.S. employers exhausted the supply of 65,000 H-1B visas available for 2007 on
May 26, 2006, a full 17 months before new visas would be issued. Although experts
are cautiously optimistic that Congress will raise the cap in 2007, recruiters still
face a full year of inadequate supplies of engineering and IT candidates.
Recruiters should explore all possibilities before they conclude that tapping
foreign labor markets for U.S. positions is simply not feasible. Alternative visas
may offer some limited relief from the recruiting nightmare created by the closing
of the H-1B door.
Free trade visas, training visas and intra-company transfer visas apply only
to narrow categories of workers, but may provide recruiters with options for global
recruiting until Congress creates a more permanent solution.
Free trade visas
The H-1B visa quota has a carve-out of 1,400 free trade H-1B visas for Chilean nationals
and 6,100 H-1B visas for Singaporean nationals.
"These visas are the product of free trade agreements between the United States
and these countries, and we have not reached the quota on them," says Susan Cohen,
manager of the immigration section at law firm Mintz Levin Cohn Ferris Glovsky and
Popeo in Boston.
Unlike traditional H-1B visas, which are valid for three years initially, with
extensions up to six years, these free trade visas are good for only one year at
a time.
"Despite these limitations, the free trade H-1B visas are a welcome option when
no other H-1B visas are available," Cohen notes. "Indeed, some employers have decided
to focus their recruiting efforts on these countries since visas are available for
these nationals if they meet the ‘professional worker’ criteria."
Another relatively new work visa created as a result of a trade agreement is
the E-3 visa for Australian nationals. The criteria for this visa are similar to
those for the H-1B. As with all types of H-1B visas, the employer must make certain
attestations to the Labor Department about the wages and working conditions for
the position.
"But the application process is streamlined so the visa can be obtained quickly,"
Cohen reports.
"Not only are Australians who come to work on E-3 visas admitted for two years,
they can continually extend their visa status as long as they still qualify for
the visa," Cohen says. "Also, the E-3 spouse is allowed to work in the United States,
which is not the case for H-1B spouses who arrive with H-4 dependent visas."
With the E-3 visas now available, Australia may prove to be a fertile recruiting
site for scientific and engineering talent in short supply in the U.S.
Another alternative to the H-1B visa is the TN visa created for Mexican and Canadian
professional workers under the North American Free Trade Agreement.
"These visas are only for certain occupations listed in NAFTA, but if the potential
employee is Canadian or Mexican and the job is on the NAFTA list, it is a straightforward
matter to obtain this visa, which is valid for one year at a time," Cohen explains.
About 65,000 TN visa holders currently work in the U.S.
Training, foreign firm and transfer visas
Visas are available for employees brought into the U.S. for training purposes, but
employers face strict limitations.
"Employers may be able to fit candidates into H-2, H-3 or other visa categories,
but they are very narrow," says Elena Park, head of the immigration practice at
Cozen O’Connor in Philadelphia.
There is no cap on H-3 visas, but they carry a two-year time limit.
"The H-3 is not for work purposes; the employee must participate in an established
training program," Park notes. "But some employers have been able to create training
programs under specific circumstances. In the initial petition stage for H-3 visas,
immigration will look at the training program."
About 3,000 foreign nationals currently train in the U.S. under H-3 visas.
The J-1 visa is similar to the H-3, but the definition of training is somewhat
broader.
"It can be used for an employee to shadow a senior worker, for example," Parks
says. "But the J-1 contemplates that the person is coming in with a lack of knowledge."
J-1 visas are issued for one year and can be extended, but the conditions for
an extension are fairly strict, and the visas must be processed though approved
sponsor agencies. About 350,000 foreign nationals hold J-1 visas in the U.S.
"J-1 sponsors are regulated by the State Department, and these sponsors will
not issue the paperwork if the employer is not above board," Cohen warns. "Proposed
changes for J-1 regulations in 2007 will subject employers to more scrutiny."
For entry-level employees, employers can try to use J-1 visas, but if the candidate
has several years of experience, it’s difficult to prove the case that training
is necessary, notes Ted Ruthizer, business immigration chair at Kramer Levin Naftalis
& Frankel in New York City. Ruthizer suggests that recruiters may be able to hire
abroad if candidates qualify for an O-1 visa, designed for employees with extraordinary
ability in their field.
"But for business purposes, the toughest standard of ‘pre-eminence’ in the field
is applied," he cautions. "O-1s require a track record of awards, published articles,
media reports or other indications of recognition."
For example, a new MBA graduate, no matter how talented, is unlikely to obtain
an O-1. Currently, about 30,000 O-1 workers are in the U.S., with only a few thousand
new O-1 visas issued each year.
Where a U.S. business is majority-owned by a foreign company that has made a
substantial investment in the U.S. business or engages in trade with the home country
overseas, recruiters for the U.S. business can use an E visa option to hire workers
of the same nationality as the business’ majority ownership. The person applying
for the visa must have essential skills necessary for the U.S. business or must
be coming to fill a managerial type role within the company.
"Once the employee has obtained the visa, he or she may enter the United States
for two years at a time and may extend the visa indefinitely," Cohen says. "Again,
a big selling point is that the spouse can work in the United States."
L-1 visas are issued for intra-company transfers for up to five years for workers
with specialized knowledge or seven years for managers or executives. The employee
must have worked in the affiliated company for at least one year out of the past
three. About 315,000 foreign workers in the U.S. hold L-1 visas.
"Companies are hiring abroad for the purpose of establishing the one year of
employment and the specialized knowledge required, but the employer must be careful
that the knowledge is specialized, meaning that it is specific to the company,"
Park cautions. "It doesn’t have to be proprietary knowledge or a trade secret, but
it must be specific to the company."
The specialized-knowledge requirement under the L-1 is different from that of
H-1B, which basically requires only that the employee has a bachelor’s degree.
"The employer cannot use L-1s to bring in generic engineers or programmers,"
Park warns.
But a marketing manager or an IT professional with knowledge of the company’s
clients and operations may meet the L-1 criteria.
"Creative" approach
"Sometimes a candidate does not fit any visa category, and the employer is simply
unable to hire," Park says. "If you become overly creative with your use of alternative
visas, you risk violating immigration laws." Although enforcement of the regulations
for non-H-1B visas is relatively lax, L-1 visas may be scrutinized and improper
use of any visa opens an employer to legal risks.
While recruiters may be able to piece together a sufficient talent pool using
some combination of the non-H-1B visas, the best solution clearly lies in higher
H-1B caps. Ruthizer is advising all of his clients to lobby for raising the H-1B
cap in 2007.
Park is hopeful that the H-1B cap will be raised.
"The biggest obstacle is that all immigration issues, including the problem of
illegal immigrants and porous borders, are lumped together, instead of segmenting
the issues and addressing them separately," she says.
Legislation on the table would increase the H-1B cap from 65,000 per year to
115,000.
"Also, it would provide a complete exemption from the cap for those individuals
who have achieved a master’s degree or higher from a U.S. school in the fields of
science, mathematics and/or technology," notes Dave Ceccanecchio, an associate in
the immigration services team at Wolf, Block, Schorr and Solis-Cohen in Philadelphia.
The emergency exemption of 20,000 visas for foreign students who received an
advanced degree from a U.S. university was exhausted before the fiscal year began.
In 2005, U.S. companies needed but could not find an additional 50,000 master’s
and Ph.D. graduates, according to a Duke University/Booz Allen Hamilton study.
Raising the H-1B cap and exempting advanced-degree graduates will reduce the
pressure on recruiters in the final quarter of 2007, but a more permanent solution
for both temporary and permanent immigration will be necessary to resolve ongoing
recruiting difficulties for critical positions in the U.S.
Workforce Management Online, December 2006 --
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