Run Off’ … 10,626 Jamaicans With B1/B2 US Visas Overstayed In 2018, Homeland Security Reports
Jerome Reynolds, Assistant Editor-Online
A total of 10,626 Jamaicans overstayed their United States (US) non-immigrant tourism/business (B1/B2) visas between October 1, 2017, and September 30, 2018, the US Department of Homeland Security has reported.
This is a jump by 1,073 when compared to the corresponding period in the previous year, according to the agency’s Fiscal Year 2018 Entry/Exit Overstay Report.
Over the period, 312,667 Jamaicans were granted entry to the US and were expected to depart the country during that window of time.
The department said that for that period, it has no departure records for 10,242 Jamaicans (now classified as suspected in-country overstays), and 384 Jamaicans left the US after their authorised period of admission expired (out-of-country overstays).
The agency said that based on the above figures, Jamaica has a total overstay rate of 3.40 per cent and a suspected in-country overstay rate of 3.28 per cent.
This is a slight increase when compared to the corresponding period the previous year.
For the 2017 reporting year, Jamaica had a total overstay rate of 3.16 per cent and a suspected in-country overstay rate of 3.04 per cent.
Troubled by the number of travellers to the US who overstay their B1/B2 visas, President Donald Trump has asked the secretary of state, in consultation with the attorney general and the secretary of homeland security, to provide recommendations to address the issue.
“Non-immigrant visa overstay rates are unacceptably high for nationals of certain countries. Aliens must abide by the terms and conditions of their visas for our immigration system to function as intended. Although the United States benefits from legitimate non-immigrant entry, individuals who abuse the visa process and decline to abide by the terms and conditions of their visas, including their visa departure dates, undermine the integrity of our immigration system and harm the national interest,” Trump said in an April 2019 memorandum.
He said attention will be given to countries with a total overstay rate greater than 10 percent in the combined B1 and B2 non-immigrant visa categories based on the Department of Homeland Security’s 2018 report.
“This engagement should identify conditions contributing to high overstay rates among nationals of those countries and methods to address those conditions,” he said.
Jamaica will not be affected as the country as a B1/B1 overstay rate of 3.40%.
For the reporting period, the African nation of Djibouti had the highest total overstay rate, 44.67 per cent.
Other countries with a rate above 10 per cent are Liberia, Nigeria, South Sudan, Syria, Yemen and Somalia.
Trumps said recommended actions to stem the problem may include suspending or limiting entry of nationals of those countries who hold B1 or B2 visas; targeted suspension of visa issuance for certain nationals; limits to duration of admission, to be implemented by the Department of Homeland Security; and additional documentary requirements.
Jamaica’s Entry/Exit Data
Non-immigrant B1/B2 visa
2018: Expected Departures – 312,667
2017: Expected Departures – 302,025
2018: Out-of Country Overstays – 384
2017: Out-of Country Overstays – 381
2018: Suspected In-Country Overstays – 10,242
2017: Suspected In-Country Overstays – 9,172
2018: Total Overstay – 10,626
2017: Total Overstay – 9,553
2018: Total Overstay Rate – 3.40%
2017: Total Overstay Rate – 3.16%
2018: Suspected In-Country Overstay Rate- 3.28%
2017: Suspected In-Country Overstay Rate- 3.04%
I want someone from the US Embassy to TRUTHFULLY tell us their selection process. I see people who are clearly going to run o.ff get visa, while people that have their business and children here get denied? It makes no sense to me.
Pardon my ignorance, but in the past, the USA did not know when a Visa holder leaves the USA and that is why people use to back-stamp their Jamaican passport. Did they change the system and now the USA knows when a Visa holder leaves the USA back to their home country?
Look like something change..wid dis ya man kmttt the ppl dem no biz a RASS him coulda chaw fire. All réponse fi demself…YES 5 YRS AGO NUFF GET SO CALL MAMMA P VISA UNBELIEVABLE. SOME HAD NO PLACE TO STAY..DEM JUS GAMBLE AN WIN. PPL CALL BEGGIN TO SLEEP. PON FLOOR
Except fi some ppl naw behave…an dem fi get sen home. Some hav been an find them way bk a farrin…til DEATH do them part dem naw tan yah..ppl drown. Tryin to get back. ITS THÉ INDIAN PLACE a teef dem teef it
That Rumor bout jamaicans can soon go farrin visa FREE its 2 yrs dat a go roun. All some persons living a Washington fi 40yrs believe dis shit…kmttt
FUSS ting a the army hav tu COME OUT. Or ELSE AIRPORT STAFF WOULDA RUN LEFF THEM POST. DID U GUYS HEAR HOW WHEN AIR JAMAICA USED TO FLY.. THE SÉCURITY WAS RELUCTANT TO WORK THAT AREA OF JFK IT REACH NEWSPAPER. YES WHEN WE A COME WE COME HARD NO RASS
Memba WHEN our ICI USE. TO PACK DEM BOX PON THE SIDEWALK A MIAMI AIRPORT IN THE 80S, DISTASTEFUL NO ONE COULD TALK TO THEM. GOOD OLD DAYS. BUT PPL. A TEL WHO SO EVA TO KISS DEM RASS DROWNING MAN KETCH AFTER STRAW
Easy! The airlines working with them!
I LOVE THE CAPTION