I will not say big NOCall me Shrek said:
eb1doc said:I will not say big NO
It varies with universities.
University handbook will have describtion of all positions like
postdoctural fellow/PD reasearch associate/Research Associate
Also they will define criteria for being permanent. I was surprised when one university gave my friend a letter of permanent job (inspite of being PDRA) just because he was 40 hr employee with benefits. Some universities don't even give retiremnet benefits to PDRA....so moral is ask your Human resource. Generally INS is aware..... that its not!!!
jollyfella said:Usually, not, but ask your employer first. I spent my postdoc at MIT and it treated me as a temp for four years of toil. A friend of mine did his at UCSF, and they actually sponsored his OR.
If they treat you as a perm employee, your employer should provide you with an employement letter signed by an authorized HR personnel, not your boss in the lab.
JollyFella
Well half true!! end dates does not mean that u can't be permanent! BCIS defines permanent in several ways .........and most of us are on H1B with defined dates.............redwoods said:H1b visa does also have expiration date. This indicates my position is not permanent. Visa officer will find this in my documents.
A lot changed from year 2003 .....& now.nara1233 said:My EB1-OR was approved as a research associate(in 2003). Most important is the EB1-OR employment letter has to be signed by the HR personnel and not your boss or division head. Even then INS may ask for further proof. In my case our institution had a policy(now revoked) of sponsoring postdoctoral fellows/associates in EB1-OR. A friend of mine who applied at the same time from my neighbouring institution was denied saying that his was not a permanent position(got letter from his division).
although my 140 got approved in 6 months my 485 is still stuck for background check at FBI.