U.S. to Sharply Cut Number of High-Tech Visas

I don’t know if this belongs in Career or here but anyway. It must be a big let down for the students about to graduate. No?

I remember this number was changed to 195,000 3-4 years back. Does anyone know what was the previous number? I mean are they going back to 65,000 or was it something like 100,000 and now it’s even lower?

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By Alan Elsner, National Correspondent

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States is about to cut the number of employment visas it offers to highly qualified foreign workers from 195,000 to 65,000, immigration experts said on Monday.

Unless Congress acts by the end of this month – and there is little sign it will do so – the change will automatically take effect on Oct. 1. Employers, especially technology companies, argue the move will hurt them and the economy.

The change will affect the number of H1-B visas that can be issued each fiscal year. The visas are mostly used to bring high-tech experts from Asia, especially from the Indian sub-continent, to work in the United States for up to three years.

“The fact that Congress doesn’t seem anxious to act reflects the political climate, with a lack of jobs for Americans,” said New York immigration lawyer Cyrus Mehta.

“The pressure to change the limit will build up again when the economy picks up.”

The Senate Judiciary Committee (news - web sites) held a hearing on the issue last week. Republican chairman Orrin Hatch of Utah noted that many U.S. high-tech workers are unemployed and the committee needed to find ways of helping them without hurting the country’s ability to compete globally.

Vermont Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy said: “Given the weakness of our current economy, and the rising unemployment we have experienced under President Bush (news - web sites)'s stewardship, many who supported the increase in 2000 now believe that 65,000 visas are sufficient.”

But Patrick Duffy, Human Resources Attorney for Intel Corporation, said finding the best-educated engineering talent from around the world was critical to his company’s future.

“We expect that we will continue to sponsor H-1B employees in the future for the simple reason that we cannot find enough U.S. workers with the advanced education, skills, and expertise we need,” he said.

Elizabeth Dickson, director of immigration services for the Ingersoll-Rand Company, speaking on behalf of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce (news - web sites), said: “In the near-term, we simply must have access to foreign nationals. Many of them have been educated in the United States. By sending them home, we are at best sending them to our own foreign plant sites, and at worst to our competitors.”

Immigration attorneys expect the new rules to set off a scramble by companies to fill their slots early before the ceiling is reached. How quickly that happens depends on the state of the economy, they said.,

65k was the original number before they jacked them up to 100k and more. Its basically a moot point. Work visas are a function of employment. If folks are not getting employment, they are not requiring work visas, in any case. I suspect in the last 2-3 years not only was the quota of H-1B not met, but also a very large number of them got unutilized.

With high-tech jobs rapidly moving out of US... I am not sure if reducing the work visa quota is really gonna hit many people. BTW, this quota only applies to absolutely new employees. Folks switching employers do not fall under the quota.

I remember the only problem before about these visas was the fact that people had to compete and it all used to depend on how good & up-to-date the company lawyer is. But I never heard of any who couldn't work because they didn't process his visa intime. The ones who had a job, got their H-1.

The people who are about to graduate might find the news depressing none-the-less.

Don't recent graduates from American unis who are here on a studen visa, get a one year work permission, pretty much automatically?

If they are good enough to land a job, they should be good enough to be in the 65,000 visas issued. No?

Yeah ...

But I know some seniors & as is, they are pretty disheartened with the job market. So, even though this news will have minimal effect on them, they will take it as yet another blow.

It IS another blow. Only its the last muka after the boxer has already fallen in the ring. :-)

Yes people get the one year but with the current market where grad job levels are in the 70%s there are plenty of people who dont have jobs three monts out from graduation. Hence they may have less then the one year of work they hoped for. Also with numbers coming down, previously the visas used to run out by early march. And the INS/BCIS needs to get everything done for the candidate before he or she runs out of the one year thing.... so it does make a significant difference to foreign grads.

hmcq... I think visas "run out by early March" is old old news. After 2001, things have changed. The quotas increased, yes, but the job market is almost destroyed. So, I don't think the visas will "run out" quite as easily or quickly. The grads should focus on getting a job first. The visas are typically processed in 3-6 months, as far as I know.

Ok let me rephrase in the 2003 cycle from what I read more then 65K H1B visas were issued this year.