As The H-1B Visa Cap Filled In Record Time, Reform Is In The Air

By Marianne Kolbasuk McGee
InformationWeek

For both critics and supporters of the H-1B visa, two days last week revealed everything you need to know about the foreign worker program, one of the most controversial topics in business technology.

In the first two days that the U.S. government accepted applications for H-1B work visas, 133,000 envelopes poured in with applications seeking 65,000 openings. The crush was enough that U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services cut off new applications, certain the envelopes it had--many with multiple applications--would fill the slots. It's the fastest the application period has ever closed. Last year, the cap was met May 26, the year before that in August.

H-1B visa supporters see the overflow as reason to raise the cap so businesses can get the talent they need from abroad. Critics see the queue as a mockery of what the H-1B is supposed to be. Instead of a ticket for the supertalented to work in the United States, the visas are being hoovered up, often by offshore outsourcing companies that want to train workers on U.S. business and technology practices so they'll be better workers when they head home.

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Comments

  • 4/8/2007 2:03 AM Ganesh K wrote:
    Is it not that the caps filled were in huge numbers and its been remoured that they may have a lottery based system, so in this case, the person who really wanted to go there may be for personal reason or say he really wanted to have the place doesn't get a seat.. what would he do? wait for next cap? or next year? also the company with which he got selected would rething about it.. it would be a harsh decision?

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    If a person does not selected in the computerized random selection and ultimately get an H-1B approval, he or she will have to wait until next year to file again.

    - Ashwin

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