Job description should match your education. Otherwise you will be subject to public charge.
Job description should match your education. Otherwise you will be subject to public charge.
when Consular refuse DV?
what are the reasons?
well, what about if someone hasn't pay Medical bills yet? - Does it effect with the Dv Lottery Interview and might be rejected?
If you have a university degree and show a job offer at the consulate, that requires a high school diploma, consulate usually assumes your university degree is fake or your job offer is fake. Either case would lead to visa denial.I think there should be no problem about that. Regarding the level of education, the only thing they demand, is the high school certificate. Sometimes it's hard to get a job that suits your degree and people working on things that have no relationship. That happens very often in many countries and I think, they will not reject someone for that. For questions, you can read the rules of the lottery.
If you have a university degree and show a job offer at the consulate, that requires a high school diploma, consulate usually assumes your university degree is fake or your job offer is fake. Either case would lead to visa denial.
That's over-simplifying the situation. The Consulate doesn't assume either is "fake" unless they can't substantiate the credentials. That means the reason for denial is that the applicant is lying. These days, people do obtain jobs that is different from their college degree field of studies. You can't penalize people for obtaining higher education but preferring to work a lesser job. That's their choice if they want to do that.
I know one. A person with a university degree showed to a consul in Warsaw a job offer from a gas station in Pittsburgh (not even a high school education is necessary for this type of job - a cashier). He was denied for providing a fake job offer with the reason as public charge. According to the visa applicant, both the degree and the job offer were not fake.I'm fully agree with you, and I do not know any person who is penalized for working on something that did not study.
9 FAM 40.41 N4.5 Education and Work Experience
(CT:VISA-1126; 12-03-2008)
You should review the applicant's education and work experience to
determine if these are compatible with the duties of the applicant's job offer
(if any). You should consider the applicant's skills, length of employment,
and frequency of job changes. Even if a job offer is not required, you should
assess the likelihood of the alien's ability to become or remain self-sufficient,
if necessary, within a reasonable time after entry into the United States.
(See 9 FAM 40.41 N4.7.)
I know one. A person with a university degree showed to a consul in Warsaw a job offer from a gas station in Pittsburgh (not even a high school education is necessary for this type of job - a cashier). He was denied for providing a fake job offer with the reason as public charge. According to the visa applicant, both the degree and the job offer were not fake..