New Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS) Release will Address Student and Exchange Visitor Visa Overstays

Featured recently in The National Law ReviewNew Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS) Release will Address Student and Exchange Visitor Visa Overstays, an article by William J. Flynn, III with Fowler White Boggs P.A.:

Fowler_NoShadow_Logo

A new version of the Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS)is scheduled to release this spring. The Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP), a faction of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), is developing the new release as part of a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) initiative to address visa overstays by F and M students and J exchange visitors. “Release 6.12” will enable better and more frequent data sharing between SEVIS and the Arrival Departure Information System (ADIS). As a result, SEVIS will now contain I-94 Arrival/Departure Record information, as well as passport information for students and exchange visitors who overstay their visas.

SEVIS is an internet-based system that was launched in 2002. The system allows DHS to track and monitor information related to SEVP-certified schools and international students in F and M status, along with their dependents. The U.S. Department of State (DOS) also uses SEVIS to access information related to DOS-designated visitor program sponsors and J-1 exchange visitors and their dependents. The new information-sharing technology of Release 6.12 will facilitate the efforts of both agencies with respect to overstays.

As part of the DHS initiative, DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano has also created a visa overstay working group to address the overstay of students and exchange visitors. The group will work towards creating a solution to facilitate the identification, location, and removal of students who overstay their status.

In light of these new initiatives, it is especially important for students and other nonimmigrant visa holders to maintain lawful status for the entire duration of stay in the United States. Overstaying a visa can not only jeopardize one’s eligibility for renewals and extensions, but may also negatively affect eligibility for permanent residence and other immigration options in the future. If you have questions on maintaining lawful status in the U.S., or would like more information on the new DHS student overstay initiative, please contact Bill Flynn, Board Certified Immigration and Nationality attorney.

©2002-2013 Fowler White Boggs P.A.

SEVP Implementation of the Accreditation Act

As the fall semester approaches, colleges and universities should be conscious of developments relating to the certification requirements that apply to schools that enroll foreign nonimmigrant students. During the first half of 2012, the Student and Exchange Visitor Program (“SEVP”), the federal agency responsible for certifying institutions to enroll foreign nonimmigrant students, began implementing changes that will affect all colleges, universities, and other educational institutions that provide English language training (“ESL”) programs. These changes stem from the Accreditation of English Language Training Act (“Accreditation Act”), which became effective in June of 2011.

The Accreditation of English Language Training Programs Act

Pursuant to the Accreditation Act, ESL programs that enroll foreign nonimmigrant students must obtain accreditation from a regional or national accreditation agency recognized by the Department of Education. This requirement has significant implications for educational institutions that enroll foreign nonimmigrant students in ESL programs.

According to recent guidance published by SEVP, the Accreditation Act applies to two types of ESL programs:

  • Stand-Alone ESL Schools whose officials have indicated on the school’s Form I-17 the intention to offer only ESL programs of study; and
  • Combined Schools whose officials have indicated on the school’s Form I-17 that the school offers an ESL program of study, as well as other programs of study (A Combined School may either contract out the ESL program of study or wholly own and operate the ESL program of study under the institution’s governance).

Any college or university that offers ESL programs in addition to general courses of study would fall within the “Combined School” category. Combined Schools are subject to the requirements imposed by the Accreditation Act.

Compliance with the Accreditation Act

Compliance with the Accreditation Act is not simple. There are few private agencies that accredit ESL programs and the process to apply for accreditation is lengthy; for some agencies it can take between one and two years, and, in some instances, even longer. This new law accounted for the delays associated with obtaining accreditation by granting a three-year reprieve from its requirements for ESL programs that applied for accreditation prior to December 15, 2011. Programs that did not meet the December deadline, however, may not continue to enroll foreign nonimmigrant students.

Implementation of the Accreditation Act by SEVP

SEVP has already started to issue out-of-cycle review notices to schools offering ESL programs. An out-of-cycle review is a demand for the school to submit evidence of its continued compliance with SEVP certification requirements. Schools have 30 days from receipt of an out-of-cycle review to submit evidence of compliance to SEVP. If the school is unable to prove that its ESL program is accredited, then the school must cease enrolling foreign nonimmigrant students in its ESL program and may not issue new Form I-20s for its ESL program.

SEVP has not provided clear guidance as to what constitutes sufficient evidence of compliance with the Accreditation Act. All colleges and universities with SEVP certification are accredited by a regional or national accreditation agency, but, typically, the accreditation is general and applies to the entire institution. At this time, SEVP has not clarified whether this type of accreditation is sufficient to satisfy the Accreditation Act’s requirements or whether ESL programs at Combined Schools will require separate accreditation that specifically addresses their ESL program.

Additional Considerations for Colleges and Universities

The Accreditation Act applies only to colleges and universities that offer ESL programs. The first step, therefore, is to determine if your English program is in fact an ESL program as defined by SEVP. According to SEVP, “[i]f English language training is just an adjunct or it will be taken in conjunction with another program of study, do not indicate English language training [on the Form I-17].” 1 Based on this guidance, schools that teach English as part of their curriculum, but do not provide a separate, stand-alone, ESL program will not need to comply with the additional requirements imposed by the Accreditation Act.

The application of the Accreditation Act will vary between colleges and universities based on the details of their ESL program.


1 See I-17 Frequently Asked Question: Preparing the Petition for SEVP Certification, U.S. Department of Homeland Security (available at http://www.ice.gov/sevis/i17/i17_4.htm).

©1994-2012 Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C.