Haw. Code R. § 19-149-20 - Expiration date
State civil identification cards shall expire eight years from the year of issuance on the applicant's birthday, except for legal non-immigrants (foreign tourists, students, or employees who are not legal permanent residents), in which case the card shall bear the same expiration date as the expiration date on the Form 1-94.
(1) For Canadian visitors who are allowed to
stay in the United States for up to six months at a time, the card's expiration
date shall be six months from the date of entry into the United
States;
(2) For foreign students
and student trainees, the date on the Form 1-20 or Form IAP that presumes his
or her completion of studies or student training shall be used as the
expiration date. If only the month and year are noted, the last day of that
month shall be used as the expiration date;
(3) For conditional resident aliens, the
expiration date displayed at the bottom of the resident alien card shall be
used as the expiration date;
(4)
For individuals covered under the Compact of Free Association, the expiration
date shall be eight years from the year of issuance on the applicant's
birthday. These individuals are allowed unrestricted entry between their
countries and the United States and include Micronesia, Marshall Islands,
Palau, and the Northern Marianas;
(5) For individuals paroled indefinitely, the
expiration date shall be either the expiration date on their Immigration and
Customs Enforcement employment authorization card or the expiration date on
their passport, if Immigration and Customs Enforcement has not confiscated the
passport. This applies to those individuals who are illegally in the United
States, but due to the politics of their country, are not allowed reentry to
their country. Immigration and Customs Enforcement allows them to work and
remain in the United States until conditions in their country change to allow
them reentry; and
(6) For
individuals who enter the United States on a K status (fiance/fiancée),
the expiration date will be the date on the individual's Immigration and
Customs Enforcement employment authorization card or the date of the interview
which is set after the sponsor petitions the Immigration and Customs
Enforcement for permanent residency. The applicant must present the applicant's
employment authorization card or evidence of the interview date.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.