Subject: NAFTA
Marc A. Williams <artcons [at] ix__netcom__com> writes >Has anyone had success in bringing Canadians to work short-term in >US museums? Is it possible to approach the internships (they carry >a stipend) from an educational angle? Any assistance would be >appreciated, I only have two experiences with the US Immigrations and Naturalization Service, but that is enough. In the first instance, I sponsored Hugo Peller, a master bookbinder from Switzerland, to teach a one-month workshop in my lab. I filled out all of the paperwork and included the requested documentation (consisting of photocopies of international awards, etc.). INS returned the forms/documentation and required that the foreign language awards be translated into English. I had them translated and returned the paperwork. Then INS wrote to require a notarized copy of a certificate asserting that the translator had passed a *particular* examination, given by a recognized institution of higher education, certifying that the translator was qualified to perform the translation. Final permission arrived the day Hugo Peller arrived, many months after the process began. My second experience was more troublesome. I had employed a paper conservator who had graduated from a Polish conservation program, and had a green card. No problem. And the person was an excellent conservator. Then, another graduate of the program, who was in the U.S. on a visitor's visa applied for work. This time there was an attorney involved; an attorney who specialized in this sort of law. The process took three years. As required by INS, I advertised the position to the trade and there were no applicants (other than the one who wanted the job). That was not good enough. INS then placed their own ad, at their own expense, rewritten by them, with all responses to be mailed to them (under my name) at a dummy address (theirs; they did not advertise to the trade, but only to the largest newspaper in the Oregon). By then, we were somewhere in year number two. Again, there was only one response. The conservator I wished to employ. By this time, INS informed the conservator that their visitor's visa and extensions had expired and that a trip out of country (to Canada, in the first instance) was required to re-new the visa. Ultimately, the conservator had to return to Poland and apply through the American Embassy there. After all this time (three years), INS then wrote to ask me whether or not the position was still open. It was, and the conservator was able to return to the U.S. This was before NAFTA, but it does not appear that there have been any significant changes at INS. Good luck.... Jack C. Thompson Thompson Conservation Lab. 7549 N. Fenwick Portland, OR 97217 503-735-3942 (voice/fax) *** Conservation DistList Instance 12:4 Distributed: Thursday, June 18, 1998 Message Id: cdl-12-4-022 ***Received on Thursday, 18 June, 1998