News Bytes
Temporary
Protected Status will not be recommended by the U.S. State Department for
Columbian citizens living in the United States according to information conveyed
to Columbian officials. Temporary
Protected Status, or TPS, is granted by the U.S. to immigrants who are forced to
flee their countries due to natural disasters or war.
However, the United States believes that the security conditions in
Columbia have improved enough to reduce the need for TPS to be extended to
Columbians.
TPS
for Peruvians and Columbians is currently part of the proposed Andean Adjustment
Act which is pending in Congress. At
least 258,173 Columbians are legal residents in America, but an estimated two
million more are thought to live in the United States illegally.
*****
Michael
J. Garcia has been nominated to the position of Assistant Secretary of DHS for
ICE. The Senate voted by unanimous
consent to refer Mr. Garcia’s nomination to the Senate Judiciary Committee for
a period not to exceed thirty days.
*****
USCIS
is planning to shift certain live telephone assistance back to service centers.
The final decision will be determined over the next several weeks upon
USCIS analysis of the current system.
*****
Individuals
who registered under NSEERS, the National Security Entry-Exit Registration
System, are required to reregister within ten days of the date they registered
last year. Each individual’s
deadline is based on the original date on which he registered last year.
*****
Representatives
from the Alliance for International Educational and Cultural Exchange and the
Association of International Practical Training and NAFSA met with staff of the
Department of Homeland Security and the Social Security Administration to
discuss new procedures for a Memorandum of Understanding between the DHS and SSA.
The new procedures should assist the SSA in verifying the status of F and
J visa status holders more efficiently. The
projected time for implementation is December 1.
*****
The
US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has temporarily suspended the
clinical J-1 waiver program. The
waiver program allows foreign medical students studying in the United States to
forgo the home residency requirement of the J-1 visa by working in a medically
underserved area in the United States.
The HHS waiver program was first implemented on June 12 of this year. It was designed to fill the void created by the post-September 11 suspension of the US Department of Agriculture clinical waiver program for J-1 physicians. HHS has not indicated when the program will go back online. State 30 officials have been complaining privately that the move by HHS is unreasonable particularly since a number of states changed their waiver programs to account for the new HHS program.
< Back | Index | Next >
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.