Immigration: Foreign Physicians and the J-1 Visa Waiver Program
Last
week, the Congressional Research Service (CRS) of the Library of Congress
submitted a report to Congress providing current information on the J-1 Visa
Waiver Program as it relates to foreign physicians. The report was provided as
background to members of Congress who are currently considering extending the
Conrad 30 J-1 waiver program.
Most
foreign medical graduates (FMGs) enter the United States under the J-1 visa
program for the purpose of graduate medical training and education.
This program requires that the FMGs must return to their home country for
at least two years after completion of his or her training before applying for
another nonimmigrant visa or legal permanent resident (LPR) status, except for
those granted a waiver of the requirement. Waivers can be requested from any
interested government agency (IGA) or state health department that wishes to
sponsor an FMG. In return for
sponsorship, the FMG agrees to practice as a primary care physician in a
selected medical shortage area for a certain period of time.
In 2002, FMGs accounted for 24.7% of the total practicing physicians and
27.4% of physicians in residency and fellowship programs.
This report focuses on FMGs entering through the J-1 program.
Under
current law, a J-1 physician can get a waiver of two-year home residency in the
following ways:
§
The waiver is requested
by an IGA
§
The FMGs return would
cause extreme hardship to a U.S citizen or LPR spouse or child
§
The FMG fears persecution
in the home country based on race, religion, or political opinion.
A
J-1 waiver is processed by an IGA sending a letter of support
to the Department of State. If the DOS concurs, it will forward its
recommendation to U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) for final
approval. The physician would then
be able to obtain status as H-1B professional specialty worker (assuming a visa
is available).
The
J-1 visa waiver program has gone through considerable change in recent years.
The largest sponsor of J-1 visa waivers, the United States Department of
Agriculture (USDA), decided to end its involvement as an IGA, effective February
2002. In addition, the Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced it would assume the USDA’s role
as an IGA. And bills introduced in
the 107th Congress expanded the “Conrad 20” program and renamed
it the “Conrad 30” which now increases the number of waivers for
participating states from 20 to 30.
Any
federal government agency or state department can act as an IGA.
The main agencies involved in this program are the Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA), the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the Appalachian
Regional Commission (ARC), the Delta Regional Authority (DRA), and the “Conrad
20” (now known as the “Conrad 30”) Program for States.
The
specific requirements for each of the main participating IGAs are:
§
The VA allows facility
directors to request waivers in cases where efforts to recruit a qualified U.S.
citizen or LPR have failed.
§
The HHS in the past has
been very restrictive in its sponsorship of J-1 waivers because the department
saw this program as a way to pass advanced medical knowledge to foreign
countries. As an alternative, the
HHS position viewed programs such as the National Health Service Corps be used
to fill the lack of medical service. In
June 2003, HHS began sponsoring J-1 waivers, but in September 2003 suspended the
program. After reevaluation, HHS
released its new program guidelines, which are more restrictive and have limited
the states’ access to physicians. Analyses
of the new HHS program show a reduction in the number of eligible facilities by
at least 80%. The agency has adjudicated only 42 cases in the last year
(compared to nearly 4,000 cases adjudicated by the USDA’s single administrator
during the program’s eight year run).
§
The ARC was established
by Congress in 1965 and is a joint federal and state entity set up to ensure
that all residents of Appalachia have access to quality, affordable health care.
The governor of the sponsoring state must recommend the J-1 waiver
sponsored by the ARC. The FMG must
provide primary care for at least 40 hours a week for three years at a medical
shortage Medicare or Medicaid-certified hospital or clinic that also accepts
medically indigent patients. The
facility must show good faith effort to recruit an U.S. physician for at least
six months prior to applying for a J-1 waiver applicant.
If the physician does not comply with the terms of the waiver and
complete three years of practice at the selected facility, he or she must pay
the employer $250,000.
§
The USDA became a sponsor
in 1994 and ceased its involvement in 2002 citing security matters and the
inability to perform acceptable background and site checks.
§
The “Conrad 20”
program was set up by Congress in 1994, and was named after its sponsor Senator
Kent Conrad. In 2001, 45 states and
the District of Columbia participated in “Conrad 20” programs.
As stated earlier, the “Conrad 20” program was extended until June 1,
2004 and renamed the “Conrad 30” program.
Current Congressional bills are pending which will extend the current
program until June 1, 2009; allow state public health departments to identify
shortage areas; and make waiver recipients except from the H-1B cap of 65,000.
Administration of the programs varies by state, and the participants have
to meet the state-specified licensing criteria before beginning work.
The
report can be found online at http://fpc.state.gov/fpc/c12498.htm
.
Disclaimer: This newsletter is provided as a public service and not intended to establish an attorney client relationship. Any reliance on information contained herein is taken at your own risk.