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Re: J-1- Waiver for "2 year

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Re: J-1- Waiver for "2 year

From: Fabia Gozzo <click for textversion of email address >
Date: 20 May 1997 13:48:34 -0700

                      RE>J-1: Waiver for "2 year home residency 5/20/97

Hi All,

I will add few practical pieces of information to Andreas' list which might
be useful.
 I obtained a waiver approximately a year ago going from a J1 to an H1B visa
and now I am getting a green card.

1) I have being also told that the time necessary to get a waiver was 5-6
months, but it took only 1 month and a half. Aline Cossy had the same
experience in a different period of the year. Of course, two cases are not a
good statistics, but if things are done correctly, it does not take so long.

2) For obtaining the "no objection agreement" from the Swiss Embassy, I would
suggest to contact directly Patricia at the direct number 202-7457947. She is
very knowledgeable on the subject, very efficient and has some right
connections with the US Information Agency, so she can help speed up or keep
track of the process if needed. In my case, it was not necessary, but she
told me she could have done that. Also, she took one day to right that "no
objection" agreement letter.

3) Try to justify as better as you can the request of a waiver and specify
the importance of having that waiver for a certain deadline. A letter from
the company or professor who is offering you a position which requires a
status adjustment would help a lot.

4) When you ask a waiver, you cannot get a J1 visa anymore, you go to an H
visa or directly for a green card.

Good luck

Fabia Gozzo

--------------------------------------
Date: 5/18/97 11:00 PM
To: Fabia Gozzo
From: BILL, Andreas
                                                Mai 1997
Hi everybody!

As you know, most swiss coming to the US with a J-1 visa are subject to a
2 year home residency requirement. There is a possibility to obtain a
waiver of this requirement. Being in process of doing so, I have some
practical informations for those who want to do the same.

Before all, remember two important points. According to my informations:

A) You need to obtain the waiver EVEN IF you received a green card
   (through the lottery for example).

B) The swiss embassy and USIA (United States Information Agency) needed
   about 2 months to send their recommendation to the INS (Immigration and
   Naturalization service). The latter needs 90 DAYS to give its final
answer!
   So YOU NEED ABOUT 5 MONTHS TO OBTAIN THE WAIVER!!

Given that, here is how it works:

1) You need a "no objection statement" from the Swiss embassy in
   Washington. For this you have to contact the embassy

                2900 Cathedrale Av. N.W.
                Washington D.C. 20008-3499
                Tel (202) 745-7900
                Fax (202) 387-2564
                (business hours: Mo-Fr 9am-12pm ...)

   They will send you a data sheet to be completed and returned to the
   embassy. In addition, you need to enclose:
                - Letter in which you state that you are not required to
                  return to CH. (my experience is that one sentence is enough)
                - Photocopies of the first five pages, the J-1 page and the
                  stamped page (from the US embassy were you obtained the J-1)
                  of your passport.

  The only information on the data sheet that is not easy to find is,
  under point 4, the name of the Immigration Service Center to which
  the recommendation should be sent. For California it is:
                Western Service Center
                Immigration and Naturalization Service
                Post Office Box 30111
                Laguna Niguel, CA 92677-8111

2) The Swiss Embassy will send to the USIA a "no objection statement"
   and send you a copy of it.
   You have to pay (via a check payable to the Embassy of Switzerland)
   $90.- "for their efforts done on your behalf"...

3) You will receive a letter from USIA stating that they are working on
   your case. Then you will get a copy of their recommendation for the
   INS. I was told that if the recommendation is positive, there should
   be no reason not to obtain the waiver from INS (we'll see...).

4) The INS will send you a letter stating that they received your
   application via USIA and that they need " 89 to 90 days..." to answer.

5) You call and wait and call and wait and...

If you need it for this year, you should immediately begin!

Need anything? Do you have more information? Write to the Swiss-list...

Good luck and my best regards,

Andreas Bill

-------------------------------
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab.
1 cyclotron road, MS 62-203
Berkeley, CA 94720, USA

Tel : +1-510-486-6991
FAX : +1-510-486-5401
e-mail: abill_at_lbl.gov
-------------------------------

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Received on Tue Mar 11 1997 - 12:07:51 PST

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