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"GREEN
CARD" LOTTERY INFO
| What
is the "Green Card" Lottery? |
The
U.S. Congress has authorized the allotment of 50,000 immigrant
visas in the DV-2007 category during Fiscal Year 2007
(which runs from October 1, 2006 to September 30, 2007).
Foreign nationals who are natives of countries determined
by the USCIS (according to a mathematical formula based
upon population totals and totals of specified immigrant
admissions for a 5-year period) are eligible to apply.
The application period will begin October 5, 2005 and
will end at noon on December 4, 2005. Entries are for
the first time this year submitted electronically. Applicants
can submit their applications at http://www.dvlottery.state.gov/.
Paper entries are no longer accepted. Applicants can submit
their forms themselves or they have a representative,
such as a lawyer, submit the application on their behalf.
Note that the web site will not go online until 12 pm
Eastern US Time on October 5 and will end at 12 pm Eastern
Time on December 4.
The
DV lottery is designed to increase the diversity of the
overall pool of immigrants coming to the US. Countries
that are proportionately over-represented in the immigrant
population are excluded. Countries that have sent more
than 50,000 immigrants to the US in the past five years
are put on to the list above.
The
DV-2007 program apportions visa issuance among six geographic
regions (Africa, Asia, Europe, North America (other than
Mexico), Oceania, and South America (including Mexico,
Central America and the Caribbean). The world is divided
up into high and low admission regions and each of the
six regions is divided into high and low admission states.
A greater portion of the visas goes to the low admission
regions than to high admissions regions.
High
admission states are entirely excluded from the lottery
(those states are listed above) and low admission states
compete equally with other low admission states in the
same region. No single state may receive more than 7%
(3,500) of the 50,000 allotted visas.
The
determination of which occupations require at least two
years of training or experience shall be based upon the
Department of Labor's O*Net Online database. Previously,
when work experience was used as the equivalent of high
school graduation, the employment position was compared
to those in the US Department of Labor Dictionary of Occupational
Titles.
The
Labor Department has phased out this publication and replaced
it with the O*Net online system. To reflect this change,
the State Department will begin using O*Net classifications
in determining whether an applicant has the equivalent
of a high school education. The O*Net system is available
online at http://online.onetcenter.org/. As with proof
of education, documentary proof of work experience should
not be submitted with the application, but must be presented
to the consular office at the time of a formal immigrant
visa application.
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