US House approves faster green cards for Indian IT workers
December 1st, 2011 - 12:01 pm ICT by IANSWashington, Dec 1 (IANS) In a move that may allow more highly skilled immigrants from India and China to obtain the so-called green cards faster, the US House of Representatives has passed a bill modifying the visa system.
The Fairness for High-Skilled Immigration Act (H.R. 3012), eliminating per-country caps on employment-based visas and instituting a first come, first served system, drew broad, bipartisan support, passing the House with a vote of 389-15 Tuesday.
The bill is expected to move swiftly through the Senate.
Currently, immigration law limits employment-based green cards allowing permanent residence for citizens from any one country to no more than seven percent of the total green cards approved by the State Department in any particular year.
The rule makes it easier to obtain a green card for applicants from smaller countries that don’t generate a significant amount of applications, but makes it tougher for workers from big countries that provide most of the foreign tech workers sought by companies.
Individuals from India, the source of most tech industry immigrants to the US, often have to wait up to 10 years for a green card due to the per-country cap.
The High-Skilled Immigration Act, which was introduced to Congress in September by Utah Republican Jason Chaffetz, aims to correct such imbalances by switching to a first come, first served system for the roughly 140,000 employment-based green cards awarded each year.
“Per country limits make no sense in the context of employment-based visas. Companies view all highly skilled immigrants as the same regardless of where they are from–be it India or Brazil,” Chaffetz said in a statement.
In addition to eliminating numerical caps on employment-based green cards, the Act would also raise the per-country cap for 226,000 family-related green cards from seven percent of the total to 15 percent.
The bill’s bipartisan support owes much to the fact that it does nothing to increase the total number of green cards awarded, it simply evens out the process for those looking to emigrate to the US.
American technology companies have been clamouring for Congress to offer more green cards for their foreign employees, arguing that the United States was losing out in global competition by forcing those immigrants to leave.
(Arun Kumar can be contacted at arun.kumar@ians.in)
- Can America fix its immigration system? (Washington Newsletter) - Dec 04, 2011
- Skilled Indians face a 70-year green card wait! - Oct 06, 2011
- Let market decide on H-1B cap, says US chamber - Aug 16, 2010
- Indians among top three among new US green card holders - Apr 01, 2011
- US degree may become passport to green cards - May 01, 2010
- UK decision to cap non-EU immigrants may hit Indian students - Sep 06, 2010
- UK to let in 20,000 skilled Indians yearly bypassing government's new immigration caps - Feb 20, 2011
- Many skilled migrants in Britain work in lowly posts - Oct 28, 2010
- Britain allays India's visa concerns - Aug 23, 2010
- Amid Indian protests, US House okays bill to hike visa fees - Aug 11, 2010
- UK PM pledges visa abuse crackdown, stem immigration - Nov 22, 2010
- Demand to raise US H-1B visa cap, take PhDs out of it (Lead) - Apr 08, 2009
- Only 25 pc 'highly skilled migrants' from India, Pak end up in top job in UK, says report - Oct 28, 2010
- UK's new proposals to protect Brit workers may hit skilled Indian migrants - Feb 08, 2011
- Australia to end IELTS monopoly for student visas - Oct 17, 2011
Tags: 10 years, bipartisan support, caps, citizens, congress, fairness, green card, green cards, house of representatives, immigration act, immigration law, permanent residence, senate, skilled immigrants, skilled immigration, state department, us house of representatives, utah republican, visa system, visas