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Possible
H-1B Visa Increase
Foreigners With American Graduate Degrees Get Access to 20,000 Special Worker Visas
Foreigners who hold master's degrees or Ph.D.'s from American universities will have an edge over other foreign citizens seeking H-1B visas to work in the United States, thanks to a provision tucked into the vast spending bill that Congress approved on Saturday.
The provision would allocate 20,000 new H-1B visas solely to foreigners who have graduate degrees from American universities. President Bush is expected to sign the legislation, which encompasses the budgets of 13 federal departments and dozens of agencies for the 2005 fiscal year (The Chronicle, November 22).
The Department of Homeland Security's U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services agency was authorized to issue a total of 65,000 H-1B worker visas in the current fiscal year, the same number as in the 2004 fiscal year, which ended on September 30. The size of the cap varies from year to year, but in five of the past seven, it has been reached before the end of the fiscal year, leaving thousands of job-seekers in limbo until the start of the next visa-granting cycle.
Under the new provision, the first 20,000 applicants for H-1B visas with graduate degrees will not have to compete against the larger pool of applicants. Likewise, their visas will not be counted against the regular cap.
The regular cap for the 2005 fiscal year has already been met. While it is not yet clear how the immigration agency will apply the new exemption to this year's application cycle, the 20,000 new visas may become available to foreign graduates as soon as 90 days after the spending bill is signed into law. We do not yet know when this bill will be
signed into law.
Adapted from the Tuesday, November 23, 2004 Chronicle of Higher Education article
written by John Gravois
http://chronicle.com/
For additional articles about this possible increase, go to:
http://tinyurl.com/4vue7
http://tinyurl.com/6gwfh
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