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A BRIEF OVERVIEW OF THE J-1 WAIVER AND
H-1B
PROCESS
This is a very brief overview of how a foreign medical graduate
would be
able to find a
job here in America. This is all general information and should not be
construed to be
legal advice.
Foreign Medical graduates come to the U.S. on a J visa to complete
their
residency or
fellowship training. These visas are issued with the intent that
physicians
return to
their home countries with the knowledge and training acquired in
America.
Physicians with
J visas must return to their home country for two years before being
allowed
to change to
a different visa status. However, this two-year home residence
requirement
may be waived
if the physician faces persecution in his home country, exceptional
hardship, or (what is
frequently done) through a request by an interested government agency.
At this time, government agencies willing to request waivers include
the
Department of
Agriculture, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and the Appalachian
Regional Commission.
State departments of health are also allowed to request waivers of the
foreign residence
requirement. From one of these stages, the process moves to the United
States Information
Agency (USIA) which in turn would recommend or not recommend a waiver
to the
Immigration
and Naturalization Service (INS). The INS then decides whether to grant
the
waiver.
Obtaining a waiver of the 2 year foreign residence requirement is
only
one step in the
process. The other step involves obtaining an H-1B visa. The physician
must
submit a three
year employment contract for full-time practice in a shortage area. The
salary of the
physician must be checked with local and federal Department of Labor
authorities to make
sure a prospective employer would be paying the doctor the prevailing
wage.
If the
physician does not remain in the shortage area for three years, the
two-year
foreign
residence requirement is once again imposed upon the doctor.
A prospective employer and physician should know that this is not a
short
process and
could very well take several months to complete.
A physician will then have an H-1B visa, a waiver of the 2 year
foreign
residence
requirement, and the ability to change to a different visa or adjust
status
once the
requirments of the contract have been completed.