[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: 8CFR251.1]



[Page 606-608]

 

                     TITLE 8--ALIENS AND NATIONALITY

 

               CHAPTER I--DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY

 

PART 251_ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE MANIFESTS AND LISTS: SUPPORTING DOCUMENTS

--Table of Contents

 

Sec. 251.1  Arrival manifests and lists.









Sec.

251.1 Arrival manifests and lists.

251.2 Notification of illegal landings.

251.3 Departure manifests and lists for vessels.

251.4 Departure manifests and lists for aircraft.

251.5 Paper arrival and departure manifests for crew.

251.6 Exemptions for private vessels and aircraft.



    Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1103, 1182, 1221, 1281, 1282, 8 CFR part 2.





    (a) Vessels--(1) General. The master or agent of every vessel 

arriving in the United States from a foreign place or an outlying 

possession of the United States shall present to the immigration officer 

at the port where the immigration inspection is performed a manifest of 

all crewmen on board on Form I-418, Passenger List and Crew List, in 

accordance with the instructions contained thereon.

    (2) Longshore work notations. The master or agent of the vessel 

shall indicate in writing immediately below the name of the last alien 

listed on the Form I-418 whether or not crewmen aboard the vessel will 

be used to perform longshore work at any United States port before the 

vessel departs the United States.

    (i) If no longshore work will be performed, no further notation 

regarding longshore work is required.

    (ii) If longshore work will be performed, the master or agent shall 

note which exception listed in section 258 of the Act permits the work. 

The exceptions are:

    (A) The hazardous cargo exception;

    (B) The prevailing practice exception in accordance with a port's 

collective bargaining agreements;

    (C) The prevailing practice exception at a port where there is no 

collective bargaining agreement, but for which the vessel files an 

attestation;

    (D) The prevailing practice exception for automated vessels; and

    (E) The reciprocity exception.

    (iii) If longshore work will be performed under the hazardous cargo 

exception, the vessel must either be a tanker or be transporting dry 

bulk cargo that qualifies as hazardous. All tankers qualify for the 

hazardous cargo exception, except for a tanker that has been gas-freed 

to load non-hazardous dry bulk commodities.



[[Page 607]]



    (A) To invoke the exception for tankers, the master or agent shall 

note on the manifest that the vessel is a qualifying tanker.

    (B) If the vessel is transporting dry bulk hazardous cargo, the 

master or agent shall note on the manifest that the vessel's dry bulk 

cargo is hazardous and shall show the immigration officer the dangerous 

cargo manifest that is signed by the master or an authorized 

representative of the owner, and that under 46 CFR 148.02 must be kept 

in a conspicuous place near the bridge house.

    (iv) If longshore work will be performed under the prevailing 

practice exception, the master or agent shall note on the manifest each 

port at which longshore work will be performed under this exception. 

Additionally, for each port the master or agent shall note either that:

    (A) The practice of nonimmigrant crewmen doing longshore work is in 

accordance with all collective bargaining agreements covering 30 percent 

or more of the longshore workers in the port;

    (B) The port has no collective bargaining agreement covering 30 

percent or more of the longshore workers in the port and an attestation 

has been filed with the Secretary of Labor;

    (C) An attestation that was previously filed is still valid and the 

vessel continues to comply with the conditions stated in that 

attestation; or

    (D) The longshore work consists of operating an automated, self-

unloading conveyor belt or a vacuum-actuated system.

    (v) If longshore work will be performed under the reciprocity 

exception, the master or agent shall note on the manifest that the work 

will be done under the reciprocity exception, and will note the 

nationality of the vessel's registry and the nationality or 

nationalities of the holders of a majority of the ownership interest in 

the vessel.

    (3) Exception for certain Great Lakes vessels. (i) A manifest shall 

not be required for a vessel of United States, Canadian, or British 

registry engaged solely in traffic on the Great Lakes or the St. 

Lawrence River and connecting waterways, herein designated as a Great 

Lakes vessel, unless:

    (A) The vessel employs nonimmigrant crewmen who will do longshore 

work at a port in the United States; or

    (B) The vessel employs crewmen of other than United States, 

Canadian, or British citizenship.

    (ii) In either situation, the master shall note the manifest in the 

manner prescribed in paragraph (a)(2) of this section.

    (iii) After submission of a manifest on the first voyage of a 

calendar year, a manifest shall not be required on subsequent arrivals 

unless a nonimmigrant crewman of other than Canadian or British 

citizenship is employed on the vessel who was not aboard and listed on 

the last prior manifest, or a change has occurred regarding the 

performance of longshore work in the United States by nonimmigrant 

crewmen, or a change has occurred in the exception that the master or 

agent of the vessel wishes to invoke which was not noted on the last 

prior manifest.

    (4) The master or agent of a vessel that only bunkers at a United 

States port en route to another United States port shall annotate Form 

I-418 presented at the onward port to indicate the time, date, and place 

of bunkering.

    (5) If documentation is required to support an exception, as 

described in Sec. 258.2 of this chapter, it must accompany the 

manifest.

    (b) Aircraft. The captain or agent of every aircraft arriving in the 

United States from a foreign place or from an outlying possession of the 

United States, except an aircraft arriving in the United States directly 

from Canada on a flight originating in that country, shall present to 

the immigration officer at the port where the inspection is performed a 

manifest on United States Customs Service Form 7507 or on the 

International Civil Aviation Organization's General Declaration of all 

the alien crewmembers on board, including alien crewmembers who are 

returning to the United States after taking an aircraft of the same line 

from the United States to a foreign place or alien crewmembers who are 

entering the United States as passengers solely



[[Page 608]]



for the purpose of taking an aircraft of the same line from the United 

States to a foreign port. The captain or agent of an aircraft that only 

refuels at the United States en route to another United States port must 

annotate the manifest presented at the onward port to indicate the time, 

date, and place of refueling. The surname, given name, and middle 

initial of each alien crewman listed also shall be shown on the 

manifest. In addition, the captain or agent of the aircraft shall 

indicate the total number of United States citizen crewmembers and total 

number of alien crewmembers.

    (c) Additional documents. The master, captain, or agent shall 

prepare as a part of the manifest, when one is required for presentation 

to an immigration officer, a completely executed set of Forms I-95, 

Conditional Landing Permit, for each nonimmigrant alien crewman on 

board, except:

    (1) A Canadian or British citizen crewman serving on a vessel plying 

solely between Canada and the United States; or

    (2) A nonimmigrant crewman who is in possession of an unmutilated 

Form I-184, Alien Crewman Landing Permit and Identification Card, or an 

unmutilated Form I-95 with space for additional endorsements previously 

issued to him or her as a member of the crew of the same vessel or an 

aircraft of the same line on his or her last prior arrival in the United 

States, following which he or she departed from the United States as a 

member of the crew of the same vessel or an aircraft of the same line.



[62 FR 10386, Mar. 6, 1997]