|
INFORMATION
The following is a summary of information provided courtesy
of the U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Consular Affairs.
For additional information, please contact the closest U.S. Embassy
or Consulate. You may also want to confer with an attorney practicing
immigration law.
CATEGORIES
The Immigration and Nationality Act provides a yearly minimum
of 140,000 employment-based immigrant visas which are divided
into five preference categories. They may require a labor certification
from the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), and the filing of a
petition with the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS).
EMPLOYMENT FIRST PREFERENCE (E1)
Priority Workers receive 28.6 percent of the yearly world-wide
limit. All Priority Workers must be the beneficiaries of an approved
Form I-140, Immigrant Petition for Foreign Worker, filed with
INS. Within this preference there are three sub-groups:
Persons of extraordinary ability in the sciences, arts, education,
business, or athletics. Applicants in this category must have
extensive documentation showing sustained national or international
acclaim and recognition in the field of expertise. Such applicants
do not have to have a specific job offer so long as they are
entering the U.S. to continue work in the field in which they
have extraordinary ability. Such applicants can file their own
petition with the INS, rather than through an employer.
Outstanding professors and researchers with at least three years
experience in teaching or research, who are recognized internationally.
No labor certification is required for this classification, but
the prospective employer must provide a job offer and file a
petition with the INS; and
Certain executives and managers who have been employed at least
one of the three preceding years by the overseas affiliate, parent,
subsidiary, or branch of the U.S. employer. The applicant must
be coming to work in a managerial or executive capacity. No labor
certification is required for this classification, but the prospective
employer must provide a job offer and file a petition with the
INS.
EMPLOYMENT SECOND PREFERENCE (E2)
Professionals Holding Advance Degrees, or Persons of Exceptional
Ability in the Arts, Sciences, or Business receive 28.6 percent
of the yearly worldwide limit, plus any unused Employment First
Preference visas. All Second Preference applicants must have
a labor certification approved by the DOL, or Schedule A designation,
or establish that they qualify for one of the shortage occupations
in the Labor Market Information Pilot Program. A job offer is
required and the U.S. employer must file a petition on behalf
of the applicant. Aliens may apply for exemption form the job
offer and labor certification if the exemption would be in the
national interest, in which case the alien may file the petition,
Form I-140, along with evidence of the national interest. There
are two subgroups within the category:
Professionals hold an advance degree (beyond a baccalaureate
degree), or a baccalaureate degree and at least five years progressive
experience in the profession; and
Persons with exceptional ability in the arts, sciences, or business.
Exceptional ability means having a degree of expertise significantly
above that ordinarily encountered within the field.
EMPLOYMENT THIRD PREFERENCE (E3)
Skilled Workers, Professionals Holding Baccalaureate Degrees
and Other Workers received 28.6 percent of the yearly worldwide
limit, plus any unused Employment First and Second Preference
visas. All Third Preference applicants require an approved I-140
petition filed by the prospective employer. All such workers
require a labor certification, or Schedule A designation, or
evidence that they qualify for one of the shortage occupations
in the Labor Market Information Pilot Program. There are three
subgroups within this category:
Skilled workers are persons capable of performing a job requiring
at least two years' training or experience;
Professionals with a baccalaureate degree are members of a profession
with at least a university bachelor's degree; and
Other workers are those persons capable of filling positions
requiring less than two years' training or experience.
EMPLOYMENT FOURTH PREFERENCE (E4)
Special Immigrants receive 7.1 percent of the yearly worldwide
limit. All such applicants must be the beneficiary of an approved
I-360, Petition for Special Immigrant, except overseas employees
of the U.S. Government who must use Form DS-1884. There are six
subgroups:
Religious workers coming to carry on the vocation of a minister
of religion, or to work in a professional capacity in a religious
vocation, or to work for a tax-exempt organization affiliated
with a religious denomination;
Certain overseas employees of the U.S. Government;
Former employees of the Panama Canal Company;
Retired employees of international organizations;
Certain dependents of international organization employees; and
Certain members of the U.S. Armed Forces.
EMPLOYMENT FIFTH PREFERENCE (E-5)
Employment Creation Investors receive 7.1 percent of the yearly
worldwide limit. All applicants must file a Form I-526, Immigrant
Petition by Alien Entrepreneur, with the INS. To qualify, an
alien must invest between USD $500,000 and $1,000,000, depending
on the employment rate in the geographical area, in a commercial
enterprise in the United States which creates at least 10 new
full-time jobs for U.S. citizens, permanent resident aliens,
or other lawful immigrants, not including the investor and his
or her family.
Also visit Immigrant Investor Visas page for a
more detailed explanation.
|