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HI-B
Professional
Work Visas
Summary
of H-1B Cap Bill (S. 2045)
As Passed by the Congress (10-3-00)
- H-1B
Cap: Increases
cap to 195,000 for FY2001, 2002, and 2003
- Backlog
Clearout: The bill mandates that all H-1B cases
approved in 1999 after the cap was reached and before
October 1, 1999 are counted against the FY1999 cap, and all
cases filed before September 1, 2000 are to be
counted against the FY2000 cap, regardless of when they are
approved. The caps for those years are raised to accommodate
however many visas this would require.
- Exemption
from the Cap: Exempts individuals employed at
higher educational institutions and their related or
affiliated nonprofit entities, and individuals employed by
nonprofit research organizations or governmental research
organizations from being counted toward the H-1B cap. (Exemption
from the cap for foreign graduates of U.S. masters or Ph.D.
programs is deleted). Also, H-1B physicians who have
received a J-1 Conrad 20 waiver of the two-year home
residency requirement are exempt from the cap. Anyone exempt
from the cap by virtue of their employment with one of the
entities described above who subsequently changes employers
to one that is not described would be counted toward the cap
in the year they change employers.
- H-1B
Count: Prohibits the INS from counting someone
toward the H-1B cap if they have had H-1B status in the
previous 6 years, unless the individual would be authorized
for a new six-year period of stay at the time the petition
is filed.
- Per
Country Limits: Will allow unused employment-based
immigrant visas in a calendar quarter to be allocated in
subsequent quarters without regard to per-country limits.
Allows an individual who has an I-140 filed on his or her
behalf and who would be subject to per-country limits to
extend his or her nonimmigrant status until the adjustment
of status application is decided.
- Portability
of H-1B Status: H-1B non-immigrants may change
jobs upon the filing of a new petition by the new
employer as long as the individual is in lawful status at
the time of filing and has not engaged in any unauthorized
employment since his or her last lawful admission.
- Portability
of I-140s and Labor Certs: Allows individuals who
have filed for adjustment of status and whose cases have
been pending for 180 days or more to change jobs or
employers without affecting the validity of the I-140 or
underlying labor certification, as long as the new job is in
“the same or a similar occupational classification” to
the job in the original petition and labor cert.
- Recapture
of Unused Employment-based Immigrant Visas: Provides
that any employment-based immigrant visas that were
available but unused in FY1999 and FY2000 are to be
“banked” for use in future fiscal years if the demand
for employment-based visas exceeds the overall cap for that
year. (This shall take place in addition to any “spill
up” of unused visas to the family preferences that would
otherwise occur.)
- Sixth-Year
Extension for H-1Bs Awaiting Green Cards: Provides
that H-1B non-immigrants for whom an I-140 has been filed
and whose labor cert or I-140 was filed at least 365 days
prior, may obtain extensions of their H-1B status beyond the
six-year maximum, in one-year increments, until their
adjustment of status or immigrant visa application is
decided.
- Extension
of Attestations and DOL Investigative Authorities Through
2003: Extends the additional attestations and DOL
investigative authorities from ACWIA through FY2003
- Recovery
of Fraudulent Visas: Provides that for any H-1B
petition revoked for fraud or willful misrepresentation, the
visa number shall be added back to the cap in the year the
petition is revoked, regardless of when the visa was
actually issued.
- Additional
Funds to INS for Processing: Increases INS’
portion of the H-1B education and training fee to 4% from
the current 1.5%
- Education
and Training Provisions: Worked out in a
compromise between Senators Abraham, Kennedy, Lieberman and
others.
- 55%
of the H-1B education and training fees are to go toward
DOL demonstration programs and projects to provide
technical skills training for workers. Training
shall not necessarily be at the level of a baccalaureate
degree, but preparation for workers at a broad range
along the career ladder. 75% of the grants shall be to
workforce investment boards or consortia of such boards
in a region, to be decided in consultation with the
Dept. of Commerce. 25% of the grants will go to
partnerships of at least 2 businesses or a
business-related nonprofit organization that represents
more than one business, and may include any educational,
labor, community organization or workforce investment
board. 80% of grants will be for skills training in high
technology, information technology, and biotechnology
and no more than 20% to training workers for skills in
other H-1B-type specialty occupations.
- 22%
of the fees will go toward low-income scholarships
instituted in ACWIA (“Abraham scholarships”)
- 15%
of the Fees will go toward NSF competitive grants for
K-12 math, technology and science education.
- 4%
of Fees go to the Department of Justice and the INS for
H-1B case processing and enforcement of those
attestations under their jurisdiction.
- 4%
of fees go to the Department of Labor for enforcement
and processing of LCAs.
- Studies
and Reports: Requires a new NSF study on the
divergence of access to high technology (“digital
divide”), Dept. of Commerce to conduct a review of
existing public and private high-tech workforce training
programs in the United States (Kerry amendment).
- Kids
2000: Biden amendment from committee that provides
after-school technology grants to the Boys and Girls Clubs
of America. Up to $20 million may be appropriated for
FY2001-2006 to the Attorney General to fund grants under
this program, such funds may come from the Violent Crime
Control Trust Fund.
- Backlog
Reduction Provisions: The bill incorporates the
text of the Immigration Services and Infrastructure
Improvement Act (S. 2586, introduced by Senator Feinstein),
which provides for the creation of a new Immigration
Services and Infrastructure Improvement Account (and
authorizes appropriations to fund this account) in order to
reduce INS processing time of all cases to less than 180
days and eliminate the backlog of pending cases. The bill
requires INS to provide a backlog elimination plan to
Congress within 90 days of the enactment of the bill, and
annual reports on their service provision situation and
progress toward improvement.
Courtesy
of the American Immigration Lawyers Association
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