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Questions
and Answers on the New V Visa and the New K Visa Rules
Revised
January 16, 2001
On December 21, 2000, the Legal Immigration and Family Equity Act (LIFE)
became law. Among other provisions,
LIFE creates a V visa that allows certain spouses and children of permanent
residents to live and work here while their immigration cases are pending.
LIFE also extends K visa benefits to the spouse and unmarried minor
children of U.S. citizens. Prior to
LIFE, K visas were available only to a U.S. citizen’s fiancé and the fiancés
children.
Congress passed LIFE to bring
families together. Due to
processing delays and quota backlogs, husbands, wives and children of permanent
residents and U.S. citizens often wait abroad months or years to get immigrant
visas.
The New V Visa
The V visa is available to the
spouses and unmarried minor children of permanent residents.
Because of quota backlogs, these individuals typically wait five to six
years to get permanent residence. While
many wait in their country, separated from spouses or parents, many others are
in the United States without lawful status and unable to work.
1.
Who qualifies for the new V visa?
The V visa is available to the spouse and unmarried children under 21 of
permanent residents. The applicant
must have been waiting for permanent residence three years or more from the time
the INS received a second preference petition filed on his or her behalf.
The INS must have received the applicant’s petition on or before
December 21, 2000. The INS need not
have approved the petition.
2.
What
are the benefits of the V visa?
V visa holders can live and work in the United States while waiting to
qualify for permanent residence. Prior
to LIFE, these relatives of permanent residents often had difficulty getting a
visa to visit the United States.
3.
How does one get a V visa?
V visa applicants outside the United States will apply for their visa at a
U.S. consulate abroad. The bars for
applicants unlawfully present don’t apply. Applicants in the United States,
even those here unlawfully, qualify to change status without returning home.
We won’t know the exact procedures until the INS and Department of
State issue instructions. Once the V visa holder has a relative petition
approved on his or her behalf and a current priority date, he or she can adjust
status under 245(a) or 245(i) if qualified.
4.
Is the V visa available to people who have been in undocumented status?
Yes. V visa applicants ARE NOT
inadmissible for having been unlawfully present in the United States more than
180 days.
5.
When can I apply for a V visa?
The law went into effect on the day of enactment, December 21, 2001.
However, INS and DOS have not yet issued instructions and/or interim
regulations and are not yet accepting applications.
The New K Visa Rules
Congress amended the K visa law to
allow the spouse and unmarried minor children of a U.S. citizen to live and work
in the United States while waiting to get residence.
Unlike for V visa applicants, K visa applicants need not have filed by
December 21, 2000 and need not have been waiting any particular amount of time.
Prior to LIFE, the K visa was only available to the fiancé of a U.S.
citizen and his or her children.
1. Who qualifies
for the new K visa?
The K visa is available to the spouse of U.S. citizens and their unmarried
children under age 21 who are outside the United States awaiting processing of
their green card petitions. The K
visa is available to future and current spouses and children.
To qualify the applicant need only have a U.S. citizen spouse petition on
his or her behalf.
2.
How does the K visa help the children of the spouse of a U.S. citizen?
LIFE allows the unmarried children
under 21 of the foreign spouse to accompany or follow their parent to the United
States in K status. The children
can work in the United States, and can adjust status to permanent residence.
The ability to adjust status is a
big benefit for children 18 or older but under 21 who are not the natural
children of the petitioning spouse. Under
current law, the 18-to-under-21 children of a FIANCÉ (K-1) visa holder are able
to adjust status on their parent’s immigrant visa petition, if the fiancé
married the U.S. citizen petitioner within 90 days of entry.
In contrast, a child 18-to-under-21 whose parent had already married a
U.S. citizen was required to have an immigrant petition filed for them directly
and therefore faced a long wait to get permanent residence. Prior
to LIFE, the non-citizen parent of these children had to petition for these
children after the parent got permanent residence or U.S. citizenship.
Due to processing and quota backlogs, the process often meant a wait for
permanent residence of six years or more. Now,
unmarried children 18-to-under-21 who accompany or follow a parent to the United
States on the new K visa should be able to adjust status after entry using the
immigrant petition filed for their parent.
3.
What are the benefits of the K visa?
Hopefully the INS and U.S. consuls will process K visas more quickly than
immigrant visas, speeding up the uniting of spouses and children with the U.S.
citizen petitioner. K fiancé
visas often, but not always, process a couple of months faster than immigrant
visas. Another benefit is the
ability of unmarried minor children over 18 but under 21 to accompany a parent
to the United States. Under current
law such children would need to wait years for approval of a visa.
4.
Is the K visa available to people who have been in undocumented status?
Maybe. Undocumented immigrants
would have to apply at a U.S. consul abroad.
If the applicant were inadmissible on any grounds, he or she would
require a waiver under section INA 212(d)(3)(A) AND a finding that the applicant
would be eligible for a waiver at the adjustment of status interview.
The unlawful presence bars apply. For
an applicant facing inadmissibility charges, the risk of applying at a consul is
great.
5.
How does one get a K visa?
K visa processing for the spouse and children of a U.S. citizen should be
similar to current K visa rules for fiancés.
If the petitioner is in the United States, he or she will file here and
the notice of approval will be forwarded to a U.S. consul abroad.
Where the marriage has taken place abroad, LIFE requires that the K visa
applicant apply for the visa in the country where the marriage occurred.
6.
When can I apply for a K visa?
The K visa law NOW is in effect, but neither INS nor DOS have issued any
rules so are not yet accepting petitions.
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