May 24, 2000 Immigration News Update
Click for a Printable Version of this Article
Business
Immigration News Update
from True, Walsh & Miller
May 24, 2000
1. National Sign-on Letter in Support of H-1B Legislation
2. INS Inches Forward on H-1B Cap Case Processing
3. DOL Revises Prevailing Wage Standards
4. Employment-based Priority Dates Remain Stuck for
People from India, China
5. The Firm Speaks, Chats and Writes
1. National Sign-on Letter in Support of H-1B Legislation
The American Business for Legal Immigration (ABLI), a Washington
DC-based coalition of employer groups, is circulating a letter in
support of legislation to increase the number of H-1B nonimmigrant
work visas. The letter appears below. ABLI will send this
letter to the House of Representatives in early June to demonstrate
both support for the Dreier-Lofgren H-1B bill (H.R. 3983) and
opposition to the Smith bill, H.R. 4227. ABLI hopes to gather 300
signatures from companies, associations, educational institutions,
non-profits and other employers. Please consider signing onto
this letter. To date more than 200 companies have signed on.
To sign on, please forward the following information, by e-mail (tbrown@aila.org)
or fax (202-371-9449): employer's name; name, title and phone number
of the individual at the employer authorizing the sign on; city and
state in which the employer is located. The deadline for sign
ons is Thursday, June 1, 2000. If you have any questions, please
contact Theresa Brown at 202-216-2408).
Thank you for your continued advocacy efforts! Together we can
raise the cap on H-1B visas.
Please note two things, however. First, it is not at all clear
that any legislation will be enacted before October 1, the start of
the new fiscal year. In the meantime, the INS has at least given
some good news by acknowledging that people in F and J nonimmigrant
status can receive signing bonuses while waiting for their H-1B visas
to come through. Second, any legislation is likely to include
significant new requirements for filing and documenting H-1B visa
petitions. So, although any new law will probably increase the
number of H-1B visas, processing petitions under the new requirements
may be as slow and cumbersome as currently, if not more so.
Draft letter:
Dear Republican Leadership:
On behalf of the American Business for Legal Immigration Coalition (ABLI),
we want you to know of our strong support for H.R. 3983, the HI-TECH
Act introduced by Representatives David Dreier and Zoe Lofgren. The
bill, which temporarily raises the cap on H-1B visas, addresses the
critical workforce shortage American employers face, particularly for
jobs requiring degrees in math, science and engineering.
Three trends are at the crux of the problem. Unemployment is at
a record thirty-year low. Demand for professionals with highly
specialized skills has soared while the number of American students
graduating from U.S. universities with degrees in math, science,
engineering and other technical disciplines has declined.
Finally, the way companies design, manufacture and market products and
services around the globe demands international personnel mobility.
Unfortunately, American employers are finding it increasingly
difficult to locate and recruit professionals to meet current project
demands. Failure to raise the cap to allow access to highly educated
foreign professionals, many of whom were trained in U.S. universities,
will result in lost sales, delayed projects and other setbacks that
will threaten the technological preeminence of U.S. industry.
The Dreier-Lofgren bill would provide immediate relief to employers.
It would ensure that a number of visas are clearly reserved for
individuals with masters degrees and above as well as for individuals
working for institutions of higher education and non-profit research
organizations. Moreover it would institute changes to the green
card process that would help to alleviate some of the pressures that
are currently borne by the H-1B program. The bill also directs
funds raised by the fee to effective education and training programs
that help lay the groundwork for longer-term solutions to the worker
shortage issue. The bill enjoys broad bipartisan support from
Members across the country.
We appreciate the fact that Immigration Subcommittee Chairman Lamar
Smith has acknowledged the need to adjust the cap. However, we
believe his bill, H.R. 4227, does not provide the necessary changes to
deliver meaningful relief. Indeed, H.R. 4227 imposes burdensome
new requirements on the H-1B program that would make the program
unusable for many employers. The HI-TECH Act is currently the
only viable, bipartisan vehicle for moving forward on this issue this
year. With the cap on H-1Bs already expired, the need to address
this issue quickly is acute. We cannot afford to maintain an
artificial cap on our technology-driven economy. We look forward
to working with you on this critical bill in the weeks ahead.
2. INS Inches Forward on H-1B Cap Case Processing
According to the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA),
the INS continues to lurch forward a week at a time in processing H-1B
cases countable toward the annual cap. INS Service Centers have now
been instructed to process new H-1B cases filed up to March 2, 2000.
Once the four centers reach that point, INS headquarters will evaluate
where it stands with respect to the cap and issue instructions on the
next goal date for processing. Stay tuned for details.
The fact that the H-1B cap was reached so early this year (only six
months into the fiscal year) shows why new legislation is needed.
This is yet another reason to support the legislation discussed in the
first article above.
3. DOL Revises Prevailing Wage Standards
The federal Department of Labor (DOL) has published a new memo on
prevailing wage issues. The memo includes new guidelines on when
private or employer wage surveys can be used instead of DOL surveys.
Such surveys are important for both H-1B nonimmigrant visas and many
employment-based green card applications. Please contact us ff
you have a question about this memo.
4. Employment-based Priority Dates Remain Stuck for
People from India, China
Priority dates for green cards measure a person's place in line to
receive a green card. While there are long waits in almost all
of the family-sponsored immigrant visa categories, most of the
employment-based (EB) green card categories have no backlogs.
Two noticeable exceptions are India and China. Currently, people
from China with advanced degrees can receive a green card in the EB-2
category only if they filed before September 1, 1997. Indians in
the EB-2 category can receive green cards only if they filed before
June 1, 1999. The backlog is even worse for people from India
and China in the EB-3 category, which is for people with bachelor's
degrees or lower. There the wait for people from these two countries
is backlogged over three years, to early 1997. In addition,
people with approved green card applications cannot start the
adjustment of status process to actually receive their green card
until their priority date is current. Some INS offices are taking one
to two years to process adjustment applications. Thus, the
overall process can take up to five years for many people from India
and China. This puts a premium on starting the green card
process as early as possible, especially for Indians and Chinese in
H-1B status, who face a six-year limit in that category.
5. The Firm Speaks, Chats and Writes
Steve Yale-Loehr will speak on May 31 at the NAFSA: Association of
International Educators conference in San Diego on the legal, ethical
and practical issues surrounding undocumented students at U.S.
colleges and universities. He will also speak on investor visas
at the annual conference of the American Immigration Lawyers
Association (AILA) in Chicago June 15-18. Steve currently
co-chairs the AILA investors committee. He will also moderate a
panel on the immigration aspects of corporate reorganizations at the
AILA conference.
Please note that all of the firm's immigration lawyers will be at the
AILA conference June 15-18. We will check our voice mail,
however, while we are out of town.
Steve Yale-Loehr recently held a live Internet chat about work-related
visas and green cards. To see a transcript of the chat, go to http://www.ilw.com/immigrants/
Steve Yale-Loehr has also co-authored an article about the immigration
impact of corporate reorganizations on H-1B workers as part of his
regular immigration column for the New York Law Journal. The
article is reprinted here
_________
That’s it for this issue. For answers to any
of your immigration questions, contact Hilary Fraser (htf@millermayer.com),
Rosie Mayer (rma@millermayer.com), or
Steve Yale-Loehr (syl@millermayer.com)
at True, Walsh & Miller.
The contents of these web pages are provided for general informational purposes and
do not constitute legal advice for specific cases, which should only be obtained from an
attorney. |
Copyright © 2002 True, Walsh & Miller, LLP. Attorneys at Law
The Commons, 202 East State Street, Ithaca, New York 14850
phone: 607-273-4200, fax: 607-272-6694, E-mail: twm@twmlaw.com |
|