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V visa

The V visa was a temporary visa available to spouses and minor children (unmarried, under 21) of U.S. lawful permanent residents (LPR, also known as green card holders). It allowed permanent residents to achieve family unity with their spouses and children while the immigration process took its course. It was created by the Legal Immigration Family Equity Act of 2000.[1] The Act is to relieve those who applied for immigrant visas on or before December 21, 2000. Practically, the V visa is currently not available to spouses and minor children of LPRs who have applied after December 21, 2000.

Background edit

A permanent resident is a person who has been granted the right to reside permanently in the U.S. He/She is authorized to work and gains the right to become a U.S. citizen if he/she meets certain criteria.

The permanent resident is known as the sponsor of the immigrant visa petition while the spouse/child is known as the beneficiary.

A permanent resident who marries a non-U.S. citizen or permanent resident after getting his/her green card needs to file a Form I-130 (Petition for Alien Relative)[2] with the USCIS. Once the I-130 is approved, the beneficiary needs to wait for an F2A immigrant visa. The F2A immigrant visa is heavily backlogged because only around 90,000 visas are available each year and demand exceeds supply. The current processing delays for the I-130 can be viewed at the USCIS website.[3] The current backlog for F2A visas is updated each month. The date is available in the Visa Bulletin[4] posted on the State Department's web site.

While waiting for the I-130 to be approved or the F2A visa to become available, the beneficiary may visit the U.S. on B-2 visa (maximum 90 or 180 days stay) or under the Visa Waiver Program (VWP, maximum 90 days stay). However, in many cases, application for the B-2 visa or entry under the VWP is denied. Even once allowed a short-visit to the U.S., it cannot be repeated many times. Basically, the beneficiary cannot live or study in the U.S. until obtaining approval of an immigrant visa by a U.S. embassy or consulate outside of the U.S. This is because the visitor and student visas (or the VWP) require demonstration of non-immigrant intent. By definition, the spouse/child of a permanent resident cannot demonstrate non-immigrant intent.

The permanent resident, on the other hand, cannot be away from the U.S. for long periods. Doing so can be considered abandonment of permanent resident status.

This situation often separates the permanent resident from his/her spouse/child. These days, it takes 4–5 years[5] before family unity can be achieved.

V visa edit

The V visa was available to those beneficiaries who satisfy the following conditions:

1. An immigrant petition (I-130) must have been filed by the sponsor for the beneficiary on or before December 21, 2000.

2. The beneficiary must have been waiting for at least three years since the time the I - 130 was filed.

The V visa was available regardless of whether the beneficiary is waiting for the I-130 to be approved or for an F2A visa. With this visa, the nuclear family can achieve unity in the U.S. The spouse can work and the child can go to school. International travel is permitted. The V visa remains valid as long as the underlying immigrant petition is valid.

While the V visa is still available to those who satisfy the conditions, it is effectively no longer useful since the sunset date was December 21, 2000. Those who missed this deadline have no relief. Approximately 1,000,000 spouses/minor children of the lawful permanent residents are standing in the waiting line of 5–6 years for immigrant visas without being allowed to live with their spouses/parents in the U.S.

Family unity in other non-immigrant and immigrant categories edit

U.S. non-immigrants (students, specialty workers, intracompany transferees) do not have this kind of problem. Their spouses/minor children qualify for dependent visas. There are no numerical limits or processing delays associated with dependent visas.

Most U.S. citizens do not experience major delays either. While U.S. citizens have to file I-130 applications for their spouses/minor children, they do not have to wait for immigrant visas. If the process takes too long, they can apply for K visas. Even without having to wait for an immigrant visa, the entire process typically takes at least one year and often as much as three years. This is caused by USCIS (6-10mo), NVC (1-4mo), and Consular (1-6mo) processing times.

Under current law it is only permanent residents whose spouses/minor children must wait many years to be admitted.[6]

Legislation edit

Bills have been introduced in previous sessions of Congress to address this issue. H.R. 1823[7] (109th Congress) addresses this head-on by reinstating the V visa. S.1919[8] (also 109th Congress) reclassifies spouses and children of permanent residents as immediate relatives. This classification removes the numerical limits on the number of immigrant visas available to them. Other bills offered partial solutions to the problem. However, with a new session of Congress that began in January 2007, these bills have lapsed. New bills would have to be introduced for any relief.

Most other developed nations do not separate nuclear families. Canada, for example, expedites family unity petitions.[citation needed]

Statistics edit

Number of visas issued by year edit

The first V visas were issued in Fiscal Year 2001, after the LIFE Act became law. In the table below, the years are Fiscal Years, so for instance the year 2009 refers to the period from October 1, 2008 to September 30, 2009.[9] Note that this only counts V visas issued at embassies and consulates outside the United States, and does not include people who changed nonimmigrant status to V status within the United States.

The significance of the V visa has declined over time, because it applies only to people who had filed Form I-130 petitions on or before December 21, 2000. The most recent V visas were issued in Fiscal Year 2007.

Fiscal Year Number of V-1 visas issued Number of V-2 visas issued Number of V-3 visas issued Total
2001 9,127 14,805 1,400 25,332
2002 18,020 19,523 19,567 57,110
2003 13,983 12,918 16,302 43,203
2004 6,896 7,217 6,856 20,969
2005 911 951 1,165 3,027
2006 166 133 281 580
2007 30 23 51 104

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . US Citizenship and Immigration Services. Archived from the original on 2005-12-21. Retrieved 2007-05-01.
  2. ^ (PDF). US Citizenship and Immigration Services. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-04-06. Retrieved 2007-05-01.
  3. ^ "Case Status Service Online". US Citizenship and Immigration Services. Retrieved 2007-05-01.
  4. ^ . Bureau of Consular Affairs, US Department of State. Archived from the original on 2007-02-23. Retrieved 2012-12-12.
  5. ^ Visa Bulletin U.S. Department of State
  6. ^ Written Testimony of Stephen H. Legomsky, John S. Lehmann University Professor, Washington University School of Law. Before the United States House of Representatives, Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, Refugees, Border Security, and International Law. Oversight Hearing on the Shortfalls of the 1986 Immigration Reform Legislation, April 19, 2007.
  7. ^ H.R.1823 To amend the Immigration and Nationality Act to extend the provisions governing nonimmigrant status for spouses and children of permanent resident aliens awaiting the availability of an immigrant visa, and for other purposes. House of Representatives, 109th Congress.
  8. ^ S.1919 2016-07-04 at the Wayback Machine Immigrant Accountability Act of 2005. A bill to amend the Immigration and Nationality Act in order to reunify families, to provide for earned adjustment of status, and for other purposes. Senate, 109th Congress.
  9. ^ "Non-immigrant visa statistics". United States Department of State. Retrieved January 29, 2017.

External links edit

  • Legal Immigration Family Equity (LIFE) Act (USCIS)
  • V Visa Regulation (Federal Register: September 7, 2001 [Volume 66, Number 174])
  • INS Implements ‘V’ Nonimmigrant Provision of the LIFE Act (INS News Release, September 7, 2001)
  • How Do I Become a V-Nonimmigrant? (USCIS)
  • Nonimmigrant (V) Visa for Spouse and Children of a Lawful Permanent Resident (LPR) (US Department of State)
  • Bills
    • H.R.1823 To amend the Immigration and Nationality Act to extend the provisions governing nonimmigrant status for spouses and children of permanent resident aliens awaiting the availability of an immigrant visa, and for other purposes.
    • S.1919 2016-07-04 at the Wayback Machine Immigrant Accountability Act of 2005: A bill to amend the Immigration and Nationality Act in order to reunify families, to provide for earned adjustment of status, and for other purposes.
  • UniteFamilies.org — a not-for-profit, volunteer-run group that advocates changing the immigration laws to remedy this situation.
  • Yahoo! Groups: unitefamilies - Unite LPRs with their families
  • b2bhandshake's Diary
  • News Articles/Opinions
    • A Family's Wait for U.S. Visas Spans Generations (Jennifer Ludden, NPR)
    • Laws could help unite immigrant families. Green card carriers have hardest time visiting spouses (Cicero A. Estrella, San Francisco Chronicle)
    • Families pay price of faulty policies (Jeff Jacoby, Boston Globe)
    • Immigrants forced to wait longer for family to join them (Suzanne Gamboa, Associated Press)
    • Congress should be concerned about the legal immigrants, too. (Ricardo Lu, Opinion, Tennessean)
    • Joined by Love, Separated by Immigration Laws (Ekaterina Atanasova, Letter to the Editor, Washington Post)
    • Preston, Julia (2007-05-24). "As Law Is Renegotiated, Immigrant Families Are on Edge". New York Times. Retrieved 2007-05-24.

visa, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, remove, this, message, until. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met October 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information April 2024 This article may require copy editing for grammar style cohesion tone or spelling You can assist by editing it April 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message The V visa was a temporary visa available to spouses and minor children unmarried under 21 of U S lawful permanent residents LPR also known as green card holders It allowed permanent residents to achieve family unity with their spouses and children while the immigration process took its course It was created by the Legal Immigration Family Equity Act of 2000 1 The Act is to relieve those who applied for immigrant visas on or before December 21 2000 Practically the V visa is currently not available to spouses and minor children of LPRs who have applied after December 21 2000 Contents 1 Background 2 V visa 3 Family unity in other non immigrant and immigrant categories 4 Legislation 5 Statistics 5 1 Number of visas issued by year 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksBackground editA permanent resident is a person who has been granted the right to reside permanently in the U S He She is authorized to work and gains the right to become a U S citizen if he she meets certain criteria The permanent resident is known as the sponsor of the immigrant visa petition while the spouse child is known as the beneficiary A permanent resident who marries a non U S citizen or permanent resident after getting his her green card needs to file a Form I 130 Petition for Alien Relative 2 with the USCIS Once the I 130 is approved the beneficiary needs to wait for an F2A immigrant visa The F2A immigrant visa is heavily backlogged because only around 90 000 visas are available each year and demand exceeds supply The current processing delays for the I 130 can be viewed at the USCIS website 3 The current backlog for F2A visas is updated each month The date is available in the Visa Bulletin 4 posted on the State Department s web site While waiting for the I 130 to be approved or the F2A visa to become available the beneficiary may visit the U S on B 2 visa maximum 90 or 180 days stay or under the Visa Waiver Program VWP maximum 90 days stay However in many cases application for the B 2 visa or entry under the VWP is denied Even once allowed a short visit to the U S it cannot be repeated many times Basically the beneficiary cannot live or study in the U S until obtaining approval of an immigrant visa by a U S embassy or consulate outside of the U S This is because the visitor and student visas or the VWP require demonstration of non immigrant intent By definition the spouse child of a permanent resident cannot demonstrate non immigrant intent The permanent resident on the other hand cannot be away from the U S for long periods Doing so can be considered abandonment of permanent resident status This situation often separates the permanent resident from his her spouse child These days it takes 4 5 years 5 before family unity can be achieved V visa editThe V visa was available to those beneficiaries who satisfy the following conditions 1 An immigrant petition I 130 must have been filed by the sponsor for the beneficiary on or before December 21 2000 2 The beneficiary must have been waiting for at least three years since the time the I 130 was filed The V visa was available regardless of whether the beneficiary is waiting for the I 130 to be approved or for an F2A visa With this visa the nuclear family can achieve unity in the U S The spouse can work and the child can go to school International travel is permitted The V visa remains valid as long as the underlying immigrant petition is valid While the V visa is still available to those who satisfy the conditions it is effectively no longer useful since the sunset date was December 21 2000 Those who missed this deadline have no relief Approximately 1 000 000 spouses minor children of the lawful permanent residents are standing in the waiting line of 5 6 years for immigrant visas without being allowed to live with their spouses parents in the U S Family unity in other non immigrant and immigrant categories editU S non immigrants students specialty workers intracompany transferees do not have this kind of problem Their spouses minor children qualify for dependent visas There are no numerical limits or processing delays associated with dependent visas Most U S citizens do not experience major delays either While U S citizens have to file I 130 applications for their spouses minor children they do not have to wait for immigrant visas If the process takes too long they can apply for K visas Even without having to wait for an immigrant visa the entire process typically takes at least one year and often as much as three years This is caused by USCIS 6 10mo NVC 1 4mo and Consular 1 6mo processing times Under current law it is only permanent residents whose spouses minor children must wait many years to be admitted 6 Legislation editBills have been introduced in previous sessions of Congress to address this issue H R 1823 7 109th Congress addresses this head on by reinstating the V visa S 1919 8 also 109th Congress reclassifies spouses and children of permanent residents as immediate relatives This classification removes the numerical limits on the number of immigrant visas available to them Other bills offered partial solutions to the problem However with a new session of Congress that began in January 2007 these bills have lapsed New bills would have to be introduced for any relief Most other developed nations do not separate nuclear families Canada for example expedites family unity petitions citation needed Statistics editNumber of visas issued by year edit The first V visas were issued in Fiscal Year 2001 after the LIFE Act became law In the table below the years are Fiscal Years so for instance the year 2009 refers to the period from October 1 2008 to September 30 2009 9 Note that this only counts V visas issued at embassies and consulates outside the United States and does not include people who changed nonimmigrant status to V status within the United States The significance of the V visa has declined over time because it applies only to people who had filed Form I 130 petitions on or before December 21 2000 The most recent V visas were issued in Fiscal Year 2007 Fiscal Year Number of V 1 visas issued Number of V 2 visas issued Number of V 3 visas issued Total 2001 9 127 14 805 1 400 25 332 2002 18 020 19 523 19 567 57 110 2003 13 983 12 918 16 302 43 203 2004 6 896 7 217 6 856 20 969 2005 911 951 1 165 3 027 2006 166 133 281 580 2007 30 23 51 104See also editFamily reunificationReferences edit Immigration through Legal Immigration Family Equity Act LIFE of 2000 US Citizenship and Immigration Services Archived from the original on 2005 12 21 Retrieved 2007 05 01 Petition for Alien Relative Form I 130 PDF US Citizenship and Immigration Services Archived from the original PDF on 2007 04 06 Retrieved 2007 05 01 Case Status Service Online US Citizenship and Immigration Services Retrieved 2007 05 01 Visa Bulletins Bureau of Consular Affairs US Department of State Archived from the original on 2007 02 23 Retrieved 2012 12 12 Visa Bulletin U S Department of State Written Testimony of Stephen H Legomsky John S Lehmann University Professor Washington University School of Law Before the United States House of Representatives Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration Citizenship Refugees Border Security and International Law Oversight Hearing on the Shortfalls of the 1986 Immigration Reform Legislation April 19 2007 H R 1823 To amend the Immigration and Nationality Act to extend the provisions governing nonimmigrant status for spouses and children of permanent resident aliens awaiting the availability of an immigrant visa and for other purposes House of Representatives 109th Congress S 1919 Archived 2016 07 04 at the Wayback Machine Immigrant Accountability Act of 2005 A bill to amend the Immigration and Nationality Act in order to reunify families to provide for earned adjustment of status and for other purposes Senate 109th Congress Non immigrant visa statistics United States Department of State Retrieved January 29 2017 External links editLegal Immigration Family Equity LIFE Act USCIS V Visa Regulation Federal Register September 7 2001 Volume 66 Number 174 INS Implements V Nonimmigrant Provision of the LIFE Act INS News Release September 7 2001 How Do I Become a V Nonimmigrant USCIS Nonimmigrant V Visa for Spouse and Children of a Lawful Permanent Resident LPR US Department of State Bills H R 1823 To amend the Immigration and Nationality Act to extend the provisions governing nonimmigrant status for spouses and children of permanent resident aliens awaiting the availability of an immigrant visa and for other purposes S 1919 Archived 2016 07 04 at the Wayback Machine Immigrant Accountability Act of 2005 A bill to amend the Immigration and Nationality Act in order to reunify families to provide for earned adjustment of status and for other purposes UniteFamilies org a not for profit volunteer run group that advocates changing the immigration laws to remedy this situation Yahoo Groups unitefamilies Unite LPRs with their families b2bhandshake s Diary News Articles Opinions A Family s Wait for U S Visas Spans Generations Jennifer Ludden NPR Laws could help unite immigrant families Green card carriers have hardest time visiting spouses Cicero A Estrella San Francisco Chronicle Families pay price of faulty policies Jeff Jacoby Boston Globe Immigrants forced to wait longer for family to join them Suzanne Gamboa Associated Press Congress should be concerned about the legal immigrants too Ricardo Lu Opinion Tennessean Joined by Love Separated by Immigration Laws Ekaterina Atanasova Letter to the Editor Washington Post Preston Julia 2007 05 24 As Law Is Renegotiated Immigrant Families Are on Edge New York Times Retrieved 2007 05 24 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title V visa amp oldid 1220477457, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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