Washington: Amid a contentious
debate over comprehensive immigration reforms, a top Republican senator has
introduced a bill to eliminate what he calls "fraud and abuse" from
H-1B visa programme coveted by Indian techies.
Introducing
a bill to bring "much needed reform" to the H-1B and L visa
programmes for skilled workers and corporate transfers respectively, Chuck
Grassley, top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said it would help
ensure that Americans are given top consideration when applying for jobs.
The
legislation makes reforms to increase enforcement, modify wage requirements and
ensure protection for visa holders and American workers, he said.
The
bill, he said, would provide a good basis for H-1B reform in the comprehensive
immigration bill being put together by a bipartisan group of senators to put
America's 11 million illegal immigrants, including some 250,000 Indians, on a
path to citizenship.
"The
legislation will benefit the American worker, while still ensuring that US
companies get the specialised workers they need," Grassley said
The
senator cited a 2008 US Citizenship and Immigration Service suggesting a more
than a 20 per cent violation rate by those who use the H-1B visa programme.
He
also cited recent data from fiscal 2012 revealing that the top 10 companies
that use the programme are offshoring firms that take up nearly 50 per cent
of the visas available.
Key
points of the legislation include: requiring all companies to make a good faith
effort to hire Americans first; prohibiting employers from advertising only to
H-1B visa holders; and prohibiting companies from outsourcing visa holders to
other companies.
It
also requires that an H-1B application filed by an employer that employs 50 or
more US workers will not be accepted unless the employer attests that less than
50 per cent of the employer's workforce are H-1B and L visa holders.
It
also increases administrative fines per violation from $1000 to $2000 and from
$5000 to $10,000 for wilful misrepresentation and restricts the
ability of these companies to Indian technology companies, which bagged almost
one third of the H-1B work visas granted in 2012, according to new data from
the USCIS.
According
to the data, of the top 12 companies which bagged more than 40,000 of the
134,740 H-1B visas approved in 2012 all had a strong India presence.
They
included Cognizant, in first place with 9,281 visas, followed by Tata (7,469),
Infosys (5,600), Wipro (4,304), Accenture (4,037), HCL America (2,070),
Mahindra and Satyam (1,963). Indian professionals also took the largest
one-third piece of the H1B visa pie in 2009 making up the second largest group
of people making the US their temporary home.
Accounting
for one-tenth of non-immigrant residents in the US, 364,757 Indians were only
second to the Mexicans who made up 11.7 per cent at 403,793, but 123,002 H1B
visa holders from India gave them the largest 36.3 per cent share among
professionals. (IANS)
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