Contact Us | Donate | Blog | Artículos seleccionados en español
Immigration EqualityImage: collage of people
IssuesAbout UsCommunityPress RoomImmigration BasicsResources and PublicationsBlog

Binational Couples

Asylum

Transgender Issues

HIV Issues

The HIV Ban

HIV Waivers

HIV-Based Immigration Applications

Primary Source Materials

Useful Links

Detention


HIV Issues

"The U.S. has one of the harshest immigration policies in the world against people living with HIV."

HIV Issues



"Immigration Equality has been committed for over a decade to repealing this ban
that disproportionately affects LGBT people.  I am thrilled to report that after so many
years of discrimination, the HIV ban is history."
                                                                          Rachel B. Tiven, Executive Director

The HIV Ban Is History!

On January 4, 2010, the HIV ban on travel and immigration, which had been in place for two decades finally came to an end.  After a 60 day waiting period, the final regulations  which were published by the Department of Health and Human Services  on November 2, 2009, became law.  The regulations remove HIV from the list of “communicable diseases of public health significance,”  meaning that anyone seeking to enter the U.S. as a visitor can now do so without having to disclose his or her HIV status. The regulations also remove the HIV testing requirement for lawful permanent resident applicants.  

As the lengthy bureaucratic process of publishing the regulations and issuing guidance on their implementation have unfolded, there have been several significant memoranda to be issued by various U.S. government agencies about the end of the ban.  The United States Citizenship and Immigration Services has issued two memos about implementation of the end of the ban.  On September 15, 2009  (USCIS) issued a memo  which provided guidance on adjudicating cases before the January 4, 2010 change in the law.  Specifically the memo instructed officers not to deny cases based solely on a person's HIV-positive status, but rather to hold them in abeyance until the change in the law. 

On November 24, 2009, USCIS issued further guidance to its officers on adjudicating cases after January 4, 2010.  Namely, the memo re-iterates that HIV will no longer be a ground of inadmissibility, that waivers for individuals with HIV will no longer be required, that HIV anti-body testing will no longer be a part of the medical exam for lawful permanent resident applicants, and that, upon a motion with the proper fee, applications that were denied solely because the applicant was HIV-positive after July 2, 2009 (the date that the final regulations were published) may be reopened.

At long last, on December 17, 2009, the Department of State issued a Q and A explaining the end of the HIV ban.  This is very important because individuals seeking visas abroad (either short-term or for permanent residence) must do so with U.S. consulates which are part of DOS, not USCIS.  The guidance makes it clear that after January 4, 2010, HIV is no longer a reason to deny visas.

Also, the Centers for Disease Control recently sent a letter to all doctors who conduct Immigration medical exams.  USCIS is in the process of changing its medical examination form for lawful permanent resident (green card) and refugee applicants, form I-693.  Until it completes that bureaucratic process, the question about HIV remains on the form.  This letter instructs physicians NOT to test for HIV and to simply fill in "no longer required" in the box.

The end of the HIV ban was the culmination of incredibly hard work by a broad coalition of immigration, HIV, LGBT and human rights organizations.  Together, we mobilized  over 23,000 comments in favor of lifting the ban and fewer than 550 comments against lifting the ban.  Significantly, over 400 organizations submitted or signed onto comments calling for an end to the ban and there were no organizational comments that asked HHS to keep the ban in place.  Immigration Equality was among the organizations that submitted comments in full support of the proposed regulations.

None of this would have been possible without the leadership of Senator John Kerry, Congresswoman Barbara Lee, and former Senator Gordon Smith, who led the fight in Congress in 2008 to remove the statutory HIV ban.  Immigration Equality has also convened a broad-based coalition that has continued to push for full equality under U.S. immigration law for people living with HIV.

Stay tuned here, on our blog and through our e-bulletins for more information about the implementation of the end of the HIV ban.

Meanwhile, if you have an immigration case which is affected by the HIV ban, please visit our HIV ban page.  If your question is not answered, please call or e-mail the legal staff in our New York office.

FAQs About the Current Policy

Latest Updates from Immigration Equality's Blog

Past Press Coverage of the repeal of the HIV Travel and Immigration Ban

Senator John Kerry on the HIV ban, accepting the 2009 Safe Haven Award



 


Donate Now

Sign Up!

Get Our News Updates


Our Issues

Search This Site:

Artículos seleccionados en español

HOME       ISSUES       ABOUT US       COMMUNITY       PRESS ROOM       IMMIGRATION BASICS       RESOURCES AND PUBLICATIONS

Copyright 2005-2009 Immigration Equality       Contact Us       Legal and Privacy Statement       Site designed and produced by litchinut.