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Posts Tagged ‘H-1Bs for Healthcare’

USCIS Announces 2nd Mtg on the Neufeld Memo 3/26/10

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

We have been advised that USCIS will hold a 2nd in-person and teleconferenced meeting on the above topic on Friday, March 26th at 3:00 (Eastern). We link to a copy of the Meeting Invitation that contains the RSVP information.

The American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA) sent a letter to USCIS, requesting that the January 8th “Neufeld memo” on the “employer-employee relationship” be withdrawn listing four key problems.

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Here’s an update with some new developments in re the H-1B Memo:

1. The memo is a new policy that is inconsistent with current regulations: The regulations already define “employer” for H-1B context and indicates control when the employer “may hire, pay, fire, supervise, or otherwise control the work of any such employee.” The Memo adds additional requirements beyond what the regulations state.

2. The position taken by USCIS imposes significant economic burdens on business, at a time when the government should be trying to encourage business growth, in that employers will be required to spend considerable time and money gathering additional evidence to file their H-1B petitions and/or respond to RFE’s. Also, AILA pointed to several studies of the positive economic impact of H-1B employment, including a study that found that “U.S. technology companies increase their employment by an average of five U.S. workers for each H-1B worker they hire.”

3. The memo will have serious adverse affects on employers and individuals: AILA pointed to state restrictions on physicians being employed directly by hospitals and to locum tenens and other temporary staffing arrangements in the health care arena (including therapists) where it will be difficult to satisfy the new standards of the memo. AILA also pointed to government contracts as not being able to meet the standards. The memo will also negatively affect H-1B workers who change employers or extend status, and may have adverse effects on permanent residence petitions. AILA noted that it is not just the H-1B petitioner and the H-1B visa holder that are impacted — the end-users are also affected as they may experience a disruption in work for an H-1B worker that is not able to timely extend status or when additional staffing is needed.

4. The policy is spreading to other non-immigrant and immigrant petitions: AILA noted that USCIS has been adjudicating L-1 petitions and I-140 petitions based upon this new, heightened standard of the employer-employee relationship.

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For those of you who might have missed the Immigration Solutions teleconference that we had on “Tougher Standards for H-1B’s”, you can access the audio recording here.

If you would like to share with us any recent experiences you’ve had or your input as to how this Memo has impacted your business, please feel free to do so.

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Lastly, we are available to assist you with your H-1B filings and have developed some smart approaches as to how to deal with these new regulations and document requirements. Contact us today. If you file your own H-1B cases and require consultation or a skilled attorney to review your petitions, we also offer these services.

H-1B Cap Cases for FY 2011: We’re Accepting Cases

Friday, February 5th, 2010

Yes – it’s the season to start preparing H-1B “cap” filings again for Fiscal Year 2011.

The USCIS FY starts on October 1st each year. Thus, fiscal year 2011 starts on October 1, 2010 and runs through September 30, 2011.  Regulations permit cap subject filings 6 months in advance of the October start date for cases to be received at USCIS on April 1, 2010.

The following are suggestions to help you for the upcoming cap season.  Our suggestions are based on existing law, as well as USCIS guidance and our experience from prior years.

USCIS frequently issues updated guidance with slight procedural variations for each fiscal year. For example, the LCA process changed in July – note it is taking sometimes up to 7 days to obtain an approval.  In case of a denial such as problems with verifying an employer’s EIN# which is quite common unfortunately, obtaining an LCA may take even longer.

Immigration Solutions is accepting H-1B cases for FY2011 at this time.  We have a team of experienced attorneys, case managers and paralegals in our business unit who are currently working on new H-1B cap-subject cases.  The cases will be prepared in advance and will be transmitted for delivery on March 31, 2010, for USCIS filing on April 1st.  In order to file, it is necessary to have an appropriate job offer from a U.S. employer who is willing to sponsor the H-1B case.

The USCIS has increased scrutiny on all H-1B cases and imposed tougher standards, particularly those filed in the IT consulting industry and for software companies. These new standards also affect healthcare staffing agencies that place workers at 3rd party jobsites.   The standards for approval have become more stringent. It is necessary to recognize this trend when preparing new H-1B cap cases for filing.  For this reason, we recommend that you work with an experienced law firm that specializes in employment-based immigration. Click here to contact us for your new H-1B case now.

NOTE:  Immigration Solutions is sponsoring a free teleconference on February 10th that will address the tougher standards in the H-1B category.  For more on this and to RSVP, we link to our blog