[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: 8CFR258.2]



[Page 615-617]

 

                     TITLE 8--ALIENS AND NATIONALITY

 

               CHAPTER I--DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY

 

PART 258_LIMITATIONS ON PERFORMANCE OF LONGSHORE WORK BY ALIEN CREWMEN

--Table of Contents

 

Sec. 258.2  Exceptions.



    Any master or agent who uses nonimmigrant crewmen to perform 

longshore work at any United States port under the exceptions provided 

for in paragraphs (a)(2), (b), or (c) of this section must so indicate 

on the crew manifest and shall note under which exception the work will 

be performed.

    (a) Hazardous cargo. (1) The term longshore work does not include 

the loading and unloading of any cargo for which the Secretary of 

Transportation has prescribed regulations under authority contained in 

chapter 37 of title 46, United States Code, section 311 of the Federal 

Water Pollution Control Act, section 4106 of the Oil Pollution Act of 

1990, or section 105 or 106 of the Hazardous Materials Transportation 

Act.



[[Page 616]]



    (2) In order to invoke the hazardous cargo exception for safety and 

environmental protection, the master or agent shall note on the manifest 

that the vessel is a qualifying tanker or carries hazardous dry bulk 

cargo.

    (i) All tankers qualify for the hazardous cargo exception, including 

parcel tankers, except for a tanker that has been gas-freed to transport 

non-hazardous dry bulk commodities.

    (ii) In order for a vessel to qualify for the hazardous cargo 

exception as a dry bulk hazardous cargo carrier, the master or agent 

must show the immigration officer the dangerous cargo manifest that is 

required by Coast Guard regulation 46 CFR 148.02-3(a) to be kept near 

the bridge house.

    (b) Prevailing practice exception. (1) Nonimmigrant crewmen may 

perform longshore work under this exception if:

    (i) There is in effect in the local port one or more collective 

bargaining agreements, each covering at least 30 percent of the persons 

performing longshore work at the port, and each of which permits the 

longshore activity to be performed by the nonimmigrant crewman, or

    (ii) There is no collective bargaining agreement in effect in the 

local port covering at least 30 percent of the persons performing 

longshore work at the port, and the employer of the crewmen has filed an 

attestation with the Secretary of Labor that the Secretary of Labor has 

accepted.

    (2) Documentation to be presented under the prevailing practice 

exception. (i) If the master or agent states on the manifest, Form I-

418, that nonimmigrant crewmen will perform longshore work at a port 

under the prevailing practice exception as permitted by all collective 

bargaining agreements covering 30 percent or more of the persons 

performing longshore work at the port, then the master or agent must 

present to the examining immigration officer an affidavit from the local 

stevedore. The stevedore or a union representative of the employees' 

association must state on the affidavit that all bargaining agreements 

covering 30 percent or more of the longshore workers at the port allow 

nonimmigrant crewmen either to perform all longshore work or to perform 

those specified longshore activities that crewmen on the vessel intend 

to perform.

    (ii) Where there is no collective bargaining agreement in effect at 

a port covering at least 30 percent of the persons who do longshore 

work, and the master or agent states on the manifest that nonimmigrant 

crewmen will perform such work under the prevailing practice exception, 

then the master or agent shall present a copy of the notification 

received from the Secretary of Labor that the attestation required for 

this exception has been accepted.

    (iii) When an unanticipated emergency occurs, the master or agent of 

a vessel may file an attestation with the Secretary of Labor up to the 

date on which crewmen perform longshore work.

    (A) If, because of an unanticipated emergency, crewmen on a vessel 

perform longshore work under the prevailing practice exception at a 

port, a revised manifest shall be submitted together with complete 

documentation, as specified in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section, 

within 14 days of the longshore work having been done. Failure to 

present the required documentation may result in a fine under section 

251 of the Act.

    (B) All documents submitted after inspection shall be sent to the 

Immigration and Naturalization Service seaport office that inspected the 

vessel.

    (iv) Attestations are valid for one year from the date of filing and 

cover nonimmigrant crewmen landing during that period if the master or 

agent states on the manifest that the vessel's crew continue to comply 

with the conditions in the attestation. When the vessel's master or 

agent intends to use a previously accepted attestation that is still 

valid, the master or agent shall submit a copy of the notification from 

the Secretary of Labor that the attestation was accepted and shall note 

on the manifest that the vessel continues to comply with the conditions 

of the attestation.

    (3) Use of automated self-unloading conveyor belt or vacuum-actuated 

system



[[Page 617]]



on a vessel. An automated self-unloading conveyor belt or a vacuum-

actuated system may be operated by a nonimmigrant crewman under the 

prevailing practice exception when no collective bargaining agreement at 

the local port prevents it. The master or agent is not required to file 

an attestation for nonimmigrant crewmen to perform such activity in such 

a circumstance unless the Secretary of Labor has determined that such 

activity is not the prevailing practice at that port, and has publicized 

this finding. When invoking this exception, the master or agent of the 

vessel shall annotate the manifest that the longshore work consists of 

operating a self-unloading conveyor belt or a vacuum-actuated system on 

the vessel under the prevailing practice exception.

    (4) Sanctions upon notification by the Secretary of Labor. If the 

Immigration and Naturalization Service is notified by the Secretary of 

Labor that an entity has either misrepresented facts in its attestation 

or has failed to meet a condition attested to, then the Immigration and 

Naturalization Service will take the necessary steps to prevent the 

landing of vessels owned or chartered by the offending entity in 

accordance with section 258(c)(E)(i) of the Act. The Service may also 

impose a sanction as provided in that section, including the prohibition 

of any vessel owned or chartered by the violating entity from landing at 

any United States port for up to one year.

    (5) The three variations of the prevailing practice exception--

collective bargaining agreement, attestation process, and automated 

equipment--are port specific. If a vessel is to use nonimmigrant crewmen 

to perform longshore work under the prevailing practice exception, the 

appropriate documentation required under paragraph (b)(2) of this 

section must be presented for each port at which the longshore work will 

be performed.

    (c) Reciprocity exception. Nonimmigrant crewmen may perform 

longshore work in a United States port under this exception if:

    (1) The vessel on which the crewmen serve is registered in a country 

that does not prohibit crewmen aboard United States vessels from 

performing longshore work, or a specified longshore activity, when 

United States vessels land in that country, as determined by the 

Secretary of State; and

    (2) The master or agent presents an affidavit from the crewmen's 

employer or the vessel's owner that a majority of the ownership interest 

in the vessel is held by nationals of a country or countries that do not 

prohibit such longshore activity by crewmen aboard United States vessels 

when they land in those countries.

    (d) Vessels that qualify for multiple exceptions. A vessel that 

qualifies for more than one exception under this section may invoke the 

exception that the master or agent chooses.

    (e) Lack of documentation required by an exception. If a vessel 

invokes an exception to the prohibition against nonimmigrant crewmen 

performing longshore work, but lacks any documentation required to 

accompany the manifest when invoking the exception, then the vessel's 

crewmen shall not perform longshore work. If the longshore work is 

performed despite the lack of documentation that the immigration officer 

has noted on the Form I-410, then the vessel is subject to fine under 

section 251(d) of the Act.