RE:
AMERICAN COMPETITIVENESS IN THE
TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY ACT (?AC
21?)
& RELATED LEGISLATION
1. How
many new visas are available? Will
there be enough?
The
quota is increased to 195,000 for each of fiscal years 2001,
2002, and 2003.> (It then drops back
down to 65,000 in fiscal 2004.) However,
other provisions of the legislation should result in a noticeable
number of H-1Bs not being counted toward the cap that had been
counted in past years, resulting in an even greater effective
increase in numbers. Those
provisions include:
Exceptions
from the quota for H-1Bs hired by institutions of higher
learning, affiliated research organizations, nonprofit
research organizations and governmental research organizations.
This exception is estimated to account for between 6,000
and 10,000 H-1B visas per year.
Exceptions
from the quota for H-1Bs granted to physicians who have
obtained a Conrad 20 waiver of the J-1 two-year home residence
requirement.
Because
the legislation increases the quotas for fiscal 1999 and
2000 to whatever was the number needed to meet those years?
demands, and treats petitions (filed up to September 1,
2000) as applicable to fiscal 2000, fiscal 2001 effectively
?starts fresh? without any carry-over of petitions left
over from last fiscal year. This provision will prevent
more than 30,000 H-1B numbers from last year being charged
to the current year?s quota.
The
legislation requires INS to put an H-1B number back into
the pool of available numbers each time an H-1B status
is revoked for fraud or willful misrepresentation.> This
particular provision is not expected to account for a significant
number of visas, however.
AC21
corrects INS? past errors in its approach to counting H-1Bs,
instructing that those who have received an H-1B in the
past 6 years (and who are not eligible to begin another
6 years of H-1B status), and those for whom multiple petitions
have been filed, be counted only once.> It
has been estimated that these counting errors have in the
past accounted for at least 3,000 and possibly as many
as 12,000 H-1B numbers in a given year.
The
combined result of the increase in numbers, the exceptions from the
quota, the ?fresh start? and the correction of past INS counting errors
is hoped to be a sufficient supply of H-1B numbers, at least for the
next year or two, but no one can be sure.
2. Is
someone who obtained H-1B status three years ago, but has not been
maintaining status for the past year, still subject to the quota?
If
the individual was in the U.S. during all or part of that year, s/he
is not subject to the quota, since AC21 section 103 amends INA section
214(g)(7) to make clear that anyone who already has been counted in
the past six years would not be counted again unless eligible for another
full six years.> However,
if the individual had spent that one year outside the U.S., under INS
regulations s/he is eligible for another 6 years of H-1B status, and
thus would be counted.
3. What
is the expected immediate effect of AC21 section 104?s provisional
lifting of the per-country limits on employment-based India and
China backlogs?
According
to Charles Oppenheim (the individual at the Department of State responsible
for preference cut-off dates), significant movements forward in cut-off
dates are not likely to happen until December 2000 (but a cut-off date
for the Philippines third preference is likely to be established at
that time).> He is uncertain
as to whether and when there will cease to be any per-country backlogs,
due to a lack of information from INS as to the number of cases caught
in processing backlogs and as to expected processing times, but Mr.
Oppenheim believes per-country cut-off dates will continue at least
for the first two quarters of fiscal year 2001.>
4. Under
what circumstances can someone who is running out of his/her six
years in H-1B status extend that status?
AC21
provides for such extensions in two circumstances:>
Under
AC21 section 104(c), a beneficiary of an employment-based
first, second or third preference petition who is eligible
for permanent residence but for the application of the
per-country limits may obtain extension of the H-1B status
until the adjustment of status is decided.
Under
AC21 section 106(a), an H-1B status can be renewed in one-year
increments for beneficiaries of any employment-based petition
until adjustment processing is completed as long as 365
days or more have elapsed since the labor certification
application or immigrant petition was filed.>
5. Lately,
consular processing at most posts has been faster than adjustment
of status at most service centers.> Does
this legislation nevertheless make adjustment more desirable than
consular processing?
AC21
gives some advantages to people in adjustment of status over people
in consular processing, but at least one of the law?s benefits may be
useable in either context:>
The
section 104(c) extension beyond the sixth year for individuals
with employment-based immigrant petitions filed but priority
dates not current appears to be available only in the context
of an adjustment of status.
The
section 106(a) provision for extending H-1Bs beyond the
sixth year when permanent residence processing has taken
too long can be read to apply whether the individual pursues
adjustment or consular processing, since one can become
eligible for its benefits if the petition has been filed.> But
there is no assurance that INS and the State Department
will read this provision to apply to consular processing
cases.
Another
advantage to the beneficiary of adjustment over consular
processing is that the AC21 section 106(c) permanent residence
portability provision specifies the filing of an adjustment
of status application as a prerequisite for eligibility,
and thus appears not to apply to persons in consular processing.> Under
this provision, someone whose adjustment application has
been unadjudicated for 180 days or more can change jobs
and/or employers if the new job is in the same or a similar
occupational classification as the one for which the petition
was filed.> (Note
that this portability provision does not apply to beneficiaries
of EB-1 extraordinary ability petitions, most likely because
Congress assumed that such petitions already are portable.)
6. How
does one become eligible for the AC21 section 105 H-1B portability
provisions?
This
section allows a beneficiary of a petition to change employers to begin
the new employment upon filing of the petition, rather than waiting
for the petition to be approved.> The
petition must be nonfrivolous, and the beneficiary must be a nonimmigrant
admitted to the U.S. (no particular nonimmigrant category is specified,
but the individual must have been previously issued an H-1B visa or
otherwise provided H-1B status), must not have been employed without
authorization before the petition was filed, and must be in an unexpired
period of stay when the petition is filed.
7. Can
someone with a change of employer H-1B petition pending since before
AC21?s passage change employers now under AC21 section 105, before
the petition is approved?
Yes.> The
AC21 section 105 H-1B portability provision applies to petitions filed
?before, on, or after? the date of enactment.
8. Must
an employer under the AC21 section 105 portability provisions pay
the higher of the prevailing or the actual wage under the labor
condition application?
It
would appear so.> The employment
with the new employer cannot begin until the petition is filed.> The
petition cannot be filed if the labor condition application has not
been filed. > The INA
section 212(n)(1)(A) wage attestation of the LCA requires that the employer
?is offering and will offer during the period of authorized employment?
the required wage.> Since
AC21 section 105 makes the I-129 pending period a ?period of authorized
employment,? those LCA attestations would appear to apply during the
period before the petition is approved.
9. How
would an employer under the section 105 portability provisions fulfill
the I-9 verification requirement?
The
situation here is analogous to the 240-day grace period of 8 C.F.R.
section 274A.12(b)(20), which authorizes employment with the same employer
for up to 240 days after an extension petition is filed.> In
both circumstances, the employment is authorized but there is no provision
on the I-9 form for the documentation of this fact.> Thus,
employers may want to follow whatever documentation procedures they
use for the 240-day grace period.
10. Will
the ACWIA attestations for dependent employers apply?
Yes,
as soon as the Department of Labor issues the regulations that will
trigger the application of those provisions.> AC21
extends the dependent attestation provisions until October 1, 2003,
thus providing the DOL some time to avoid having the provisions sunset
before they ever take effect.> The
provisions were originally slated to sunset on October 1, 2001.
11. What
processing times for petitions and applications did Congress set
forth for INS?
Title
II of AC21 provides a ?sense of the Congress? that INS should eliminate
its current backlog and reduce processing times for Hs, Ls, Os and Ps
to 30 days, and all other petitions and applications (including family-based)
to 180 days.> To fund this
endeavor, AC21 authorizes appropriations necessary for INS to carry
out the steps needed, thus at last authorizing expenditure of funds
for adjudications other than from the user fee account.> It
also designates an account in the Treasury Department for INS infrastructure
improvements.> Although
the legislation authorizes these expenditures, an actual appropriation
measure will be needed for INS to obtain the funds, and there is no
guarantee that Congress will pass such a measure.
12. Is
any provision made for continuity of H-1B validity in corporate
restructuring situations?
Yes.> A
separate measure, the Visa Waiver Permanent Program Act, included a
provision that an amended H-1B petition is not required where a new
corporate entity succeeds to the interests and obligations of the original
employer, and where the terms and conditions of employment remain the
same. [Update to original post follows.] Note that, as of
this writing, the President has not yet signed this measure, but he
is expected to do so.
13. Has
the H-1B ?training fee? changed?
Yes,
in a separate piece of legislation (H.R. 5362), the amount of the fee
has been increased to $1,000 and the exemptions from the fee have been
expanded to include primary and secondary schools and nonprofits engaged
in curriculum-related clinical training of students registered at an
institution of higher education.> The
fee increase is effective two months after enactment, but the new exemptions
take effect immediately.
14. When
do all these new provisions take effect?
Most
are effective as of October 17, 2000, the date AC21 and the fee increase
bill were signed.> The only
provision with a delayed effective date is the fee increase, which takes
effect December 17, 2000.> As
of this writing, the Visa Waiver Permanent Program Act, which includes
the corporate restructuring provisions, has not yet been signed.> That
provision will take effect immediately upon signing.
Two
provisions have, to some extent, retroactive effect.> The
extra H-1B numbers to clear out the fiscal 1999 and 2000 overages are
effective ?as if included in? ACWIA, which was enacted in 1998.> AC21
section 105, allowing beneficiaries of change of employer petitions
to begin the new job immediately upon filing of the petition, applies
to petitions filed before, on, or after the date of enactment.
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