About 6 months before (and NO sooner, unfortunately/legally!) the artist is scheduled to perform in your community, you need to ensure that the visa petition is in process. If you are lucky enough to have a performer with an American manager/agent, they are likely handling this for the artist's entire U.S. tour.
If the artist's management agency is located abroad and/or you are the only American organization presenting said performer/ensemble, you will need to submit the visa petition(s) to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS) for work-related O or P classification visas. The classes are as follows:
- O-1: Persons of extraordinary ability in the arts, athletics, business, education or science
- O-2: Essential support personnel of O-1 visa holders (accompanists, coaches, tour manager, lighting designer, etc.)
- P-1: Athletes, entertainment groups/ensembles and their support personnel
- P-3: Artists or Entertainers in a culturally unique program
Let's say we actually get the petition and all documentation in order in a fairly timely fashion. We then send the petition(s) off to the Vermont Service Center. This is a fairly recent development. You used to send the I-129 to your region's processing center, but due to extreme backloads in certain centers (CA had a 180 day backlog - and remember, you cannot apply more than 180 days in advance!!) , all O & P's are now sent just to Vermont, since this center notoriously had the best processing times and customer service. However - this now means YOUR petition is competing for processing with every other O & P in the nation (over 44,000 last year!) - including those that have paid for "premium processing." So you can imaging that things have slowed a little.
Now, did I mention that...
- An "ensemble" or "culturally-significant" performance can be filed under a single P visa petition - BUT if you have, say, a vocalist (O-1B visa) who travels with her accompanist (O-2) and a vocal coach or tour manager (O-2) you actually need to complete three separate petitions
- Oh - and the cost. The I-129 carries a $190 processing fee PER petition, AND you also have to pay usually $200 for each labor consultation. If you don't complete the petition yourself, then you're also looking at paying an immigration firm as well.
- AND - if you have not done adequate planning, book the event in a short-time frame, or hit a filing snag - you'll likely have to upgrade your petition to Premium Processing - which guarantees processing in 15 days or less, for the minor cost of $1,000 per petition.
- And lastly, if any of the artists are male applicants between 16-45 years old and/OR nationals of the 7 designated "state sponsors of terrorism" (Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Sudan and Syria) they must also complete a DS-157 form and possibly be subject to additional scrutiny.
If all goes well, you should receive a I-797 Approval Notice to forward to the performer. THEN the artist him/herself must complete a DS-156 form, and schedule a visit (around their busy world-wide touring schedule!) at an appropriate U.S. Consulate abroad for an interview, fingerprinting and the actual processing of the new machine-readable visa (pic. above) itself. The artist also has to pay a $100 application fee at this time.
If everything up until this point goes well - don't worry - there are still a few stops along the way where it can all derail in an instant! But I'll cover PFIs, POEs, I-94s and border posts in Part 4 - When in Rome, NY. Until then - enjoy the next installment : Part 3 - Taxation without Representation.
For more information, please visit Artists from Abroad.
Lady Liberty image Copyright © 2005/2006 American Symphony Orchestra League/Association of Performing Arts Presenters
Updated - cleaned up bad code!
2 comments:
good lord, sweetie, how in the world do you find the time to plan ANYTHING?!?! This is more complicated than rocket science! <3
All 4 "World Music" installments:
World Music: Part 1 of 4 - Introduction
World Music - Part 2 of 4 - Visa. It's everywhere you want to be! (tm)
World Music - Part 3 of 4. Taxation without Representation"
World Music: Part 4 of 4 - When in Rome,...NY
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