[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 8, Volume 1]

[Revised as of January 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 8CFR245.1]



[Page 491-500]

 

                     TITLE 8--ALIENS AND NATIONALITY

 

               CHAPTER I--DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY

 

PART 245_ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS TO THAT OF PERSON ADMITTED FOR PERMANENT 

RESIDENCE--Table of Contents

 

Sec. 245.1  Eligibility.









Sec.

245.1 Eligibility.

245.2 Application.

245.3 Adjustment of status under section 13 of the Act of September 11, 

          1957, as amended.

245.4 Documentary requirements.

245.5 Medical examination.

245.6 Interview.

245.7 Adjustment of status of certain Soviet and Indochinese parolees 

          under the Foreign Operations Appropriations Act for Fiscal 

          Year 1990 (Pub. L. 101-167).

245.8 Adjustment of status as a special immigrant under section 

          101(a)(27)(K) of the Act.

245.9 Adjustment of status of certain nationals of the People's Republic 

          of China under Public Law 102-404.

245.10 Adjustment of status upon payment of additional sum under Public 

          Law 103-317.

245.11 Adjustment of aliens in S nonimmigrant classification.

245.12 What are the procedures for certain Polish and Hungarian parolees 

          who are



[[Page 492]]



          adjusting status to that of permanent resident under the 

          Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 

          1996?

245.13 Adjustment of status of certain nationals of Nicaragua and Cuba 

          under Public Law 105-100.

245.14 [Reserved]

245.15 Adjustment of status of certain Haitian nationals under the 

          Haitian Refugee Immigrant Fairness Act of 1998 (HRIFA).

245.18 How can physicians (with approved Forms I-140) that are serving 

          in medically underserved areas or at a Veterans Affairs 

          facility adjust status?

245.20 Adjustment of status of Syrian asylees under Public Law 106-378.

245.21 Adjustment of status of certain nationals of Vietnam, Cambodia, 

          and Laos (section 586 of Public Law 106-429).

245.22 Evidence to demonstrate an alien's physical presence in the 

          United States on a specific date.



    Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101, 1103, 1182, 1255; sec. 202, Pub. L. 105-

100, 111 Stat. 2160, 2193; sec. 902, Pub. L. 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681; 8 

CFR part 2.





    (a) General. Any alien who is physically present in the United 

States, except for an alien who is ineligible to apply for adjustment of 

status under paragraph (b) or (c) of this section, may apply for 

adjustment of status to that of a lawful permanent resident of the 

United States if the applicant is eligible to receive an immigrant visa 

and an immigrant visa is immediately available at the time of filing of 

the application. A special immigrant described under section 

101(a)(27)(J) of the Act shall be deemed, for the purpose of applying 

the adjustment to status provisions of section 245(a) of the Act, to 

have been paroled into the United States, regardless of the actual 

method of entry into the United States.

    (b) Restricted aliens. The following categories of aliens are 

ineligible to apply for adjustment of status to that of a lawful 

permanent resident alien under section 245 of the Act, unless the alien 

establishes eligibility under the provisions of section 245(i) of the 

Act and Sec. 245.10, is not included in the categories of aliens 

prohibited from applying for adjustment of status listed in Sec. 

245.1(c), is eligible to receive an immigrant visa, and has an immigrant 

visa immediately available at the time of filing the application for 

adjustment of status:

    (1) Any alien who entered the United States in transit without a 

visa;

    (2) Any alien who, on arrival in the United States, was serving in 

any capacity on board a vessel or aircraft or was destined to join a 

vessel or aircraft in the United States to serve in any capacity 

thereon;

    (3) Any alien who was not admitted or paroled following inspection 

by an immigration officer;

    (4) Any alien who, on or after January 1, 1977, was employed in the 

United States without authorization prior to filing an application for 

adjustment of status. This restriction shall not apply to an alien who 

is:

    (i) An immediate relative as defined in section 201(b) of the Act;

    (ii) A special immigrant as defined in section 101(a)(27)(H) or (J) 

of the Act;

    (iii) Eligible for the benefits of Public Law 101-238 (the 

Immigration Nursing Relief Act of 1989) and files an application for 

adjustment of status on or before October 17, 1991; or

    (iv) Eligible for the benefits of Public Law 101-238 (the 

Immigration Nursing Relief Act of 1989), and has not entered into or 

continued in unauthorized employment on or after November 29, 1990.

    (5) Any alien who on or after November 6, 1986 is not in lawful 

immigration status on the date of filing his or her application for 

adjustment of status, except an applicant who is an immediate relative 

as defined in section 201(b) or a special immigrant as defined in 

section 101(a)(27) (H), (I), or (J).

    (6) Any alien who files an application for adjustment of status on 

or after November 6, 1986, who has failed (other than through no fault 

of his or her own or for technical reasons) to maintain continuously a 

lawful status since entry into the United States, except an applicant 

who is an immediate relative as defined in section 201(b) of the Act or 

a special immigrant as defined in section 101(a)(27) (H), (I), or (J) of 

the Act;

    (7) Any alien admitted as a visitor under the visa waiver provisions 

of Sec. 212.1(e) of this chapter;

    (8) Any alien admitted as a Visa Waiver Pilot Program visitor under 

the provisions of section 217 of the Act and



[[Page 493]]



part 217 of this chapter other than an immediate relative as defined in 

section 201(b) of the Act;

    (9) Any alien who seeks adjustment of status pursuant to an 

employment-based immigrant visa petition under section 203(b) of the Act 

and who is not maintaining a lawful nonimmigrant status at the time he 

or she files an application for adjustment of status; and

    (10) Any alien who was ever employed in the United States without 

the authorization of the Service or who has otherwise at any time 

violated the terms of his or her admission to the United States as a 

nonimmigrant, except an alien who is an immediate relative as defined in 

section 201(b) of the Act or a special immigrant as defined in section 

101(a)(27)(H), (I), (J), or (K) of the Act. For purposes of this 

paragraph, an alien who meets the requirements of Sec. 274a.12(c)(9) of 

this chapter shall not be deemed to have engaged in unauthorized 

employment during the pendency of his or her adjustment application.

    (c) Ineligible aliens. The following categories of aliens are 

ineligible to apply for adjustment of status to that of a lawful 

permanent resident alien under section 245 of the Act:

    (1) Any nonpreference alien who is seeking or engaging in gainful 

employment in the United States who is not the beneficiary of a valid 

individual or blanket labor certification issued by the Secretary of 

Labor or who is not exempt from certification requirements under Sec. 

212.8(b) of this chapter;

    (2) Except for an alien who is applying for residence under the 

provisions of section 133 of the Immigration Act of 1990, any alien who 

has or had the status of an exchange visitor under section 101(a)(15)(J) 

of the Act and who is subject to the foreign residence requirement of 

section 212(e) of the Act, unless the alien has complied with the 

foreign residence requirement or has been granted a waiver of that 

requirement, under that section. An alien who has been granted a waiver 

under section 212(e)(iii) of the Act based on a request by a State 

Department of Health (or its equivalent) under Pub. L. 103-416 shall be 

ineligible to apply for adjustment of status under section 245 of the 

Act if the terms and conditions specified in section 214(k) of the Act 

and Sec. 212.7(c)(9) of this chapter have not been met;

    (3) Any alien who has nonimmigrant status under paragraph (15)(A), 

(15)(E), or (15)(G) of section 101(a) of the Act, or has an occupational 

status which would, if the alien were seeking admission to the United 

States, entitle the alien to nonimmigrant status under those paragraphs, 

unless the alien first executes and submits the written waiver required 

by section 247(b) of the Act and part 247 of this chapter;

    (4) Any alien who claims immediate relative status under section 

201(b) or preference status under sections 203(a) or 203(b) of the Act, 

unless the applicant is the beneficiary of a valid unexpired visa 

petition filed in accordance with part 204 of this chapter;

    (5) Any alien who is already an alien lawfully admitted to the 

United States for permanent residence on a conditional basis pursuant to 

section 216 or 216A of the Act, regardless of any other quota or non-

quota immigrant visa classification for which the alien may otherwise be 

eligible;

    (6) Any alien admitted to the United States as a nonimmigrant 

defined in section 101(a)(15)(K) of the Act, unless:

    (i) In the case of a K-1 fiance[eacute](e) under section 

101(a)(15)(K)(i) of the Act or the K-2 child of a fiance[eacute](e) 

under section 101(a)(15)(K)(iii) of the Act, the alien is applying for 

adjustment of status based upon the marriage of the K-1 

fiance[eacute](e) which was contracted within 90 days of entry with the 

United States citizen who filed a petition on behalf of the K-1 

fiance[eacute](e) pursuant to Sec. 214.2(k) of this chapter;

    (ii) In the case of a K-3 spouse under section 101(a)(15)(K)(ii) of 

the Act or the K-4 child of a spouse under section 101(a)(15)(K)(iii) of 

the Act, the alien is applying for adjustment of status based upon the 

marriage of the K-3 spouse to the United States citizen who filed a 

petition on behalf of the K-3 spouse pursuant to Sec. 214.2(k) of this 

chapter;

    (7) A nonimmigrant classified pursuant to section 101(a)(15)(S) of 

the Act, unless the nonimmigrant is applying for adjustment of status 

pursuant to the request of a law enforcement authority, the provisions 

of section



[[Page 494]]



101(a)(15)(S) of the Act, and 8 CFR 245.11;

    (8) Any arriving alien who is in removal proceedings pursuant to 

section 235(b)(1) or section 240 of the Act; and

    (9) Any alien who seeks to adjust status based upon a marriage which 

occurred on or after November 10, 1986, and while the alien was in 

exclusion, deportation, or removal proceedings, or judicial proceedings 

relating thereto.

    (i) Commencement of proceedings. The period during which the alien 

is in deportation, exclusion, or removal proceedings or judicial 

proceedings relating thereto, commences:

    (A) With the issuance of the Form I-221, Order to Show Cause and 

Notice of Hearing prior to June 20, 1991;

    (B) With the filing of a Form I-221, Order to Show Cause and Notice 

of Hearing, issued on or after June 20, 1991, with the Immigration 

Court;

    (C) With the issuance of Form I-122, Notice to Applicant for 

Admission Detained for Hearing Before Immigration Judge, prior to April 

1, 1997,

    (D) With the filing of a Form I-862, Notice to Appear, with the 

Immigration Court, or

    (E) With the issuance and service of Form I-860, Notice and Order of 

Expedited Removal.

    (ii) Termination of proceedings. The period during which the alien 

is in exclusion, deportation, or removal proceedings, or judicial 

proceedings relating thereto, terminates:

    (A) When the alien departs from the United States while an order of 

exclusion, deportation, or removal is outstanding or before the 

expiration of the voluntary departure time granted in connection with an 

alternate order of deportation or removal;

    (B) When the alien is found not to be inadmissible or deportable 

from the United States;

    (C) When the Form I-122, I-221, I-860, or I-862 is canceled;

    (D) When proceedings are terminated by the immigration judge or the 

Board of Immigration Appeals; or

    (E) When a petition for review or an action for habeas corpus is 

granted by a Federal court on judicial review.

    (iii) Exemptions. This prohibition shall no longer apply if:

    (A) The alien is found not to be inadmissible or deportable from the 

United States;

    (B) Form I-122, I-221, I-860, or I-862, is canceled;

    (C) Proceedings are terminated by the immigration judge or the Board 

of Immigration Appeals;

    (D) A petition for review or an action for habeas corpus is granted 

by a Federal court on judicial review;

    (E) The alien has resided outside the United States for 2 or more 

years following the marriage; or

    (F) The alien establishes the marriage is bona fide by providing 

clear and convincing evidence that the marriage was entered into in good 

faith and in accordance with the laws of the place where the marriage 

took place, was not entered into for the purpose of procuring the 

alien's entry as an immigrant, and no fee or other consideration was 

given (other than to an attorney for assistance in preparation of a 

lawful petition) for the filing of a petition.

    (iv) Request for exemption. No application or fee is required to 

request the exemption under section 245(e) of the Act. The request must 

be made in writing and submitted with the Form I-485. Application for 

Permanent Residence. The request must state the basis for requesting 

consideration for the exemption and must be supported by documentary 

evidence establishing eligibility for the exemption.

    (v) Evidence to establish eligibility for the bona fide marriage 

exemption. Section 204(g) of the Act provides that certain visa 

petitions based upon marriages entered into during deportation, 

exclusion or related judicial proceedings may be approved only if the 

petitioner provides clear and convincing evidence that the marriage is 

bona fide. Evidence that a visa petition based upon the same marriage 

was approved under the bona fide marriage exemption to section 204(g) of 

the Act will be considered primary evidence of eligibility for the bona 

fide marriage exemption provided in this part. The applicant will not be 

required to submit additional evidence to qualify for the bona fide 

marriage exemption provided in this part, unless the district



[[Page 495]]



director determines that such additional evidence is needed. In cases 

where the district director notifies the applicant that additional 

evidence is required, the applicant must submit documentary evidence 

which clearly and convincingly establishes that the marriage was entered 

into in good faith and not entered into for the purpose of procuring the 

alien's entry as an immigrant. Such evidence may include:

    (A) Documentation showing joint ownership of property;

    (B) Lease showing joint tenancy of a common residence;

    (C) Documentation showing commingling of financial resources;

    (D) Birth certificates of children born to the applicant and his or 

her spouse;

    (E) Affidavits of third parties having knowledge of the bona fides 

of the marital relationship, or

    (F) Other documentation establishing that the marriage was not 

entered into in order to evade the immigration laws of the United 

States.

    (vi) Decision. An application for adjustment of status filed during 

the prohibited period shall be denied, unless the applicant establishes 

eligibility for an exemption from the general prohibition.

    (vii) Denials. The denial of an application for adjustment of status 

because the marriage took place during the prohibited period shall be 

without prejudice to the consideration of a new application or a motion 

to reopen a previously denied application, if deportation or exclusion 

proceedings are terminated while the alien is in the United States. The 

denial shall also be without prejudice to the consideration of a new 

application or motion to reopen the adjustment of status application, if 

the applicant presents clear and convincing evidence establishing 

eligibility for the bona fide marriage exemption contained in this part.

    (viii) Appeals. An application for adjustment of status to lawful 

permanent resident which is denied by the district director solely 

because the applicant failed to establish eligibility for the bona fide 

marriage exemption contained in this part may be appealed to the 

Associate Commissioner, Examinations, in accordance with 8 CFR part 103. 

The appeal to the Associate Commissioner, Examinations, shall be the 

single level of appellate review established by statute.

    (d) Definitions--(1) Lawful immigration status. For purposes of 

section 245(c)(2) of the Act, the term ``lawful immigration status'' 

will only describe the immigration status of an individual who is:

    (i) In lawful permanent resident status;

    (ii) An alien admitted to the United States in nonimmigrant status 

as defined in section 101(a)(15) of the Act, whose initial period of 

admission has not expired or whose nonimmigrant status has been extended 

in accordance with part 214 of this chapter;

    (iii) In refugee status under section 207 of the Act, such status 

not having been revoked;

    (iv) In asylee status under section 208 of the Act, such status not 

having been revoked;

    (v) In parole status which has not expired, been revoked or 

terminated; or

    (vi) Eligible for the benefits of Public Law 101-238 (the 

Immigration Nursing Relief Act of 1989) and files an application for 

adjustment of status on or before October 17, 1991.

    (2) No fault of the applicant or for technical reasons. The 

parenthetical phrase other than through no fault of his or her own or 

for technical reasons shall be limited to:

    (i) Inaction of another individual or organization designated by 

regulation to act on behalf of an individual and over whose actions the 

individual has no control, if the inaction is acknowledged by that 

individual or organization (as, for example, where a designated school 

official certified under Sec. 214.2(f) of this chapter or an exchange 

propram sponsor under Sec. 214.2(j) of this chapter did not provide 

required notification to the Service of continuation of status, or did 

not forward a request for continuation of status to the Service); or

    (ii) A technical violation resulting from inaction of the Service 

(as for example, where an applicant establishes that he or she properly 

filed a timely request to maintain status and the Service has not yet 

acted on that request). An individual whose refugee or



[[Page 496]]



asylum status has expired through passage of time, but whose status has 

not been revoked, will be considered to have gone out of status for a 

technical reason.

    (iii) A technical violation caused by the physical inability of the 

applicant to request an extension of nonimmigrant stay from the Service 

either in person or by mail (as, for example, an individual who is 

hospitalized with an illness at the time nonimmigrant stay expires). The 

explanation of such a technical violation shall be accompanied by a 

letter explaining the circumstances from the hospital or attending 

physician.

    (iv) A technical violation resulting from the Service's application 

of the maximum five/six year period of stay for certain H-1 nurses only 

if the applicant was subsequently reinstated to H-1 status in accordance 

with the terms of Public Law 101-656 (Immigration Amendments of 1988).

    (3) Effect of departure. The departure and subsequent reentry of an 

individual who was employed without authorization in the United States 

after January 1, 1977 does not erase the bar to adjustment of status in 

section 245(c)(2) of the Act. Similarly, the departure and subsequent 

reentry of an individual who has not maintained a lawful immigration 

status on any previous entry into the United States does not erase the 

bar to adjustment of status in section 245(c)(2) of the Act for any 

application filed on or after November 6, 1986.

    (e) Special categories--(1) Alien medical graduates. Any alien who 

is a medical graduate qualified for special immigrant classification 

under section 101(a)(27)(H) of the Act and is the beneficiary of an 

approved petition as required under section 204(a)(1)(E)(i) of the Act 

is eligible for adjustment of status. An accompanying spouse and 

children also may apply for adjustment of status under this section. 

Temporary absences from the United States for 30 days or less, during 

which the applicant was practicing or studying medicine, do not 

interrupt the continuous presence requirement. Temporary absences 

authorized under the Service's advance parole procedures will not be 

considered interruptive of continuous presence when the alien applies 

for adjustment of status.

    (2) Adjustment of certain nurses who were in H-1 nonimmigrant status 

on September 1, 1989 (Pub. L. 101-238)--(i) Eligibility. An alien is 

eligible to apply for adjustment of status without regard to the 

numerical limitations of sections 201 and 202 of the Act if:

    (A) The applicant was admitted to the United States in, or had been 

granted a change of status to, nonimmigrant status under section 

101(a)(15)(H)(i) of the Act on or before September 1, 1989, to perform 

services as a registered nurse (regardless of the date upon which the 

applicant's authorization to remain in the United States expired or will 

expire), and the applicant had not thereafter been granted a change to 

status to any other nonimmigrant classification prior to September 1, 

1989,

    (B) The applicant has been employed in the United States as a 

registered nurse for an aggregate of three years prior to the date of 

application for adjustment of status,

    (C) The applicant's continued employment as a registered nurse meets 

the standards established for certification described in section 

212(a)(5)(A)(i) of the Act,

    (D) The applicant is the beneficiary of:

    (1) A valid, unexpired visa petition filed prior to October 1, 1991, 

which has been approved to grant the applicant preference status under 

section 202(a) (3) or (6) of the Act (as in effect prior to October 1, 

1991), and is deemed by operation of the automatic conversion provisions 

of section 4 of Public Law 102-110 (the Armed Forces Immigration 

Adjustment Act of 1991), to be effective to grant the applicant 

preference status under section 203(b) (2) or (3) of the Act (as in 

effect on and after October 1, 1991) because of his or here occupation 

as a registered nurse, provided the application for adjustment of status 

is approved no later than October 1, 1993, or

    (2) A valid, unexpired visa petition filed on or after October 1, 

1991, which has been approved to grant the applicant preference, status 

under section



[[Page 497]]



203(b) (1), (2), or (3) of this Act (as in effect on and after October 

1, 1991) because of his or her occupation as a registered nurse, and

    (E) The applicant properly files an application for adjustment of 

status under the provisions of section 245 of the Act.

    (ii) Application period. To benefit from the provisions of Public 

Law 101-238, an alien must properly file an application for adjustments 

of status under section 245 of the Act on or before March 20, 1995.

    (iii) Application. An applicant for the benefits of Public Law 101-

238 must file an application for adjustment of status on Form I-485, 

accompanied by the fee and supporting documents described in Sec. 245.2 

of this part. Beneficiaries of Public Law 101-238 must also submit:

    (A) Evidence that the applicant is the beneficiary of:

    (1) A valid, unexpired visa petition filed prior to October 1, 1991, 

which has been approved to grant the applicant preference status under 

section 203(a) (3) or (6) of the Act (as in effect prior to October 1, 

1991) and is deemed by operation of the automatic conversion provisions 

of section 4 of Public Law 101-110 to be effective to grant the 

applicant preference status under section 203(b) (2) or (3) of the Act 

(as in effect on and after October 1, 1991) because of his or her 

occupation as a registered nurse, provided the application for 

adjustment of status is approved no later than October 1, 1993, or

    (2) A valid, unexpired visa petition filed on or after October 1, 

1991, which has been approved to grant the applicant preference status 

under section 203(b) (1), (2), or (3) of the Act (as in effect on and 

after October 1, 1991) because of his or her occupation as a registered 

nurse, and

    (B) A request, made on Form ETA 750 submitted in duplicate, for a 

determination by the district director that the alien is qualified for 

and will engage in the occupation of registered nurse, as currently 

listed on Schedule A (20 CFR part 656),

    (C) Evidence showing that the applicant has been employed in the 

United States as a registered nurse for an aggregate of three years 

prior to the date the application for adjustment of status is filed, in 

the form of:

    (1) Letters from employers stating the beginning and ending dates of 

employment as a registered nurse, or

    (2) Other evidence of employment as a registered nurse, such as pay 

receipts supported by affidavits of co-workers, which is accompanied by 

evidence that the nurse has made reasonable efforts to obtain employment 

letter(s), but has been unable to do so because the current or former 

employer refuses to issue the letter or has gone out of business,

    (D) Evidence that the applicant was licensed, either temporarily or 

permanently, as a registered nurse during all periods of qualifying 

employment, and

    (E) Evidence which establishes that the applicant was in the United 

States in H-1 nonimmigrant status for the purpose of performing services 

as a registered nurse on September 1, 1989.

    (iv) Effect of section 245(c)(2). An applicant for the benefits of 

the adjustment of status provisions of Public Law 101-238 must establish 

eligibility for adjustment of status under all provisions of section 245 

unless those provisions have specifically been waived.

    (A) Application for adjustment of status filed on or before October 

17, 1991. An applicant who qualifies for the benefits of Public Law 101-

238, who properly files an application for adjustment of status on or 

before October 17, 1991, may be granted adjustment of status even though 

the alien has engaged or is engaging in unauthorized employment. For 

purposes of adjustment of status, the applicant will be considered to 

have continuously maintained a lawful nonimmigrant status throughout his 

or her stay in the United States as a nonimmigrant and to be in lawful 

nonimmigrant status at the time the application is filed.

    (B) Application for adjustment of status filed after October 17, 

1991. An alien who files an application for adjustment of status after 

October 17, 1991, will not automatically be considered as having 

maintained lawful nonimmigrant status. An alien who files for adjustment 

after this date will be subject to the statutory bar of section 

245(c)(2) of the Act and will be ineligible to apply for adjustment of 

status if he or she has



[[Page 498]]



failed to continuously maintain lawful nonimmigrant status (other than 

through no fault of his or her own or for technical reasons); if he or 

she was not in lawful nonimmigrant status at the time the application 

was filed; or if he or she was employed without authorization on or 

after November 29, 1990. Unauthorized employment which has been waived 

as a basis for ineligibility for adjustment of status may not be used as 

the basis of a determination that the applicant is ineligible for 

adjustment of status due to failure to continuously maintain lawful 

nonimmigrant status.

    (C) Motions to reopen. Public Law 101-649 (the Immigration Act of 

1990), which became law on November 29, 1990, retroactively amended 

Public Law 101-238 (the Immigration Nursing Relief Act of 1989). An 

alien whose application for adjustment of status under the provisions of 

Public Law 101-238 was denied by the district director before November 

29, 1990, because of unauthorized employment, failure to continuously 

maintain a lawful nonimmigrant status, or not being in lawful 

immigration status at the time of filing, may file a motion to reopen 

the adjustment application. The motion to reopen must be made in 

accordance with the provisions of 8 CFR 103.5. The district director 

will reopen the application for adjustment of status and enter a new 

decision based upon the provisions of Public Law 101-238, as amended by 

Public Law 101-649. Any other alien whose application for adjustment of 

status was denied may file a motion to reopen or reconsider in 

accordance with normal statutory and regulatory provisions.

    (v) Description of qualifying employment. Qualifying employment as a 

registered nurse may have taken place at any time before the alien files 

the application for adjustment of status. It may have occurred before, 

on, or after the enactment of Public Law 101-238. All qualifying 

employment must have occurred in the United States. The qualifying 

employment as a registered nurse may have occurred while the alien was 

in any immigration status, provided that the alien had been admitted in 

or changed to H-1 status for the purpose of performing services as a 

registered nurse on or before September 1, 1989, and had not thereafter 

changed from H-1 status to any other status before September 1, 1989. 

The employment need not have been continuous, provided the applicant can 

establish that he or she engaged in qualifying employment for a total of 

three or more years. Qualifying employment may include periods when the 

applicant possessed a provisional, temporary, interim, or other permit 

or license authorizing the applicant to perform services as a registered 

nurse; provided the license or permit was issued or recognized by the 

State Board of Nursing of the state in which the employment was 

performed. Qualifying employment may not include periods when the 

applicant performed duties as a registered nurse in violation of any 

state law regulating the employment of registered nurses in that state.

    (vi) Effect of enactment on spouse or child--(A) Spouse or child 

accompanying principal alien. The accompanying spouse or child of an 

applicant for adjustment of status who benefits from Public Law 101-238, 

may also apply for adjustment of status. All benefits and limitations of 

this section, including those resulting from the implementation of the 

adjustment of status provisions of section 162(f) of Public Law 101-649, 

apply equally to the principal applicant and his or her accompanying 

spouse or child.

    (B) Spouse or child residing outside the United States or ineligible 

for adjustment of status. A spouse or child who is ineligible to apply 

for adjustment of status as an accompanying spouse or child is not 

immediately eligible for issuance of an immigrant visa under the 

provisions of Public Law 101-238. However, the spouse or child may be 

eligible for visa issuance under other provisions of the Act.

    (1) Existing relationship. A spouse or child acquired by the 

principal alien prior to the approval of the principal's adjustment of 

status application may be accorded the derivative priority date and 

preference category of the principal alien. The spouse or child may use 

the priority date and category when it becomes current, in accordance 

with existing limitations outlined in



[[Page 499]]



sections 201 and 202 of the Act. The priority date is not considered 

immediately available for these family members under Public Law 101-238.

    (2) Relationship entered into after adjustment of status is 

approved. An alien who acquires lawful permanent residence under the 

provisions of Public Law 101-238 may file a petition under section 204 

of the Act for an alien spouse, unmarried son or unmarried daughter in 

accordance with existing laws and regulations. The priority date is not 

considered immediately available for these family members under Public 

Law 101-238.

    (3) Special immigrant juveniles. Any alien qualified for special 

immigrant classification under section 101(a)(27)(J) of the Act shall be 

deemed, for the purpose of section 245(a) of the Act, to have been 

paroled into the United States, regardless of the alien's actual method 

of entry into the United States. Neither the provisions of section 

245(c)(2) nor the exclusion provisions of sections 212(a)(4), (5)(A), or 

(7)(A) of the Act shall apply to a qualified special immigrant under 

section 101(a)(27)(J) of the Act. The exclusion provisions of sections 

212(a)(2)(A), (2)(B), (2)(C) (except for so much of such paragraph as 

related to a single offense of simple possession of 30 grams or less of 

marijuana), (3)(A), (3)(B), (3)(C), or (3)(E) of the Act may not be 

waived. Any other exclusion provision may be waived on an individual 

basis for humanitarian purposes, family unity, or when it is otherwise 

in the public interest; however, the relationship between the alien and 

the alien's natural parents or prior adoptive parents shall not be 

considered a factor in a discretionary waiver determination.

    (f) Concurrent applications to overcome grounds of inadmissibility. 

Except as provided in 8 CFR parts 235 and 249, an application under this 

part shall be the sole method of requesting the exercise of discretion 

under sections 212(g), (h), (i), and (k) of the Act, as they relate to 

the inadmissibility of an alien in the United States. No fee is required 

for filing an application to overcome the grounds of inadmissibility of 

the Act if filed concurrently with an application for adjustment of 

status under the provisions of the Act of October 28, 1977, and of this 

part.

    (g) Availability of immigrant visas under section 245 and priority 

dates--(1) Availability of immigrant visas under section 245. An alien 

is ineligible for the benefits of section 245 of the Act unless an 

immigrant visa is immediately available to him or her at the time the 

application is filed. If the applicant is a preference alien, the 

current Department of State Bureau of Consular Affairs Visa Bulletin 

will be consulted to determine whether an immigrant visa is immediately 

available. An immigrant visa is considered available for accepting and 

processing the application Form I-485 is the preference category 

applicant has a priority date on the waiting list which is earlier than 

the date shown in the Bulletin (or the Bulletin shows that numbers for 

visa applicants in his or her category are current). An immigrant visa 

is also considered immediately available if the applicant establishes 

eligibility for the benefits of Public Law 101-238. Information 

concerning the immediate availability of an immigrant visa may be 

obtained at any Service office.

    (2) Priority dates. The priority date of an applicant who is seeking 

the allotment of an immigrant visa number under one of the preference 

classes specified in section 203(a) or 203(b) of the Act by virtue of a 

valid visa petition approved in his or her behalf shall be fixed by the 

date on which such approved petition was filed.

    (h) Conditional basis of status. Whenever an alien spouse (as 

defined in section 216(g)(1) of the Act), an alien son or daughter (as 

defined in section 216(g)(2) of the Act), an alien entrepreneur (as 

defined in section 216A(f)(1) of the Act), or an alien spouse or child 

(as defined in section 216A(f)(2) of the Act) is granted adjustment of 

status to that of lawful permanent residence, the alien shall be 

considered to have obtained such status on a conditional basis subject 

to the provisions of section 216 or 216A of the Act, as appropriate.

    (i) Adjustment of status from K-3/K-4 status. An alien admitted to 

the United States as a K-3 under section 101(a)(15)(K)(ii) of the Act 

may apply for adjustment of status to that of a



[[Page 500]]



permanent resident pursuant to section 245 of the Act at any time 

following the approval of the Form I-130 petition filed on the alien's 

behalf, by the same citizen who petitioned for the alien's K-3 status. 

An alien admitted to the United States as a K-4 under section 

101(a)(15)(K)(iii) of the Act may apply for adjustment of status to that 

of permanent residence pursuant to section 245 of the Act at any time 

following the approval of the Form I-130 petition filed on the alien's 

behalf, by the same citizen who petitioned for the alien's parent's K-3 

status. Upon approval of the application, the director shall record his 

or her lawful admission for permanent residence in accordance with that 

section and subject to the conditions prescribed in section 216 of the 

Act. An alien admitted to the U.S. as a K-3/K-4 alien may not adjust to 

that of permanent resident status in any way other than as a spouse or 

child of the U.S. citizen who originally filed the petition for that 

alien's K-3/K-4 status.



(Title I of Pub. L. 95-145 enacted Oct. 28, 1977 (91 Stat. 1223), sec. 

103 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1103). Interpret or 

apply secs. 101, 212, 242 and 245 (8 U.S.C. 1101, 1182, 1252 and 1255))



[30 FR 14778, Nov. 30, 1965]



    Editorial Note: For Federal Register citations affecting Sec. 

245.1, see the List of CFR Sections Affected, which appears in the 

Finding Aids section of the printed volume and on GPO Access.