Close X
Thursday, December 19, 2024
ADVT 
International

H-1B Visa Holders May Work For More Than One Employer, Clarifies US Agency

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Dec, 2017 01:06 PM
    Foreign workers in the US on a H-1B work visa, the most sought after among Indian IT professionals, may work for more than one company, the country's immigration agency has said. The H1B visa is a non-immigrant visa that allows US companies to employ foreign workers in speciality occupations that require theoretical or technical expertise. 
     
     
    The technology companies depend on it to hire tens of thousands of employees each year from countries like India and China. "In general, H1B workers may work for more than one employer but must have approved I-129 for each," the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), the federal agency which receives and determines the successful applications for H1B visas, tweeted yesterday.
     
     
    "New employer must submit an I-129 petition before you may begin working," the USCIS said.
     
     
    Form I-129 is a form submitted for a non-immigrant worker to the USCIS used by employers or prospective employers to obtain (or amend the details of) a worker on a non-immigrant visa status. While this is not a new rule, but very few people know about it. The H1B visa has an annual numerical limit cap of 65,000 visas each fiscal year as mandated by the Congress. The first 20,000 petitions filed on behalf of beneficiaries with a US master's degree or higher are exempt from the cap.
     
     
     
    Additionally, H1B workers who are petitioned for or employed at an institution of higher education or its affiliated or related nonprofit entities or a nonprofit research organisation or a government research organization are not subject to this numerical cap. Meanwhile, an American think-tank, the Cato Institute in a report said that in 2015, a total of 56 per cent of all supposed employment-based green cards went to the family members of workers. 
     
     
    The other 44 per cent went to the workers themselves. If family members were exempted from the quota or there was a separate green card category for them, an additional 76,711 highly skilled immigrant workers could have earned a green card in 2015 without increasing the quota.
     
     
    According to the institute, about 85 per cent of those who received an employment-based green card in 2015 were already legally living in the US. "They were able to adjust their immigration status from another type of visa, like an H-1B or F visa, to an employment-based green card. Exempting some or all of the adjustments of status from the green card cap would almost double the number of highly skilled workers who could enter," it said.
     
     
    In a blog post, Immigration Attorney Tsion Chudnovsky said immigration lawyers are seeing a big change in how visas are being processed in 2017 and many expect denial rates to increase to 40 per cent in this year's H1B cap. The USCIS has started challenging H1Bs which would have no problem being approved in the past, she said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Meet Ajit Pai, The Indian-Origin FCC Chief At Centre Of 'Net Neutrality' Debate In US

    Meet Ajit Pai, The Indian-Origin FCC Chief At Centre Of 'Net Neutrality' Debate In US
    Ajit Pai said the FCC will vote on December 14 to rescind the so-called net neutrality rules championed by Democratic former President Barack Obama.

    Meet Ajit Pai, The Indian-Origin FCC Chief At Centre Of 'Net Neutrality' Debate In US

    Great To Be An Indian In The US Right Now: YouTube Star Vidya Vox

    Great To Be An Indian In The US Right Now: YouTube Star Vidya Vox
    US-based YouTube star Vidya Vox says that, while growing up, she tried to shun her Indian heritage as she was often bullied in school. But she is now "100 per cent" proud of her roots and feels it is great to be an Indian in the US right now.

    Great To Be An Indian In The US Right Now: YouTube Star Vidya Vox

    2 Indian-Origin Men Killed In UK, Plane Collided With Chopper

    2 Indian-Origin Men Killed In UK, Plane Collided With Chopper
    Savaan Mundae, aeronautics student from Buckinghamshire New University who was training to be a commercial pilot, died with his instructor Jaspal Bahra when their plane collided with a chopper. Both aircraft disintegrated on impact and plummeted to the ground.

    2 Indian-Origin Men Killed In UK, Plane Collided With Chopper

    Indian-Origin Man Arrested After 1-Month-Old Child Found Dead In Car

    Indian-Origin Man Arrested After 1-Month-Old Child Found Dead In Car
      Divya Patel of Rocky Hill in Connecticut was arrested after police discovered his one-month-old child dead in the backseat of his car on Sunday.

    Indian-Origin Man Arrested After 1-Month-Old Child Found Dead In Car

    After 6 Weeks In Foster Care, Sherin Mathews' Sister Placed With Family

    After 6 Weeks In Foster Care, Sherin Mathews' Sister Placed With Family
    Sherin, who went missing on October 7, was found dead in a culvert under a road about a half a kilometre from her home on October 22.

    After 6 Weeks In Foster Care, Sherin Mathews' Sister Placed With Family

    Man Who Sought Refuge In B.C. Church Loses Another Attempt To Clear His Name

    Man Who Sought Refuge In B.C. Church Loses Another Attempt To Clear His Name
    Jose Figueroa is now a permanent resident of Canada, but he spent two years in asylum in a B.C. church to avoid deportation after the former Conservative government labelled him as a member of a terrorist group.

    Man Who Sought Refuge In B.C. Church Loses Another Attempt To Clear His Name