My Photo

Home Page

Advanced search


Immigration Daily

Archives

Classifieds

RSS feed

Processing times

Immigration forms

Discussion board

VIP Lawyer Network

CLE Seminars

CLE Workshops

Immigration books

Advertise

Services 4 LawFirms

Resources

Blogs

Twitter feed

Immigrant Nation

Attorney2Attorney

EB-5

About ILW.COM

Connect to us

Make us Homepage

Questions/Comments


SUBSCRIBE


ilw.com VIP

The leading immigration law publisher - over 50000 pages of free information!

Copyright © 1995-
ILW.COM,American Immigration LLC.

About Gary Endelman

Blog powered by TypePad

« Beware of What You Wish For: Is " The Fairness for HIgh-Skilled Immigration Act" Really A Good Idea? | Main | Is It Still A Federal Case? An Unintended Consequence of Arizona v. USA »

Nov 26, 2011

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d834521fa969e20162fcf76e29970d

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference " Where Do We Go From Here: How Can We Improve the H-1B?":

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

The immigration law was established to check that any illegal person was not entered in the US country .

Interesting suggestions Gary. A few comments on your points:

1) I wouldn't equate the average H-1B worker with someone who has to go through the trouble of convincing USCIS that their immigration is in the national interest or that they are extraordinary. Let O-1's self petition. The job market is not yet strong enough for H-1B's not to take advantage or to be taken advantage of.
2) Redefine "dependent" with a higher figure and I wouldn't disagree. However, you need to have exceptions for start ups, entrepreneurs and investors.
3) Showing recruitment and "best applicant" would be fine if you could then turn around and use it for a PERM. Need a few exceptions such as where the H-1B often has to be used in lieu of an L-1 due to the absence of one year of continuous employment abroad. There would not have been any recruitment in this instance.
4) Call it a "blanket" and restrictionists will be up in arms. An H-1B employer registration and prequalification program sounds better. And I would equate it to ICE IMAGE.
5) Selecting highly skilled workers by lottery is a mistake any way you look at it. Employer need should drive the process, not beneficiary desire.
6) In the absence of any real alternative work visa, other than L's and trade visas which benefit a few countries, creating a list of occupations removes the flexibility and creativity which is often needed in the H-1B context.
7, 8 and 9) Sure the country needs more STEM workers. But it also needs the best in all fields for employers such as educational and cultural institutions. From translators to art conservators to foreign legal and cultural experts, there are many fields in need of the best and highly skilled workers. To contradict Bill Clinton, it's not just the economy. The arts, education, culture and many other fields are of value to the United States. The same unfortunate attitude is destroying arts, music and other non-STEM field study in our public schools. If the recruitment requirement is in place, we don't need to have a "skills list" or "schedule B" for H-1B workers.
10) The purpose of the H-1B category should be to permit US employers to hire skilled workers. Not sure why diversifying the nationalities of temporary visa worker serves the national interest.

Interesting ideas.

I'd actually like to see a quota on a per occupation basis, rather than a per-country basis. For example, only allow each SOC code to have up to 10% of H1Bs, with spillover if some codes don't use the allocation.

This would stop stuff like SOC 15 (IT) dominating the entire H1B system and allow other industries to get H1Bs too.

We want a seamless movement of trade and ideas across national boundaries but seem to believe that people must stay behind.
You have hit the nail on the head. This is the reasoning behind the processing of H1 cases.
You have a similar issue in respect of 214(b). The adjudications for B1/B2 cannot be justified in any public forum. I know of 2 brothers, both doctors, one issues visa and one rejected under 214(b). I do know the brothers personnally. The one who did not want to go and wanted to stay home with parents was rejected. One who wanted to go to US was given visa.

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment