, usually the country of the
    bearer's nationality.
  • Passport must be valid for a minimum of six
    months from the date of the expiration of the
    initial period of the alien's contemplated
    initial period of stay.

17
Visa stamps
  • Visa cost, validity, and the number of entries
    allowed on a particular visa are determined by a
    policy of reciprocity between the US and another
    country
  • Cost, validity period, and number of entries
    differ from country to country and from visa
    category to visa category. You can find out what
    the visa fees, period of validity, and number of
    entries will be by consulting the DOS Visa
    Reciprocity tables but note that the website is
    not always accurate.
  • A visa is not required for Canadian citizens to
    enter the United States in any nonimmigrant
    category except E, K, S, and V categories.
  • http//travel.state.gov/content/visas/english/fees
    /reciprocity-by-country.html

18
Visa Security Clearances
  • Fingerprint Checks - Screen a visa applicant's
    fingerprints against DHS' Automated Biometric
    Identification System (IDENT) and the FBI's
    Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification
    System (IAFIS)
  • Facial Recognition Checks - Use facial
    recognition technology to screen the photographs
    of all visa applicants against FBI watchlists as
    well as against the photos contained in DOS'
    Consular Consolidated Database (CCD).
  • CLASS Namecheck - Check the names of all visa
    applicants against the Consular Lookout and
    Support System (CLASS) database. CLASS contains
    information on persons found ineligible for
    visas, or against whom potentially derogatory
    information exists. Almost 70 percent of CLASS
    records come from other agencies.
  • CCD checks - Visa applicant's data is screened
    against the visa applicant data in the Consular
    Consolidated Database.
  • Enterprise Case Assessment Service checks - this
    platform stores fraud-related research.
  • Post information gathering - Collect information
    from all sources relevant to making their
    decision. This includes getting information
    directly from the visa applicant through
    application forms, supporting documentation, and
    personal interviews. When another post may have
    information affecting the applicant's visa
    eligibility the post considering the visa
    application may have to obtain information from
    the other post in order to complete the clearance
    process.
  • Advisory Opinions (AOs) - from the Department of
    State on questions of law and policy.
  • Security Advisory Opinions (SAOs) - through the
    Department of State regarding security and
    related grounds.

19
Security Name Checks
  • Special clearance procedures may be required if
    the consular officer has reason to believe that
    an individual may be inadmissible under INA
    212(a)(3), which establishes a basis for
    inadmissibility relating to "Security and Related
    Grounds." These grounds include activities such
    as espionage, terrorism, export of sensitive
    technology, and other activities that have been
    determined to affect the security of the US. If a
    consular officer knows, or has reasonable grounds
    to believe, that an alien falls under INA
    212(a)(3), a visa will not be issued.
  • ?The "security advisory opinion" (SAO) process is
    a multi-agency review that collects additional
    information on applicants to provide a
    recommendation to posts to issue or refuse a
    visa. SAOs are mandatory for some categories of
    visa applicants. In some situations, an SAO is
    mandatory in others, the consular officer has
    the discretion to request an SAO.

20
Mantis and Export Control Clearances
  • Inquiry and clearance procedures relating to the
    INA 212(a)(3)(A)(i)(II) ground of
    inadmissibility (concerning prohibited export
    from the US of goods, technology, or sensitive
    information) are guided by a DOS policy called
    Mantis.
  • The mantis program was developed due to law
    enforcement/ intelligence community concern that
    U.S. produced goods and information are
    vulnerable to theft...The primary program
    security objectives are
  • -To stem the proliferation of weapons of mass
    destruction and missile delivery systems
  • -Restrain the development of destabilizing
    conventional military capabilities in certain
    regions of the world
  • -Prevent the transfer of arms and sensitive
    dual-use items to terrorist states
  • -And maintain U.S. advantages in certain
    militarily critical technologies."
  • A Mantis clearance might be requested for a
    national of any country who may come within the
    purview of INA 212(a)(3)(A)(i)(II), and the
    decision to request a Mantis clearance is often
    in the discretion of the consular officer.

21
Technology Alert List (TAL)
  • Cases involving fields on the Technology Alert
    List (TAL) usually require a Mantis Security
    Advisory Opinion ?before a visa is issued. The
    most recent version of the TAL is not available
    to the public. Here are the fifteen categories
    included on the "critical fields list" in the
    last public version of the TAL before it was
    designated as "sensitive but unclassified." This
    list is provided as background only as the actual
    current TAL may now be quite different
  • Conventional Munitions
  • Nuclear Technology
  • Rocket Systems
  • Rocket System and Unmanned Air Vehicle (UAV)
    Subsystems
  • Navigation, Avionics and Flight Control Usable in
    Rocket Systems and Unmanned Air Vehicles (UAV)
  • Chemical, Biotechnology and Biomedical
    Engineering
  • Remote Sensing, Imaging and Reconnaissance
  • Advanced Computer/Microelectronic Technology
  • Materials Technology
  • Information Security
  • Laser and Directed Energy Systems Technology
  • Sensors and Sensor Technology
  • Marine Technology
  • Robotics
  • Urban Planning

22
Inspection at US Port of Entry (POE)
  • Individuals seeking admission to the US must be
    inspected in person by an immigration officer at
    an official U.S. port of entry (POE). Before
    inspection, arriving aliens are seen as
    "applicants for admission. The first level of
    inspection is called primary inspection which
    consists of a brief interview by a CBP
    immigration inspector Customs and Border
    Protection, who also examines the alien's
    immigration documents and supporting documents,
    and conducts other standard procedures. The
    inspector will ask what the alien's purpose is in
    coming to the US, look to see that the passport
    is valid and belongs to the holder, ensure that
    the visa is valid, appropriate, and belongs to
    the holder, and assess whether the supporting
    documents are valid, appropriate, and belong to
    the holder. The immigration inspector will also
    query government databases.
  • If all is in order, the immigration inspector
    will conduct OBIM biometric data collection, and
    then admit the alien to the United States.
    Primary inspections are usually fairly quick,
    lasting not much more than a couple of minutes.

23
Secondary Inspection
  • If there is a lookout that needs to be resolved,
    or if the inspector wants to have documents
    examined more carefully, needs to ask for help on
    a particular inspection, or needs to have a
    person's SEVIS record checked, the inspector may
    place the individual in a higher level of
    inspection called secondary inspection. This can
    take the form of the inspector asking the person
    to wait in a separate area until the inspector
    can complete the inspection. At larger ports of
    entry, secondary inspection takes place in a
    separate room with additional inspectors.
  • Arriving aliens may find secondary inspection
    somewhat anxiety-producing, and it may take
    significantly longer than primary inspection.
    Travelers should be advised to travel with
    complete documentation appropriate for their
    immigration classification, and to leave
    sufficient time for connecting flights or airport
    pickups to accommodate the possibility of
    secondary inspection.

24
I-94 Document
  • Form I-94 is a card on which DHS records
    important information about a particular
    admission of an alien to the US, such as the
    category the person has been admitted in and the
    duration of the person's stay.
  • Enabling documents and Form I-94 are like
    "snapshots in time" reflecting particular aspects
    of a person's status at the time of the
    documents' creation or amendment. For instance,
    someone entered as an F-1 student but changed to
    J-1 statusan I-94 may reflect F-1 status but the
    individual now holds J-1 status and will receive
    a new I-94 documenting J-1 status upon departure
    and reentry into the US

25
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26
Admission to the US
  • Nonimmigrants are admitted to the United States
    either until a specific date ("date certain"), or
    for duration of status ("D/S").
  • For most nonimmigrants, the expiration of the
    period of authorized stay is recorded on Form
    I-94 (paper or electronic). Such an I-94 is said
    to be "date certain." Generally speaking, that
    date is the date by which the individual must
    either leave the United States or have applied
    for an extension or change of status.
  • Aliens should be encouraged to examine the date
    expiration date stamped on their I-94 each time
    they enter the US to avoid inadvertently staying
    beyond their period of authorized admission.

27
  • The B-1 category is appropriate for aliens who
    wish to come to the United States to engage in
    temporary commercial, business, or professional
    activities related to their employment or
    business abroad, provided that the U.S. activity
    does not constitute "employment" in the U.S.
  • 22 C.F.R. 41.31(b)(1) The term "business," as
    used in INA 101(a)(15)(B), refers to conventions,
    conferences, consultations and other legitimate
    activities of a commercial or professional
    nature. It does not include local employment or
    labor for hire.

28
  • The State Department Foreign Affairs Manual (FAM)
    contains an example of what is NOT local
    employment "The clearest legal definition comes
    from the decision of the Board of Immigration
    Appeals in Matter of Hira, affirmed by the
    Attorney General. Hira involved a tailor
    measuring customers in the United States for
    suits to be manufactured and shipped from outside
    the United States. The decision stated that this
    was an appropriate B-1 activity, because the
    principal place of business and the actual place
    of accrual of profits, if any, was in the foreign
    country."

29
B-1/2 Tourist Visa Almost Always Inappropriate
for Researchers
  • In general, ISSS recommends that non-employee
    individuals from abroad who will come to Temple
    to engage in research, lecture, etc. should enter
    the US as a J-1 Exchange Visitor. Our office has
    seen too many instances of individuals being
    turned away at the border when they try to enter
    with B-1/B-2 (Tourist) or WB/WT (Visa Waiver)
    status.
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