US Proposes not to Issue Business Visa for H-1B Speciality
Occupations
The State Department has proposed
not to issue temporary business visas for H- 1B speciality occupations which allowed several companies to send their
technology professionals for a short stay to
complete jobs on site in the US, a move which could affect hundreds of Indians.
The proposal, if finalised,
will eliminate any misconception that the "B-1 in lieu of H policy"
provides an alternative avenue for foreign
professionals to enter the US to perform skilled labour
that allows, and potentially even encourages them and their employers to
circumvent the restrictions and requirements relating to the H non-immigrant
classification established by Congress to protect the US workers, the State
Department said.
The move, made public on Wednesday,
less than two weeks ahead of the November 3 presidential election, is likely to
impact several Indian companies which send their
technology professionals on B-1 visas for a short
stay to complete jobs on site in the United States.
On December 17, 2019, the Attorney
General of California announced a USD 800,000 settlement against Infosys
Limited to resolve allegations that approximately 500 Infosys employees worked
in the state on Infosys-sponsored B-1 visas rather than H-
1B visas, the State Department said.
"The proposed changes and the
resulting transparency would reduce the impact of foreign labour
on the US workforce of aliens performing activities in a specialty occupation
without the procedural protections attendant to the H-
1B classification," it said.
In its federal notification issued
on Wednesday, the State Department said the US architecture firm seeking
protection from rising labour costs in the country
might believe it could lay off its US architects and contract for the same professional architectural services to be provided by a foreign architecture firm.
If the foreign firm sought H- 1B visas for its architects, it would be required to pay the
prevailing wage for architects in the area of
intended employment in the US, presumably the same wage the US architects had been paid, and meet the other requirements enacted by
the Congress to protect US workers.
But under the B-1 in lieu of H
policy, the foreign architects could ostensibly seek B-1 visas and travel to
the US to fill a temporary need for architecture
services, as long as they retained a residence in the foreign country and
continued to receive a salary, perhaps significantly lower than what is
customary for US architects, dispersed abroad by
the foreign firm (or under the auspices of a foreign parent or subsidiary), the
State Department said.
Under the Department's guidance,
visas could be issued for
multiple architects planning temporary work in the US in certain situations. However,
a foreign employer may succeed in undermining the US immigration law and policy by rotating
architects between the US and the foreign country to
effectively fill the position of one US architect at a significantly
lower cost, the notification said.
"If the architects who intended
to perform skilled labour were "of distinguished
merit and ability... seeking to perform (temporary architectural services) of
an exceptional nature requiring such merit and ability, one might argue the
current regulatory language suggests this type of labour
is a permissible basis for B-1 non-immigrant visa issuance," the State Department said.
This potential outcome is harmful to
the US workers and contrary to the policies of the Trump administration, it
said.
The State Department said the
application process for a B-1 visa does not include similar procedural requirements
to protect the US workers like that of H- 1B visas.
Also, the fees for
the B-1 visas are far less than that of H- 1B visas.
While Congress required H- 1B employers to pay
significant fees to fund assistance to the US workforce as well as prevention
and detection of fraud related to skilled labour,
employers are not required to pay comparable fees to employ skilled workers
under the B-1 in lieu of H policy, it said.
According to the notification, the
State Department estimates that this proposal will affect not more than 6,000
to 8,000 foreign workers per year, specifically aliens intending to provide
services in a specialty occupation in the US.
As per its estimate, up to 28 per
cent of the approximately 8,000 annual B-1 visa
issuances under the B-1 in lieu of H policy were to foreign workers who applied
for a visa to
perform services in a specialty occupation for a
small entity in the United States.