Congress Faces Renewed Fight Over H-1B Visa Limits
Cap for FY '06 is reached; IT groups lobby for increase
August 22, 2005 12:00 PM ETComputerworld -
High-tech trade groups will likely again push Congress to increase the H-1B visa cap, after the government said this month that it has already received enough petitions to reach the limit of 65,000 new visas set for the fiscal year that starts Oct. 1.
The Aug. 10 cutoff date for fiscal 2006 visa petitions was the earliest one ever for the controversial program and marked the first time that the application process has been closed prior to the start of a fiscal year.
The early cutoff, which was officially announced two days after it took effect, means that some U.S. employers may have to wait more than a year before they can bring in additional H-1B workers.
"It's becoming increasingly difficult for the best talent in the world to come to the U.S.," said John Palafoutas, vice president of the Washington-based trade group AEA. Palafoutas said IT industry groups have been meeting with congressional leaders "to figure out what's the best way to proceed on the issue."
It's possible that a "market-based" solution could be crafted that would include automatic triggers to increase the cap if there was a strong demand for H-1B visas, he added.
'Significant' Boost Eyed
Trade groups aren't specifying how much of an increase they may seek in the visa limit. But any expansion of the cap "should be significant," said Bob Cohen, a spokesman for the Information Technology Association of America in Arlington, Va. "I think it's a real problem, and the longer we put off addressing it, the less competitive we will be."
Vic Goel, an immigration attorney in Greenbelt, Md., said the quick exhaustion of the fiscal 2006 H-1B allotment "obviously should be taken as a sign that we don't have enough visas" availableespecially with the U.S. economy doing well.
But H-1B critic Ron Hira, who is vice president of career activities at IEEE-USA, questioned claims that reaching the cap so soon indicates a need for more visas.
Hira, who is also an assistant professor of public policy at the Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, N.Y., noted that the fiscal 2006 limit has been hit before companies have even hired any new workers.
"It seems to indicate that companies are planning ahead for positions that don't exist right now, which highlights the fact that, contrary to conventional wisdom, they aren't searching for Americans first," Hira said.
Employers aren't completely out of H-1B options. An additional 20,000 visas became available in May for the current fiscal year, and a similar number will be offered in fiscal 2006. But Congress has limited those visas to foreign workers who have advanced degrees from U.S. universities.
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