H-1B visa has no change.
IT's official, there will be no change in H-1B visa
norms this year. The US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) authourity
announced this earlier this week.
The announcement is surely good news for Indian IT companies who
traditionally have been the biggest recipient of these visas and have been
dreading a change in visa policy since President Donald Trump came to power.
No change in visa rules for this year means
that IT companies can benefit from the existing H-1B visa policy for their
workers for another year.
A US court has dismissed a lawsuit that
challenged the lottery system adopted to determine successful applicants for
H-1B visas, the most sought after by Indian IT firms and professionals.
The ruling by a federal judge in Oregon means
that there will be no change in the H-1B visa issuance process for the fiscal
2018 which begins on April 3.
As a result, successful H-1B visa applicants
are expected to be determined by the US Citizenship and Immigration Services
(USCIS) through a lottery system.
The USCIS receives more applications for H-1B
visas than the Congressional mandated limit of 65,000 in the general category
and another 20,000 for those foreign students who have masters or higher degree
from a US academic institution.
The case against the lottery system was filed
by two firms from Portland -- Tenrec Inc, a web development company and Walker
Macy, a landscape architecture firm.
In its 31-page order last week, US District
Court Judge Michael Simon upheld the USCIS's argument that a H-1B visa
application is not considered as filed unless a lottery determines it.
"Because Congress left to the discretion
of the USCIS how to handle simultaneous submissions, even if petitions are
considered 'filed' immediately upon delivery, the USCIS has discretion to
decide how best to order those petitions," Simon said.
"Plaintiffs offer no suggestion of how
to order 150,000 petitions being delivered on the same day that is less
arbitrary than a random computer selection. If a carrier delivers bags of
envelopes containing petitions, it is just as arbitrary to order them based on
how the envelopes are removed from the delivery bag as it is to randomly select
the petitions from a computer," the judge said.
The USCIS resorts to a computerized draw of
lots if the number of H-1B visa applications crosses the Congressional allotted
quota in the first five days after it starts accepting the petitions every year
in the month of April.
"The Court recognizes that the practical
implication of this rule is that every petition will be subject to the random
computer-generated selection process in years when the numbers of petitions
needed to meet the statutory cap are met in the first five days," the
judge said.
Attorney Brent Renison, who represented the
two Portland companies said the court did not say the lottery was the best way
to distribute visas, only a permissible way.
"While we disagree with the court's
ultimate ruling which defers to the agency, we note that Congress can change
the system for the better," he said.
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