Order Code RL30498
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Immigration: Legislative Issues on Nonimmigrant
Professional Specialty (H-1B) Workers
Updated May 12, 2006
Ruth Ellen Wasem
Specialist in Immigration Policy
Domestic Social Policy Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress
Immigration: Legislative Issues on Nonimmigrant
Professional Specialty (H-1B) Workers
Summary
The economic prosperity of the 1990s fueled a drive to increase the levels of
employment-based immigration. Both the Congress and the Federal Reserve Board
then expressed concern that a scarcity of labor could curtail the pace of economic
growth. A primary response was to increase the supply of foreign temporary
professional workers through FY2003. When the H-1B annual numerical limits
reverted to 65,000 in FY2005, that limit was reached on the first day. The FY2006
limit was reached before the fiscal year began.
The 106th Congress raised the number of H-1B visas by 297,500 over three years
in the American Competitiveness in the Twenty-first Century Act of 2000 ( P.L. 106-
313). The107th Congress enacted provisions that allow H-1B workers to remain
beyond the statutory limits if their employers petitioned for them to become legal
permanent residents. A provision in P.L. 108-447 exempted up to 20,000 aliens
holding a master’s or higher degree from the cap on H-1B visas. It also reinstated
certain labor market protections and established a fraud-prevention and detection fee
on petitioners. Provisions on H-1B visas also were part of Chile and Singapore Free
Trade Agreements (P.L. 108-77 and P.L. 108-78).
In FY2003, the almost half (49%) of newly arriving H-1B workers had
bachelor’s degrees, an additional 29% had master’s degrees, and 14% had doctorates.
About one quarter (28%) reported occupations in computer-related fields, down from
over half in FY2001. While India sent 45% of the newly arriving H-1B in FY2001,
it only sent 28% in FY2003. The median annual compensation for newly arriving H-
1B workers was $44,803 in FY2003, down from $50,000 in FY2001.
Those opposing any further increases or easing of admissions requirements
assert that there is no compelling evidence of a labor shortage in these professional
areas that cannot be met by newly graduating students and retraining the existing U.S.
work force. They argue further that the education of U.S. students and training of
U.S. workers should be prioritized instead of fostering a reliance on foreign workers.
Proponents of current H-1B levels say that the education of students and
retraining of the current workforce is a long-term response, and they assert that H-1B
workers are essential if the United States is to remain globally competitive. Some
proponents argue that employers should be free to hire the best people for the jobs,
maintaining that market forces should regulate H-1B visas, not an arbitrary ceiling.
S. 2611/S. 2612 would raise the numerical limit on H-1B visas from 65,000 to
115,000 and would establish a formula on which to calculate future admissions. As
does S. 1918, S. 2454 and S.Amdt. 3192 to S. 2454, S. 2611/S. 2612 would add a
new exemption from the H-1B annual numerical limit for H-1Bs who have earned
an advanced degree in science, technology, engineering, or math from an accredited
university in the United States. It would also establish a pathway to permanent
residence for such aliens. This report tracks legislative activity and will be updated
as needed.
Contents
Immigration Policy for Professional Workers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Temporary Foreign Professional (H-1B) Workers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Other Categories of Professional Foreign Workers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Permanent Employment-Based Immigration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Intracompany Transfers (L Visas) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Analysis of H-1B Admissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Trends in H-1B Entries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Characteristics of Recent H-1B Nonimmigrants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Pathways to Permanent Residence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Legislative History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
American Competitiveness and Workforce Improvement Act . . . . . . . . . . 12
American Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century Act . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Legislation in the 107th Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Legislation in the 108th Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Free Trade Agreements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
H-1B Reform . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Exemptions from H-1B Cap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
H-1B Elimination/Moratorium . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Provisions in Omnibus Appropriations Bill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Legislative Issues in the 109th Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Main Issues of Debate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Effects on U.S. Labor Market . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Inclusion in Free Trade Agreements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
National Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Legislative Action . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Emergency Supplemental (P.L. 109-13) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Budget Reconciliation (P.L. 109-71) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Securing America’s Borders Act (S. 2454) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act (S. 2611/S. 2612) . . . . . . . 22
H-1B Reform . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
H-1B Repeal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
List of Figures
Figure 1. H-1B Petitions Approved, FY1992-FY2005 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Figure 2. Leading Occupations of Newly Arriving H-1B Workers . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Figure 3. Educational Attainment of Newly Arriving H-1B Workers . . . . . . . . . . 8
Figure 4. Country of Origin of Newly Arriving H-1B Workers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Figure 5. Percent of LPRs Adjusting Status by Prior Student and Temporary
Worker Category, FY1994-FY2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Immigration: Legislative Issues on
Nonimmigrant Professional Specialty
(H-1B) Workers
Immigration Policy for Professional Workers
Introduction
The economic prosperity of the 1990s fueled a drive to increase the levels of
employment-based immigration. The nation enjoyed its longest economic expansion,
and the unemployment rate had remained low. Both the Congress and the Federal
Reserve Board then expressed concern that a scarcity of labor could curtail the pace
of economic growth. A primary legislative response was to increase the supply of
foreign temporary professional workers through FY2003.
Although Congress enacted legislation in 1998 to increase the number of visas
for temporary foreign workers who have professional specialties, commonly known
as H-1B visas, that annual ceiling of 115,000 visas was reached months before
FY1999 and FY2000 ended. Many in the business community, notably in the
information technology area, once more urged that the ceiling be raised. Congress,
again striving to balance the needs of U.S. employers with employment opportunities
for U.S. residents, enacted legislation to raise the annual ceiling to 195,000 for three
years and to expand education and training programs (P.L. 106-313, S. 2045; and
P.L. 106-311, H.R. 5362).
In the early 2000s, the economic downturn in the information technology sector
appeared to have diminished demand for H-1B workers in that sector and raised new
questions about the lay-offs of H-1Bs nonimmigrants. When the H-1B annual
numerical limits reverted to 65,000, the 108th Congress weighed whether to extend
the increases as the admissions once again surpass the statutory limit. The FY2004
limit was reached in mid-February 2004, and the FY2005 limit was reached on
October 1, 2004, the first day of the fiscal year. The inclusion of H-1B provisions
in free trade agreements (P.L. 108-77 and P.L. 108-78) as well as national security
concerns sparked additional debate.
Title IV of P.L. 108-447, the Consolidated Appropriations Act for FY2005,
exempts up to 20,000 aliens holding a master’s or higher degree from the cap on
H-1B visas. On August 12, 2005, USCIS announced that it has received enough
H-1B petitions to meet the cap for FY2006. Concerns in the business community
that a scarcity of qualified professional and technical workers may slow economic
growth or encourage outsourcing of technical jobs has renewed effort to increase H-
1B visas.
CRS-2
Most recently, Title IV of S. 2454, which Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist
introduced, Title V in S.Amdt. 3192 to S. 2454 (offered by Senate Judiciary
Chairman Specter), and Title V in the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act (S.
2611/S. 2612) would exempt aliens who have earned an advanced degree in science,
technology, engineering, or math from an accredited university in the United States
from the numerical limits of H-1Bs. In addition, S. 2611/S. 2612 would raise the
annual numerical limit on H-1B visas from 65,000 to 115,000 and would establish
a formula on which to calculate future admissions.
Temporary Foreign Professional (H-1B) Workers
A nonimmigrant is an alien legally in the United States for a specific purpose
and a temporary period of time. There are 70 nonimmigrant visa categories specified
in the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), and they are commonly referred to by
the letter that denotes their section in the statute.1 The major nonimmigrant category
for temporary workers is the H visa. The largest classification of H visas is the H-1B
workers in specialty occupations.2
Any employer wishing to bring in an H-1B nonimmigrant must attest in an
application to the Department of Labor (DOL) that the employer will pay the
nonimmigrant the greater of the actual wages paid other employees in the same job
or the prevailing wages for that occupation; the employer will provide working
conditions for the nonimmigrant that do not cause the working conditions of the other
employees to be adversely affected; and, there is no strike or lockout. The employer
also must post at the workplace the application to hire nonimmigrants. Firms
categorized as H-1B dependent (generally if at least 15% of the workforce are H-1B
workers) must also attest that they have attempted to recruit U.S. workers and that
they have not laid off U.S. workers 90 days prior to or after hiring any H-1B
nonimmigrants.
DOL reviews the application for completeness and obvious inaccuracies. Only
if a complaint subsequently is raised challenging the employer’s application will
DOL investigate. If DOL finds the employer failed to comply, the employer may be
fined, may be denied the right to apply for additional H-1B workers, and may be
subject to other penalties.
The prospective H-1B nonimmigrants must demonstrate to the U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services Bureau (USCIS) in the Department of Homeland Security
that they have the requisite education and work experience for the posted positions.
1 For a full discussion and analysis of nonimmigrant visas, see CRS Report RL31381, U.S.
Immigration Policy on Temporary Admissions, by Ruth Ellen Wasem.
2 The regulations define “specialty occupation” as requiring theoretical and practical
application of a body of highly specialized knowledge in fields of human endeavor
including, but not limited to, architecture, engineering, mathematics, physical sciences,
social sciences, medicine and health, education, law, accounting, business specialties,
theology and the arts, and requiring the attainment of a bachelor’s degree or its equivalent
as a minimum. Law and regulations also specify that fashion models deemed “prominent”
may enter on H-1B visas.
CRS-3
USCIS then approves the petition for the H-1B nonimmigrant (assuming other
immigration requirements are satisfied) for periods up to three years. An alien can
stay a maximum of six years on an H-1B visa. There is a $110 filing fee that goes to
USCIS.3
Those H-1B applicants who live abroad must then obtain a visa to enter the
United States from the Bureau of Consular Affairs in the Department of State. The
Department of Commerce screens H-1B visa applicants from countries of concern
(e.g., China, India, Iran, North Korea, Pakistan, Sudan, and Syria) to identify those
who may be working in controlled technologies, such as advanced computer,
electronic, telecommunications or information security technologies that could be
used to upgrade military capabilities. Those already in the United States legally,
typically foreign students, do not need to obtain another visa and simply change their
immigration status to H-1B with the USCIS.4
Other Categories of Professional Foreign Workers5
Permanent Employment-Based Immigration. Many people confuse H-
1B nonimmigrants with permanent immigration that is employment-based.6 If an
employer wishes to hire an alien to work on a permanent basis in the United States,
the alien may petition to immigrate to the United States through one of the
employment-based categories. The employer “sponsors” the prospective immigrant,
and if the petition is successful, the alien becomes a legal permanent resident. Many
H-1B nonimmigrants may have education, skills, and experience that are similar to
the requirements for three of the five preference categories for employment-based
immigration: priority workers — i.e., persons of extraordinary ability in the arts,
sciences, education, business, or athletics, outstanding professors and researchers;
and, certain multinational executives and managers (first preference); members of the
professions holding advanced degrees or persons of exceptional ability (second
3 At the end of FY2003, the provision requiring the employer to pay a $1,000 fee for every
H-1B nonimmigrant initially admitted, getting an extension, and changing employment or
nonimmigrant status expired. This fee had been allocated to DOL for job training and to the
National Science Foundation for scholarships and grants. For more on this issue see CRS
Report RL31973, Education and Training Funded by the H-1B Visa Fee and the Demand
for Information Technology and Other Professional Specialty Workers, by Linda Levine.
4 For more on visa procedures and the grounds for exclusion, see CRS Report RL31512,
Visa Issuances: Policy, Issues, and Legislation, by Ruth Ellen Wasem.
5 B-1 nonimmigrants are visitors for business purposes and are required to be seeking
admission for activities other than purely employment or hire. To be classified as a visitor
for business, an alien must receive his or her salary from abroad and must not receive any
remuneration from a U.S. source other than an expense allowance and reimbursement for
other expenses incidental to temporary stay. Foreign nationals who are treaty traders enter
on the E-1 visa, while those who are treaty investors use the E-2 visa.
6 The other potentially confusing category is the “O” nonimmigrant visa for persons who
have extraordinary ability in the sciences, arts, education, business or athletics demonstrated
by sustained national or international acclaim.
CRS-4
preference); and, skilled workers with at least two years training and professionals
with baccalaureate degrees (third preference).7
Employment-based immigrants applying through the second and third
preferences must have job offers for positions in which the employers have obtained
labor certification. The labor certification is intended to demonstrate that the
immigrant is not taking jobs away from qualified U.S. workers, and many consider
the labor certification process far more arduous than the attestation process used for
H-1B nonimmigrants.8 More specifically, the employer who seeks to hire a
prospective immigrant worker petitions USCIS and DOL on behalf of the alien. The
prospective immigrant must demonstrate that he or she meets the qualifications for
the particular job as well as the preference category. If DOL determines that a labor
shortage exists in the occupation for which the petition is filed, labor certification
will be issued. If there is not a labor shortage in the given occupation, the employer
must submit evidence of extensive recruitment efforts in order to obtain
certification.9
Intracompany Transfers (L Visas). There have been a series of media
reports that firms are opting to bring in foreign professional workers on L-1 visas
rather than the H-1B visa for professional specialty workers.10 Intracompany
transferees who work for an international firm or corporation in executive and
managerial positions or have specialized product knowledge are admitted on the L-1
visas. Their immediate family (spouse and minor children) are admitted on L-2
visas. The prospective L nonimmigrant must demonstrate that he or she meets the
qualifications for the particular job as well as the visa category. The alien must have
been employed by the firm for at least six months in the preceding three years in the
capacity for which the transfer is sought. The INA does not require firms who wish
to bring L intracompany transfers into the United States to meet any labor market
tests in order to obtain a visa for the transferring employee.11
7 Third preference also includes 10,000 “other workers” (i.e., unskilled workers) with
occupations in which U.S. workers are in short supply.
8 Certain second preference immigrants who are deemed to be “in the national interest” are
exempt from labor certification.
9 See CRS Report RS21520, Labor Certification for Permanent Immigrant Admissions, by
Ruth Ellen Wasem.
10 For examples, see “L1s Slip Past H-1B Curbs,” eWeek, Jan. 6, 2003; “A Loophole as Big
as a Mainframe,” Business Week, Mar. 10, 2003; “Displaced Americans,” Washington
Times, Mar. 14, 2003; and, “Magna Cum Unemployed,” Computerworld, Apr. 28, 2003.
11 For background and analysis on L visas, see CRS Report RL32030, Immigration Policy
for Intracompany Transfers (L Visa): Issues and Legislation, by Ruth Ellen Wasem.
CRS-5
Analysis of H-1B Admissions
Trends in H-1B Entries
Preliminary data indicate that 266,000 H-1B petitions were approved in
FY2005. The number of petitions approved for H-1B workers escalated in the late
1990s and peaked in FY2001 at 331,206 approvals (Figure 1). Data from the DHS
Office of Immigration Statistics (hereafter referred to as DHS Immigration Statistics)
illustrate that the demand for H-1B visas continued to press against the statutory
ceiling, even after Congress increased it to 115,000 for FY1999-FY2000 and to
195,000 for FY2001-FY2003. The number of H-1B petitions approved dropped to
197,537 in FY2002.
Because of statutory changes made by P.L. 106-313, which are discussed below,
most H-1B petitions are now exempt from the ceiling, as Figure 1 illustrates. Only
79,100 H-1B approvals fell under the cap in FY2002. DHS Immigration Statistics
reports that 103,584 petitions were approved for newly arriving H-1B workers in
FY2002. There were also 93,953 petitions approved in FY2002 for H-1B workers
who were continuing to be employed after their initial H-1B visa had expired. In
FY2001, there were 163,200 approved petitions that counted under the cap. The
former INS reported that 201,079 petitions for newly arriving H-1B workers were
approved in FY2001. That year INS also reported that 130,127 H-1B workers
already in the United States were approved for continuing employment, up from
120,853 continuing H-1B workers approved in FY2000. In FY2005, the 72,000 H-
1Bs worked came in under the cap, which was higher than 65,000 because of roll-
overs from FY2004.
The INA sets a 65,000 numerical limit on H-1B visas that was reached for the
first time prior to the end of FY1997, with visa numbers running out by September
1997. The 65,000 ceiling for FY1998 was reached in May of that year, and —
despite the statutory increase — the 115,000 ceiling for FY1999 was reached in June
2002. About 5,000 cases approved in FY1997 after the ceiling was hit were rolled
over into FY1998. More than 19,000 cases approved in FY1998 after the ceiling was
hit were rolled over to FY1999.
CRS-6
Figure 1. H-1B Petitions Approved, FY1992-FY2005
Thousands
350
325
300
Exempt from cap
275
250
225
200
cap of
195,000
175
Roll-overs and
150
over-issues
125
cap of
115,000
100
75
cap of
65,000
50
Numerically limited,
25
i.e.,"capped"
0
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
Fiscal Year
Source: CRS presentation of data from the U.S.Citizenship and Immigration Services and the
former Immigration and Naturalization Service. FY2004 and FY2005 data are preliminary.
The former INS admitted in autumn 1999 that thousands of H-1B visas beyond
the 115,000 ceiling were approved in FY1999, allegedly as a result of problems with
the automated reporting system. Then INS hired KPMG Peat Marwick to audit and
investigate how the problems occurred and how pervasive they may be. KPMG Peat
Marwick determined that between 21,888 and 23,3385 H-1B visas (depicted in
Figure 1) were issued over the ceiling in FY1999. Meanwhile, in mid-March 2000,
INS announced the FY2000 ceiling of 115,000 would be reached by June.
Ultimately, INS reported that 136,787 petitions for newly arriving H-1B workers
were approved in FY2000.
USCIS data indicate that 217,340 H-1B petitions were approved in FY2003, but
that only about 78,000 were subject to the cap of 195,000. The FY2004 limit of
65,000 was reached in mid-February. On October 1, 2004 — the first day of the fiscal
year — USCIS announced that it had reached the cap, which that year was 58,200
because of visas set aside by the U.S.-Chile and U.S.-Singapore Free Trade
Agreements (as discussed below).
On August 12, 2005, USCIS announced that it has received enough H-1B
petitions to meet the cap for FY2006. USCIS determined that the “final receipt date”
was August 10, 2005. Most recently, USCIS announced that it has received enough
H-1B petitions that qualify for the exemption from the H-1B numerical limitations
for foreign workers with a U.S.-earned master’s or higher degree. The number
exempted from the H-1B cap on this basis is 20,000 annually. USCIS determined
CRS-7
that the “final receipt date” for the 20,000 cap-exempt H-1B petitions was January
17, 2006.12
Characteristics of Recent H-1B Nonimmigrants
Until recently, the only data available on the occupations filled by H-1B
nonimmigrants were the labor attestation applications filed by prospective employers.
These data were imperfect because they included multiple openings and did not
reflect actual H-1B admissions. According to the DOL data on approved attestations,
therapists — mostly physical therapists, but also some occupational therapists,
speech therapists, and related occupations — comprised over half (53.5%) of those
approved in FY1995. The number of attestations approved for therapists fell to one-
quarter (25.9%) in FY1997. In FY1996 computer-related occupations became the
largest category and continue to lead in job openings approved by DOL for H-1Bs,
going from 25.6% in FY1995, to 41.5% in FY1996, to 44.4% of the openings
approved in FY1997. The DOL data from October 1998 through May 1999 have
systems analysts, programmers, and other computer-related occupations comprising
51% of all openings approved.13
Figure 2. Leading Occupations of Newly Arriving H-1B Workers
Others
18.5%
Computer-related
27.6%
Managers
5.6%
Medicine &
health
8.6%
Architecture, engineering
& surveying
12.0%
Education
14.4%
Administrative specializations
13.3%
Source: CRS presentation of data from U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Office of
Immigration Statistics, Characteristics of Specialty Occupation Workers (H-1B): Fiscal
Year 2003, (2004).
12 U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Press Release, USCIS Reaches H-1B Exemption
Cap for Fiscal Year 2006, Jan. 18, 2006.
13 For a fuller analysis of these DOL data and their limitations, see CRS Report 98-462,
Immigration and Information Technology Jobs: The Issue of Temporary Foreign Workers,
by Ruth Ellen Wasem and Linda Levine.
CRS-8
According to data from the DHS Immigration Statistics for FY2001, over half
(55.3%) of H-1B new arrivals (i.e., those who came in under the numerical cap)
were employed in computer-related fields; however, this percentage fell to 27.6% in
FY2003, as Figure 2 illustrates. Architects, engineers and surveyors follow with
12.0% of the newly approved H-1B petitions in FY2003. Administrative
specializations (13.3%), educators (14.4%), and those working in medicine and
health (8.6%), and life sciences (4.6%) round out the occupations with notable
numbers of H-1B nonimmigrants in FY2003.14
Figure 3. Educational Attainment of Newly Arriving H-1B Workers
Bachelor's
48.6%
< Bachelor's
2.2%
Doctorate
13.7%
Master's
Professional
29.1%
6.4%
Source: CRS presentation of data from U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Office of
Immigration Statistics, Characteristics of Specialty Occupation Workers (H-1B): Fiscal
Year 2003, (2004).
To obtain H-1B visas, nonimmigrants must demonstrate they have highly
specialized knowledge in fields of human endeavor requiring the attainment of a
bachelor’s degree or its equivalent as a minimum. As Figure 3 depicts, the most
common degree attained by most H-1B new arrivals is a bachelor’s degree or its
equivalent (48.6%). Somewhat less than one-third (29.1%) have earned master’s
degrees. Another 20.1% have either professional degrees or doctorates.15 Of those
with less than a bachelor’s degree, many are presumed to be the “prominent” fashion
models who also are admitted as H-1B nonimmigrants.
14 Although there is a special visa (H-1C) for nurses, those registered nurses who have
baccalaureate degrees also may qualify for H-1B visas. CRS Report RS20164, Immigration:
Temporary Admission of Nurses for Health Shortage Areas (P.L. 106-95), by Joyce Vialet.
15 According to data published by the U.S. Department of Education’s National Center for
Education Statistics, there were 232,300 nonresident aliens (i.e., foreign students) in degree-
granting graduate programs in 2000, comprising 12.6% of student enrollment. Data on how
many H-1Bs workers were educated in the United States are not available, but it is presumed
that many H-1B workers did attend U.S. colleges and universities.
CRS-9
India was the leading country of origin for newly arriving H-1B workers,
comprising 45.2% of all of the new arrivals in FY2001, but falling to 27.8% in
FY2003 (Figure 4). Data previously released by DHS Immigration Statistics further
estimate that nearly 74% of all of the systems analysts and programmers are from
India. In terms of overall H-1B new arrivals inFY2003, China follows with 10.6%,
and Canada is third (5.9%). Other countries at or near 3%-6% are the United
Kingdom, Philippines, Korea, and Japan.
Figure 4. Country of Origin of Newly Arriving H-1B Workers
China 10.6%
India 27.8%
Canada 5.9%
Philippines 6.5%
United Kingdom 3.7%
Korea 3.7%
Japan 3.1%
All other 38.7%
Source: CRS presentation of data from U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Office of
Immigration Statistics,
Characteristics of Specialty Occupation Workers (H-1B): Fiscal
Year 2003, (2004).
The median annual compensation of the newly arriving H-1B nonimmigrants
dropped from $50,000 in FY2001 to $44,803 in FY2003. Half of all H-1Bs workers
who came in under the numerical cap in FY2003 have median annual compensations
ranging from $35,000 to $60,000. Fashion models have the highest reported median
compensation — $100,000 annually. Although few H-1B nonimmigrants are
admitted in law and jurisprudence occupations, they have the second highest median
compensation of $60,000. Newly arriving H-1B nonimmigrants in computer-related
occupations have median annual salaries of $50,500 in FY2003, down from $55,000
in FY2001. The median compensation for those H-1B workers approved for
continuing employment is much higher — $60,000 annually in FY2003. Likewise,
the median compensation for those H-1B workers approved for continuing
employment in computer-related occupations in FY2003 — $60,000 — is higher
than their newly arriving counterparts, but dropped from $69,000 in FY2001.
CRS-10
Pathways to Permanent Residence
The H-1B visa often provides the link for the foreign student (F-1 visa) to
become legal permanent residence (LPR).16 Many anecdotal accounts tell of foreign
students who are hired by U.S. firms as they are completing their programs. The
employers obtain H-1B visas for the recent graduates, and if the employees meet
expectations, the employers may also petition for the nonimmigrants to become LPRs
through one of the employment-based immigration categories.17 Some policy makers
consider this a natural and positive chain of events, arguing that it would be foolish
to educate these talented young people only to make them leave to work for foreign
competitors. Others consider this “F-1 to H-1B to LPR” pathway an abuse of the
temporary element of nonimmigrant status and a way to circumvent the laws and
procedures that protect U.S. workers from being displaced by immigrants.18
Recent research by B. Lindsay Lowell of the Institute for the Study of
International Migration estimates that approximately 7% of foreign students adjust
to LPR status directly, and that additional 7% to 8% of students adjust to LPR status
following a stint as an H nonimmigrant worker.19 In 2000, Lowell also conducted
analysis of all H-1Bs who ultimately become LPRs and estimated that about half of
them did so at that time.20
In 1995, CRS analysis of INS data on employment-based admissions found that
43% of those adjusting status were either H-1Bs or accompanying H-4 immediate
family members of the temporary worker. Another 14.4% of the employment-based
adjustments were foreign students and the accompanying immediate family of
16 For more discussion of legal permanent residence, see CRS Report RL32235, U.S.
Immigration Policy on Permanent Admissions, by Ruth Ellen Wasem.
17 DOL reports that nearly half the permanent employment-based immigrants converted from
H-1B status. See U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on the Judiciary,
Subcommittee on Immigration and Claims. Immigration and America’s Workforce for the
21st Century. Washington, Apr. 21, 1998; and CRS Report 98-462, Immigration and
Information Technology Jobs: The Issue of Temporary Foreign Workers, by Ruth Ellen
Wasem and Linda Levine.
18 During the 104th Congress and earlier, some observers maintained that many foreign
students violate the intent of the provision that requires they have a foreign residence that
they do not intend to abandon. Specifically, the practice of a foreign student petitioning to
change status to nonimmigrant H-1B professional and specialty workers raised concerns.
Fears that foreign students, as well as H-1Bs, were “leap frogging” the laws that protect U.S.
workers from being displaced by immigrants prompted some to suggest that all foreign
students and foreign temporary workers return home for 2 years to establish residency if
they wish to return to the United States. This proposal circulated in the Senate, but it met
with strong and varied opposition from the educational community and business interests.
Many argued it would just lead to abuses and increase incentives to manipulate the
nonimmigrant visa process.
19 B. Lindsay Lowell, “Foreign Student Adjustment to Permanent Status in the United
States,” Presentation at the International Metropolis Conference, 2005.
20 B. Lindsay Lowell, “H1-B Temporary Workers: Estimating the Population,” Institute for
the Study of International Migration, Georgetown University, 2000.
CRS-11
foreign students. That analysis also found that H worker adjustments to LPR status
had increased from 7,244 in FY1988 to 24,223 in FY1994 — an increase of more
than 225% in six years — which was likely due in part to the change in the
Immigration Act of 1990 to permit “dual intent” for H-1Bs.21
Although the USCIS asks what the last nonimmigrant status was of aliens who
are adjusting to LPR status, there has been a data quality problem in recent years.
According to the DHS Office of Immigration Statistics, the data collected on last
nonimmigrant status are missing on more than 40% of the adjustment of status
records.22 Nonetheless, Jeanne Batalova of the Migration Policy Institute recently
published analysis of the limited data that are available. Batalova’s analysis finds that
the percentage of foreign students adjusting has remained rather flat, if not
diminishing, but that the percentage of adjustments who are H nonimmigrant workers
has grown, notably from FY1998 through FY2002, as Figure 5 illustrates.23
Figure 5. Percent of LPRs Adjusting Status by Prior Student
and Temporary Worker Category, FY1994-FY2002
40
Students
Temporary Workers
35
32.2
30
27.2
25.9
25
22.6
20.4
19.8
20
14.5
15
12.7
12
10
5
0
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
Source: CRS presentation of DHS Office of Immigration Statistics data analyzed by
Jeanne Batalova of the Migration Policy Institute (2006).
21 CRS Memorandum, “Nonimmigrant Pathways to Permanent Residence,” by Ruth Ellen
Wasem, Sept. 1995. (Available by request from author)
22 E-mail correspondence from the DHS Office of Immigration Statistics, Mar. 3, 2006.
23 Migration Policy Institute, The Growing Connection Between Temporary and Permanent
Immigration Systems, by Jeanne Batalova, Jan., 2006.
CRS-12
Legislative History
When Congress enacted the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, the H-1
nonimmigrants were described as aliens of “distinguished merit and ability” who
were filling positions that were temporary.24 Nonimmigrants on H-1 visas had to
maintain a foreign residence. Over the years, Congress made a series of revisions to
the H-1 visa category and in 1989, split the H-1 visa into (a) and (b). The
Immigration Act of 1990 (P.L. 101-649) established the main features of H-1B visa
as it is known today. Foremost, §205 of P.L. 101-649 replaced “distinguished merit
and ability” with the “specialty occupation” definition. It added labor attestation
requirements and the numerical limit of 65,000 on H-1B visas issued annually. It
also dropped the foreign residence requirement.
American Competitiveness and Workforce Improvement Act25
Enacted as the 105th Congress drew to a close, Title IV of the FY1999 Omnibus
Consolidated and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act (P.L. 105-277) raised
the H-1B ceiling by 142,500 over three years and contained provisions aimed at
correcting some of the perceived abuses. Most importantly, the 1998 law added new
attestation requirements for recruitment and lay-off protections, but only requires
them of firms that are “H-1B dependent” (generally at least 15% of the workforce are
H-1Bs). All firms now have to offer H-1Bs benefits as well as wages comparable to
their U.S. workers. Education and training for U.S. workers was to be funded by a
$500 fee paid by the employer for each H-1B worker hired. The ceiling set by the
new law was 115,000 in both FY1999 and FY2000, 107,500 in FY2001, and would
revert back to 65,000 in FY2002.
The House (H.R. 3736) and the Senate (S. 1723) had offered proposals to raise
the H-1B ceiling for the next few years, though each bill approached the increase
differently. Each bill would have added whistle blower protections for individuals
who report violations of the H-1B program and would have increased the penalties
for willful violations of the H-1B program. Many considered the provisions aimed
at protecting U.S. workers as the most controversial in H.R. 3736 as it was reported
by the House Judiciary Committee. While S. 1723 as passed by the Senate did add
provisions penalizing firms that lay off U.S. workers and replace them with H-1B
workers if the firms have violated other attestation requirements, amendments that
would have required prospective H-1B employers to attest that they were not laying
off U.S. workers and that they tried to recruit U.S. workers failed on the Senate floor.
H.R. 3736 as reported included lay-off protection and recruiting requirement
provisions similar to those that the Senate rejected. On the other hand, S. 1723
included language that would have expanded the education and training of U.S.
students and workers in the math, science, engineering and information technology
fields.
24 P.L. 414, 82nd Congress.
25 For a full account, see CRS Report 98-531, Immigration: Nonimmigrant H-1B Specialty
Worker Issues and Legislation, by Ruth Ellen Wasem.
CRS-13
Pre-conference discussions between Senate and House Republicans late in July
1998 yielded a compromise on key points of difference, but it did not address all the
Clinton Administration’s concerns regarding the education and training of U.S.
workers and reform of the existing program. After a presidential veto threat of the
Republican compromise, Republicans began working out a compromise with the
White House, and this language passed as the substitute when H.R. 3736 came to the
House floor on September 24, 1998. The House-passed language was then folded
into P.L. 105-277.
American Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century Act
On October 3, 2000, both chambers of Congress passed the American
Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century Act of 2000 (S. 2045) with bipartisan
support, and President Clinton signed the new law (P.L. 106-313) on October 17.
The Senate had debated the legislation for several days, though much of the debate
centered on procedural issues — specifically whether amendments that would
legalize certain aliens (mostly Central Americans and Liberians) would be
permitted.26 The House passed S. 2045 under a suspension of the rules shortly after
the Senate passed it.
The language that passed was a substitute version offered by Judiciary
Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch with bipartisan support. It includes many of the
same features as the version of the bill reported earlier by the Senate Judiciary
Committee.27 It raises the number of H-1B visas by 297,500 over three years,
FY2000-FY2002. Specifically, it adds 80,000 new H-1B visas for FY2000, 87,500
visas for FY2001, and 130,000 visas for FY2002. It also authorizes additional H-1B
visas for FY1999 to compensate for the excess inadvertently approved that year. In
addition, P.L. 106-313 excludes from the new ceiling all H-1B nonimmigrants who
work for universities and nonprofit research facilities. A provision that would have
exempted H-1B nonimmigrants with at least a master’s degree from the numerical
limits was dropped from the final bill. The new law also makes a major change in
the law governing the permanent admission of immigrants by eliminating the per-
country ceilings for employment-based immigrants. It also has provisions that
facilitate the portability of H-1B status for those already here lawfully and requires
a study of the “digital divide” on access to information technology.
The new law makes changes in the use of the H-1B fees for education and
training, notably earmarking a portion of DOL training funds for skills that are in
information technology shortage areas and adding to the NSF portion a K-12 math,
science and technology education grant program. Because S. 2045 originated in the
Senate, it did not contain revenue provisions. Separate legislation to increase the H-
1B fee from $500 to $1,000 (P.L. 106-311, H.R. 5362) passed the House on October
6, the Senate on October 10, and was signed by President Clinton on October 17.
The conference agreement on the FY2001 Commerce, Justice, State appropriations
26 For a fuller discussion and legislative tracking of these immigration issues, see CRS
Report RS20836, Immigration Legislation in the 106th Congress, by Ruth Ellen Wasem.
27 The Judiciary Committee report (S.Rept. 106-260) was filed on Apr. 11, 2000.
CRS-14
bill (H.R. 4942, H.Rept. 106-1005) includes a provision that would authorize another
H-1B fee that employers would pay for expedited servicing of the petitions.
Prior to passage of S. 2045, the House Judiciary Committee had been taking a
somewhat different approach to the H-1B issue. After mark-up considerations for
several days, the House Judiciary Committee had ordered Chairman Lamar Smith’s
bill, the Technology Worker Temporary Relief Act (H.R. 4227), reported with
amendments on May 17, 2000. H.R. 4227 would have eliminated the numerical limit
on H-1B visas for FY2000 and would have allowed for temporary increases (i.e.,
enabling employers to hire H-1B workers outside of the numerical ceilings) in
FY2001 and FY2002 if certain conditions were met. These conditions included
demonstrating that there was a net increase from the previous year in the median
wages (including cash bonuses and similar compensation) paid to the U.S. workers
on the payroll. H.R. 4227 also would have revised the requirements employers of H-
1B workers must meet, notably adding a $40,000 minimum salary and new reporting
requirements. Like S. 2045, universities, elementary and secondary schools, and
nonprofit research facilities would have been exempt from most of these new
requirements. H.R. 4227 would have required all H-1B employers to file W-2 forms
and add anti-fraud provisions (including the requirement that the H-1B have full-time
employment) funded by a $100 fee. An additional $200 processing fee would also
have been collected and allocated to INS and DOL to expedite the processing of H-
1B petitions and attestations. Like S. 2045, H.R. 4227 included provisions that
would facilitate the portability of H-1B status for those already here lawfully. The
bill also would have instructed the U.S. Government Accountability Office (formerly
General Accounting Office, GAO) to study the recruitment measures — particularly
among under-represented groups — and training efforts undertaken by employers.
The House Judiciary Committee issued the bill report (H.Rept. 106-692) on June 23.
The House Committee on Education and the Workforce considered the
education and training provisions of the H-1B statute and marked up legislation
introduced by its chairman William Goodling (H.R. 4402) on May 10, 2000. As
reported on May 25, 2000 (H.Rept. 106-642), H.R. 4402 would have directed the
Secretary of Labor to use 75% of the funding she receives from the H-1B education
and training fee account to provide training in the skilled shortage occupations
related to specialty occupations (as defined under INA’s H-1B provisions). The bill
would have transferred 25% of the funds from the fee account to the Department of
Education to augment a student loan forgiveness program for teachers of
mathematics, science, and reading.
Representatives David Dreier and Zoe Lofgren introduced H.R. 3983, which
would have added an additional 362,500 over FY2001-FY2003. Specifically, it
would have raised the ceiling by 200,000 for three years and would have set aside
60,000 visas annually through FY2003 for persons with master’s degrees. It would
have required employers to file W-2 forms with DOL for each H-1B worker
employed. Like P.L. 106-313, H.R. 3983 would have eliminated the per-country
ceilings for permanent employment-based admissions. It would have enabled
employers to use Internet recruiting to meet labor market recruitment requirements
and would have established an Internet web-based tracking system for immigration-
related petitions. Like P.L. 106-311, this bill would have increased the $500 fee for
education and training to $1,000, and it would have modified the scholarship and
CRS-15
training program requirements, including the addition of student loan forgiveness in
special cases.
Representative Sheila Jackson-Lee, the ranking member of the House Judiciary
Immigration and Claims Subcommittee, introduced H.R. 4200, which would have
set the ceiling at 225,000 annually for FY2001-FY2003, with the condition that it
would have fallen back to 115,000 if the U.S. unemployment rate exceeds 5% and
65,000 if the unemployment rate exceeds 6%. H.R. 4200 would have allocated 40%
of the H-1B visas in FY2000 to nonimmigrants who have at least attained master’s
degrees and would have increased that allocation to 50% in FY2001 and 60% in
FY2002 (with 10,000 set aside each year for persons with Ph.D. degrees). The bill
also provided additional visas retroactively for those inadvertently issued in excess
of the FY1999 ceiling. It would have added a sliding fee scale based upon the size
of the firm seeking H-1B workers and would have revised the uses of the fees
collected for education and training programs, including programs for children.
Among other provisions, it further would have modified the attestation requirements
of employers seeking to hire H-1B workers.
House Judiciary Immigration and Claims Subcommittee Chairman Lamar Smith
had previously introduced H.R. 3814, which would have added 45,000 H-1B visas
for FY2000 if the employer met certain conditions. It would also have raised the fee
to $1,000 for scholarships and training, with most of the revenue going to merit-
based scholarships for students. H.R. 3814 also included provisions for expedited
processing of H-1B petitions funded by a $250 fee and would have added anti-fraud
provisions (including the requirement that the H-1B have full-time employment)
funded by a $100 fee. It would have given the Secretary of State responsibility for
maintaining records on H-1B nonimmigrants.
Other bills pertaining to the H-1B issues were introduced. The New Workers
for Economic Growth Act (S. 1440/H.R. 2698) introduced by Senator Phil Gramm
and Representative Dave Dreier would have raised the ceiling of H-1B admissions
to 200,000 annually FY2000-FY2002. Those H-1B nonimmigrants who have at least
a master’s degree and earn at least $60,000 would not have counted toward the
ceiling. Those who have at least a bachelor’s degree and are employed by an
institution of higher education would have been exempted from the attestation
requirements as well as the ceiling. Senator John McCain introduced S. 1804, which,
among other initiatives, would have eliminated the H-1B ceiling through FY2006.
Representative David Wu introduced H.R. 3508, which would have increased the
ceiling by 65,000 annually through 2002 for those with master’s or Ph.D. degrees,
provided the employers establish scholarship funds.
The Bringing Resources from Academia to the Industry of Our Nation Act (H.R.
2687), introduced by Representative Zoe Lofgren, would have created a new
nonimmigrant visa category, referred to as “T” visas, for foreign students who have
graduated from U.S. institutions with bachelor’s degrees in mathematics, science or
engineering and who are obtaining jobs earning at least $60,000. The Helping
Improve Technology Education and Competitiveness Act (S. 1645), introduced by
Senator Charles Robb, also would have created a “T” nonimmigrant visa category for
foreign students who have graduated from U.S. institutions with bachelor’s degrees
in mathematics, science, or engineering and who are obtaining jobs paying at least
CRS-16
$60,000. More stringent than H.R. 2687, S. 1645 included provisions aimed at
protecting U.S. workers that are comparable to the provisions governing the H-1B
visa.
Legislation in the 107th Congress
Several bills addressing the H-1B numerical limits were introduced in the 107th
Congress. H.R. 2984 would have amended the INA to require the Attorney General
to ensure that only H-1B visa holders who actually commence employment are
counted toward the ceiling. Representative Tom Tancredo offered H.R. 3222, which
would have set the upper limit of H-1B admissions at 65,000 and reduced it by
10,000 for each quarter percentage point by which the unemployment rate for the
United States exceeded 6%. Emerging concerns of a shortage of nurses and other
health care workers, however, prompted interest in the use of H-1Bs among health
care professionals. The Senate Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on
Immigration held hearings May 22, 2001, on “Immigration Policy: Rural and Urban
Health Care Needs.”28
Although the 107th Congress did not alter H-1B admission levels, it did include
provisions that allow H-1B visa holders to remain in that status beyond the statutory
time limits of their temporary visas if their employers had filed applications for them
to become legal permanent residents. Conferees on the Department of Justice
Reauthorization Act (H.R. 2215, H.Rept. 107-685) included §11030A, which
authorizes the Attorney General to extend the stay in one-year increments for H-1B
nonimmigrants while their applications are pending. On October 3, 2002, Senator
Orrin Hatch, ranking Republican on the Senate Committee on the Judiciary,
introduced legislation (S. 3051) with the expressed purpose of extending H-1B status
for aliens with lengthy adjudications, using language comparable to §11030A. The
conference report on H.R. 2215 passed the House September 26, 2002, and the
Senate October 3, 2002. President Bush signed the Department of Justice
Reauthorization Act on November 2, 2002 as P.L. 107-272.
Legislation in the 108th Congress
Free Trade Agreements. The USTR’s legislation implementing the Chile
and Singapore FTAs was introduced July 15, 2003, as S. 1416/H.R. 2738 and S.
1417/H.R. 2739, respectively. The House passed H.R. 2738 and H.R. 2739 on July
24, 2003, and the Senate passed them on July 31, 2003 (P.L. 108-77 and P.L. 108-78
respectively). Title IV of each of these laws amends several sections of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA, 8 U.S.C.). Foremost, the laws amend
§101(a)(15)(H) of INA to carve out a portion of the H-1B visas — designated as the
H-1B-1 visa — for professional workers entering through the FTAs. In many ways
the FTA professional worker visa requirements parallel the H-1B visa requirements,
notably having similar educational requirements. The H-1B visa, however, specifies
that the occupation require highly specialized knowledge, while the FTA professional
worker visa specifies that the occupation require only specialized knowledge.
28 For background, see CRS Report RL30974, A Shortage of Registered Nurses: Is It on the
Horizon or Already Here? by Linda Levine.
CRS-17
The laws also amend §212 of INA to add a labor attestation requirement for
employers bringing in potential FTA professional worker nonimmigrants that is
similar to the H-1B labor attestation statutory requirements. The additional
attestation requirements for “H-1B dependent employers” currently specified in §212
are not included in the labor attestation requirements for employers of the FTA
professional worker nonimmigrants.
S. 1416/H.R. 2738 contains numerical limits of 1,400 new entries under the
FTA professional worker visa from Chile, and S. 1417/H.R. 2739 contains a limit of
5,400 for Singapore. The bills do not limit the number of times that an alien may
renew the FTA professional worker visa on an annual basis, unlike H-1B workers,
who are limited to a total of six years. The bills count an FTA professional worker
against the H-1B cap the first year he/she enters and again after the fifth year he/she
seeks renewal. Although the foreign national holding the FTA professional worker
visa would remain a temporary resident who would only be permitted to work for any
employer who had met the labor attestation requirements, the foreign national with
a FTA professional worker visa could legally remain in the United States indefinitely.
H-1B Reform. On July 24, 2003, Senator Christopher Dodd and
Representative Nancy Johnson introduced the USA Jobs Protection Act of 2003 (S.
1452/H.R. 2849), which would have made several changes to current law on H-1B
visas, as well as revised the L visa category. In § 4 of S. 1452/H.R. 2849, the lay-off
protection provisions in current law pertaining to H-1B-dependent employers would
have been broadened to cover all employers hiring H-1B workers. The lay-off
protection period would have expanded from 90 days before and after hiring H-1B
workers to 180 days. The bills also would have given DOL the authority to initiate
investigations of H-1B employers if there is reasonable cause.
On April 2, 2004, Representative Lamar Smith introduced H.R. 4166, the
American Workforce Improvement and Jobs Protection Act. It would have made
permanent: the attestation requirement concerning nondisplacement of U.S. workers
applicable to H-1B-dependent employers and willful violators; the filing fee
applicable to H-1B petitioners; and the Secretary of Labor’s authority to investigate
an employer’s alleged failure to meet specified labor attestation conditions. It also
would have required the Secretary of Homeland Security to impose a fraud
prevention and detection fee on H-1B or L (intracompany business personnel)
petitioners for use in combating fraud and carrying out labor attestation enforcement
activities.
Exemptions from H-1B Cap. H.R. 4166 would have amended the INA to
exempt up to 20,000 aliens holding a master’s or higher degree from the numerical
limitation on H-1B nonimmigrants in any fiscal year.
H-1B Elimination/Moratorium. On June 25, 2003, Representative Sam
Graves introduced H.R. 2235, which would have suspended the issuances of certain
nonimmigrant visas — including H-1B visas — until a set of conditions pertaining
to the full implementation of specified immigration and homeland security laws was
met. On July 9, 2003, Representative Tom Tancredo introduced H.R. 2688, which
would have repealed the statutory authority to admit H-1B workers.
CRS-18
Provisions in Omnibus Appropriations Bill. Title IV of P.L. 108-447
(H.R. 4818), the Consolidated Appropriations Act for FY2005, exempts up to 20,000
aliens holding a master’s or higher degree from the cap on H-1B visas. It reinstates:
the attestation requirement concerning nondisplacement of U.S. workers applicable
to H-1B-dependent employers and willful violators; the filing fee applicable to H-1B
petitioners; and the Secretary of Labor’s authority to investigate an employer’s
alleged failure to meet specified labor attestation conditions. It also requires the
Secretary of Homeland Security to impose a fraud prevention and detection fee on
H-1B or L (intracompany business personnel) petitioners for use in combating fraud
and carrying out labor attestation enforcement activities.
Legislative Issues in the 109th Congress
Main Issues of Debate
Effects on U.S. Labor Market. Congress continues to strive to balance the
needs of U.S. employers with employment opportunities for U.S. residents.
Proponents argue that continuing current levels in the admission of H-1B workers are
essential if the United States is to remain globally competitive and that employers
should be free to hire the best people for the jobs.29 They say that the education of
students and retraining of the current workforce is a long-term approach, and they
cannot wait to fill today’s openings. Some point out that many mathematics,
computer science, and engineering graduates of U.S. colleges and universities are
foreign students and that we should keep that talent here. Others assert that H-1B
workers create jobs, either by ultimately starting their own information technology
firms or by providing a workforce sufficient for firms to remain in the United States.
Proponents of the increase also cite media accounts of information technology
workers from India who prefer to work for companies in India and warn that the
work will move abroad if action to increase H-1B visas is not taken.30
Those opposing any further increases — temporary or permanent — assert that
there is no compelling evidence of a labor shortage in these professional areas that
cannot be met by newly graduating students and by retraining the existing U.S. work
force. They argue that the education of U.S. students and training of U.S. workers
should be prioritized. Opponents also maintain that salaries and compensation would
be rising if there is a labor shortage and if employers wanted to attract qualified U.S.
workers. Some allege that employers prefer H-1B workers because they are less
demanding in terms of wages and working conditions and that an industry’s
dependence on temporary foreign workers may inadvertently lead the brightest U.S.
students to seek positions in fields offering more stable and lucrative careers.31 Many
29 For example, see U.S. Chamber of Congress and Information Technology Association of
America, joint letter to U.S. Senators from Randel K. Johnson and Jeff Lande, Oct. 18,
2005.
30 Pamela Constable, “India’s Brain Drain Eases Off,” Washington Post, Sept. 14, 2000.
31 CRS Report RL30140, An Information Technology Labor Shortage? Legislation in the
(continued...)
CRS-19
opposed to increase in H-1B visas cite the GAO reports that document abuses of H-
1B visas and recommend additional controls to protect U.S. workers32
Alternatively, some maintain that the H-1B ceiling is arbitrary and would not
be necessary if more stringent protections for U.S. workers were enacted. They argue
the question is not “how many” but “under what conditions.” Some would
strengthen the anti-fraud provisions and would broaden the recruitment requirements
and layoff protections enacted in 1998 for “H-1B dependent” employers to all
employers hiring H-1B workers.33 Others would reform the labor attestation and
certification process and would make the labor market tests for nonimmigrant
temporary workers comparable to those for immigrants applying for one of the
permanent employment-based admissions categories.
GAO has issued reports that recommended more controls to protect workers, to
prevent abuses, and to streamline services in the issuing of H-1B visas. GAO
concluded that the DOL has limited authority to question information on the labor
attestation form and to initiate enforcement activities. GAO also concluded that the
former INS’s handling of H-1B petitions had potential for abuses.34
Inclusion in Free Trade Agreements. Negotiators for the Uruguay Round
Agreements of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), completed in
1994 and known as the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), included
specific language on temporary professional workers. This language references
§101(a)(15)(H(i)(b) of INA and commits the United States to admitting 65,000 H-1B
visa holders each year under the definition of H-1B specified in GATS.35
Some have expressed concerned that free trade agreements, most recently the
Chile and Singapore Free Trade Agreements (FTAs), include language on temporary
professional workers that bars the United States from future statutory changes to H-
31 (...continued)
106th Congress, by Linda Levine; and CRS Report 98-462, Immigration and Information
Technology Jobs: The Issue of Temporary Foreign Workers, by Ruth Ellen Wasem and
Linda Levine.
32 For example, see AFL-CIO Legislative Alert, letter to U.S. Senators from William
Samuel, Oct. 19, 2005.
33 According to the testimony of Jacquelyn Williams-Bridgers, Inspector General of the
U.S. Department of State, “[F]raud involving the H-1 visa program often involves large
scale and complex operations.” U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on the Judiciary,
Subcommittee on Immigration and Claims, Oversight Hearing on Nonimmigrant Visa
Fraud, May 5, 1999.
34 U.S. General Accounting Office, H-1B Foreign Workers: Better Controls Needed to Help
Employers and Protect Workers, GAO/HEHS-00-157, Sept. 2000; and U.S. General
Accounting Office, H-1B Foreign Workers: Better Tracking Needed to Help Determine
H-1B Program’s Effects on U.S. Workforce, GAO-03-883 Sept. 2003.
35 General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), Uruguay Round Trade Agreements,
Schedule of Specific Commitments. For legal analysis, see CRS Congressional Distribution
Memorandum, U.S. Immigration-Related Obligations Under the WTO General Agreement
on Trade in Services, by Jeanne J. Grimmett, May 12, 1998.
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1B visas as well as other temporary business and worker nonimmigrant categories.
Some assert that the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) has overstepped
its authority by negotiating immigration provisions in FTAs and are voicing
opposition to trade agreements that would prevent Congress from subsequently
revising immigration law on temporary professional nonimmigrants. Some have
expressed concern that professional workers from Chile and Singapore are held to a
less stringent standard than existing H-1B law as a result of the recent FTAs.
Proponents of these trade agreements point out that they are merely reflecting
current immigration law and policy. They argue that the movement of people is
subsumed under the broader category of “provision of services” and thus an inherent
part of any free trade agreement. Such agreements on the flow of business people
and workers, they maintain, are essential to U.S. economic growth and business
vitality. The USTR states that the labor attestations, education and training fees, and
numerical limits provisions have been added to the FTAs in response to
congressional concerns. The USTR further argues that the temporary business
personnel provisions in the FTAs are not immigration policy because they only affect
temporary entry.36
National Security. Some concerns have been raised about the need to
monitor H-1Bs workers, particularly those whose employment gives them access to
controlled technologies (i.e., those that could be used to upgrade military
capabilities). GAO found that 15,000 foreign nationals from countries of concern
(e.g., China, India, Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Pakistan, Sudan, and Syria) had changed
their immigration status to an H-1B visa in 2001 to obtain jobs that could have
involved controlled technologies without the Department of Commerce screening
and called for a reexamination of policies that give foreign nationals access to such
technology.37
Supporters of the current policy maintain that safeguards which are more than
adequate are already in place and point out that all foreign nationals who seek to
enter the United States are screened for potential national security risks by both the
Department of State and the Department of Homeland Security. They argue that
additional monitoring of H-1B workers would shift resources away from other areas
of homeland security where they are more needed, such as border security.
Legislative Action
Emergency Supplemental (P.L. 109-13). The FY2005 supplemental
appropriations for military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, reconstruction in
Afghanistan and other foreign aid includes a provision that touches on the nexus of
H-1B visas and FTAs. Specifically, §501 of the legislation as enacted would add
10,500 visas for Australian nationals to perform services in specialty occupations
36 For further analysis, see CRS Report RL32982, Immigration Issues in Trade Agreements,
by Ruth Ellen Wasem.
37 U.S. General Accounting Office, Export Controls: Department of Commerce Controls
over Transfers of Technology to Foreign Nationals Needs Improvement, GAO-02-972, Sept.
2002.
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under a new E-3 temporary visa. The Senate had adopted a provision during the floor
debate on H.R. 1268 that would have created a new E-3 temporary visas that would
have been capped at 5,000 per year.38 This language was included in REAL ID Act
of 2005 (P.L. 109-13, Division B).
Budget Reconciliation (P.L. 109-71). On October 20, 2005, the Senate
Committee on the Judiciary approved compromise language that would recapture up
to 30,000 H-1B visas that had not been issued in prior years (see Figure 1). An
additional fee of $500 would be charged to obtain these recaptured visas. This
language was forwarded to the Senate Budget Committee for inclusion in the budget
reconciliation legislation. On November 18, 2005, the Senate passed S. 1932, the
Deficit Reduction Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 2005, with these provisions as
Title VIII. These provisions were not included in the House-passed Deficit
Reduction Act of 2005 (H.R. 4241).
The conference report (H.Rept. 109-362) on S. 1932, which was renamed the
Deficit Reduction Act of 2005, was reported on December 19 (during the legislative
day of December 18). It did not include the Senate provisions that would recapture
H-1B visas unused in prior years. On December 19, the House agreed to the
conference report by a vote of 212-206. On December 21, the Senate removed
extraneous matter from the legislation pursuant to a point of order raised under the
“Byrd rule,” and then, by a vote of 51-50 (with Vice President Cheney breaking a tie
vote), returned the amended measure to the House for further action. The measure
was signed into law on February 8, 2006, as P.L. 109-171.
Securing America’s Borders Act (S. 2454). Title IV of S. 2454, which
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist introduced on March 16, 2006, as well as Title V
in the draft of Senate Judiciary Chairman Specter’s mark circulated March 6, 2006
(Chairman’s mark) would add a new exemption from the numerical limits for H-1Bs
who have earned an advanced degree in science, technology, engineering, or math
from an accredited university in the United States.
Title IV of S. 2454 and Title V of the Chairman’s mark have foreign student
provisions that, if enacted, may provide employers an attractive alternative to the H-
1B visas. The bills would extend foreign students’ practical training (and F-1 status)
from 12 to 24 months. They also would create a new “F-4” student visa for advanced
degree candidates studying in the fields of math, engineering, technology or the
physical sciences at the end of their course of study. The proposed visa would allow
eligible students to either return to their country of origin or remain in the United
States for up to one year and seek employment in their relevant field of study.
The Senate debated immigration reform from late March through early April
2006, but efforts to invoke cloture failed. At that time the leading proposals included
S. 2454, the Securing America's Borders Act, which Senate Majority Leader Bill
Frist introduced on March 16, 2006, and S.Amdt. 3192 to S. 2454, the
Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act, which Judiciary Chairman Arlen Specter
38 U.S. Congress, House, Conference Report on H.R. 1268, H.Rept. 109-72, May 3, 2005.
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offered on March 30, 2006.39 Title IV of S. 2454 and Title V of S.Amdt. 3192,
which are essentially equivalent, would substantially increase legal permanent
immigration and would restructure the allocation of the family-sponsored and
employment-based visas.
Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act (S. 2611/S. 2612). The
legislative proposal reportedly coming to the Senate floor as early as next week is
based on a compromise that Senators Chuck Hagel and Mel Martinez shaped and
introduced April 7, 2006, along with co-sponsors Sam Brownback, Lindsey Graham,
Ted Kennedy, John McCain and Arlen Specter. The identical language has been
introduced by Senator Specter (S. 2611) and Senator Hagel (S. 2612). Much like S.
2454 and S.Amdt. 3192, S. 2611/S. 2612 would substantially increase legal
permanent immigration as well as raise the ceiling on H-1B visas.
As in other bills, S. 2611/S. 2612 would exempt H-1Bs who have earned an
advanced degree in science, technology, engineering, or math from an accredited
university in the United States from the statutory numerical limits. Moreover, S.
2611/S. 2612 would raise the numerical limit on H-1B visas from 65,000 to 115,000
and would establish a formula on which to calculate future admissions.
S. 2611/2612 are among those bills that would ease opportunities for temporary
workers to ultimately adjust to LPR status. More specifically, §508 would exempt
aliens who have worked in the United States for three years and who have earned an
advanced degree in science, technology, engineering, or math from the numerical
limits on permanent admissions. S. 2611/2612 also would create a new “F-4”
student visa for advanced degree candidates studying in the fields of math,
engineering, technology or the physical sciences at the end of their course of study.
The proposed F-4 visa would allow eligible students to either return to their country
of origin or remain in the United States for up to one year and seek employment in
their relevant field of study. In S. 2611/2612, the proposed F-4 foreign students
would then be able to adjust to LPR status outside of the statutory numerical limits
on employment-based LPRs.
H-1B Reform. On July 18, 2005, Representative Nancy Johnson introduced
the USA Jobs Protection Act of 2003 (H.R. 3322), which would make several
changes to current law on H-1B visas, as well as revised the L visa category. In H.R.
3322, the lay-off protection provisions in current law pertaining to H-1B-dependent
employers would be broadened to cover all employers hiring H-1B workers. In
addition, the lay-off protection period would be expanded from 90 days before and
after hiring H-1B workers to 180 days. The bill also would give DOL the authority
to initiate investigations of H-1B employers if there is reasonable cause.
As introduced by Representative Bill Pascrell on November 17, 2005, the
Defend the American Dream Act of 2005 (H.R. 4378) would make substantial
changes to the H-1B visa. Among other reforms, it would: require employers of
H-1B nonimmigrants to use one of three specified methods (whichever results in the
39 S.Amdt. 3192 is based on the legislative language that the Senate Committee on the
Judiciary approved on March 27, 2006.
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highest wages) to determine wages for purposes of required wage attestations;
require employers to actively engage in recruitment efforts and, require employers
who previously employed one or more H-1B nonimmigrants to submit with their
labor condition application (LCA) a copy of the W-2 Wage and Tax Statement filed
with respect to those nonimmigrants. It also would extend to 180 days the period
during which certain H-1B employers must show nondisplacement of U.S. workers.
It further would prohibit employers from outsourcing or otherwise contracting for the
placement of an H-1B nonimmigrant with another employer, regardless of whether
the other employer is H-1B dependent employer. It would reduce the period of H-1B
authorized admission from six to three years and would eliminate the exemption
from H-1B numerical admission limitations aliens with a U.S. master’s or higher
degree. It would require the Secretary of Labor to be responsible for investigations
of wage complaints and allegations of fraud in the filing of LCAs and would create
a private right of action for persons harmed by an employer’s violation of labor
condition requirements.
H-1B Repeal. On March 15, 2005, Representative Tom Tancredo introduced
H.R. 1325, which would repeal the authority for H-1B nonimmigrants in the INA.