Bill

Bill > HR2187


US HR2187

US HR2187
JOLT Act of 2019 Jobs Originated through Launching Travel Act of 2019


summary

Introduced
04/09/2019
In Committee
05/15/2019
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
12/31/2020

Introduced Session

116th Congress

Bill Summary

To amend the Immigration and Nationality Act to stimulate international tourism to the United States, and for other purposes. This bill establishes a nonimmigrant visa for qualified Canadian citizens and makes various amendments related to nonimmigrant visas. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) may admit as a visitor a Canadian citizen who (1) is at least 50 years old, (2) maintains a residence in Canada, (3) owns a U.S. residence or has signed a rental agreement for the duration of the stay, (4) is not inadmissible or deportable under various provisions, (5) will not engage in U.S. employment, and (6) will not seek U.S. assistance or benefits. Such visitors may be admitted for up to 240 days out of any single 365-day period. The Visa Waiver Program (program allowing citizens of participating countries to visit the United States without a visa) shall be renamed the Secure Travel Partnership Program. The bill amends various provisions relating to the program, such as the maximum nonimmigrant visa refusal rate a qualifying country may have. DHS may waive the refusal rate requirement if a country meets other requirements, such as entering into intelligence collection and information sharing arrangements with the United States. The Department of State shall set a goal of interviewing nonimmigrant visa applicants worldwide within 15 days of receiving the application and periodically report to Congress on efforts to meet this goal. The State Department shall conduct a pilot program for using secure remote videoconferencing technology for conducting visa interviews for certain classes of nonimmigrant visa applications.

AI Summary

This bill, the Jobs Originated through Launching Travel Act of 2019 (JOLT Act of 2019), aims to stimulate international tourism to the United States. It establishes a new nonimmigrant visa for qualified Canadian citizens aged 50 or older who own a U.S. residence or have a rental agreement, are not inadmissible or deportable, and will not seek employment or government assistance during their stay of up to 240 days. The bill also renames the Visa Waiver Program as the Secure Travel Partnership Program and makes various amendments, such as allowing the Secretary of Homeland Security to waive the nonimmigrant visa refusal rate requirement if a country meets other security-related criteria. Additionally, the bill requires the Department of State to set a goal of interviewing nonimmigrant visa applicants worldwide within 15 days and conduct a pilot program for using secure remote videoconferencing technology for certain visa interviews.

Committee Categories

Justice

Sponsors (12)

Last Action

Referred to the Subcommittee on Immigration and Citizenship. (on 05/15/2019)

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