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Changes
to the H-1B Program
On
October 17 and 30, 2000, President Clinton signed into law several bills which
significantly change the H-1B program as well as the employment based immigration
program. Prominent among these bills is the American Competitiveness in the
Twenty-First Century Act (AC21).
Q1: How does AC21 affect the H-1B cap?
A1: Section 214(g) of the Immigration
and Nationality Act (Act) sets an annual limit on the number of aliens that
can receive H-1B status in a fiscal year. For FY2000 the limit was set at
115,000. AC21 increases the annual limit to 195,000 for 2001, 2002 and 2003.
After that date the cap reverts back to 65,000.
Q2: Are there new exemptions to the
H-1B cap?
A2: Yes. In addition to increasing the
cap, AC21 exempts H-1B workers who are employed by or have an offer of employment
from:
o Institutions of higher education;
o Related or affiliated nonprofit entity, or
o Nonprofit or government research organization.
AC21 also specifies that an H-1B worker be counted against the cap if the
worker transfers from an "exempt" employer to an employer that does
not have an exemption.
In addition, the FY 2001 cap does not include H-1B petitions filed after INS
reached the FY 2000 cap on March 22, 2000 but before September 1, 2000. INS
estimates that approximately 30,000 petitions were filed during that time
frame.
Q3: How does INS plan to adjust its
current counting method so that any petitions filed prior to September 1,
2000 will not count against the FY 2001 cap?
A3: The Service already electronically
captures the date a petition was received by INS. Therefore, our ability to
electronically separate cases file before 09/01/00 is already in place.
Q4: What steps has INS taken to improve
its counting to ensure that multiple beneficiaries are only counted once as
required by the new law?
A4: The Service has conducted sweeps of
the H-1B data to identify multiple beneficiaries to ensure that they are counted
toward the cap only once in past fiscal years. We will continue with that
process insuring that we conduct the sweep on using H-1B data for the past
six years.
Q5: The bill requires that INS may
not count someone toward the cap if they have had H-1B status in the prior
6 years, unless the individual would be authorized for a new 6-year period
of stay. How is INS going to implement this? How does this differ from INS'
current counting methodology?
A5: INS is revising its regulations to
explain when an H-1B worker is eligible for a new 6-year period of stay.
System changes will be made in order to allow the Adjudicator to indicate
whether an individual who was previously H-1B is now eligible for a new 6-year
period of stay. This indicator will enable the Service to properly count an
individual toward the cap in these circumstances.
Upon approval of the petition, the program will compute the number of H1B
visas issued according to the factors as defined by statute.
Q6: The legislation states that the
limit for FY 99 is increased by "a number equal to the number of aliens
issued such a visa or provided such as status" from the time the limit
was reached and September 30, 1999. Is INS interpreting this clause to deal
solely with the discovered overage or does INS intend to recapture any visas
it issued before September 30, 1999 but had given FY 2000 start dates?
A6: The Service interprets this language
as forgiveness for the number of H-1B petitions approved in excess of the
FY99 cap due to counting errors. It is not our intent to recapture numbers
for cases approved in FY00 toward the FY00 cap.
Q7: When does the law take effect?
A7: Almost all of the provisions of AC21
and the related legislation are effective immediately upon enactment. The
law was officially enacted on October 18, 2000. The sole exception is the
increase in H-1B petitioner fee from $500 to $1000, which takes effect on
December 17, 60 days after enactment.
Q8: Are there new exemptions from the
ACWIA (now $1,000) fee?
A8: Yes. Employers now exempt from paying
the fee include:
o Institutions of higher education and related or affiliated non-profit organizations;
o Non-profit or governmental research organizations;
o Any employer who is filing for a second extension of stay for an H-1B nonimmigrant;
o Primary or secondary education institutions; or
o Nonprofit entity engaged in "established curriculum-related clinical
training of students".
Although the fee increase does not take effect for 60 days, the new exemptions
from the fee are effective immediately. Thus the new exempt organizations
are exempt as of October 18, 2000. INS is working to change its forms and
systems to accommodate this change but this will take time. In the meantime,
petitioners claiming to be exempt should submit a copy of the relevant provision
of AC21 with their petition along with evidence that they qualify as an exempt
organization. Petitioners should also note on Form I-129W the basis for the
exemption, notwithstanding the fact that the form will not initially contain
the necessary boxes to check for these new exemptions.
Q9: Are there any new filing exemptions?
A9: Yes. An amended H-1B petition is no
longer required when the petitioning employer undergoes a corporate restructuring,
including but not limited to a merger, acquisition or consolidation, where
the new corporate entity succeeds to the interest and obligations of the original
petitioning employer and where the terms and conditions of employment remain
the same but for the identity of the petitioner.
Q10: Who is eligible to use the H1B
"portability" provisions?
A10: The portability provisions allow
a nonimmigrant alien previously issued an H-1B visa or otherwise accorded
H-1B status to begin working for a new H-1B employer as soon as the new employer
files an H-1B petition for the alien. Previously, aliens in this situation
had to await INS approval before commencing the new H-1B employment. These
provisions apply to H-1B petitions filed "before, on, or after"
the date of enactment, so all aliens who meet this definition can begin using
the portability provisions.
Q11: Are there any other limitations
on the portability provisions?
A11: An alien must have been lawfully
admitted into the United States. The new employer must have filed a "non-frivolous"
petition while the alien was in a period of stay authorized by the Attorney
General. A non-frivolous petition is one that has some basis in law or fact.
INS plans to further define this in its implementing regulations. Subsequent
to such lawful admission, the alien must not have been employed without authorization.
Q12: How will employers who hire H-1B
aliens using the portability provisions comply with their I-9 requirements?
A12: Current regulations at 8 C.F.R. 274A.12(b)(20)
authorize employment with the existing employer after a request for extension
of H-1B status is filed. The alien in this case is employment authorized but
the I-9 form contains no provision for this authorization. Employers should
follow the documentation procedures they currently use for an extension of
this sort. Typically, this could involve attaching a copy of the receipt notice
for the filed petition along with a copy of the alien's I-94 to the I-9 kept
on file.
Q13: When will the Implementing regulation
be published?
A13: INS is currently drafting the regulation.
Because of the new $1,000 fee increase, it is possible that in addition to
the normal DOJ and OMB review, this regulation will have to undergo the additional
review required by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
of 1996. If this is the case it is unlikely that the regulation will be published
before March 2001. INS is exploring ways to expedite publication of the regulation.
Q14: What benefits are available under
AC21 to aliens with Immigrant petitions/adjustment applications?
A14: First, § 104 of AC21 lifts the
per-country limits on employment-based immigrant visa numbers if the total
number of visas available during a calendar quarter exceeds the number used.
The Department of State is charged with issuance of these visas and maintenance
of priority dates and availability. This issue will not be addressed in INS
regulations.
Where the country caps delay an alien's immigration notwithstanding this provision,
AC21 also provides for an extension of H-1B status until the alien's adjustment
of status application can be processed and a decision made.
Finally, AC21 gives extensions of H-1B status in one-year increments to H-1B
aliens who have an employment-based immigrant visa petition or application
for adjustment of status pending if It has been more than 365 days since the
visa petition or the labor certification application has been filed. Note
that the adjustment application, labor certification, or visa petition need
not necessarily have been pending for a year to obtain this benefit. The only
requirement is that 365 days have passed since filing of the labor certification
or immigrant visa petition.
Q15: Will H-4 dependents of H-1B nonimmigrants
be able to receive these extensions?
A15: The AC21 does not address this issue
but speaks only of aliens issued a visa or otherwise provided nonimmigrant
status under the H-1B provisions of the Act. INS is studying this issue, which
will be addressed in the implementing regulations currently under development.
Q16: How will employers demonstrate
I-9 compliance for H-1B aliens granted extensions beyond the six-year period
in INA 214(g)(4)?
A16: Current regulations at 8 C.F.R. 274A.12(b)(20)
authorize employment with the existing employer after a request for extension
of H-1B status is filed. The alien in this case is employment authorized but
the I-9 form contains no provision for this authorization. Employers should
follow the documentation procedures they currently use for an extension of
this sort. Typically, this involves attaching a copy of the receipt notice
for the extension along with a copy of the alien's I-94 to the I-9 kept on
file.
Q17: The law requires that any visas
revoked due to fraud are recaptured and restored to the total available for
the current fiscal year. How does INS intend to do this?
A17: INS already has the ability to electronically
identify those cases that are revoked due to fraud as opposed to those that
are revoked for other reasons. Therefore, this should not be an issue.
Q18: The law mandates INS processing
times of 180 days. Given the current budget situation does INS feel that it
can realistically meet this goal?
A18: The new law does not mandate any
processing times. It does, however, indicate that it is the sense of Congress
that adjustment applications should be completed in no more than 180 days
and nonimmigrant petitions should be processed in no more than 30 days. This
sense of Congress is followed by recognition that INS is in need of appropriations
for infrastructure and other improvements. INS will in the process of collecting
data in an attempt to comply with the reporting requirements necessary to
be eligible for consideration of appropriations that may be granted to aide
in the reduction of processing times. There is no guarantee that Congress
will appropriate funds for the improvements necessary to reduce backlogs and
improve processing time within the Service even if INS complies with all of
the reporting requirements set forth in the statute.
Q19: Given the large increase in the
volume of applications, does INS feel that it can maintain its current processing
goals of 60 days for H-1B petitions and 90 days for I-140 petitions given
that Congress has only earmarked 4 percent of the new H-1B fee for INS processing?
A19: The Service will do its best to maintain
current processing times. Much of our ability to maintain the processing times
will be a result of the budget that is passed and our ability to direct overtime
funds to the offices that will be impacted by the increased filings. Although
we have been authorized to hire individuals into term positions to deal with
the increased filings, the hiring and training process are lengthy and the
true benefits of the hiring will not be realized for several months.
(Source: Visa news.com) |
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