PROCEDURE FOR OBTAINING PERMANENT RESIDENCE FOR FOREIGN STAFF
MEMBERS Immigration regulations stipulate that employers may only sponsor foreign
employees for permanent resident status if both of the following conditions
exist:
A permanent position is defined at Urbana-Champaign as 1) a tenured or tenure-track faculty position or 2) an academic professional teaching or research position which is expected to be funded for at least five years*. A description of funding expectations must be provided. Post-doctoral research associates are considered to be temporary and are not eligible for permanent residence sponsorship. Positions having the word "Visiting" or "Acting" in the title are obviously not permanent. If the conditions stated above do not exist and the permanent residence process is nonetheless undertaken, both the employer and the employee may be subject to investigation for fraudulent activity.
*Acceptable evidence of five-year funding is a description by the department head of funding which has been allocated for the position and a statement that this funding is expected to continue for the next five years. If the position is funded by grant money which does not cover five years, explain why he/she is confident that the grant will be renewed.
Additional requirements:
The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) will serve as a permanent residence sponsor for a foreign employee when these conditions are met. All permanent residence cases based on UIUC employment must be handled by the Office of International Faculty and Staff Affairs (IFSA), not by private attorneys. NOTE: Individual faculty members occasionally sign documents indicating that the employment status of a foreign-born employee is permanent when, in fact, it is temporary. This may lead to legal difficulties for the faculty members and the alien. Consult with the IFSA office before signing any immigration document.
Steps for Obtaining Permanent Residence
The permanent residence process for non-teachers is different from the process for teachers. A teacher, for these purposes, is anyone with regular responsibility for teaching university credit courses, e.g., assistant professors, lecturers, teaching associates. A non-teacher is someone who has no teaching responsibilities, such as someone who solely does research or administrative work.
In all cases:
The process is usually initiated after the alien has been in the position for approximately one semester. Under certain circumstances it can start earlier.
Steps 3 and 4 above are quite routine. The interview may, in some cases, be waived.
Depending on a number of factors, this process can take from one to two years to complete.
For Outstanding Professors or Researchers:
If an alien can be classified as outstanding, the labor certification stage of the process can be bypassed and they can move directly to step b. See Attachment II for a description of the criteria for this classification. Bypassing the labor certification saves a great deal of the processing time.
Details of these procedures are available from the Director of International Faculty and Staff Affairs at 333-8226.
Please see Attachment I (requires Adobe Acrobat Reader) and Attachment II.
Note: Attachment is
in .PDF format and
will require Adobe Acrobat Reader to download.
Date Revised: June 30, 2003
Date Issued: June 21, 1996
Approved by: Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs
Personnel Policies: Section IX/A - 5