98-15508. Employment Authorization for Certain F-1 Nonimmigrant Students Whose Means of Financial Support Comes From Indonesia, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, or the Philippines  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 111 (Wednesday, June 10, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 31874-31876]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-15508]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
    
    Immigration and Naturalization Service
    
    8 CFR Part 214
    
    [INS No. 1911-98]
    
    
    Employment Authorization for Certain F-1 Nonimmigrant Students 
    Whose Means of Financial Support Comes From Indonesia, South Korea, 
    Malaysia, Thailand, or the Philippines
    
    AGENCY: Immigration and Naturalization Service, Justice.
    
    ACTION: Notice of suspension of applicability of certain requirements.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service 
    (Service) is temporarily suspending the applicability of certain 
    requirements in 8 CFR 214.2(f)(9) governing on-campus and off-campus 
    employment for nonimmigrant aliens who are admitted to the United 
    States in F-1 classification for duration of status under section 
    101(a)(15)(F)(i) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (Act), and 
    whose means of financial support as reflected in the students' Form I-
    20, Certificate of Eligibility for Nonimmigrant (F-1) Student Status, 
    is from Indonesia, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, or the Philippines. 
    This action is necessary because students whose means of financial 
    support comes from these countries are experiencing severe economic 
    hardship due to the rapid devaluation of their currencies against the 
    United States dollar and the consequent reduction in financial support. 
    These affected students may need to be exempted from the normal student 
    employment requirements in order to continue their studies in the 
    United States.
    
    DATES: This document is effective June 10, 1998 and will remain in 
    effect until the Attorney General rescinds this document.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    Maurice R. Berez, Adjudications Officer, Office of Adjudications, 
    Immigration and Naturalization Service, 425 I Street, NW., Washington, 
    DC 20536, telephone (202) 514-5014.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Why Is The Service Taking This Action?
    
        The currencies of Indonesia, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, and 
    the Philippines have experienced a sudden and severe drop in value over 
    recent months relative to the United States dollar. The United States 
    Department of the Treasury advises that this economic crisis will 
    likely continue for the next several months. The President and the 
    Secretary of State have requested the Government, as a matter of 
    foreign policy and wherever feasible, to assist students whose means of 
    financial support comes from these countries to mitigate the adverse 
    impact of this crisis. The economic crisis has had a severe economic 
    impact on many F-1 nonimmigrant students who are presently in the 
    United States and whose means of financial support comes from any of 
    these five countries. The total population of such students attending 
    colleges and universities in the United States is approximately 80,000. 
    Given the magnitude of this student population in the United States, 
    the economic crisis in these students' countries is also having an 
    indirect but serious adverse impact on campuses across the country.
        While some affected students will have brought enough money with 
    them to the United States for the entire academic year, many other 
    students who depend on a regular flow of funds from one of the five 
    enumerated countries may be experiencing severe economic hardship as a 
    result of the economic crisis. These students may be unable to continue 
    to cover the full cost of their studies and reasonable living expenses, 
    and may therefore need to seek immediate employment to meet this 
    unexpected change in their financial support.
        Based on the above-noted foreign policy grounds, and in order to 
    aid such adversely affected students, the Commissioner is exercising 
    her authority under 8 CFR 214.2(f)(9) and is temporarily suspending the 
    applicability of certain regulatory requirements pertaining to 
    employment authorization for certain F-1 students whose means of 
    financial support, as reflected on their Form I-20, comes from 
    Indonesia, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, or the Philippines, and 
    who, due to the economic crisis, would suffer severe economic hardship 
    without such employment authorization. Under this temporary suspension, 
    eligible F-1 students will be permitted to exceed the normal 20-hour 
    limit on both on-campus and off-campus employment, and to reduce their 
    full course of study without violating their F-1 status. This action is 
    taken pursuant to amendments made to the regulations at 8 CFR 
    214.2(f)(5), 214.2(f)(6), and 214.2(f)(9) in an interim rule issued by 
    the Service and published in this issue of the Federal Register.
    
    For What Requirements in 8 CFR 214.2(f)(9) Is The Applicability 
    Temporarily Suspended?
    
    1. On-Campus Employment
    
        For F-1 students whose means of financial support, as reflected in 
    their Form I-20, comes from Indonesia, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand 
    or the Philippines, and who seek to engage in on-campus employment 
    because of severe economic hardship resulting from the current economic 
    crisis, the Commissioner is suspending the applicability of the 
    requirement in 8 CFR 214.2(f)(9)(i) that limits an F-1 student's on-
    campus employment to 20 hours per week while school is in session. The 
    applicability of this requirement will be suspended until this document 
    is rescinded. Students whose means of financial support comes from one 
    of the five enumerated countries, and who are experiencing severe 
    economic hardship due to the
    
    [[Page 31875]]
    
    economic crisis in these countries, are authorized to work more than 20 
    hours per week while school is in session if their Designated School 
    Official (DSO) notates page 4 of both the school and student copies of 
    the Form I-20 in the student employment box with the statement:
    
        Approved for more than 20 hour per week of on-campus employment 
    under the Special Student Relief authorization from (DSO shall 
    insert the beginning date of employment) until (DSO shall insert the 
    earlier of the last day of the student's program or one year from 
    the beginning date of employment)
    
    and signs and dates the notation. To obtain this on-campus employment 
    authorization, students must demonstrate to their DSO that the 
    employment is necessary to avoid severe economic hardship caused by the 
    economic crisis taking place in one of the five specified countries 
    from which their means of financial support is derived. These students 
    are permitted to reduce their normal course of study in order to accept 
    such employment. To be considered to be maintaining F-1 status and 
    engaging in a full course of study under 8 CFR 214.2(f)(5)(v) and 
    214.2(f)(6)(i)(F), however, undergraduate students must remain 
    registered for a minimum of 6 semester or quarter hours of instruction 
    per academic term and graduate students must remain registered for a 
    minimum of 3 semester or quarter hours of instruction per academic term 
    for the period of authorized employment. The standard rules at 8 CFR 
    214.2(f)(9)(i) permitting full-time work on-campus when school is not 
    in session or during school vacations will continue to apply during the 
    effective period of this document.
    
    2. Off-Campus Employment
    
        For purposes of off-campus employment authorization under 8 CFR 
    214.2(f)(9)(ii), the Commissioner has determined that the currency 
    devaluation affecting Indonesia, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, and 
    the Philippines constitutes unforeseen circumstances beyond the 
    student's control. Moreover, for students whose means of financial 
    support, as reflected on their Form I-20, is from one of these five 
    countries and who establish severe economic hardship, the Commissioner 
    is suspending the applicability of the following regulatory 
    requirements in 8 CFR 214.2(f)(9)(ii):
        1. The requirement that the student has been in F-1 status for one 
    full academic year;
        2. The requirement that acceptance of employment will not interfere 
    with the student's carrying a full course of study; and
        3. The requirement that the student's work authorization be limited 
    to no more than 20 hours per week when school is in session.
        F-1 students who must reduce their normal course of study as a 
    result of accepting employment authorized by this notice will be 
    considered to be maintaining F-1 status and engaging in a full course 
    of study under 8 CFR 214.2(f)(5)(v) and 214.2(f)(6)(i)(F), provided 
    that, for the duration of their authorized employment, undergraduate 
    students are registered for a minimum of 6 semester or quarter hours of 
    instruction per academic term and graduate students are registered for 
    a minimum of 3 semester or quarter hours of instruction per academic 
    term. The standard rules at 8 CFR 214.2(f)(9)(ii) permitting full-time 
    work off-campus when school is in session or during school vacations 
    will continue to apply during the effective period of this document.
    
    How Can F-1 Students, Whose Means of Financial Support Is From One 
    of the Five Enumerated Countries, Apply for Special Off-Campus 
    Employment Authorization Pursuant to This Document?
    
        To apply for this special off-campus employment authorization, F-1 
    students must file a complete employment authorization application with 
    the Service Center having jurisdiction over the student's place of 
    residence. An application is complete if it contains:
        1. A properly completed Form I-765, Application for Employment 
    Authorization, with the required fee of $70 or, in the absence of the 
    fee, a written affidavit requesting waiver of the fee which explains 
    why he or she is entitled to or deserving of the fee waiver and the 
    reasons for his or her inability to pay as provided under 8 CFR 
    103.7(c);
        2. Form I-20 with a written notation by the DSO on page 4 in the 
    student employment box stating,
    
        Special Student Relief recommended from (DSO shall insert the 
    recommended beginning date of employment) until (DSO shall insert 
    the earlier of the last day of the student's program or one year 
    from the recommended beginning date of employment)
    
    that is signed and dated by the DSO; and
        3. A copy of Form I-538, Certification by Designated School 
    Official, containing an original, notarized signature of the DSO and a 
    certification by the DSO that the student has demonstrated the 
    following:
        a. That the student's means of financial support, as documented on 
    Form I-20, is from Indonesia, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand or the 
    Philippines (the DSO must note this in the comments section of Form I-
    538);
        b. That the student is in good standing as a student and is 
    carrying a full course of study at the time of the request for 
    employment authorization (the DSO must check the appropriate box in 
    block 9 of Form I-538);
        c. That, if the student cannot carry a full course of study as a 
    result of the acceptance of employment, the student will be registered, 
    for the duration of his or her authorized employment, for a minimum of 
    6 semester or quarter hours of instruction per academic term if the 
    student is at the undergraduate level or for a minimum of 3 semester or 
    quarter hours of instruction per academic term if the student is at the 
    graduate level (the DSO must note this in the comments section of Form 
    I-538); and
        d. That the off-campus employment is necessary to avoid severe 
    economic hardship to the individual caused by the economic crisis 
    taking place in one of the five specified countries from which the 
    student's means of financial support is derived (the DSO must note this 
    in the comments section of Form I-538).
        To help expedite adjudication of the student's application, the 
    student should:
        a. Ensure that the application package includes: (1) A completed 
    Form I-765; (2) the required fee or affidavit requesting waiver of the 
    fee; (3) a copy of Form I-538 with notarized original signature of the 
    DSO; and (4) a copy of the student's I-20 with the appropriate DSO 
    notation on page 4 as previously described in this notice;
        b. Send the application in an envelope which is clearly marked on 
    the front of the envelope, bottom right-hand side, with the phrase 
    ``SPECIAL STUDENT RELIEF.''
        If the Service approves the student's employment authorization 
    application, the Service will send the student an Employment 
    Authorization Document, Form I-766, to evidence his or her employment 
    authorization. The Form I-766 will contain an expiration date that does 
    not exceed the earlier of the last day of the student's program or one 
    year from the date of issuance.
    
    Is There a Cut-Off Date for the Filing of Applications for Off-
    Campus Employment Authorization Under This Document?
    
        The Service has not yet determined a cut-off date for the filing of 
    applications for off-campus work authorization under this document. The 
    Service will
    
    [[Page 31876]]
    
    issue a document in the Federal Register announcing a cut-off date for 
    filing such applications when it makes this determination.
    
    Must the F-1 Student Apply for Reinstatement After Expiration of 
    This Special Employment Authorization if the Student Reduces His or 
    Her Full Course of Study?
    
        No. If an F-1 student reduces his or her normal course of study in 
    order to engage in employment pursuant to this document, the F-1 
    student will be considered to be maintaining his or her status under 8 
    CFR 214.2(f)(5)(v). As previously discussed, a student will be 
    considered to be maintaining status only if the student is registered 
    for a minimum of 6 semester or quarter hours of instruction per 
    academic term where the student is at the undergraduate level, or is 
    registered for a minimum of 3 semester or quarter hours of instruction 
    per academic term where the student is at the graduate level. Because a 
    student who has reduced his or her full course of study in accordance 
    with this document is considered to be maintaining status, he or she is 
    not required to request reinstatement from the Service under 8 CFR 
    214.2(f)(16) before the student resumes a full course of study at the 
    conclusion of his or her employment authorization.
    
    Will the Suspension of the Applicability of the Standard Student 
    Employment Requirements Apply to Aliens Who, as of the Effective 
    Date of This Document, Have not yet Been Granted an F-1 Visa in 
    Order to Pursue a Course of Studies in the United States?
    
        No, the suspension of the applicability of the standard regulatory 
    requirements does not apply to such persons, even if their means of 
    financial support comes from any of the five above-noted countries.
    
    Does This Document Apply to F-1 Students Who Leave the United 
    States and Will Need to Obtain a New F-1 Visa During the Validity 
    Period of This Document in Order to Continue Their Educational 
    Program in the United States?
    
        Yes, provided that the DSO has properly notated the Form I-20 in 
    accordance with this document. Subject to the specific terms of this 
    document, however, the normal rules for visa issuance, including those 
    related to public charge and nonimmigrant intent, remain applicable to 
    aliens who need to apply for a new F-1 visa in order to continue their 
    educational program in the United States.
    
    How Long Will This Document Remain in Effect?
    
        The suspension of applicability of on-campus and off-campus 
    employment authorization requirements by this document will remain in 
    effect until this document is rescinded by the Attorney General. During 
    this period, the Service will continue to consult with the President 
    and the Departments of State and Treasury in order to determine whether 
    economic circumstances in the five enumerated countries warrant 
    rescission or modification of the special provisions for F-1 students 
    whose means of support comes from one of these countries. Should these 
    special provisions be modified or rescinded, the Service will issue a 
    document in the Federal Register announcing any changes.
    
        Dated: June 5, 1998.
    Doris Meissner,
    Commissioner, Immigration and Naturalization Service.
    [FR Doc. 98-15508 Filed 6-8-98; 2:23 pm]
    BILLING CODE 4410-10-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
6/10/1998
Published:
06/10/1998
Department:
Immigration and Naturalization Service
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Notice of suspension of applicability of certain requirements.
Document Number:
98-15508
Dates:
This document is effective June 10, 1998 and will remain in effect until the Attorney General rescinds this document.
Pages:
31874-31876 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
INS No. 1911-98
PDF File:
98-15508.pdf
CFR: (1)
8 CFR 214