Bureau of Consular Affairs; Registration for the Diversity Immigrant (DV-2016) Visa Program, 57172-57180 [2014-22767]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 185 / Wednesday, September 24, 2014 / Notices
the United States,’’ pursuant to section
407 of the Act;
For Sudan, the restriction on making
certain appropriated funds available for
assistance to the Government of Sudan
in the annual Department of State,
Foreign Operations, and Related
Programs Appropriations Act, currently
set forth in section 7042(j) of the
Department of State, Foreign
Operations, and Related Programs
Appropriations Act, 2014 (Div. K, Pub.
L. 113–76), and any provision of law
that is the same or substantially the
same as this provision, pursuant to
section 402(c)(5) of the Act;
For Turkmenistan, a waiver as
required in the ‘‘important national
interest of the United States,’’ pursuant
to section 407 of the Act; and
For Uzbekistan, a waiver as required
in the ‘‘important national interest of
the United States,’’ pursuant to section
407 of the Act.
Dated: September 16, 2014.
Kari Johnstone,
Office Director, Office of International
Religious Freedom, Department of State.
[FR Doc. 2014–22769 Filed 9–23–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice 8880]
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
U.S. Department of State Advisory
Committee on Private International
Law (ACPIL): Public Meeting on Online
Dispute Resolution (ODR)
The Office of the Assistant Legal
Adviser for Private International Law,
Department of State, hereby gives notice
that the ACPIL ODR Study Group will
hold a public meeting. The ACPIL ODR
Study Group will meet to discuss the
next session of the UNCITRAL ODR
Working Group, scheduled for October
20–24, 2014 in Vienna. This is not a
meeting of the full Advisory Committee.
The UNCITRAL ODR Working Group
is charged with the development of legal
instruments for resolving both business
to business and business to consumer
cross-border electronic commerce
disputes. The Working Group is in the
process of developing generic ODR
procedural rules for resolution of crossborder electronic commerce disputes,
along with separate legal instruments
that may take the form of annexes such
as guidelines for online dispute
resolution providers and arbitrators. For
the reports of the first eight sessions of
the UNCITRAL ODR Working Group—
December 13–17, 2010, in Vienna (A/
CN.9/716); May 23–27, 2011, in New
York (A/CN.9/721); Nov. 14–18, 2011,
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in Vienna (A/CN.9/739); May 21–25,
2012, in New York (A/CN.9/744);
November 5–9, 2012, in Vienna (A/
CN.9/762): May 20–24, 2013, in New
York (A/CN.9/769); November 18–22,
2014, in Vienna (A/CN.9/795) and
March 24–28, 2014, in New York (A/
CN.9/801)—please follow the following
link: https://www.uncitral.org/uncitral/
commission/working_groups/3Online_
Dispute_Resolution.html. Documents
relating to the upcoming session of the
Working Group are available on the
same link.
Time and Place: The meeting of the
ACPIL ODR Study Group will take place
on Thursday October 2 from 10:00 a.m.
to 1:00 p.m. EDT at 2430 E Street NW.,
South Building (SA 4) (Navy Hill),
Room 356. Participants should arrive at
Navy Hill before 9:45 a.m. for visitor
screening. Participants will be met at
the Navy Hill gate at 23rd and D Streets,
NW., and will be escorted to the South
Building. Persons arriving later will
need to make arrangements for entry
using the contact information provided
below. If you are unable to attend the
public meeting and would like to
participate from a remote location,
teleconferencing will be available.
Public Participation: This meeting is
open to the public, subject to the
capacity of the meeting room. Access to
Navy Hill is strictly controlled. For
preclearance purposes, those planning
to attend in person are requested to send
an email to PIL@state.gov providing full
name, address, date of birth, citizenship,
driver’s license or passport number,
affiliation, and email address. This will
greatly facilitate entry. A member of the
public needing reasonable
accommodation should provide an
email requesting such accommodation
to pil@state.gov no later than a week
before the meeting. Requests made after
that date will be considered, but might
not be able to be fulfilled. If you would
like to participate by telephone, please
email pil@state.gov to obtain the call-in
number and other information. Data
from the public is requested pursuant to
Public Law 99–399 (Omnibus
Diplomatic Security and Antiterrorism
Act of 1986), as amended; Public Law
107–56 (USA PATRIOT Act); and
Executive Order 13356. The purpose of
the collection is to validate the identity
of individuals who enter Department
facilities. The data will be entered into
the Visitor Access Control System
(VACS–D) database. Please see the
Security Records System of Records
Notice (State-36) at http: www.state.gov/
documents/organization/103419.pdf for
additional information.
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Dated: September 17, 2014.
Michael J. Dennis,
Attorney-Adviser, Office of Private
International Law, U.S. Department of State.
[FR Doc. 2014–22760 Filed 9–23–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–08–P
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice 8879]
Bureau of Consular Affairs;
Registration for the Diversity
Immigrant (DV–2016) Visa Program
Department of State.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
This public notice provides
information on how to apply for the
DV–2016 Program.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Program Overview
The Congressionally-mandated
Diversity Immigrant Visa Program is
administered annually by the
Department of State. Section 203(c) of
the Immigration and Nationality Act
(INA) provides for a class of immigrants
known as ‘‘diversity immigrants,’’ from
countries with historically low rates of
immigration to the United States. For
fiscal year 2016, 50,000 diversity visas
(DVs) will be available. There is no cost
to register for the DV Program.
Applicants who are selected in the
lottery (‘‘selectees’’) must meet simple,
but strict, eligibility requirements in
order to qualify for a diversity visa.
Selectees are chosen through a
randomized computer drawing.
Diversity visas are distributed among six
geographic regions and no single
country may receive more than seven
percent of the available DVs in any one
year.
For DV–2016, natives of the following
countries are not eligible to apply,
because more than 50,000 natives of
these countries immigrated to the
United States in the previous five years:
Bangladesh, Brazil, Canada, China
(mainland-born), Colombia, Dominican
Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Haiti,
India, Jamaica, Mexico, Nigeria,
Pakistan, Peru, Philippines, South
Korea, United Kingdom (except
Northern Ireland) and its dependent
territories, and Vietnam.
Persons born in Hong Kong SAR,
Macau SAR, and Taiwan are eligible.
Changes in eligibility this year: None.
Eligibility
Requirement #1: Individuals born in
countries whose natives qualify may be
eligible to enter. If you were not born in
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an eligible country, there are two other
ways you might be able to qualify.
• Was your spouse born in a country
whose natives are eligible? If yes, you
can claim your spouse’s country of
birth—provided that both you and your
spouse are named on the selected entry,
are issued diversity visas, and enter the
United States simultaneously.
• Were you born in a country whose
natives are ineligible, but in which
neither of your parents was born or
legally resident at the time of your
birth? If yes, you may claim the country
of birth of one of your parents if it is a
country whose natives are eligible for
the DV–2016 program. For more details
on what this means, see the Frequently
Asked Questions.
Requirement #2: Each applicant must
meet the education work experience
requirement of the DV program by
having either:
• A high school education or its
equivalent, defined as successful
completion of a 12-year course of formal
elementary and secondary education;
or
• two years of work experience
within the past five years in an
occupation requiring at least two years
of training or experience to perform.
The U.S. Department of Labor’s O*Net
Online database will be used to
determine qualifying work experience.
For more information about qualifying
work experience for the principal DV
applicant, see the Frequently Asked
Questions.
Do not submit an entry to the DV
program unless you meet both of these
requirements.
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Entry Period
Entries for the DV–2016 DV program
must be submitted electronically at
www.dvlottery.state.gov between noon,
Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) (GMT–4),
Wednesday, October 1, 2014, and noon,
Eastern Standard Time (EST) (GMT–5),
Monday, November 3, 2014. Do not wait
until the last week of the registration
period to enter, as heavy demand may
result in Web site delays. No late entries
or paper entries will be accepted. The
law allows only one entry by or for each
person during each registration period.
The Department of State uses
sophisticated technology to detect
multiple entries. Individuals with more
than one entry will be disqualified.
Completing Your Electronic Entry for
the DV–2016 Program
Submit your Electronic Diversity Visa
Entry Form (E–DV Entry Form or DS–
5501), online at www.dvlottery.state.gov.
Incomplete entries will not be accepted.
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There is no cost to register for the DV
Program.
You are strongly encouraged to
complete the entry form yourself,
without a ‘‘visa consultant,’’ ‘‘visa
agent,’’ or other facilitator who offers to
help. If somebody else helps you, you
should be present when your entry is
prepared so that you can provide the
correct answers to the questions and
retain the confirmation page and your
unique confirmation number. It is
extremely important that you retain
your confirmation page and unique
confirmation number. Without this
information, you will not be able to
access the online system that will
inform you of the status of your entry.
Think carefully if someone else offers to
keep this information for you. You also
should retain access to the email
account listed in the E–DV. See the
Frequently Asked Questions for more
information about Diversity Visa scams.
After you submit a complete entry,
you will see a confirmation screen
containing your name and a unique
confirmation number. Print this
confirmation screen for your records.
Starting May 5, 2015, you will be able
to check the status of your entry by
returning to www.dvlottery.state.gov,
clicking on Entrant Status Check, and
entering your unique confirmation
number and personal information.
Entrant Status Check will be the sole
means of informing you of your
selection for DV–2016, providing
instructions on how to proceed with
your application, and notifying you of
your appointment for your immigrant
visa interview. Please review the
Frequently Asked Questions for more
information about the selection process.
You must provide the following
information to complete your E–DV
entry:
1. Name—last/family name, first
name, middle name—exactly as on your
passport.
2. Birth date—day, month, year.
3. Gender—male or female.
4. City where you were born.
5. Country where you were born—Use
the name of the country currently used
for the place where you were born.
6. Country of eligibility for the DV
Program—Your country of eligibility
will normally be the same as your
country of birth. Your country of
eligibility is not related to where you
live. If you were born in a country that
is not eligible, please review the
Frequently Asked Questions to see if
there is another way you may be
eligible.
7. Entrant photograph(s)—Recent
photographs of yourself, your spouse,
and all your children listed on your
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entry. See Submitting a Digital
Photograph for compositional and
technical specifications. You do not
need to include a photograph for a
spouse or child who is already a U.S.
citizen or a Lawful Permanent Resident,
but you will not be penalized if you do.
Group photographs will not be
accepted; you must submit a photograph
for each individual. Your entry may be
disqualified or visa refused if the
photographs are not recent, have been
manipulated in any way, or do not meet
the specifications explained below. See
Submitting a Digital Photograph for
more information.
8. Mailing Address—In Care Of
Address Line 1
Address Line 2
City/Town
District/Country/Province/State
Postal Code/Zip Code
Country
9. Country where you live today.
10. Phone number (optional).
11. Email address—An email address
to which you have direct access. If your
entry is selected and you respond to the
notification of your selection through
the Entrant Status Check, you will
receive follow-up email communication
from the Department of State notifying
you that details of your immigrant visa
interview are available on Entrant
Status Check. The Department of State
will never send you an email telling you
that you have been selected for the DV
program. See the Frequently Asked
Questions for more information about
the selection process.
12. Highest level of education you
have achieved, as of today: (1) Primary
school only, (2) Some high school, no
diploma, (3) High school diploma, (4)
Vocational school, (5) Some university
courses, (6) University degree, (7) Some
graduate-level courses, (8) Master’s
degree, (9) Some doctoral-level courses,
and (10) Doctorate. See the Frequently
Asked Questions for more information
about educational requirements.
13. Current marital status—
Unmarried, married, divorced,
widowed, or legally separated. Enter the
name, date of birth, gender, city/town of
birth, country of birth of your spouse,
and a photograph of your spouse
meeting the same technical
specifications as your photo.
Failure to list your eligible spouse
will result in disqualification of the
principal applicant and refusal of all
visas in the case at the time of the visa
interview. You must list your spouse
even if you plan to be divorced before
you apply for a visa. A spouse who is
already a U.S. citizen or a Lawful
Permanent Resident will not require or
be issued a DV visa, though you will not
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be penalized if you list them on your
entry form. See the Frequently Asked
Questions for more information about
family members.
14. Number of children—List the
Name, date of birth, gender, city/town of
birth, and country of birth for all living
unmarried children under 21 years of
age, regardless of whether or not they
are living with you or intend to
accompany or follow to join you should
you immigrate to the United States.
Submit individual photographs of each
of your children using the same
technical specifications as your own
photograph.
• Be sure to include:
• All living natural children;
• all living children legally adopted
by you; and,
• all living step-children who are
unmarried and under the age of 21 on
the date of your electronic entry, even
if you are no longer legally married to
the child’s parent, and even if the child
does not currently reside with you and/
or will not immigrate with you.
Married children and children over
the age of 21 are not eligible for the DV.
However, the Child Status Protection
Act protects children from ‘‘aging out’’
in certain circumstances. If your DV
entry is made before your unmarried
child turns 21, and the child turns 21
before visa issuance, he/she may be
treated as though he/she were under 21
for visa-processing purposes.
A child who is already a U.S. citizen
or a Lawful Permanent Resident is not
eligible for a diversity visa, and you will
not be penalized for either including or
omitting such family members from
your entry.
Failure to list all children who are
eligible will result in disqualification of
the principal applicant and refusal of all
visas in the case at the time of the visa
interview. See the Frequently Asked
Questions for more information about
family members.
See the Frequently Asked Questions
for more information about completing
your Electronic Entry for the DV–2016
Program.
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Selection of Applicants
Based on the allocations of available
visas in each region and country,
individuals will be randomly selected
by computer from among qualified
entries. All DV–2016 entrants will be
required to go to the Entrant Status
Check using the unique confirmation
number saved from their DV–2016
online entry registration to find out
whether their entry has been selected in
the DV program. Entrant Status Check
will be available on the E–DV Web site
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at www.dvlottery.state.gov starting May
5, 2015, through at least June 30, 2016.
If your entry is selected, you will be
directed to a confirmation page that will
provide further instructions, including
information on fees connected with
immigration to the United States.
Entrant Status Check will be the only
means by which selectees will be
notified of their selection for DV–2016.
The Department of State will not mail
out notification letters or notify
selectees by email. U.S. embassies and
consulates will not provide a list of
selectees. Individuals who have not
been selected also will be notified
ONLY through Entrant Status Check.
You are strongly encouraged to access
Entrant Status Check yourself and not to
rely on someone else to check and
inform you.
If you are selected, in order to receive
a DV to immigrate to the United States,
you still must meet all eligibility
requirements under U.S. law. These
requirements may significantly increase
the level of scrutiny required and time
necessary for processing for natives of
some countries listed in this notice
including, but not limited to, countries
identified as state sponsors of terrorism.
All processing of entries and issuance
of DVs to selectees meeting eligibility
requirements and their eligible family
members must be completed by
midnight on September 30, 2016. Under
no circumstances can DVs be issued or
adjustments approved after this date,
nor can family members obtain DVs to
follow-to-join the principal applicant in
the United States after this date. See the
Frequently Asked Questions for more
information about the selection process.
Submitting a Digital Photograph
(Image)
You can take a new digital
photograph or scan a photographic print
with a digital scanner, as long as it
meets the compositional and technical
specifications listed below. Test your
photos through the photo validation
link on the E–DV Web site, which
provides additional technical advice on
photo composition and examples of
acceptable and unacceptable photos.
Photographs must be in 24-bit color
depth. If you are using a scanner, the
settings must be for True Color or 24-bit
color mode. See the additional scanning
requirements below.
Compositional Specifications
• Head Position: The subject must
directly face the camera. The subject’s
head should not be tilted up, down, or
to the side. The head height or facial
region size (measured from the top of
the head, including the hair, to the
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bottom of the chin) must be between 50
percent and 69 percent of the image’s
total height. The eye height (measured
from the bottom of the image to the level
of the eyes) should be between 56
percent and 69 percent of the image’s
height.
• Light-colored Background: The
subject should be in front of a neutral,
light-colored background.
• Focus: The photograph must be in
focus.
• No Decorative Items: The subject
must not wear sunglasses or other items
that detract from the face.
• No Head Coverings or Hats: Head
coverings or hats worn for religious
beliefs are acceptable, but the head
covering may not obscure any portion of
the face. Tribal or other headgear not
religious in nature may not be worn.
Photographs of military, airline, or other
personnel wearing hats will not be
accepted.
Technical Specifications
• Taking a New Digital Image. If you
take a new digital image, it must meet
the following specifications:
Image File Format: The image must be
in the Joint Photographic Experts Group
(JPEG) format.
Image File Size; The maximum image
file size is 240 kilobytes (240KB).
Image Resolution and Dimensions:
Minimum acceptable dimensions are
600 pixels (width) x 600 pixels (height).
Image pixel dimensions must be in a
square aspect ratio (meaning the height
must be equal to the width).
Image Color Depth: Image must be in
color (24 bits per pixel). 24-bit black and
white or 8-bit images will not be
accepted.
• Scanning a Submitted Photograph.
Before you scan a photographic print,
make sure it meets the color and
compositional specifications listed
above. Scan the print using the
following scanner specifications:
Scanner Resolution: Scanned at a
resolution of at least 300 dots per inch
(dpi).
Image File Format: The image must be
in the Joint Photographic Experts Group
(JPEG) format.
Image File Size: The maximum image
file size is 240 kilobytes (240 KB).
Image Color Depth: 24-bit color. [Note
that black and white, monochrome, or
grayscale images will not be accepted.]
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ’s)
Eligibility
1. What do the terms ‘‘Native’’ and
‘‘chargeability’’ mean?
‘‘Native’’ ordinarily means someone
born in a particular country, regardless
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of the individual’s current country of
residence or nationality. ‘‘Native’’ can
also mean someone who is entitled to be
‘‘charged’’ to a country other than the
one in which he/she was born under the
provisions of Section 202(b) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act.
Because a numerical limitation is
placed on immigrants entering from a
country or geographic region, each
individual is ‘‘charged’’ to a country.
Your chargeability’’ refers to the country
whose limitation you count towards.
Your country of eligibility will normally
be the same as your country of birth.
However, you may choose your country
of eligibility as the country of birth of
your spouse, or the country of birth of
either of your parents if you were born
in a country in which neither parent
was born and in which the parents were
not resident at the time of your birth.
These are the only three ways to select
your country of chargeability.
Listing an incorrect country of
eligibility or chargeability (i.e., one to
which you cannot establish a valid
claim) may disqualify your entry.
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2. Can I still apply if I was not born in
a qualifying country?
There are two circumstances in which
you still might be eligible to apply.
First, if your derivative spouse was born
in an eligible country, you may claim
chargeability to that country. As your
eligibility is based on your spouse, you
will only be issued a DV–1 immigrant
visa if your spouse is also eligible for
and issued a DV–2 visa. Both of you
must enter the United States together
using your DVs. Similarly, your minor
dependent child can be ‘‘charged’’ to a
parent’s country of birth.
Second, you can be ‘‘charged’’ to the
country of birth of either of your parents
as long as neither of your parents was
born in or a resident of your country of
birth at the time of your birth. People
are not generally considered residents of
a country in which they were not born
or legally naturalized, if they were only
visiting, studying in the country
temporarily, or stationed temporarily for
business or professional reasons on
behalf of a company or government from
a different country other than the one in
which you were born.
If you claim alternate chargeability
through either of the above, you must
provide an explanation on the E–DV
Entry Form, in question #6.
Listing an incorrect country of
eligibility or chargeability (i.e., one to
which you cannot establish a valid
claim) may disqualify your entry.
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3. Why do Natives of certain countries
not qualify for the DV program?
DVs are intended to provide an
immigration opportunity for persons
who are not from ‘‘high admission’’
countries. The law defines ‘‘high
admission countries’’ as those from
which a total of 50,000 persons in the
Family-Sponsored and EmploymentBased visa categories immigrated to the
United States during the previous five
years. Each year, U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services (USCIS) tallies the
family and employment immigrant
admission and adjustment of status
figures for the previous five years to
identify the countries that are
considered ‘‘high admission’’ and
whose natives will therefore be
ineligible for the annual diversity visa
program. Since this calculation is made
annually, the list of countries whose
natives are eligible or not eligible may
change from one year to the next.
4. How many DV–2016 visas will go to
natives of each region and eligible
country?
United States Citizenship and
Immigration Services (USCIS)
determines the regional DV limits for
each year according to a formula
specified in Section 203(c) of the INA.
The number of visas that will eventually
be issued to natives of each country will
depend on the regional limits
established, how many entrants come
from each country, and how many of the
selected entrants are found eligible for
the visa. No more than seven percent of
the total visas available can go to natives
of any one country.
5. What are the requirements for
education or work experience?
U.S. immigration law and regulations
require that every DV entrant must have
at least a high school education or its
equivalent or have two years of work
experience within the past five years in
an occupation requiring at least two
years of training or experience. A ‘‘high
school education or equivalent’’ is
defined as successful completion of a
12-year course of elementary and
secondary education in the United
States OR the successful completion in
another country of a formal course of
elementary and secondary education
comparable to a high school education
in the United States. Only formal
courses of study meet this requirement;
correspondence programs or
equivalency certificates (such as the
General Equivalency Diploma G.E.D.)
are not acceptable. Documentary proof
of education or work experience must
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be presented to the consular officer at
the time of the visa interview.
If you do not meet the requirements
for education or work experience, your
entry will be disqualified at the time of
your visa interview, and no visas will be
issued to you or any of your family
members.
6. What occupations qualify for the DV
program?
The U.S. Department of Labor’s (DOL)
O*Net OnLine database will be used to
determine qualifying work experience.
The O*Net Online Database groups job
experience into five ‘‘job zones.’’ While
many occupations are listed on the DOL
Web site, not all occupations qualify for
the DV Program. To qualify for a DV on
the basis of your work experience, you
must have, within the past five years,
two years of experience in an
occupation that is designated as Job
Zone 4 or 5, classified in a Specific
Vocational Preparation (SVP) range of
7.0 or higher.
If you do not meet the requirements
for education or work experience, your
entry will be disqualified at the time of
your visa interview, and no visas will be
issued to you or any of your family
members.
7. How can I find the qualifying DV
occupations in the Department of
Labor’s O*Net online database?
When you are in O*Net OnLine,
follow these steps to find out if your
occupation qualifies:
1. Under ‘‘Find Occupations’’ select
‘‘Job Family’’ from the pull down;
2. Browse by ‘‘Job Family’’, make your
selection, and click ‘‘GO’’;
3. Click on the link for your specific
occupation.
4. Select the tab ‘‘Job Zone’’ to find
the designated Job Zone number and
Specific Vocational Preparation (SVP)
rating range.
As an example, select Aerospace
Engineers. At the bottom of the
Summary Report for Aerospace
Engineers, under the Job Zone section,
you will find the designated Job Zone 4,
SVP Range, 7.0 to <8.0. Using this
example, Aerospace Engineering is a
qualifying occupation.
For additional information, see the
Diversity Visa—List of Occupations
Web page (https://travel.state.gov/visa/
immigrants/types/types_1319.html).
8. Is there a minimum age to apply for
the DV program?
There is no minimum age to apply,
but the requirement of a high school
education or work experience for each
principal applicant at the time of
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application will effectively disqualify
most persons who are under age 18.
Completing Your Electronic Entry for
the DV Program
9. When can I submit my entry?
The DV–2016 entry period will run
from 12:00 p.m. (noon), Eastern Daylight
Time (EST) (GMT–4), Wednesday,
October 1, 2014, until 12:00 p.m. (noon),
Eastern Standard Time (EDT) (GMT–5),
Monday, November 3, 2014. Each year,
millions of people submit entries.
Holding the entry period on these dates
ensures that selectees are notified in a
timely manner and gives both the visa
applicants and our embassies and
consulates time to prepare and complete
cases for visa issuance.
You are strongly encouraged to enter
early during the registration period.
Excessive demand at the end of the
registration period may slow the system
down. No entries will be accepted after
noon EST Monday, November 3, 2014.
10. I am in the United States. Can I enter
the DV program?
Yes, an applicant may be in the
United States or in another country, and
the entry may be submitted from
anywhere.
11. Can I only enter once during the
registration period?
Yes, the law allows only one entry by
or for each person during each
registration period. The Department of
State uses sophisticated technology to
detect multiple entries. Individuals with
more than one entry will be disqualified.
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
12. May my spouse and I each submit
a separate entry?
Yes, a husband and a wife may each
submit one entry if each meets the
eligibility requirements. If either spouse
is selected, the other is entitled to apply
as a derivative dependent.
13. What family members must I
include in my DV entry?
Spouse: You must list your spouse
(husband or wife) regardless of whether
or not he/she is living with you or
intentds to immigrate to the United
States. You must list your spouse even
if you are currently separated from him/
her, unless you are legally separated
(i.e., there is a written agreement
recognized by a court or a court order).
If you are legally separated, you do not
have to list your spouse, though you
will not be penalized if you do so. If you
are divorced or your spouse is deceased,
you do not have to list your former
spouse.
Children: You must list ALL your
living children who are unmarried and
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under 21 years of age at the time of your
initial E–DV entry, whether they are
your natural children, your stepchildren
(even if you are now divorced from that
child’s parent), your spouse’s children,
or children you have formally adopted
in accordance with the laws of your
country. List all children under 21 years
of age at the time of your electronic
entry, even if they no longer reside with
you or you do not intend for them to
immigrate under the DV program. You
are not required to list children who are
already U.S. citizens or Lawful
Permanent Residents, though you will
not be penalized if you do include them.
Parents and siblings of the entrant are
ineligible to receive DV visas as
dependents, and should not be included
in your entry.
If you list family members on your
entry, they are not required to apply for
a visa or to immigrate or travel with
you. However, if you fail to include an
eligible dependent on your original
entry and later list them on your visa
application forms, your case will be
disqualified at the time of your visa
interview and no visas will be issued to
you or any of your family members.
This only applies to those who were
family members at the time the original
application was submitted, not those
acquired at a later date. Your spouse, if
eligible to enter, may still submit a
separate entry even though he or she is
listed on your entry, as long as both
entries include details on all
dependents in your family (see FAQ #12
above).
14. Must I submit my own entry, or can
someone else do it for me?
You are encouraged to prepare and
submit your own entry, but you may
have someone submit the entry for you.
Regardless of whether you submit your
own entry, or an attorney, friend,
relative, or someone else submits it on
your behalf, only one entry may be
submitted in your name. You, as the
entrant, are responsible for ensuring that
information in the entry is correct and
complete; entries that are not correct or
complete may be disqualified. Entrants
should keep their own confirmation
number so that they are able to
independently check the status of their
entry using Entrant Status Check at
www.dvlottery.state.gov. Entrants
should keep retain access to the email
account used in the E–DV submission.
15. I’m already registered for an
immigrant visa in another category. Can
I still apply for the DV program?
Yes.
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16. When will E–DV be available
online?
You can enter online during the
registration period beginning at 12:00
p.m. (noon) Eastern Daylight Time
(EDT) (GMT–4) on Wednesday, October
1, 2014, and ending at 12:00 p.m. (noon)
Eastern Standard Time (EST) (GMT–5)
on Monday, November 3, 2014.
17. Can I download and save the E–DV
entry form into a word processing
program and finish it later?
No, you will not be able to save the
form into another program for
completion and submission later. The
E–DV Entry Form is a Web form only.
You must fill in the information and
submit it while online.
18. Can I save the form online and finish
it later?
No. The E–DV Entry Form is designed
to be completed and submitted at one
time. You will have sixty (60) minutes
starting from when you download the
form to complete and submit your entry
through the E–DV Web site. If you
exceed the sixty minute limit and have
not electronically submitted your
complete entry, any information already
entered is discarded. The system deletes
any partial entries so that they are not
accidentally identified as duplicates of
a later, complete entry. Read the DV
instructions completely before you start
to complete the form online, so that you
know exactly what information you will
need.
19. I don’t have a scanner. Can I send
photographs to someone in the United
States to scan them, save them, and mail
them back to me so I can use them in
my entry?
Yes, as long as the photograph meets
the requirements in the instructions and
is electronically submitted with, and at
the same time as, the E–DV online entry.
You must already have the scanned
photograph file when you submit the
entry online; it cannot be submitted
separately from the online application.
The entire entry (photograph and
application together) can be submitted
electronically from the United States or
from overseas.
20. According to the procedures, the
system will reject my E–DV entry form
if my photos don’t meet the
specifications. Can I resubmit my entry?
Yes. If your photo(s) did not meet the
specifications, your entry will not be
accepted by the E–DV Web site, so you
will not receive a confirmation notice.
However, given the unpredictable
nature of the Internet, you may not
receive the rejection notice
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immediately. If you can correct the
photo(s) and re-send the Form Part One
or Two within sixty (60) minutes, you
may be able to successfully submit the
entry. Otherwise, you will have to
restart the entire entry process. You can
try to submit an application as many
times as is necessary until a complete
application is received and the
confirmation notice sent. Once you have
received a confirmation notice, your
entry is complete and you should NOT
submit any additional entries.
21. How soon after I submit my entry
will I receive the electronic
confirmation notice?
You should receive the confirmation
notice immediately, including a
confirmation number that you must
record and keep. However, the
unpredictable nature of the Internet can
result in delays. You can hit the
‘‘Submit’’ button as many times as is
necessary until a complete application
is received and the confirmation notice
sent. However, once you receive a
confirmation notice, do not resubmit
your information.
Selection
22. How do I know if I am selected?
You must use your confirmation
number to access the Entrant Status
Check available on the E–DV Web site
at www.dvlottery.state.gov starting May
5, 2015 through at least June 30, 2016.
Entrant Status Check is the sole means
by which you will be notified if you are
selected, provided further instructions
on your visa application, and notified of
your immigrant visa interview
appointment date and time. The only
authorized Department of State Web site
for official online entry in the Diversity
Visa Program and Entrant Status Check
is www.dvlottery.state.gov.
The Department of State will not
contact you to tell you that you have
been selected (see FAQ #23).
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
23. How will I know if I am not
selected? Will I be notified?
You may check the status of your DV–
2016 entry through the Entrant Status
Check on the E–DV Web site at
www.dvlottery.state.gov starting May 5,
2015, until at least June 30, 2016. Keep
your confirmation number until at least
September 30, 2016. (Status information
for the previous year’s DV program, DV–
2015, is available online from May 1,
2014, through June 30, 2015.) If your
entry is not selected, you will not
receive any additional instructions.
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24. What if I lose my confirmation
number?
26. How many individuals will be
selected for DV–2016?
You must have your confirmation
number to access Entrant Status Check.
A tool is now available in Entrant Status
Check (ESC) on the eDV Web site that
will allow you to retrieve your
confirmation number via the email
address you registered with by entering
certain personal information to confirm
your identity.
U.S. Embassies and Consulates and
the Kentucky Consular Center are
unable to check your selection status for
you or provide your confirmation
number to you directly (other than
through the ESC retrieval tool). The
Department of State is NOT able to
provide a list of those selected to
continue the visa process.
For DV–2016, 50,000 DV visas are
available. Because it is likely that some
of the first 50,000 persons who are
selected will not qualify for visas or
pursue their cases to visa issuance, more
than 50,000 entries will be selected to
ensure that all of the available DV visas
are issued. However, this also means
that there will not be a sufficient
number of visas for all those who are
initially selected
You can check the E–DV Web site’s
Entrant Status Check to see if you have
been selected for further processing and
your place on the list. Interviews for the
DV–2016 program will begin in October
2015 for selectees who have submitted
all pre-interview paperwork and other
information as requested in the
notification instructions. Selectees who
provide all required information will be
informed of their visa interview
appointment through the E–DV Web
site’s Entrant Status Check four to six
weeks before the scheduled interviews
with U.S. consular officers at overseas
posts.
Each month, visas will be issued to
those applicants who are ready for
issuance during that month, visanumber availability permitting. Once all
of the 50,000 DV visas have been issued,
the program will end. Visa numbers
could be finished before September
2016. Selected applicants who wish to
receive visas must be prepared to act
promptly on their cases. Being
randomly chosen as a selectee does not
guarantee that you will receive a visa.
Selection merely means that you are
eligible to apply for a Diversity Visa,
and if your rank number becomes
eligible for final processing, potentially
to be issued a Diversity Visa. Only
50,000 visas will be issued to such
applicants.
25. Will I receive information from the
Department of State by email or by
postal mail?
The Department of State will not send
you a notification letter. The U.S.
government has never sent emails to
notify individuals that they have been
selected, and there are no plans to use
email for this purpose for the DV–2016
program. If you are a selectee, you will
only receive email communications
regarding your visa appointment after
you have responded to the notification
instructions on Entrant Status Check.
These emails will not contain
information on the actual appointment
date and time; they will simply tell you
that appointment details are available
and you must then access Entrant Status
Check for details.
Only Internet sites that end with the
‘‘.gov’’ domain suffix are official U.S.
government Web sites. Many other Web
sites (e.g., with the suffixes ‘‘.com,’’
‘‘.org,’’ or ‘‘.net’’) provide immigration
and visa-related information and
services. The Department of State does
not endorse, recommend, or sponsor
any information or material on these
other Web sites.
You may receive emails from websites
trying to trick you into sending money
or providing your personal information.
You may be asked to pay for forms and
information about immigration
procedures, all which are available free
on the Department of State Web site or
through U.S. Embassy or Consulate Web
sites. Additionally, organizations or
Web sites may try to steal your money
by charging fees for DV-related services.
If you send money to one of these
scams, you will likely never see it again.
Also, do not send personal information
to these Web sites, as it may be used for
identity fraud/theft.
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27. How will successful entrants be
selected?
Official notifications of selection will
be made through Entrant Status Check,
available starting May 5, 2015, through
at least June 30, 2016, on the E–DV Web
site www.dvlottery.state.gov. The
Department of State does not send
selectee notifications or letters by
regular postal mail or by email. Any
email notification or mailed letter
stating that you have been selected to
receive a DV does not come from the
Department of State and is not
legitimate. Any email communication
you receive from the Department of
State will direct you to review Entrant
Status Check for new information about
your application. The Department of
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State will never ask you to send money
by mail or by services such as Western
Union.
All entries received from each region
are individually numbered, and at the
end of the entry period, a computer will
randomly select entries from among all
the entries received for each geographic
region. Within each region, the first
entry randomly selected will be the first
case registered; the second entry
selected will be the second case
registered, etc. All entries received
within each region during the entry
period will have an equal chance of
being selected. When an entry has been
selected, the entrant will be notified of
his/her selection through the Entrant
Status Check available starting May 5,
2015, on the E–DV Web site
www.dvlottery.state.gov. If you are
selected and you respond to the
instructions provided online via Entrant
Status Check, the Department of State’s
Kentucky Consular Center (KCC) will
process the case until those selected are
instructed to appear for visa interviews
at a U.S. Embassy or Consulate or until
those in the United States who are
applying to adjust status apply at a
domestic USCIS office.
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
28. I am already in the United States. If
selected, may I adjust my status with
USCIS?
Yes, provided you are otherwise
eligible to adjust status under the terms
of Section 245 of the INA, you may
apply to USCIS for adjustment of status
to permanent resident. You must ensure
that USCIS can complete action on your
case, including processing of any
overseas spouse or children under 21
years of age, before September 30, 2016,
since on that date your eligibility for the
DV–2016 program expires. No visa
numbers or adjustments of status for the
DV–2016 program will be approved
after midnight EDT on September 30,
2016, under any circumstances.
29. If I am selected, for how long am I
entitled to apply for a diversity visa?
If you are selected in the DV–2016
program, you are entitled to apply for
visa issuance only during U.S.
Government Fiscal Year 2016, which
spans from October 1, 2015, through
September 30, 2016. Selectees are
encouraged to apply for visas as early as
possible, once their lottery rank
numbers become eligible for further
processing.
Without exception, all selected and
eligible applicants must obtain their
visa or adjust status by the end of the
fiscal year. There is no carry-over of DV
benefits into the next year for persons
who are selected but who do not obtain
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18:41 Sep 23, 2014
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visas by September 30, 2016 (the end of
the fiscal year). Also, spouses and
children who derive status from a DV–
2016 registration can only obtain visas
in the DV category between October 1,
2015 and September 30, 2016.
Applicants who apply overseas will
receive an appointment notification
from the Department through Entrant
Status Check on the E–DV Web site four
to six weeks before the scheduled
appointment.
30. If a DV selectee dies, what happens
to the case?
If a DV selectee dies at any point
before he or she has traveled to the
United States, the DV case is
automatically terminated. Any
derivative spouse and/or children of the
deceased selectee will no longer be
entitled to a DV visa. Any visas that
were issued to them will be revoked.
Fees
31. How much does it cost to enter the
E DV program?
There is currently no fee charged for
submitting an electronic entry.
However, if you are selected and apply
for a Diversity Visa, you must pay all
required visa fees at the time of visa
application and interview directly to the
consular cashier at the U.S. Embassy or
Consulate. If you are a selectee already
in the United States and you apply to
USCIS to adjust status, you will pay all
required fees directly to USCIS. If you
are selected, you will receive details of
required DV and immigrant visa
application fees with the instructions
provided through the E–DV Web site at
www.dvlottery.state.gov.
32. How and where do I pay DV and
immigrant visa fees if I am selected?
If you are a randomly selected entrant,
you will receive instructions for the DV
visa application process through Entrant
Status Check at www.dvlottery.state.gov.
You will pay all DV and immigrant visa
fees in person only at the U.S. Embassy
or Consulate at the time of the visa
application. The consular cashier will
immediately give you a U.S. government
receipt for payment. Do not send money
for DV fees to anyone through the mail,
Western Union, or any other delivery
service if you are applying for an
immigrant visa at a U.S. Embassy or
Consulate.
If you are selected and you are already
present in the United States and plan to
file for adjustment of status with USCIS,
the instructions page accessible through
Entrant Status Check at
www.dvlottery.state.gov contains
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separate instructions on how to mail DV
fees to a U.S. bank.
33. If I apply for a DV, but don’t qualify
to receive one, can I get a refund of the
visa fees I paid?
No. Visa fees cannot be refunded. You
must meet all qualifications for the visa
as detailed in these instructions. If a
consular officer determines you do not
meet requirements for the visa, or you
are otherwise ineligible for the DV
under U.S. law, the officer cannot issue
a visa and you will forfeit all fees paid.
Ineligibilities
34. As a DV applicant, can I receive a
waiver of any grounds of visa
ineligibility? Does my waiver
application receive any special
processing?
DV applicants are subject to all
grounds of ineligibility for immigrant
visas specified in the Immigration and
Nationality Act (INA). There are no
special provisions for the waiver of any
ground of visa ineligibility aside from
those ordinarily provided in the
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA),
nor is there special processing for
waiver requests. Some general waiver
provisions for people with close
relatives who are U.S. Citizens or
Lawful Permanent Resident aliens may
be available to DV applicants in some
cases, but the time constraints in the DV
program may make it difficult for
applicants to benefit from such
provisions.
DV Fraud Warning and Scams
35. How can I report internet fraud or
unsolicited email?
Please visit the www.econsumer.gov
Web site, hosted by the Federal Trade
Commission in cooperation with
consumer-protection agencies from 17
nations. You may also report fraud to
the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
Internet Crime Complaint Center. To file
a complaint about unsolicited email,
visit the Department of Justice Contact
Us page.
DV Statistics
36. How many visas will be issued in
DV–2016?
By law, a maximum of 55,000 visas
are available each year to eligible
persons. However, in November 1997,
the U.S. Congress passed the Nicaraguan
Adjustment and Central American
Relief Act (NACARA), which stipulates
that beginning as early as DV–1999, and
for as long as necessary, up to 5,000 of
the 55,000 annually-allocated DVs will
be made available for use under the
NACARA program. The actual reduction
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of the limit began with DV–2000 and
will remain in effect through the DV–
2016 program, so 50,000 visas remain
for the DV program described in these
instructions.
37. If I receive a visa through the DV
program, will the U.S. government pay
for my airfare to the United States, help
me find housing and employment, and/
or provide healthcare or any subsidies
until I am fully settled?
No. The U.S. government will not
provide any of these services to you if
you receive a visa through the DV
program. If you are selected to apply for
a DV, you will need to demonstrate that
you will not become a public charge in
the United States before being issued a
visa. This evidence may be in the form
of a combination of your personal
assets, an Affidavit of Support (Form I–
134) submitted by a relative or friend
residing in the United States, an offer of
employment from an employer in the
United States, or other evidence.
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
List of Countries/Areas by Region Whose
Natives are Eligible for DV–2016
The list below shows the countries
whose natives are eligible for DV–2016,
grouped by geographic region.
Dependent areas overseas are included
within the region of the governing
country. The countries whose natives
are not eligible for the DV–2016
program were identified by USCIS,
according to the formula in Section
203(c) of the INA. The countries whose
natives are not eligible for the DV
program (because they are the principal
source countries of Family-Sponsored
and Employment-Based immigration or
‘‘high-admission’’ countries) are noted
after the respective regional lists.
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Ethiopia
Gabon
Gambia, The
Ghana
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Kenya
Lesotho
Liberia
Libya
Madagascar
Malawi
Mali
Mauritania
Mauritius
Morocco
Mozambique
Namibia
Niger
Rwanda
Sao Tome and Principe
Senegal
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Somalia
South Africa
South Sudan
Sudan
Swaziland
Tanzania
Togo
Tunisia
Uganda
Zambia
Zimbabwe
In Africa, natives of Nigeria are not
eligible for this year’s diversity program.
Asia
Africa
Algeria
Angola
Benin
Botswana
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cameroon
Cape Verde
Central African Republic
Chad
Comoros
Congo
Congo, Democratic Republic of the
Cote D’Ivoire (Ivory Coast)
Djibouti
Egypt*
Afghanistan
Bahrain
Bhutan
Brunei
Burma
Cambodia
Hong Kong Special Administrative
Region **
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Israel *
Japan
Jordan *
Kuwait
Laos
Lebanon
Malaysia
Maldives
Mongolia
Nepal
* Persons born in the areas administered prior to
June 1967 by Israel, Jordan, Syria, and Egypt are
chargeable, respectively, to Israel, Jordan, Syria, and
Egypt. Persons born in the Gaza Strip are chargeable
to Egypt; persons born in the West Bank are
chargeable to Jordan; persons born in the Golan
Heights are chargeable to Syria.
* Persons born in the areas administered prior to
June 1967 by Israel, Jordan, Syria, and Egypt are
chargeable, respectively, to Israel, Jordan, Syria, and
Egypt. Persons born in the Gaza Strip are chargeable
to Egypt; persons born in the West Bank are
chargeable to Jordan; persons born in the Golan
Heights are chargeable to Syria.
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57179
North Korea
Oman
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Singapore
Sri Lanka
Syria *
Taiwan **
Thailand
Timor-Leste
United Arab Emirates
Yemen
Europe
Albania
Andorra
Armenia
Austria
Azerbaijan
Belarus
Belgium
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bulgaria
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark (including components and
dependent areas overseas)
Estonia
Finland
France (including components and areas
overseas)
Georgia
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
Italy
Kazakhstan
Kosovo
Kyrgyzstan
Latvia
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Macau Special Administrative Region**
Macedonia
Malta
Moldova
Monaco
Montenegro
** Natives of the following Asia Region countries
are not eligible for this year’s diversity program:
Bangladesh, China (mainland-born), India, Pakistan,
South Korea, Philippines, and Vietnam. Hong Kong
S.A.R. (Asia region), Macau S.A.R. (Europe region),
and Taiwan (Asia region) do qualify and are listed
here.
** Natives of the following European countries
are not eligible for this year’s DV program: Great
Britain (United Kingdom). Great Britain (United
Kingdom) includes the following dependent areas:
Anguilla, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Cayman
Islands, Falkland Islands, Gibraltar, Montserrat,
Pitcairn, St. Helena, and Turks and Caicos Islands.
Note that for purposes of the diversity program
only, Northern Ireland is treated separately;
Northern Ireland does qualify and is listed among
the qualifying areas. Macau S.A.R. does qualify and
is listed above.
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Netherlands (including components and
dependent areas overseas)
Northern Ireland**
Norway
Poland
Portugal (including components and
dependent areas overseas)
Romania
Russia
San Marino
Serbia
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Tajikistan
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Ukraine
Uzbekistan
Vatican City
North America
The Bahamas
In North America, natives of Canada
and Mexico are not eligible for this
year’s diversity program.
Oceania
South America, Central America, and
the Caribbean
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Dated: September 12, 2014.
Michele T. Bond,
Acting Assistant Secretary, Bureau of
Consular Affairs, Department of State.
[FR Doc. 2014–22767 Filed 9–23–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Surface Transportation Board
[Docket No. MCF 21059]
Academy Express, L.L.C.—Acquisition
of the Properties of Go Bus LLC and
Its Affiliate, MCIZ Corp.
Surface Transportation Board.
Notice Tentatively Authorizing
Finance Transaction.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Academy Express, L.L.C.
(Academy Express), a motor carrier of
passengers, has filed an application
under 49 U.S.C. 14303 to acquire
properties of Go Bus LLC (Go Bus) and
its affiliate, MCIZ Corp. (MCIZ), both
motor carriers of passengers.1 The Board
is tentatively approving and authorizing
the transaction, and, if no opposing
comments are timely filed, this notice
will be the final Board action. Persons
wishing to oppose the application must
follow the rules under 49 CFR 1182.5
and 1182.8.
DATES: Comments must be filed by
November 10, 2014. Applicants may file
a reply by November 24, 2014. If no
comments are filed by November 10,
2014, this notice shall be effective on
November 11, 2014
ADDRESSES: Send an original and 10
copies of any comments referring to
Docket No. MCF 21059 to: Surface
Transportation Board, 395 E Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20423–0001. In
addition, send one copy of comments to
Academy Express’s representative: Fritz
R. Kahn, Fritz R. Kahn, P.C., 1919 M
Street NW., 7th Floor, Washington, DC
20036.
SUMMARY:
Australia (including components and
dependent areas overseas)
Fiji
Kiribati
Marshall Islands
Micronesia, Federated States of Nauru
New Zealand (including components
and dependent areas overseas)
Palau
Papua New Guinea
Solomon Islands
Tonga
Tuvalu
Vanuatu
Samoa
Antigua and Barbuda
Argentina
Barbados
Belize
Bolivia
Chile
Costa Rica
Cuba
Dominica
Grenada
Guatemala
Guyana
Honduras
Nicaragua
Panama
Paraguay
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Suriname
Trinidad and Tobago
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Uruguay
Venezuela
Countries in this region whose natives
are not eligible for this year’s diversity
program: Brazil, Colombia, Dominican
Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Haiti,
Jamaica, Mexico, and Peru.
18:41 Sep 23, 2014
Jkt 232001
1 Academy Express filed its application for
acquisition of the properties of Go Bus and MCIZ
on July 23, 2014. However, the Board determined
that the information provided was not sufficiently
complete to provide the required notice to the
Board and to the public as to the nature and effect
of the proposed transaction. In a Board decision
served on August 21, 2014, Academy Express was
directed to supplement its application, which it did
on August 26, 2014.
PO 00000
Frm 00137
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Valerie Quinn, (202) 245–0382. Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) for the
hearing impaired: (800) 877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Tedesco Family ESB Trust directly
controls the following noncarriers:
Academy Bus, L.L.C. (Academy Bus); 2
Franmar Leasing, Inc.; Franmar
Logistics, Inc.; Academy Services, Inc.;
and Log Re, Inc. Academy Bus directly
controls the following carriers:
Academy Express, Academy Lines,
L.L.C., and Number 22 Hillside, L.L.C.
The applicant, Academy Express, holds
authority from the Federal Motor Carrier
Safety Administration (FMCSA) as a
motor carrier primarily engaged in
interstate special and charter operations
(MC–413682). Go Bus and MCIZ are
motor carriers licensed by FMCSA (MC–
801906 and MC–161381, respectively).
According to the corporate organization
chart provided by Academy Express in
its August 26 filing, Zev Marmurstein,
an individual, Renee Marmurstein, an
individual, and the ZRM Family Trust
control 62–R LLC, a noncarrier, which
controls Go Bus. Zev Marmurstein
directly controls MCIZ.
Academy Express primarily provides
charter bus and contract carrier services
for associations or other groups in
interstate commerce in the states of New
York and New Jersey, and to a lesser
extent in the District of Columbia,
Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania,
Connecticut, Rhode Island, and
Massachusetts, and commuter line
service between New Jersey and New
York. Go Bus and MCIZ are primarily
engaged in providing special and
charter operations to and from places in
the state of New York. Go Bus also
provides regular-route service between
New York, NY (New York City), and
Cambridge and Newton, Mass., and
commuter line service between Glen
Cove, NY, and New York City. MCIZ,
pursuant to a contract with the New
York City Board of Education, provides
transportation to students and teachers
on day trips from and to places in New
York for sports or other events.
2 According to the corporate charts included in
the applicant’s petition, the Academy Bus entity
that is controlled by the Tedesco Family ESB Trust
is a New York limited liability company. But
another entity with the name Academy Bus, L.L.C.,
is owned by the Francis Tedesco Revocable Trust
and the Mark Tedesco Revocable Trust as a Florida
limited liability company. The applicant states that
the Florida Academy Bus, L.L.C., was formerly
Cabana Coaches, LLC, but changed its name to
Academy Bus, L.L.C., on January 10, 2014. The
Francis Tedesco Revocable Trust and the Mark
Tedesco Revocable Trust obtained authority to
acquire Cabana Coaches, LLC, in Tedesco Family
ESB Trust—Purchase of Certain Assets &
Membership Interests—Evergreen Trails, Inc., MCF
21056 (STB served Nov. 21, 2013).
E:\FR\FM\24SEN1.SGM
24SEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 185 (Wednesday, September 24, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 57172-57180]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-22767]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice 8879]
Bureau of Consular Affairs; Registration for the Diversity
Immigrant (DV-2016) Visa Program
AGENCY: Department of State.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This public notice provides information on how to apply for
the DV-2016 Program.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Program Overview
The Congressionally-mandated Diversity Immigrant Visa Program is
administered annually by the Department of State. Section 203(c) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) provides for a class of
immigrants known as ``diversity immigrants,'' from countries with
historically low rates of immigration to the United States. For fiscal
year 2016, 50,000 diversity visas (DVs) will be available. There is no
cost to register for the DV Program.
Applicants who are selected in the lottery (``selectees'') must
meet simple, but strict, eligibility requirements in order to qualify
for a diversity visa. Selectees are chosen through a randomized
computer drawing. Diversity visas are distributed among six geographic
regions and no single country may receive more than seven percent of
the available DVs in any one year.
For DV-2016, natives of the following countries are not eligible to
apply, because more than 50,000 natives of these countries immigrated
to the United States in the previous five years:
Bangladesh, Brazil, Canada, China (mainland-born), Colombia,
Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Haiti, India, Jamaica,
Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Peru, Philippines, South Korea, United
Kingdom (except Northern Ireland) and its dependent territories, and
Vietnam.
Persons born in Hong Kong SAR, Macau SAR, and Taiwan are eligible.
Changes in eligibility this year: None.
Eligibility
Requirement #1: Individuals born in countries whose natives qualify
may be eligible to enter. If you were not born in
[[Page 57173]]
an eligible country, there are two other ways you might be able to
qualify.
Was your spouse born in a country whose natives are
eligible? If yes, you can claim your spouse's country of birth--
provided that both you and your spouse are named on the selected entry,
are issued diversity visas, and enter the United States simultaneously.
Were you born in a country whose natives are ineligible,
but in which neither of your parents was born or legally resident at
the time of your birth? If yes, you may claim the country of birth of
one of your parents if it is a country whose natives are eligible for
the DV-2016 program. For more details on what this means, see the
Frequently Asked Questions.
Requirement #2: Each applicant must meet the education work
experience requirement of the DV program by having either:
A high school education or its equivalent, defined as
successful completion of a 12-year course of formal elementary and
secondary education;
or
two years of work experience within the past five years in
an occupation requiring at least two years of training or experience to
perform. The U.S. Department of Labor's O*Net Online database will be
used to determine qualifying work experience.
For more information about qualifying work experience for the
principal DV applicant, see the Frequently Asked Questions.
Do not submit an entry to the DV program unless you meet both of
these requirements.
Entry Period
Entries for the DV-2016 DV program must be submitted electronically
at www.dvlottery.state.gov between noon, Eastern Daylight Time (EDT)
(GMT-4), Wednesday, October 1, 2014, and noon, Eastern Standard Time
(EST) (GMT-5), Monday, November 3, 2014. Do not wait until the last
week of the registration period to enter, as heavy demand may result in
Web site delays. No late entries or paper entries will be accepted. The
law allows only one entry by or for each person during each
registration period. The Department of State uses sophisticated
technology to detect multiple entries. Individuals with more than one
entry will be disqualified.
Completing Your Electronic Entry for the DV-2016 Program
Submit your Electronic Diversity Visa Entry Form (E-DV Entry Form
or DS-5501), online at www.dvlottery.state.gov. Incomplete entries will
not be accepted. There is no cost to register for the DV Program.
You are strongly encouraged to complete the entry form yourself,
without a ``visa consultant,'' ``visa agent,'' or other facilitator who
offers to help. If somebody else helps you, you should be present when
your entry is prepared so that you can provide the correct answers to
the questions and retain the confirmation page and your unique
confirmation number. It is extremely important that you retain your
confirmation page and unique confirmation number. Without this
information, you will not be able to access the online system that will
inform you of the status of your entry. Think carefully if someone else
offers to keep this information for you. You also should retain access
to the email account listed in the E-DV. See the Frequently Asked
Questions for more information about Diversity Visa scams.
After you submit a complete entry, you will see a confirmation
screen containing your name and a unique confirmation number. Print
this confirmation screen for your records. Starting May 5, 2015, you
will be able to check the status of your entry by returning to
www.dvlottery.state.gov, clicking on Entrant Status Check, and entering
your unique confirmation number and personal information. Entrant
Status Check will be the sole means of informing you of your selection
for DV-2016, providing instructions on how to proceed with your
application, and notifying you of your appointment for your immigrant
visa interview. Please review the Frequently Asked Questions for more
information about the selection process.
You must provide the following information to complete your E-DV
entry:
1. Name--last/family name, first name, middle name--exactly as on
your passport.
2. Birth date--day, month, year.
3. Gender--male or female.
4. City where you were born.
5. Country where you were born--Use the name of the country
currently used for the place where you were born.
6. Country of eligibility for the DV Program--Your country of
eligibility will normally be the same as your country of birth. Your
country of eligibility is not related to where you live. If you were
born in a country that is not eligible, please review the Frequently
Asked Questions to see if there is another way you may be eligible.
7. Entrant photograph(s)--Recent photographs of yourself, your
spouse, and all your children listed on your entry. See Submitting a
Digital Photograph for compositional and technical specifications. You
do not need to include a photograph for a spouse or child who is
already a U.S. citizen or a Lawful Permanent Resident, but you will not
be penalized if you do.
Group photographs will not be accepted; you must submit a
photograph for each individual. Your entry may be disqualified or visa
refused if the photographs are not recent, have been manipulated in any
way, or do not meet the specifications explained below. See Submitting
a Digital Photograph for more information.
8. Mailing Address--In Care Of
Address Line 1
Address Line 2
City/Town
District/Country/Province/State
Postal Code/Zip Code
Country
9. Country where you live today.
10. Phone number (optional).
11. Email address--An email address to which you have direct
access. If your entry is selected and you respond to the notification
of your selection through the Entrant Status Check, you will receive
follow-up email communication from the Department of State notifying
you that details of your immigrant visa interview are available on
Entrant Status Check. The Department of State will never send you an
email telling you that you have been selected for the DV program. See
the Frequently Asked Questions for more information about the selection
process.
12. Highest level of education you have achieved, as of today: (1)
Primary school only, (2) Some high school, no diploma, (3) High school
diploma, (4) Vocational school, (5) Some university courses, (6)
University degree, (7) Some graduate-level courses, (8) Master's
degree, (9) Some doctoral-level courses, and (10) Doctorate. See the
Frequently Asked Questions for more information about educational
requirements.
13. Current marital status--Unmarried, married, divorced, widowed,
or legally separated. Enter the name, date of birth, gender, city/town
of birth, country of birth of your spouse, and a photograph of your
spouse meeting the same technical specifications as your photo.
Failure to list your eligible spouse will result in
disqualification of the principal applicant and refusal of all visas in
the case at the time of the visa interview. You must list your spouse
even if you plan to be divorced before you apply for a visa. A spouse
who is already a U.S. citizen or a Lawful Permanent Resident will not
require or be issued a DV visa, though you will not
[[Page 57174]]
be penalized if you list them on your entry form. See the Frequently
Asked Questions for more information about family members.
14. Number of children--List the Name, date of birth, gender, city/
town of birth, and country of birth for all living unmarried children
under 21 years of age, regardless of whether or not they are living
with you or intend to accompany or follow to join you should you
immigrate to the United States. Submit individual photographs of each
of your children using the same technical specifications as your own
photograph.
Be sure to include:
All living natural children;
all living children legally adopted by you; and,
all living step-children who are unmarried and under the
age of 21 on the date of your electronic entry, even if you are no
longer legally married to the child's parent, and even if the child
does not currently reside with you and/or will not immigrate with you.
Married children and children over the age of 21 are not eligible
for the DV. However, the Child Status Protection Act protects children
from ``aging out'' in certain circumstances. If your DV entry is made
before your unmarried child turns 21, and the child turns 21 before
visa issuance, he/she may be treated as though he/she were under 21 for
visa-processing purposes.
A child who is already a U.S. citizen or a Lawful Permanent
Resident is not eligible for a diversity visa, and you will not be
penalized for either including or omitting such family members from
your entry.
Failure to list all children who are eligible will result in
disqualification of the principal applicant and refusal of all visas in
the case at the time of the visa interview. See the Frequently Asked
Questions for more information about family members.
See the Frequently Asked Questions for more information about
completing your Electronic Entry for the DV-2016 Program.
Selection of Applicants
Based on the allocations of available visas in each region and
country, individuals will be randomly selected by computer from among
qualified entries. All DV-2016 entrants will be required to go to the
Entrant Status Check using the unique confirmation number saved from
their DV-2016 online entry registration to find out whether their entry
has been selected in the DV program. Entrant Status Check will be
available on the E-DV Web site at www.dvlottery.state.gov starting May
5, 2015, through at least June 30, 2016.
If your entry is selected, you will be directed to a confirmation
page that will provide further instructions, including information on
fees connected with immigration to the United States. Entrant Status
Check will be the only means by which selectees will be notified of
their selection for DV-2016. The Department of State will not mail out
notification letters or notify selectees by email. U.S. embassies and
consulates will not provide a list of selectees. Individuals who have
not been selected also will be notified ONLY through Entrant Status
Check. You are strongly encouraged to access Entrant Status Check
yourself and not to rely on someone else to check and inform you.
If you are selected, in order to receive a DV to immigrate to the
United States, you still must meet all eligibility requirements under
U.S. law. These requirements may significantly increase the level of
scrutiny required and time necessary for processing for natives of some
countries listed in this notice including, but not limited to,
countries identified as state sponsors of terrorism.
All processing of entries and issuance of DVs to selectees meeting
eligibility requirements and their eligible family members must be
completed by midnight on September 30, 2016. Under no circumstances can
DVs be issued or adjustments approved after this date, nor can family
members obtain DVs to follow-to-join the principal applicant in the
United States after this date. See the Frequently Asked Questions for
more information about the selection process.
Submitting a Digital Photograph (Image)
You can take a new digital photograph or scan a photographic print
with a digital scanner, as long as it meets the compositional and
technical specifications listed below. Test your photos through the
photo validation link on the E-DV Web site, which provides additional
technical advice on photo composition and examples of acceptable and
unacceptable photos.
Photographs must be in 24-bit color depth. If you are using a
scanner, the settings must be for True Color or 24-bit color mode. See
the additional scanning requirements below.
Compositional Specifications
Head Position: The subject must directly face the camera.
The subject's head should not be tilted up, down, or to the side. The
head height or facial region size (measured from the top of the head,
including the hair, to the bottom of the chin) must be between 50
percent and 69 percent of the image's total height. The eye height
(measured from the bottom of the image to the level of the eyes) should
be between 56 percent and 69 percent of the image's height.
Light-colored Background: The subject should be in front
of a neutral, light-colored background.
Focus: The photograph must be in focus.
No Decorative Items: The subject must not wear sunglasses
or other items that detract from the face.
No Head Coverings or Hats: Head coverings or hats worn for
religious beliefs are acceptable, but the head covering may not obscure
any portion of the face. Tribal or other headgear not religious in
nature may not be worn. Photographs of military, airline, or other
personnel wearing hats will not be accepted.
Technical Specifications
Taking a New Digital Image. If you take a new digital
image, it must meet the following specifications:
Image File Format: The image must be in the Joint Photographic
Experts Group (JPEG) format.
Image File Size; The maximum image file size is 240 kilobytes
(240KB).
Image Resolution and Dimensions: Minimum acceptable dimensions are
600 pixels (width) x 600 pixels (height). Image pixel dimensions must
be in a square aspect ratio (meaning the height must be equal to the
width).
Image Color Depth: Image must be in color (24 bits per pixel). 24-
bit black and white or 8-bit images will not be accepted.
Scanning a Submitted Photograph. Before you scan a
photographic print, make sure it meets the color and compositional
specifications listed above. Scan the print using the following scanner
specifications:
Scanner Resolution: Scanned at a resolution of at least 300 dots
per inch (dpi).
Image File Format: The image must be in the Joint Photographic
Experts Group (JPEG) format.
Image File Size: The maximum image file size is 240 kilobytes (240
KB).
Image Color Depth: 24-bit color. [Note that black and white,
monochrome, or grayscale images will not be accepted.]
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ's)
Eligibility
1. What do the terms ``Native'' and ``chargeability'' mean?
``Native'' ordinarily means someone born in a particular country,
regardless
[[Page 57175]]
of the individual's current country of residence or nationality.
``Native'' can also mean someone who is entitled to be ``charged'' to a
country other than the one in which he/she was born under the
provisions of Section 202(b) of the Immigration and Nationality Act.
Because a numerical limitation is placed on immigrants entering
from a country or geographic region, each individual is ``charged'' to
a country. Your chargeability'' refers to the country whose limitation
you count towards. Your country of eligibility will normally be the
same as your country of birth. However, you may choose your country of
eligibility as the country of birth of your spouse, or the country of
birth of either of your parents if you were born in a country in which
neither parent was born and in which the parents were not resident at
the time of your birth. These are the only three ways to select your
country of chargeability.
Listing an incorrect country of eligibility or chargeability (i.e.,
one to which you cannot establish a valid claim) may disqualify your
entry.
2. Can I still apply if I was not born in a qualifying country?
There are two circumstances in which you still might be eligible to
apply. First, if your derivative spouse was born in an eligible
country, you may claim chargeability to that country. As your
eligibility is based on your spouse, you will only be issued a DV-1
immigrant visa if your spouse is also eligible for and issued a DV-2
visa. Both of you must enter the United States together using your DVs.
Similarly, your minor dependent child can be ``charged'' to a parent's
country of birth.
Second, you can be ``charged'' to the country of birth of either of
your parents as long as neither of your parents was born in or a
resident of your country of birth at the time of your birth. People are
not generally considered residents of a country in which they were not
born or legally naturalized, if they were only visiting, studying in
the country temporarily, or stationed temporarily for business or
professional reasons on behalf of a company or government from a
different country other than the one in which you were born.
If you claim alternate chargeability through either of the above,
you must provide an explanation on the E-DV Entry Form, in question
6.
Listing an incorrect country of eligibility or chargeability (i.e.,
one to which you cannot establish a valid claim) may disqualify your
entry.
3. Why do Natives of certain countries not qualify for the DV program?
DVs are intended to provide an immigration opportunity for persons
who are not from ``high admission'' countries. The law defines ``high
admission countries'' as those from which a total of 50,000 persons in
the Family-Sponsored and Employment-Based visa categories immigrated to
the United States during the previous five years. Each year, U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) tallies the family and
employment immigrant admission and adjustment of status figures for the
previous five years to identify the countries that are considered
``high admission'' and whose natives will therefore be ineligible for
the annual diversity visa program. Since this calculation is made
annually, the list of countries whose natives are eligible or not
eligible may change from one year to the next.
4. How many DV-2016 visas will go to natives of each region and
eligible country?
United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)
determines the regional DV limits for each year according to a formula
specified in Section 203(c) of the INA. The number of visas that will
eventually be issued to natives of each country will depend on the
regional limits established, how many entrants come from each country,
and how many of the selected entrants are found eligible for the visa.
No more than seven percent of the total visas available can go to
natives of any one country.
5. What are the requirements for education or work experience?
U.S. immigration law and regulations require that every DV entrant
must have at least a high school education or its equivalent or have
two years of work experience within the past five years in an
occupation requiring at least two years of training or experience. A
``high school education or equivalent'' is defined as successful
completion of a 12-year course of elementary and secondary education in
the United States OR the successful completion in another country of a
formal course of elementary and secondary education comparable to a
high school education in the United States. Only formal courses of
study meet this requirement; correspondence programs or equivalency
certificates (such as the General Equivalency Diploma G.E.D.) are not
acceptable. Documentary proof of education or work experience must be
presented to the consular officer at the time of the visa interview.
If you do not meet the requirements for education or work
experience, your entry will be disqualified at the time of your visa
interview, and no visas will be issued to you or any of your family
members.
6. What occupations qualify for the DV program?
The U.S. Department of Labor's (DOL) O*Net OnLine database will be
used to determine qualifying work experience. The O*Net Online Database
groups job experience into five ``job zones.'' While many occupations
are listed on the DOL Web site, not all occupations qualify for the DV
Program. To qualify for a DV on the basis of your work experience, you
must have, within the past five years, two years of experience in an
occupation that is designated as Job Zone 4 or 5, classified in a
Specific Vocational Preparation (SVP) range of 7.0 or higher.
If you do not meet the requirements for education or work
experience, your entry will be disqualified at the time of your visa
interview, and no visas will be issued to you or any of your family
members.
7. How can I find the qualifying DV occupations in the Department of
Labor's O*Net online database?
When you are in O*Net OnLine, follow these steps to find out if
your occupation qualifies:
1. Under ``Find Occupations'' select ``Job Family'' from the pull
down;
2. Browse by ``Job Family'', make your selection, and click ``GO'';
3. Click on the link for your specific occupation.
4. Select the tab ``Job Zone'' to find the designated Job Zone
number and Specific Vocational Preparation (SVP) rating range.
As an example, select Aerospace Engineers. At the bottom of the
Summary Report for Aerospace Engineers, under the Job Zone section, you
will find the designated Job Zone 4, SVP Range, 7.0 to <8.0. Using this
example, Aerospace Engineering is a qualifying occupation.
For additional information, see the Diversity Visa--List of
Occupations Web page (https://travel.state.gov/visa/immigrants/types/
types1319.html).
8. Is there a minimum age to apply for the DV program?
There is no minimum age to apply, but the requirement of a high
school education or work experience for each principal applicant at the
time of
[[Page 57176]]
application will effectively disqualify most persons who are under age
18.
Completing Your Electronic Entry for the DV Program
9. When can I submit my entry?
The DV-2016 entry period will run from 12:00 p.m. (noon), Eastern
Daylight Time (EST) (GMT-4), Wednesday, October 1, 2014, until 12:00
p.m. (noon), Eastern Standard Time (EDT) (GMT-5), Monday, November 3,
2014. Each year, millions of people submit entries. Holding the entry
period on these dates ensures that selectees are notified in a timely
manner and gives both the visa applicants and our embassies and
consulates time to prepare and complete cases for visa issuance.
You are strongly encouraged to enter early during the registration
period. Excessive demand at the end of the registration period may slow
the system down. No entries will be accepted after noon EST Monday,
November 3, 2014.
10. I am in the United States. Can I enter the DV program?
Yes, an applicant may be in the United States or in another
country, and the entry may be submitted from anywhere.
11. Can I only enter once during the registration period?
Yes, the law allows only one entry by or for each person during
each registration period. The Department of State uses sophisticated
technology to detect multiple entries. Individuals with more than one
entry will be disqualified.
12. May my spouse and I each submit a separate entry?
Yes, a husband and a wife may each submit one entry if each meets
the eligibility requirements. If either spouse is selected, the other
is entitled to apply as a derivative dependent.
13. What family members must I include in my DV entry?
Spouse: You must list your spouse (husband or wife) regardless of
whether or not he/she is living with you or intentds to immigrate to
the United States. You must list your spouse even if you are currently
separated from him/her, unless you are legally separated (i.e., there
is a written agreement recognized by a court or a court order). If you
are legally separated, you do not have to list your spouse, though you
will not be penalized if you do so. If you are divorced or your spouse
is deceased, you do not have to list your former spouse.
Children: You must list ALL your living children who are unmarried
and under 21 years of age at the time of your initial E-DV entry,
whether they are your natural children, your stepchildren (even if you
are now divorced from that child's parent), your spouse's children, or
children you have formally adopted in accordance with the laws of your
country. List all children under 21 years of age at the time of your
electronic entry, even if they no longer reside with you or you do not
intend for them to immigrate under the DV program. You are not required
to list children who are already U.S. citizens or Lawful Permanent
Residents, though you will not be penalized if you do include them.
Parents and siblings of the entrant are ineligible to receive DV
visas as dependents, and should not be included in your entry.
If you list family members on your entry, they are not required to
apply for a visa or to immigrate or travel with you. However, if you
fail to include an eligible dependent on your original entry and later
list them on your visa application forms, your case will be
disqualified at the time of your visa interview and no visas will be
issued to you or any of your family members. This only applies to those
who were family members at the time the original application was
submitted, not those acquired at a later date. Your spouse, if eligible
to enter, may still submit a separate entry even though he or she is
listed on your entry, as long as both entries include details on all
dependents in your family (see FAQ 12 above).
14. Must I submit my own entry, or can someone else do it for me?
You are encouraged to prepare and submit your own entry, but you
may have someone submit the entry for you. Regardless of whether you
submit your own entry, or an attorney, friend, relative, or someone
else submits it on your behalf, only one entry may be submitted in your
name. You, as the entrant, are responsible for ensuring that
information in the entry is correct and complete; entries that are not
correct or complete may be disqualified. Entrants should keep their own
confirmation number so that they are able to independently check the
status of their entry using Entrant Status Check at
www.dvlottery.state.gov. Entrants should keep retain access to the
email account used in the E-DV submission.
15. I'm already registered for an immigrant visa in another category.
Can I still apply for the DV program?
Yes.
16. When will E-DV be available online?
You can enter online during the registration period beginning at
12:00 p.m. (noon) Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) (GMT-4) on Wednesday,
October 1, 2014, and ending at 12:00 p.m. (noon) Eastern Standard Time
(EST) (GMT-5) on Monday, November 3, 2014.
17. Can I download and save the E-DV entry form into a word processing
program and finish it later?
No, you will not be able to save the form into another program for
completion and submission later. The E-DV Entry Form is a Web form
only. You must fill in the information and submit it while online.
18. Can I save the form online and finish it later?
No. The E-DV Entry Form is designed to be completed and submitted
at one time. You will have sixty (60) minutes starting from when you
download the form to complete and submit your entry through the E-DV
Web site. If you exceed the sixty minute limit and have not
electronically submitted your complete entry, any information already
entered is discarded. The system deletes any partial entries so that
they are not accidentally identified as duplicates of a later, complete
entry. Read the DV instructions completely before you start to complete
the form online, so that you know exactly what information you will
need.
19. I don't have a scanner. Can I send photographs to someone in the
United States to scan them, save them, and mail them back to me so I
can use them in my entry?
Yes, as long as the photograph meets the requirements in the
instructions and is electronically submitted with, and at the same time
as, the E-DV online entry. You must already have the scanned photograph
file when you submit the entry online; it cannot be submitted
separately from the online application. The entire entry (photograph
and application together) can be submitted electronically from the
United States or from overseas.
20. According to the procedures, the system will reject my E-DV entry
form if my photos don't meet the specifications. Can I resubmit my
entry?
Yes. If your photo(s) did not meet the specifications, your entry
will not be accepted by the E-DV Web site, so you will not receive a
confirmation notice. However, given the unpredictable nature of the
Internet, you may not receive the rejection notice
[[Page 57177]]
immediately. If you can correct the photo(s) and re-send the Form Part
One or Two within sixty (60) minutes, you may be able to successfully
submit the entry. Otherwise, you will have to restart the entire entry
process. You can try to submit an application as many times as is
necessary until a complete application is received and the confirmation
notice sent. Once you have received a confirmation notice, your entry
is complete and you should NOT submit any additional entries.
21. How soon after I submit my entry will I receive the electronic
confirmation notice?
You should receive the confirmation notice immediately, including a
confirmation number that you must record and keep. However, the
unpredictable nature of the Internet can result in delays. You can hit
the ``Submit'' button as many times as is necessary until a complete
application is received and the confirmation notice sent. However, once
you receive a confirmation notice, do not resubmit your information.
Selection
22. How do I know if I am selected?
You must use your confirmation number to access the Entrant Status
Check available on the E-DV Web site at www.dvlottery.state.gov
starting May 5, 2015 through at least June 30, 2016. Entrant Status
Check is the sole means by which you will be notified if you are
selected, provided further instructions on your visa application, and
notified of your immigrant visa interview appointment date and time.
The only authorized Department of State Web site for official online
entry in the Diversity Visa Program and Entrant Status Check is
www.dvlottery.state.gov.
The Department of State will not contact you to tell you that you
have been selected (see FAQ 23).
23. How will I know if I am not selected? Will I be notified?
You may check the status of your DV-2016 entry through the Entrant
Status Check on the E-DV Web site at www.dvlottery.state.gov starting
May 5, 2015, until at least June 30, 2016. Keep your confirmation
number until at least September 30, 2016. (Status information for the
previous year's DV program, DV-2015, is available online from May 1,
2014, through June 30, 2015.) If your entry is not selected, you will
not receive any additional instructions.
24. What if I lose my confirmation number?
You must have your confirmation number to access Entrant Status
Check. A tool is now available in Entrant Status Check (ESC) on the eDV
Web site that will allow you to retrieve your confirmation number via
the email address you registered with by entering certain personal
information to confirm your identity.
U.S. Embassies and Consulates and the Kentucky Consular Center are
unable to check your selection status for you or provide your
confirmation number to you directly (other than through the ESC
retrieval tool). The Department of State is NOT able to provide a list
of those selected to continue the visa process.
25. Will I receive information from the Department of State by email or
by postal mail?
The Department of State will not send you a notification letter.
The U.S. government has never sent emails to notify individuals that
they have been selected, and there are no plans to use email for this
purpose for the DV-2016 program. If you are a selectee, you will only
receive email communications regarding your visa appointment after you
have responded to the notification instructions on Entrant Status
Check. These emails will not contain information on the actual
appointment date and time; they will simply tell you that appointment
details are available and you must then access Entrant Status Check for
details.
Only Internet sites that end with the ``.gov'' domain suffix are
official U.S. government Web sites. Many other Web sites (e.g., with
the suffixes ``.com,'' ``.org,'' or ``.net'') provide immigration and
visa-related information and services. The Department of State does not
endorse, recommend, or sponsor any information or material on these
other Web sites.
You may receive emails from websites trying to trick you into
sending money or providing your personal information. You may be asked
to pay for forms and information about immigration procedures, all
which are available free on the Department of State Web site or through
U.S. Embassy or Consulate Web sites. Additionally, organizations or Web
sites may try to steal your money by charging fees for DV-related
services. If you send money to one of these scams, you will likely
never see it again. Also, do not send personal information to these Web
sites, as it may be used for identity fraud/theft.
26. How many individuals will be selected for DV-2016?
For DV-2016, 50,000 DV visas are available. Because it is likely
that some of the first 50,000 persons who are selected will not qualify
for visas or pursue their cases to visa issuance, more than 50,000
entries will be selected to ensure that all of the available DV visas
are issued. However, this also means that there will not be a
sufficient number of visas for all those who are initially selected
You can check the E-DV Web site's Entrant Status Check to see if
you have been selected for further processing and your place on the
list. Interviews for the DV-2016 program will begin in October 2015 for
selectees who have submitted all pre-interview paperwork and other
information as requested in the notification instructions. Selectees
who provide all required information will be informed of their visa
interview appointment through the E-DV Web site's Entrant Status Check
four to six weeks before the scheduled interviews with U.S. consular
officers at overseas posts.
Each month, visas will be issued to those applicants who are ready
for issuance during that month, visa-number availability permitting.
Once all of the 50,000 DV visas have been issued, the program will end.
Visa numbers could be finished before September 2016. Selected
applicants who wish to receive visas must be prepared to act promptly
on their cases. Being randomly chosen as a selectee does not guarantee
that you will receive a visa. Selection merely means that you are
eligible to apply for a Diversity Visa, and if your rank number becomes
eligible for final processing, potentially to be issued a Diversity
Visa. Only 50,000 visas will be issued to such applicants.
27. How will successful entrants be selected?
Official notifications of selection will be made through Entrant
Status Check, available starting May 5, 2015, through at least June 30,
2016, on the E-DV Web site www.dvlottery.state.gov. The Department of
State does not send selectee notifications or letters by regular postal
mail or by email. Any email notification or mailed letter stating that
you have been selected to receive a DV does not come from the
Department of State and is not legitimate. Any email communication you
receive from the Department of State will direct you to review Entrant
Status Check for new information about your application. The Department
of
[[Page 57178]]
State will never ask you to send money by mail or by services such as
Western Union.
All entries received from each region are individually numbered,
and at the end of the entry period, a computer will randomly select
entries from among all the entries received for each geographic region.
Within each region, the first entry randomly selected will be the first
case registered; the second entry selected will be the second case
registered, etc. All entries received within each region during the
entry period will have an equal chance of being selected. When an entry
has been selected, the entrant will be notified of his/her selection
through the Entrant Status Check available starting May 5, 2015, on the
E-DV Web site www.dvlottery.state.gov. If you are selected and you
respond to the instructions provided online via Entrant Status Check,
the Department of State's Kentucky Consular Center (KCC) will process
the case until those selected are instructed to appear for visa
interviews at a U.S. Embassy or Consulate or until those in the United
States who are applying to adjust status apply at a domestic USCIS
office.
28. I am already in the United States. If selected, may I adjust my
status with USCIS?
Yes, provided you are otherwise eligible to adjust status under the
terms of Section 245 of the INA, you may apply to USCIS for adjustment
of status to permanent resident. You must ensure that USCIS can
complete action on your case, including processing of any overseas
spouse or children under 21 years of age, before September 30, 2016,
since on that date your eligibility for the DV-2016 program expires. No
visa numbers or adjustments of status for the DV-2016 program will be
approved after midnight EDT on September 30, 2016, under any
circumstances.
29. If I am selected, for how long am I entitled to apply for a
diversity visa?
If you are selected in the DV-2016 program, you are entitled to
apply for visa issuance only during U.S. Government Fiscal Year 2016,
which spans from October 1, 2015, through September 30, 2016. Selectees
are encouraged to apply for visas as early as possible, once their
lottery rank numbers become eligible for further processing.
Without exception, all selected and eligible applicants must obtain
their visa or adjust status by the end of the fiscal year. There is no
carry-over of DV benefits into the next year for persons who are
selected but who do not obtain visas by September 30, 2016 (the end of
the fiscal year). Also, spouses and children who derive status from a
DV-2016 registration can only obtain visas in the DV category between
October 1, 2015 and September 30, 2016. Applicants who apply overseas
will receive an appointment notification from the Department through
Entrant Status Check on the E-DV Web site four to six weeks before the
scheduled appointment.
30. If a DV selectee dies, what happens to the case?
If a DV selectee dies at any point before he or she has traveled to
the United States, the DV case is automatically terminated. Any
derivative spouse and/or children of the deceased selectee will no
longer be entitled to a DV visa. Any visas that were issued to them
will be revoked.
Fees
31. How much does it cost to enter the E DV program?
There is currently no fee charged for submitting an electronic
entry. However, if you are selected and apply for a Diversity Visa, you
must pay all required visa fees at the time of visa application and
interview directly to the consular cashier at the U.S. Embassy or
Consulate. If you are a selectee already in the United States and you
apply to USCIS to adjust status, you will pay all required fees
directly to USCIS. If you are selected, you will receive details of
required DV and immigrant visa application fees with the instructions
provided through the E-DV Web site at www.dvlottery.state.gov.
32. How and where do I pay DV and immigrant visa fees if I am selected?
If you are a randomly selected entrant, you will receive
instructions for the DV visa application process through Entrant Status
Check at www.dvlottery.state.gov. You will pay all DV and immigrant
visa fees in person only at the U.S. Embassy or Consulate at the time
of the visa application. The consular cashier will immediately give you
a U.S. government receipt for payment. Do not send money for DV fees to
anyone through the mail, Western Union, or any other delivery service
if you are applying for an immigrant visa at a U.S. Embassy or
Consulate.
If you are selected and you are already present in the United
States and plan to file for adjustment of status with USCIS, the
instructions page accessible through Entrant Status Check at
www.dvlottery.state.gov contains separate instructions on how to mail
DV fees to a U.S. bank.
33. If I apply for a DV, but don't qualify to receive one, can I get a
refund of the visa fees I paid?
No. Visa fees cannot be refunded. You must meet all qualifications
for the visa as detailed in these instructions. If a consular officer
determines you do not meet requirements for the visa, or you are
otherwise ineligible for the DV under U.S. law, the officer cannot
issue a visa and you will forfeit all fees paid.
Ineligibilities
34. As a DV applicant, can I receive a waiver of any grounds of visa
ineligibility? Does my waiver application receive any special
processing?
DV applicants are subject to all grounds of ineligibility for
immigrant visas specified in the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA).
There are no special provisions for the waiver of any ground of visa
ineligibility aside from those ordinarily provided in the Immigration
and Nationality Act (INA), nor is there special processing for waiver
requests. Some general waiver provisions for people with close
relatives who are U.S. Citizens or Lawful Permanent Resident aliens may
be available to DV applicants in some cases, but the time constraints
in the DV program may make it difficult for applicants to benefit from
such provisions.
DV Fraud Warning and Scams
35. How can I report internet fraud or unsolicited email?
Please visit the www.econsumer.gov Web site, hosted by the Federal
Trade Commission in cooperation with consumer-protection agencies from
17 nations. You may also report fraud to the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) Internet Crime Complaint Center. To file a
complaint about unsolicited email, visit the Department of Justice
Contact Us page.
DV Statistics
36. How many visas will be issued in DV-2016?
By law, a maximum of 55,000 visas are available each year to
eligible persons. However, in November 1997, the U.S. Congress passed
the Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central American Relief Act (NACARA),
which stipulates that beginning as early as DV-1999, and for as long as
necessary, up to 5,000 of the 55,000 annually-allocated DVs will be
made available for use under the NACARA program. The actual reduction
[[Page 57179]]
of the limit began with DV-2000 and will remain in effect through the
DV-2016 program, so 50,000 visas remain for the DV program described in
these instructions.
37. If I receive a visa through the DV program, will the U.S.
government pay for my airfare to the United States, help me find
housing and employment, and/or provide healthcare or any subsidies
until I am fully settled?
No. The U.S. government will not provide any of these services to
you if you receive a visa through the DV program. If you are selected
to apply for a DV, you will need to demonstrate that you will not
become a public charge in the United States before being issued a visa.
This evidence may be in the form of a combination of your personal
assets, an Affidavit of Support (Form I-134) submitted by a relative or
friend residing in the United States, an offer of employment from an
employer in the United States, or other evidence.
List of Countries/Areas by Region Whose Natives are Eligible for DV-
2016
The list below shows the countries whose natives are eligible for
DV-2016, grouped by geographic region. Dependent areas overseas are
included within the region of the governing country. The countries
whose natives are not eligible for the DV-2016 program were identified
by USCIS, according to the formula in Section 203(c) of the INA. The
countries whose natives are not eligible for the DV program (because
they are the principal source countries of Family-Sponsored and
Employment-Based immigration or ``high-admission'' countries) are noted
after the respective regional lists.
Africa
Algeria
Angola
Benin
Botswana
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cameroon
Cape Verde
Central African Republic
Chad
Comoros
Congo
Congo, Democratic Republic of the
Cote D'Ivoire (Ivory Coast)
Djibouti
Egypt*
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Ethiopia
Gabon
Gambia, The
Ghana
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Kenya
Lesotho
Liberia
Libya
Madagascar
Malawi
Mali
Mauritania
Mauritius
Morocco
Mozambique
Namibia
Niger
Rwanda
Sao Tome and Principe
Senegal
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Somalia
South Africa
South Sudan
Sudan
Swaziland
Tanzania
Togo
Tunisia
Uganda
Zambia
Zimbabwe
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\*\ Persons born in the areas administered prior to June 1967 by
Israel, Jordan, Syria, and Egypt are chargeable, respectively, to
Israel, Jordan, Syria, and Egypt. Persons born in the Gaza Strip are
chargeable to Egypt; persons born in the West Bank are chargeable to
Jordan; persons born in the Golan Heights are chargeable to Syria.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In Africa, natives of Nigeria are not eligible for this year's
diversity program.
Asia
Afghanistan
Bahrain
Bhutan
Brunei
Burma
Cambodia
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region **
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Israel *
Japan
Jordan *
Kuwait
Laos
Lebanon
Malaysia
Maldives
Mongolia
Nepal
North Korea
Oman
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Singapore
Sri Lanka
Syria *
Taiwan **
Thailand
Timor-Leste
United Arab Emirates
Yemen
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Persons born in the areas administered prior to June 1967 by
Israel, Jordan, Syria, and Egypt are chargeable, respectively, to
Israel, Jordan, Syria, and Egypt. Persons born in the Gaza Strip are
chargeable to Egypt; persons born in the West Bank are chargeable to
Jordan; persons born in the Golan Heights are chargeable to Syria.
** Natives of the following Asia Region countries are not
eligible for this year's diversity program: Bangladesh, China
(mainland-born), India, Pakistan, South Korea, Philippines, and
Vietnam. Hong Kong S.A.R. (Asia region), Macau S.A.R. (Europe
region), and Taiwan (Asia region) do qualify and are listed here.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Europe
Albania
Andorra
Armenia
Austria
Azerbaijan
Belarus
Belgium
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bulgaria
Croatia
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark (including components and dependent areas overseas)
Estonia
Finland
France (including components and areas overseas)
Georgia
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
Italy
Kazakhstan
Kosovo
Kyrgyzstan
Latvia
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Macau Special Administrative Region**
Macedonia
Malta
Moldova
Monaco
Montenegro
[[Page 57180]]
Netherlands (including components and dependent areas overseas)
Northern Ireland**
Norway
Poland
Portugal (including components and dependent areas overseas)
Romania
Russia
San Marino
Serbia
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Tajikistan
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Ukraine
Uzbekistan
Vatican City
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
** Natives of the following European countries are not eligible
for this year's DV program: Great Britain (United Kingdom). Great
Britain (United Kingdom) includes the following dependent areas:
Anguilla, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Falkland
Islands, Gibraltar, Montserrat, Pitcairn, St. Helena, and Turks and
Caicos Islands. Note that for purposes of the diversity program
only, Northern Ireland is treated separately; Northern Ireland does
qualify and is listed among the qualifying areas. Macau S.A.R. does
qualify and is listed above.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
North America
The Bahamas
In North America, natives of Canada and Mexico are not eligible for
this year's diversity program.
Oceania
Australia (including components and dependent areas overseas)
Fiji
Kiribati
Marshall Islands
Micronesia, Federated States of Nauru
New Zealand (including components and dependent areas overseas)
Palau
Papua New Guinea
Solomon Islands
Tonga
Tuvalu
Vanuatu
Samoa
South America, Central America, and the Caribbean
Antigua and Barbuda
Argentina
Barbados
Belize
Bolivia
Chile
Costa Rica
Cuba
Dominica
Grenada
Guatemala
Guyana
Honduras
Nicaragua
Panama
Paraguay
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Suriname
Trinidad and Tobago
Uruguay
Venezuela
Countries in this region whose natives are not eligible for this
year's diversity program: Brazil, Colombia, Dominican Republic,
Ecuador, El Salvador, Haiti, Jamaica, Mexico, and Peru.
Dated: September 12, 2014.
Michele T. Bond,
Acting Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Consular Affairs, Department of
State.
[FR Doc. 2014-22767 Filed 9-23-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710-06-P