Tag Archives: l1 visa

TN-1 Visa for Canadian Citizens Wanting to Work In The US

The Canadian TN-1 visa is a very unique US work visa allowing Canadian citizens to work in the US in 3 year increments, renewable indefinitely in theory. (until Oct 2008, this was in 1 year increments).

The TN-1 visa (or more commonly known as the TN visa) is very widely known among US employer in the US as has been in place since 1994 as a result of NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement) between Canada, Mexico and the United States. There is a similar TN-2 visa for Mexican citizens, with a slightly more thorough application procedure than applies for Canadians. Additionally there is provision for US citizen workers to work in Canada or Mexico in a similar vein.

The TN visa for Canadians bears some resemblance to the E3 visa for Australians in that it applies only to citizens of one country and is renewable indefinitely. However the TN visa related spouse visa, the TD visa, does not allow spouses to work (although they may study in the US). The E3D spouse visa does allow for spouses to work.

The TN visa has probably the easiest application process as for the primary visa holder (and for the spouse if she is a Canadian citizen), it does not require a US consular interview. This is unlike virtually any other work visa that exists for any nation. So also like the E3 visa, the cost and timing to apply is also far more straightforward than say the H-1B visa process.

Actually as there is no actual visa issued at a US consulate it is technically called TN Status rather than a TN visa.

The Application Process

Canadian citizens first need a job offer letter detailing the employment and the fact it is for no longer than 3 years. Additionally they need to bring qualifiations and experience proof which is usually a university degree and/or evidence of former employment in the occupation area. If the degree is from a US or Canadian Higher Education institution, no additional paperwork is required. However if from another country’s institution, usually as US degree equivalency certificate is needed.

Additionally proof of Canadian citizenship (and spouse citizenship) is required as well.

If the spouse is a non Canadian Citizen, the TD visa application will need to be done at a US consulate prior to entry in the

This paperwork is then brought to the border and it is usually and most easily done along the entries between the US and Canada. There is a required $50 fee. There is an additional $6 fee for a land or sea crossing that is already included in airline ticket prices if traveling via air.

The US immigration officer will then give a decision on the application on the spot and grant or deny TN status based on all the information given.

If the decision is to grant TN status, the Canadian immediately enters the US and begins TN employment.
If the decision is to deny, the immigration officer will often given details as to the missing pieces of information in the application.

Often a Canadian citizen can return in the next few days with these corrected and have their application approved under TN visa status. However is there is no procedure to appeal a TN visa denial.

To renew a TN visa or status is either via a mail in renewal or returning to the border.

To change employers on TN status, requires a completely new application, so a return to the border is required

Many people have their TN status renewed or changed without issue many times, although occasionally if an overzealous immigration officer is present, it may be denied.

The Job Category Restrictions

The TN visa has a much more restricted set of job categories than either the H-1B visa, E3 visa or even L-1 visa. For these other US work non-immigrant visa categories, the criteria is basically a specialty occupation which translated to virtually any profession requiring a bachelors degree with a few restrictions.

The TN visa has a defined set of occupations which in itself seems broad but depending on the assessing US Immigration officer may be strictly applied to a particular application. You can see the Official TN Visa page on the US State Department website for more information on the specific categories but it covers most of the common areas you would think of.

Dual Intent

Unlike the H1B visas and L1 visa which are defined as dual intent visas meaning that foreigners are specifically allowed to simultaneously apply for Permanent Residency (or Green Card) Status, the TN visa does not have a dual intent provision.

However like the E3 visa, it is not specifically prohibited either and so many Canadian citizens do successfully apply for a Green Card while on TN visa status.

Good Luck Canucks 🙂

CJ

E3 Visa & H1B Visa “Administrative Processing” Refusal at US Consulate

In general for most people once an potential employer sponsor in the US has agreed to hire a foreigner under the E3 Visa, H1B visa or L1 Visa, the hard part has been done. This also applies to the K1 Visa for Marriage.

As with the H1B visa and L1 visa, petitions and forms have to filed and approved at the USCIS and Department of Labor and with the E3 visa at the Department of Labor only, so a lot of the vetting has already been done. Then of course employers if they are planning to go through the time, expense and hassle of hiring a foreigner, they themselves are going to make sure most of the time, that the employer is a legitimate candidate with relevant experience and qualifications.

So going to the US Consulate interview, while in many ways seeming like a big deal to the candidate because of the formality, seriousness and security of the process, ends up being just a routine with at the most and most a few hours wasted in the room waiting. Therefore actually getting the E3 visa or H1B visa stamp in the passport is the last step in the process before flying to the US to begin their new career.

However for some unfortunate candidates it is not so simple and the process at the US consulate takes a lot longer under the title of “administrative processing” under condition 221(g).

For a few of this group it is partly or fully their own fault as they have forgotten documents they were supposed to bring or to pay relevant fees. Usually in these instances, it just requires another US consulate visa appointment or even a quick dash out to get things and pay the relevant costs, returning the same day to continue the interview albeit with going to back of the queue.

Also in some instance people have lied about their experience, qualifications and/or circumstances and/or their employer has to some degree and this is noticed or suspected by the US conular officer. In these cases the administrative processing that follows will ultimately result in a visa denial or occasionally and instant denial at the US consulate.

(To Note visa like the F1 visa or J1 visa tend not to have this issue. Of course you can still be denied for these visas, but it tends to be instant at the US consulate as the USCIS is generally not involved in these petitions)

However in most cases the “administrative processing” or condition 221(g) is a lot more grey and is often as a result of a very particular case officer hesitation due to some aspect of the application. These can include;

  1. Unsure about the company as never sponsored a foreigner before and/or is a smaller organization or possibly operates in an industry field not usually associated with the professional work visa like E3, H1B and L1
  2. Unsure about the job offer as it sounds like a non-professional or specialty role which may not require a bachelors degree not usually associated with the E3 visa, H1B visa or L1 visa
  3. Unsure about the candidate as either their something amiss about their qualifications and experience and how it relates to the role they are about to fulfill or about their personal background from a security/character/criminal standpoint or for the E3 visa whether they intend to return home
  4. Unsure about the nature of a dependent on the visa petition

The problem is at this point if a candidate receives a letter or notification under “administrative processing” 221 (g) that they lose complete control over the process. Whether their case will take a 1 week or 4 months is really dependent on the individual US consulate, what the backlog is at the time, mailing times, whether the processing will happen locally or be sent back to the US, public holidays and of course the nature of the individual case.

Additionally in most instances there is no way to get extra information until the US consulate contacts you with an update or request for more information or in any way to find out how long the process is going to take. This of course can complete ruin a potential work position, as many employers in the US are unlikely to hold open a role indefinitely with no guarantee of success or timeliness. Then of course individuals and families have also no doubt made travel plans and paid costs and begun to wind down local life so can cause a lot of heartache and financial pain as well.

This is a clear example of the US Immigration system for Legal Immigrants being completely unfair and in need of complete reform. However in the new immigration laws proposed by members of congress, things like this are never discussed as that would be too practical and not score any political points! This aspect and many like it is why the Legal Immigration mess feeds into and causes Illegal Immigration problems for the US.

Sometimes US consulates when required don’t even send the “diplomatic pouch” which carries the case documents back to the US straight away and collect other cases from their particular US consulate and others in the area or country prior to sending it back. This of courses further delay along with the fact the USCIS who re-process these cases often view this as low priority cases to evaluate.
In truth this process should only be used sparingly by US consular officials as in many cases just duplicating work already done by other US Government agencies as well as the Private employer.

I wish I could give more hope and insight to the process for people in this situation but it is a veyr mysterious process and this is all that is really known about it. All I can hope is that you never be subject to condition 221 (g) and administrative processing!

CJ