> you said BCIS test if you have served 3 years at 485 stage. How do
> they test that. Do they ask employer, do they ask state health
> department or do they want W2 etc.
Somebody posted the internal I485 adjudication manual on this site onece. I downloaded it, and it is buried somewhere in this wreck of computer. I'll give you answer once I find it.
edit
sorry, couldn't find it. Must be on the laptop.
Interesting question. If you use an EAD, it is not like your employment is reported to USCIS or anything. You show the card, you sign the I9 and thats it.
I remember from that document that checking for potential J1 HRR's was part of ANY I485 adjudication. How they do that, I am not sure.
edit
found it !!
http://www.ilw.com/lawyers/seminars/august2002_citation2b.pdf
I will let you know what I find.
edit
Where I come from, we have a quip that goes along the lines of: 'If you as a philosophy student to study the local phone book cover to cover well enough so he can recite it backwards, he will ask you 'WHY?'. If you ask a medical student the answer will be 'When do you want me to recite it'.
I guess the ability to accumulate large amounts of irrelevant information can serve me well in other areas as well.
If you download that 269page tomb of a PDF, and flip it to page 181 you can read up on the procedure they go through. Some pearls:
An applicant who receives a waiver under this section
of law, and changes his or her nonimmigrant classification from J-1 to H-
1B may not apply for permanent residence unless he/she has fulfilled the 3-
year employment contract with the health care facility in the specified HHS
designated shortage area named in the waiver application. PL103-416 has a
20 per State Limitation. There is no limitation on the number of waivers
issued by Federal Agencies.
A foreign medical school graduate who fails to meet the terms and
conditions imposed on the waiver under section 214(l) of the Act will once
again become subject to the 2-year requirement of section 212(e) of the
Act.
Extenuating Circumstances: Further, there may be extenuating
circumstances whereby the alien may not be able to fulfill the 3-year
contractual obligation; however, the alien will be required to serve the
balance of the 3-year period with another qualifying health care facility or
employer. Refer to recently issued guidance in memorandum issued by the
Office of Field Operations titled Waiver of the Two-Year Foreign
Residence Requirement under section 212(e) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act (the Act). October 4, 1999.
Eligibility to Adjust Status: To be eligible to file Form I-485, these
applicants must have served at least three years under the terms and
conditions of the waiver request granted by the interested Federal agency or
State Department of Public Health prior to the filing of the I-485. There is
no exception to this restriction. If the terms and conditions of the
waiver are not fulfilled, the applicant again becomes subject to the
restrictions of 212(e). [See 8 CFR 212.7(c)(9)(iv) and 8 CFR
245.1(c)(2)]
Other waiver provisions such as an approved I-612: If it is determined
that the alien is subject to section 212(e), a request for evidence will be
prepared requesting evidence that the applicant has fulfilled or received a
waiver of this requirement as of the date the I-485 was filed. If the
applicant cannot establish that the waiver was obtained as of the date of
filing of the I-485, the I-485 must be denied.
Form I-612 cannot be submitted concurrently with the I-485; however, if the
USIA no objection letter is submitted, the Center will accept it and work it. If
the I-485 is accompanied by an approval notice for Form I-612, the applicant
has met the waiver requirement. If the evidence is not provided, prepare an
RFE.
Sorry, doesn't give up too much information as to how they intend to check for the fulfillment of your HRR. God only knows how they handle this.