1 / 20

H-1B & Other Employment Visas

H-1B & Other Employment Visas. Andy Buffington Davies Pearson, P.C. Tacoma, WA. H-1B Visa Benefits. Nonimmigrant visa Valid for up to six years Three years at a time Grants work authorization Dual intent authorized. H-1B Requirements. Employer must petition for beneficiary

lawson
Download Presentation

H-1B & Other Employment Visas

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. H-1B & Other Employment Visas Andy Buffington Davies Pearson, P.C. Tacoma, WA

  2. H-1B Visa Benefits • Nonimmigrant visa • Valid for up to six years • Three years at a time • Grants work authorization • Dual intent authorized

  3. H-1B Requirements • Employer must petition for beneficiary • “Specialty occupation” • Bachelor’s Degree • Equivalent work experience (3/1 rule) • Employer must pay prevailing wage

  4. Examples of Specialty Occupations • Engineer • Computer Scientist • Professor • Accountant • Teacher

  5. Examples of Non-Specialty Occupations • Receptionist • Waitress with a Ph.D. • Customer Service Rep

  6. H-1B Fees • I-129 petition filing fee: $325 • ACWIA fee: • 25 or fewer employees = $750 • More than 25 employees = $1,500 • Anti-fraud fee = $500 • Premium processing (optional): $1,225

  7. H-1B Cap • 65k for bachelor degree jobs • Additional 20k for advanced degree jobs • April 1st filing date • October 1st employment start date • FY 2015 cap reached on 4/7/14 • 172.5k applications received

  8. Cap Exemptions • Cap exemptions include: • Alien changing H-1B employers • Extensions of H-1B status • Any applicant counted against the cap within 6 years • Institutions of higher education • Non-profits (affiliated with institutions of HE) • Governmental research organizations

  9. H-1B Application Process • Two-Step Process • Employer files Labor Condition App with DOL • Employer files I-129 petition with CIS • Upon approval, nonimmigrant’s status changed to H-1B if in US. • 3rd Step For Applicants Abroad • Upon I-129 approval, applicant obtains H-1B visa via US consulate

  10. H-1B Admission/Extension • Status granted for up to 3 years at a time and maximum of 6 years • Status extended beyond six years if LPR application process pending • Note: LPR process can be started before, during or after filing H-1B petition

  11. H-1B Portability • Change of employer allowed • Employee can commence employment with new H-1B employer upon filing new petition • Cannot be out of status when new petition filed • Can work concurrently for two or more employers pursuant to H-1B petitions

  12. OPT AND STEM • OPT: Optional Practical Training • OPT allows for 12 months of training post-graduation for F visa students • Must get a Designated School Official (DSO) rec. • DSO recommends extension and student files I-765 • May file no earlier than 90 days before end of academic year and no later than 60 days after program end date • F-1 students with STEM degrees can get OPT extended from 12 to 29 months

  13. Maintaining OPT Status • May not aggregate over 90 days unemployment during 12 OPT months • STEM: May not aggregate more than 120 days of unemployment during entire 29 months • 60 day grace period to leave US at the end of the OPT or STEM extension • Automatic extension of stay until October 1 and EAD for F-1 student with pending H-1B petition

  14. Other Nonimmigrant Visas • O-1 Extraordinary Ability • B-1 or B-2 visitor • P Entertainer or Athlete

  15. Obtaining LPR Status • Process can occur while in H1-B status • 3 Steps to employment-based LPR status (1) Approved labor cert from DOL (2) I-140 immigrant petition (3) When visa available, file I-485 Note: File via US consulate if abroad

  16. Labor Certification • Establishes that no U.S. workers qualified, willing and able to fill the job • Employer must show pattern of recruitment before filing an LC application with DOL • Sustained advertising of job opening • Valid job offer • Prevailing wage • PERM: Program Electronic Management System

  17. Employment Categories • There are 5 distinct preference categories of employment based immigrant visas. (1) EB-1: Aliens of extraordinary ability in Science, Arts, Education, Athletics or Business (2) EB-2: Members of professions holding advanced degrees and aliens of exceptional ability in business, science and arts

  18. Employment Categories (3) EB-3: Professionals with relevant bachelor’s degrees, skilled workers and unskilled workers (4) EB-4: Certain religious workers, ministers, international organizations (5) EB-5: Persons who invest either $500,000 or $1 million

  19. Visa Backlog • Not all EB visas are immediately available • DOS monthly visa bulletin • China: 5 year EB-2 wait; 1.5 year EB-3 wait • India: 9.5 year EB-2 wait, 10.5 year EB-3

  20. Resources • U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services • www.uscis.gov • U.S. Dept. of Labor • http://icert.doleta.gov • U.S. Dept. of State • www.travel.state.gov

More Related