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USCIS REACHES FY 2008 H-1B CAP
United States Citizenship And Immigration Services ^ | April 3 2007 | Office of Communications: USCIS

Posted on 04/03/2007 5:16:54 PM PDT by jas3

USCIS REACHES FY 2008 H-1B CAP

WASHINGTON – U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced today that it has received enough H-1B petitions to meet the congressionally mandated cap for fiscal year 2008 (FY2008). USCIS will use a random selection process (described below) for all cap-subject filings received on April 2, 2007 and April 3, 2007. USCIS will reject and return along with filing fee(s) all petitions received on those days that are not randomly selected.

Cap Procedures: In keeping with USCIS regulations, USCIS will use the following process to handle H-1B petitions subject to the FY2008 cap:

• USCIS has determined that as of April 2, 2007, it had received enough H-1B petitions to reach the FY2008 H-1B cap and has set the “final receipt date” as April 2, 2007.

• In keeping with its regulations, USCIS will subject H-1B petitions received on the “final receipt date” and the following day to a computer-generated random selection process.

• USCIS will reject all cap-subject H-1B petitions for FY2008 received on or after Wednesday, April 4, 2007.

• USCIS will reject and return along with the filing fee(s) all cap-subject H-1B petitions that are not randomly selected.

• Petitioners may re-submit petitions on April 1, 2008 when H-1B visas become available for FY2009. This is the earliest date for which an employer may file a petition requesting FY2009 H-1B employment with a start date of October 1, 2008.

As of late Monday afternoon (April 2), USCIS had received approximately 150,000 cap-subject H-1B petitions. USCIS must perform initial data entry for all filings received on April 2 and April 3 prior to conducting the random selection process. In light of the high volume of filings, USCIS will not be able to conduct the random selection for several weeks.

(Excerpt) Read more at uscis.gov ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: duncanhunter; h1b; immigration; uscis
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There are 65,000 H1B visas available for 2007 (excluding 20,000 for those holding advanced degrees from US universities). As of Monday there were over 150,000 applications filed. Applications filed today will also be pooled with the 150,000 from yesterday and 65,000 visas will be awarded by lottery.
1 posted on 04/03/2007 5:16:57 PM PDT by jas3
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To: jas3

Wow, US employers may actually have to hire US citizens that have the ability to quit without being deported.


2 posted on 04/03/2007 5:28:53 PM PDT by glorgau
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To: jas3

I don’t understand why they don’t screen the applications like they do at a public university. Only the best and brightest get in and the rest are denied seems to be a better system than a random lottery.

Can you imagine a business hiring people like this?


3 posted on 04/03/2007 5:34:37 PM PDT by volunbeer (Dear heaven.... we really need President Reagan again!)
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To: glorgau

I work with a guy who was telling me how he had to work 80+ hours (with unpaid OT) while in this situation. Complaining did in fact mean deportation. You just gotta love corporate America.


4 posted on 04/03/2007 5:38:58 PM PDT by StockAyatollah
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To: glorgau

There are other options. Read this web page:

http://www.murthy.com/news/UDtermh1.html

But no one is ever deported. Those who can’t find a job here usually return home.


5 posted on 04/03/2007 5:39:25 PM PDT by proxy_user
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To: glorgau
Wow, US employers may actually have to hire US citizens that have the ability to quit without being deported.

Some will. Some will instead choose to expand their businesses overseas.

Coincidentally, we have just entered the first period since before World War I that the market cap of publicly traded European companies exceeds that of US companies. US capital markets are losing market share rapidly, and both SarbOx and the inability to easily move workers between divisions in different countries are big reasons why.

Restricting legal immigration while promoting illegal immigration will only serve to grow economies outside the United States.

jas3
6 posted on 04/03/2007 5:41:43 PM PDT by jas3
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To: volunbeer
I don’t understand why they don’t screen the applications like they do at a public university. Only the best and brightest get in and the rest are denied seems to be a better system than a random lottery.

Can you imagine a business hiring people like this?


The application process is signifiantly harder than gaining acceptance at most public universities.

jas3
7 posted on 04/03/2007 5:43:10 PM PDT by jas3
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To: StockAyatollah
I work with a guy who was telling me how he had to work 80+ hours (with unpaid OT) while in this situation. Complaining did in fact mean deportation. You just gotta love corporate America.

I work 80+ hours per week too. If the guy you work with didn't like his hours, he should have quit.

jas3
8 posted on 04/03/2007 5:44:54 PM PDT by jas3
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To: jas3

I imagine the process is a painful experience. My frustration is with the random selection process the article seems to indicate.


9 posted on 04/03/2007 5:46:50 PM PDT by volunbeer (Dear heaven.... we really need President Reagan again!)
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To: volunbeer
I imagine the process is a painful experience. My frustration is with the random selection process the article seems to indicate.

I rarely have any experiences with the government which are not frustrating.

jas3
10 posted on 04/03/2007 5:49:59 PM PDT by jas3
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To: jas3
I work 80+ hours per week too. If the guy you work with didn't like his hours, he should have quit.

Well that was the problem. He could not quit. If he did he would have been deported.

11 posted on 04/03/2007 5:57:18 PM PDT by StockAyatollah
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To: StockAyatollah
Well that was the problem. He could not quit. If he did he would have been deported.

Unless the guy was a political refugee, what's so bad about that? If he hated his job, he should have looked for another job in the US or gone back home.

jas3
12 posted on 04/03/2007 6:57:16 PM PDT by jas3
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To: jas3
To a man certified LAN Administrators, DBAs, Java programmers and web designers, all certified to the lastes releases. All individually superior in every way to any American that applies for the job.

.. Sarcasm off .. Any challenges, free traders?

13 posted on 04/03/2007 6:58:20 PM PDT by Ukiapah Heep (Shoes for Industry!)
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To: jas3

I’ve been following the H1B visa thing for a while. The system has a tendency to breed fraud. Duncan Hunter could easily win both sides of this issue by opening an investigation into the fraud. Once employers know that there would be a consequent decrease in the numbers of supposedly qualified applicants, all of a sudden, then the open slots wouldn’t need to be filled by lottery. The quality of the immigrants goes up, and everyone wins.

The fair trade thing has been with us for a long time and will probably show itself in many forms, from Smoot-Hawley to H1B Visas. Here’s an oldie but goodie thread on Visa abuse.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/705954/posts

Debunking the Myth of a Desperate Software Labor Shortage

Testimony to the U.S. House Judiciary Committee
Subcommittee on Immigration

Dr. Norman Matloff

Department of Computer Science
University of California at Davis
Davis, CA 95616
(530) 752-1953
matloff@cs.ucdavis.edu
©1998, 1999, 2000, 2001

Presented April 21, 1998; updated February 4, 2002


14 posted on 04/03/2007 7:02:40 PM PDT by Kevmo (Duncan Hunter just needs one Rudy G Campaign Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RVBtPIrEleM)
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To: Ukiapah Heep

I’m sorry, but I don’t understand your post. Please use verbs in your sentences.

jas3


15 posted on 04/03/2007 7:05:32 PM PDT by jas3
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To: Kevmo

I don’t think there is a desparate software labor shortage.

However I do think that US companies will move existng jobs overseas if they can’t hire people locally. Plus they will create new businesses outside the US. It is simpler to manage local staff, but it is not necessary that they be local. Many professional jobs can now be performed from nearly anywhere in the world.

jas3


16 posted on 04/03/2007 7:09:34 PM PDT by jas3
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To: Kevmo; Duncan Hunter Ambassador

Hey Sam, here’s a potential angle on the immigration debate for you father to look into.


17 posted on 04/03/2007 7:11:56 PM PDT by Ultra Sonic 007 (Vote for Duncan Hunter in 2008. Audio, Video, and Quotes in my profile.)
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To: jas3

However I do think that US companies will move existng jobs overseas if they can’t hire people locally.
***Here’s where we differ. I see US companies moving existing jobs overseas even if they CAN hire people locally.

Plus they will create new businesses outside the US.
***That can’t be good for the US.

It is simpler to manage local staff, but it is not necessary that they be local. Many professional jobs can now be performed from nearly anywhere in the world.
***Yup. Very few jobs are “safe”. That’s why kids are leaving engineering in droves. A couple of years ago, NASA was shipping rocket scientist jobs overseas. We are eating our own seed corn. But hey, we’re “competitive”. Did our founding fathers think that was important? I don’t find many documents where they discuss such things at length, but they seemed very concerned about freedoms and rights in our society... internationally competitive businesses didn’t seem all that high on their list of priorities.


18 posted on 04/03/2007 8:13:38 PM PDT by Kevmo (Duncan Hunter just needs one Rudy G Campaign Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RVBtPIrEleM)
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To: Kevmo
However I do think that US companies will move existng jobs overseas if they can’t hire people locally.

***Here’s where we differ. I see US companies moving existing jobs overseas even if they CAN hire people locally.

The two are not mutually exclusive, and we therefore do not disagree. Companies will hire staff who provide a return on investment, wherever they are located. That's the nature of capitalism and that practice will grow human productivity more rapidly than hiring only domestic staff.

Plus they will create new businesses outside the US.

***That can’t be good for the US.

Well the opposite side of that same coin is that foreign companies hire US staff too. Also when US capital goes abroad to create new companies, that is good for both the investors in the US and the companies that receive that capital (presuming it generates a positive return). Most large capital projects in the early United States were funded almost entirely by foreign capital. That benefited both the investors and the United States.

It is simpler to manage local staff, but it is not necessary that they be local. Many professional jobs can now be performed from nearly anywhere in the world.

***Yup. Very few jobs are “safe”. That’s why kids are leaving engineering in droves. A couple of years ago, NASA was shipping rocket scientist jobs overseas. We are eating our own seed corn. But hey, we’re “competitive”. Did our founding fathers think that was important? I don’t find many documents where they discuss such things at length, but they seemed very concerned about freedoms and rights in our society... internationally competitive businesses didn’t seem all that high on their list of priorities.

I doubt that kids are leaving engineering in droves in the United States because their jobs are not "safe". I sat next to an engineer for AMD on a plane a couple days ago. He was taking his daughter to interview at UPenn, Princeton, MIT, and CMU. She was on the robotics team and was studying electrical engineering texts on the plane. Most kids were playing their GameBoys or listening their iPods. I suspect most kids in the US avoid engineering because it is a lot harder than "communications" or whatever else is the course of least resistance on the way to a B.A.

I don't think we are eating our corn seed. The analogy doesn't work at all. The corn hasn't even been planted or grown IMHO. Most kids in the US don't value hard work or education. I'm not sure I agree that the US is competitive in maths or the hard sciences compared to many other countries.

I don't know whether our founding fathers thought much about competitiveness. I would suggest that international trade was such a small part of GDP that competitiveness was not very important.

Internationally competitive business didn't seem very high on the list of priorities because it didn't really exist yet.

Incidentally, that guy on the plane was born in Taiwan and is now a US citizen. He's exactly the type person that cannot get into the US now. Had he stayed in Taiwan, he would be creating value there instead of here, as would his daughter one day soon...
19 posted on 04/03/2007 9:23:35 PM PDT by jas3
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To: jas3

The two are not mutually exclusive, and we therefore do not disagree. Companies will hire staff who provide a return on investment, wherever they are located.
***You just contradicted yourself. When someone gets hired overseas for the same job that an american got shafted over, it IS mutually exclusive.

That’s the nature of capitalism and that practice will grow human productivity more rapidly than hiring only domestic staff.
***Yes, that is the nature of capitalism. That doesn’t mean I am forced to merely accept it on the political plane, however. There is a wide continuum on the spectrum between Protectionism on one side, and Open Borders Free Trade on the other side, with FAIR TRADE striking a balance in the middle.

Well the opposite side of that same coin is that foreign companies hire US staff too.
***Yep, and then they promptly attempt to separate us from the rights delineated in the constitution, such as gun ownership, freedom of assembly, freedom of speech, etc. An example, ongoing:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1811465/posts
Our founding fathers were very concerned about the preservation of our freedoms, and they were not nearly as concerned about being competitive in the international market place. The thing that makes us such an attractive country IS THOSE FREEDOMS, and it is also one of the things which has been breeding the economic benefits of prosperity. I see the issue as one of economic patriotism. If it is good for the US, then it’s worth trying to keep it around. If it’s not good for the US, then it’s worth it to limit the activity.

I doubt that kids are leaving engineering in droves in the United States because their jobs are not “safe”. I sat next to an engineer for AMD on a plane a couple days ago. He was taking his daughter to interview at UPenn, Princeton, MIT, and CMU.
***This is a classic fallacy. One anecdotal story versus droves and droves of others. I’m not going to bite. Since I didn’t post the statistics to back up my side and you didn’t post the statistics to back up your side, we end up going nowhere on it and frankly, I do not have that level of interest. I sit next to engineers every day of my life, and I have seen thousands of jobs going overseas here in the SF bay area. My engineering job basically went overseas as well.

She was on the robotics team and was studying electrical engineering texts on the plane.
***One smart kid. I’m happy for her. My advice to her is to go into something other than EE.

Most kids were playing their GameBoys or listening their iPods. I suspect most kids in the US avoid engineering because it is a lot harder than “communications” or whatever else is the course of least resistance on the way to a B.A.
***You are probably correct in that assessment. But when someone does bust their balls to get an engineering degree and the job goes overseas because that kid with the BA in business made a management decision, I stop supporting this activity.

I don’t think we are eating our corn seed.
***I do.

The analogy doesn’t work at all.
***that’s only because you disagree with it.

The corn hasn’t even been planted or grown IMHO.
***Wow, again you have contradicted yourself. Corn that is supposed to be planted in the ground is CORN SEED. If you eat the seed, you won’t be able to grow corn the next season. You just made my point for me. Thanks.

Most kids in the US don’t value hard work or education.
***I think they do, but they don’t want to waste all that time on a difficult degree just to have the job hoisted overseas. They’re not stupid, they’re street smart. It’s much easier to work hard at that MBA and be the one who sends the job overseas. Besides, what you’re saying is a value position that has no bearing whatsoever on whether H1B visas are fraud magnets.

I’m not sure I agree that the US is competitive in maths or the hard sciences compared to many other countries.
***That’s because we are eating our own corn seed. We are not putting resources into this area.

I don’t know whether our founding fathers thought much about competitiveness.
***Again you make my point for me.

I would suggest that international trade was such a small part of GDP that competitiveness was not very important.
***So would I. That would suggest that international trade isn’t nearly as important as those conservative core values that our country is built upon. All those smart people want to come HERE, and it’s for a reason. Because HERE is BETTER than THERE, wherever THERE is. I work with internationals from all over the world — Russia, India, China, Taiwan, Indonesia, Korea, Germany, France, England, Canada, Mexico, Iran, basically everywhere. They study science in their own country and come here because they like it, our freedoms work better than over there to produce a better economy and working environment, and in several other ways the US is simply a better place to be. Most of the folks on H1B visas are living at a very low wage compared to their counterparts just 2 cubicles down.

Internationally competitive business didn’t seem very high on the list of priorities because it didn’t really exist yet.
***Again you make my point for me. Today we have internationally competitive industries all over the place, and yet MILLIONS of people still want to move to the US. That international competitiveness simply has not yet caught up with all of the other benefits that are generated by the USA, otherwise people would be moving to China by the millions. That means that our freedoms in this society trump international competitiveness concerns. For the great bulk of our country’s history, we were a poor country and some day we may be a poor country again. But we’ve always been a great country because of our freedoms; we haven’t always been a great country because “our economy is so good”.

Incidentally, that guy on the plane was born in Taiwan and is now a US citizen.
***So is my wife. I’m thoroughly familiar with the story. That doesn’t mean it bolsters your point.

He’s exactly the type person that cannot get into the US now. Had he stayed in Taiwan, he would be creating value there instead of here, as would his daughter one day soon...
***That’s a nonsense statement: “creating value”. Such a sentiment does not appear to be a major concern of our founding fathers, and I’m kinda glad it isn’t because it suggests that a person’s value is only measured in wealth or production of goods or some economic measurability. Baloney. He’s a citizen of the US so he has as much rights as I do and he is hoping his daughter does well in OUR COUNTRY. She won’t need an H1B visa, so your point starts to fall apart very rapidly at -40db/decade.


20 posted on 04/03/2007 10:59:06 PM PDT by Kevmo (Duncan Hunter just needs one Rudy G Campaign Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RVBtPIrEleM)
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