"Only dull people are brilliant at breakfast" -Oscar Wilde |
"The liberal soul shall be made fat, and he that watereth, shall be watered also himself." -- Proverbs 11:25 |
Every year, American businesses tell us how they are unable to retain the qualified people that they want to retain because of the artificially low H-1B visa caps and related regulations that do not reflect market realities. This situation is ironic, since most of the unemployable people were educated in the United States. [Note from Carrie - Hmmh, are they talking about Americans or foreign students?] As a country, we are effectively handling these highly-educated, extremely desirable individuals a diploma and a plane ticket. The message we are sending is "You can learn here, but you have to work in another country."Key provisions of the bill
I see an awful lot of exemptions from different caps. You can read other provisions by clicking on the above-referenced links. The entire Bill is located here.Amends the Immigration and Nationality Act to exempt from the annual H-1B(specialty occupation) visa cap an alien who has: (1) earned a master's or higher degree from an accredited U.S. university; or (2) been awarded a medical specialty certification based on post-doctoral training and experience in the United States.
Increases the annual H-1B cap, with a 20% increase for the following year if the previous year's quota is reached.
Exempts from worldwide immigration caps an alien who: (1) has earned a master's or higher degree from an accredited U.S. university; (2) has been awarded medical specialty certification based on postdoctoral training and experience in the United States; (3) will work in shortage occupations; (4) has earned a master's degree or higher in science, technology, engineering, or math and has been working in a related field in the United States during the three-year period preceding his or her immigrant visa application; (5) has extraordinary ability or received a national interest waiver; or (6) is the spouse or minor child of an employment-based immigrant.
Labels: H-1Bs, SKIL Bill, skills shortage