MEMORANDUM REGARDING H-1B CHANGES
I wanted to advise you of significant changes in the H-1b
program. The number of H-1B visas available in fiscal year (FY) 2004 (
The reduction stems from the expiration of a federal law
that temporarily increased the number of H-1B visas the past few years. With
the expiration of this temporary increase, other aspects of the H-1B program
also sunset on
Who is affected by the H-1B cap
Given that the H-1B cap returns to 65,000
on October 1, managers, recruiters, and human resource departments planning to
bring a foreign national from overseas to work in the
Who is not affected
Foreign nationals currently in H-1B status
who need to file an extension of status or change of employer are not affected
by the drop in H-1B numbers. Further, foreign nationals seeking employment
through institutions of higher education, nonprofit research organizations, and
government research organizations will continue to be exempt from the H-1B cap.
Who may be affected
There is some question, based on statutory
language, whether physicians previously in J-1 status who have agreed through a
state health department to work in underserved areas (HPSAs
or MUAs) in exchange for waiver of the J home
residence requirement will be subject to the numerical limit after September
30.
Other changes after September 30
Other H-1B provisions are scheduled to
sunset on September 30. These include the additional requirements that H-1B
"dependent" employers were required to meet, along with the Labor
Department's expanded investigatory authority to investigate possible H-1B
violations without first having to wait for a complaint to be filed.
The provision authorizing the $1000 employer surcharge
imposed on most H-1B petitions is also set to expire October 1. The surcharge,
which funds
How did this situation arise?
In 1990 Congress imposed a numerical cap
on the number of H-1B visas issued each fiscal year. The first cap set H-1B
numbers at 65,000 annually. In the thriving economy of the late 1990s, the cap
was prematurely reached in FY 1997, FY 1998, FY 1999, and FY 2000. Once a
fiscal year's cap was reached all additional H-1B petitions were returned until
a new fiscal year began, thus causing significant strain on
H-1B visa usage has decreased during the recent recession.
In FY 2002, 79,100 H-1B visas subject to the cap were used-a figure well above
the 65,000 cap set for FY 2004, but below usage during the peak years of FY
2001 and FY 2002.
What to do
Please feel free to contact me
with any questions or concerns regarding this matter.
Sincerely,
Abbe Allen
Kingston
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