This Article is From Apr 08, 2016

US Receives Over 2,50,000 Applications For H-1B Visas, Four Times Official Cap

US Receives Over 2,50,000 Applications For H-1B Visas, Four Times Official Cap

The US Citizenship and Immigration Services said it has reached the Congressionally-mandated cap of 65,000 for H-1B visas in the general category for Financial Year 2017. (File photo)

Washington: The US is said to have received a whopping 2,50,000 H-1B petitions this year, nearly four times the official cap for the most sought-after work visas for highly-skilled workers, with a majority of them being from either Indian companies or having huge footprint in India.

The US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) said it has reached the Congressionally-mandated cap of 65,000 for H-1B visas in the general category for Financial Year 2017.

The USCIS has also received more than the limit of 20,000 H-1B petitions filed under the US advanced degree exemption - for those who completed higher education from inside the US in STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) subjects, it said yesterday.

It did not give the number of H-1B petitions received since April 1, when it started accepting applications for this most coveted visa for the fiscal year 2017 beginning October 1, but said the successful petitions would be determined by a computerised draw of lots.

"Due to the high number of petitions, USCIS is not yet able to announce the date it will conduct the random selection process," it said.

The USCIS will first randomly select petitions for the advanced degree exemption. All unselected advanced degree petitions will become part of the random selection process for the 65,000 general cap. The agency will reject and return filing fees for all unselected cap-subject petitions that are not duplicate filings.

"We had 2,30,000 H-1B visa petitions last year. I think, this year it is going to be higher. We think 2,50,000 H-1B petitions were filed this year," Bill Stock, incoming president of American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA) and a founding partner of Klasko Immigration Law Partners told PTI.

Stock's estimates are based on his experience and interaction with lawyers and those groups who mostly file H-1B visas.

This is the fourth consecutive year that the Congressionally-mandated cap has been reached in the first five days of the filing. "Unless the economy changes again, we would continue to see it," he said.

Majority of these estimated 250,000 H-1B visa applications are "certainly" either by companies that have Indian owner like TCS or companies that have substantial operations or development centres in India like IBM, Stock said in response to a question.

The recent increase on certain category of H-1B visas, he said, "may have had a little impact" on Indian companies. "But I think their business so much depends on H-1B and being able to send people on projects, they (Indian companies) are going to pay fees on those petitions," Stock said.

H-1B visa, popular among Indian techies, is used by American companies to employ foreign workers in occupations that require highly specialised knowledge in fields such as science, engineering and computer programming.

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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