OFW Guide - Filipino's guide to working and living overseas
  • Home
  • Latest Articles
  • OFW News
  • Career Guide
  • How To's
  • OFW Stories
  • OFW Products
  • Tools
  • Advertise

Advertise at OFWguide.com

For inquiries, please fill-out the form below:
  captcha

Currency Converter Tool


Converter
World
  • PH
  • >Middle East & Africa
  • >Americas
  • >Asia & the Pacific
  • >Europe
OFWguide.com
OFWGuide.com is a Filipino website for new OFWs and for Filipinos who want to migrate, find an overseas job or work abroad.
 Search OFWguide:  
Laws and Visa Information

File those H-1Bs Now

  Atty. Robert L. Reeves,  May 19, 2012

 The immigration community is preparing itself for the exhaustion of the H-1B cap.    The United States Citizenship and Immigration Services’ (USCIS) most recent count shows that as of April 13, 2012 approximately 20,600 H-1B cap-subject petitions were received out of the 65,000 available visa numbers.  Of the 20,000 separate allotment of H-1B visas for workers with advanced degrees, 9,700 have already been accepted. Each week larger numbers of H-1B petitions are being filed with USCIS. At this rate, many expect H-1B visa numbers will be exhausted by the end of May. 

 

While this is a promising signal that the economy is heating up, employers and H-1B workers will have to scramble for the last remaining visa numbers until Congress acts to increase the quota. Since the quota is expected to be reached fairly soon, H-1B petition preparations should be their final stages. Those people looking for petitioners should intensify their job search right now to ensure sufficient time for an H-1B petition to be prepared for filing before the end of the year.

 

H-1B petitions cannot be prepared and filed overnight. The H-1B preparation process involves obtaining a labor condition application (LCA) from the US Department of Labor prior to filing the petition. This can take from 5 to 10 business days to process further delaying the filing of an H-1B petition. It is therefore of the utmost importance that H-1B petition preparations be started as soon as possible to ensure filing before the visa quota is met.

 

Below are some frequently asked questions we have received about the H-1B cap.

 

What does it mean when the H-1B cap is reached?

This means that if an employer is petitioning to change your status to H-1B (for example from student or tourist status to H-1B), and the petition is received after the cap is met, the change of status cannot be granted. 

 

I am in H-1B status now and I have filed an extension or I will be filing an extension.  Will I be in danger of missing the cap?  Will I go out of status?

No. The H-1B cap only applies to new H-1B petitions. If an employee is already in H-1B status and is being petitioned by the same employer or even a new employer, that employee is typically not subject to the cap. 

 

I am not in H-1B status now. There is an employer who is willing to sponsor me.  What should I do with the cap end approaching?

You should begin processing the H-1B petition as soon as possible. The longer you delay, the more likely it is that you won’t get a visa number. 

 

Those who require H-1B petitions must coordinate with their immigration lawyers right now to ensure that they are on track for an early filing.  In all likelihood, there will be no opportunity for a filing after the end of May.

 

*****

 

Author's Note: The analysis and suggestions offered in this column do not create a lawyer-client relationship and are not a substitute for the individual legal research and personalized representation that is essential to every case.

 

Robert L. Reeves is a licensed California attorney and is certified by the California State Bar as an Immigration and Nationality Law Specialist. He has been specializing in immigration law for over 30 years and is admitted to practice before the US Supreme Court, the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, several US District Courts and California State Courts. He is the Managing Partner of Reeves & Associates with offices located in Pasadena, San Francisco, Las Vegas and Makati City – Unit 507 Tower One Ayala Triangle, also known as the Philippine Stock Exchange Plaza Makati , 6767 Ayala Avenue, Makati City, Philippines 1226 (corner Paseo de Roxas, beside Ninoy Aquino Monument). Philippine Contact Numbers: 759-6777 or Toll Free: 1-800-10-773-3837 E-mail: immigration@rreeves.com Website: www.rreeves.com

 

 

How to Articles
  • How OFWs can get NBI clearance abroad
  • How OFWs can avail the Enterprise Development and Loan
OFW Products
  • OFWs exemption on airport terminal fees to start March 2017
  • BOC delays OFWs balikbayan boxes tax exemption
OFW Guide
  • Most Popular
  • OFW Tools
  • OFW Directory
  • Currency Converter
  • OFW Forms
  • POEA Rules and Regulations
  • POEA Memorandum Circulars
  • Government
  • POEA
  • OWWA
  • Foreign Embassies
  • Related Sites
  • Latest Jobs Abroad
  • Local Part-Time Jobs
See More
See More
 
  • Home /
  • About Us /
  • Advertise /
  • RSS Feed /
  • Disclaimer /
  • Terms of use /

2011-2014, OFWGuide. All rights reserved. Created by Quantum X, Inc.