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H-1B Program For 2022 – Immigration Lawyer New York
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H-1B Program For 2022

By Michael H. Markovitch, Esq. on February, 07, 2022

Each  year USCIS issues 85,000 new  H-1B visas. There are  65,000 for foreign nationals with a bachelor’s degree (or equivalent education) from an American or foreign college or university, and an additional 20,000 for foreign nationals with a graduate degree from an American college or university.

Pursuant to a January 2019 rule, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) will hold a pre-registration process, which based on prior years we expect to begin on March 1, 2022.

 

What is the pre-registration process?

Under the USCIS pre-registration process, employers (or their attorneys/agents) wishing to sponsor foreign national employees for initial cap-subject H-1B status will complete a pre-registration process that requests basic information about the sponsoring employer and the sponsored employee. USCIS will impose a $10 fee per registration.

If a sufficient number of H-1B registrations are received during the initial registration period, USCIS will proceed with selecting the necessary number of registrations to meet the quota. Only if an employer’s registration is selected in the lottery will a full and complete H-1B petition (with the necessary Labor Condition Application and all USCIS filing fees) need to be submitted to USCIS within 90 days of being notified of selection.

Only registrations submitted during the registration period will be considered in the H-1B lottery. It is therefore imperative that employers identify candidates for H-1B sponsorship early, and begin working with immigration counsel as soon as possible to begin the process of evaluating candidates for H-1B sponsorship.

 

What foreign national employees should be sponsored?

Employers should consider the following workers for H-1B sponsorship:

  • Foreign national employees who are in F-1 student status and working pursuant to a period of Optional Practical Training (OPT) following completion of a US degree program. OPT is generally limited to 12 months, although students who received a US degree in a science, technology, engineering, or math (STEM) discipline may be eligible for an additional 24 months of employment authorization. Employment beyond the period of OPT is typically contingent on securing an H-1B.
  • Employees in L-1 status, whom you are sponsoring for lawful permanent residency (or will sponsor in the future), but who are unlikely to receive a “green card” within the allotted period of admission (i.e., five years if in L-1B status or seven years if in L-1A status).
  • Any prospective employees who have not previously been counted against the H-1B numerical limits within the past six years (e.g., with another US employer), and whom you wish to employ in the United States.

 

The H-1B nonimmigrant visa classification is for foreign national workers in “specialty occupations,” meaning occupations that require the theoretical and practical application of highly specialized knowledge (generally by requiring at least a bachelor’s degree, or equivalent, in a specialized field relevant to the occupation).

For further information or questions you may have. Please do not hesitate to contact The Law Offices of Michael H. Markovitch.

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