Staff Writer, CNET News.com
June 9, 2001, 6:00 a.m. PT
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1007-200-6229593.html?tag=prntfr
A new program to speed the H-1B visa process for an additional fee is under 
attack from immigrants and likely to rile Americans who fear the growing 
ranks of foreigners in the U.S. technology industry.

The little-known program, which begins July 30, is criticized by immigrants 
and their advocates, who say it creates a sort of digital divide between 
skilled professionals and other foreigners who come to the United States, 
including their spouses and dependent relatives.

Skilled professionals with a job offer to work in the United States must 
usually wait six weeks or longer to secure their H-1B visas, which have a 
standard application fee of $1,100 (not including attorneys fees or related 
expenses). But the new service offered by the Immigration and Naturalization 
Service will guarantee a 15-day turnaround for an additional $1,000.

The INS promises customers who sign up for the Premium Processing Service an 
approval notice, denial, request for evidence or notice of investigation for 
fraud within 15 calendar days. If the INS fails to process the petition 
within that time, it will refund the $1,000.

Premium customers also receive a dedicated phone number and e-mail address 
to check on the status of their petition or ask any other questions they may 
have concerning their petition. The new service is a result of legislation 
that the U.S. attorney general signed in December to reduce the backlog of 
visa applications.

H-1B visas typically go to computer programmers and engineers from Asia, 
Europe and Israel, but the largest number of applicants come from India. 
Required to have a college degree or relevant work experience, the workers 
were an economical way to plug employment holes during the technology boom 
and hiring frenzy of the late 1990s, and their numbers transformed the 
technology industry.

H-1B applicants are now ubiquitous in California's Silicon Valley. San Jose 
has more ethnic Indians than 37 states, according to the 2000 U.S. Census. 
The Indian population of tech hubs such as Fairfax County, Va., and 
Middlesex County, Mass., more than doubled from 1990 to 2000. In King 
County, Wash., home of Microsoft, the Indian population more than tripled.

The INS' new service aims to clear out an H-1B application backlog, 
especially in California and the West, where foreign workers must wait at 
least seven weeks after application to hear from the INS. But it's unclear 
whether the service will backfire or work as the government intends.

Murali Krishna Devarakonda, a director of the Budd Lake, N.J.-based 
Immigrants' Support Network, said offering a premium service is like the 
state of California opening a new lane on a congested highway: Although it 
may ease a backlog in the short term, it will ultimately encourage more 
traffic and eventually become clogged itself.

Devarakonda, a computer consultant working with an extended H-1B visa, also 
questioned what the premium service would mean for smaller companies that 
can't afford the $1,000 fee.

"What they're saying is that we'll give you poor service, and those who pay 
extra might get decent service--and 'might' is the operative word," 
Devarakonda said. "INS is a huge beast and there's little we can do to move 
it or shake it, but we'll take what we can. At least this might be temporary 
relief."

H-1B visa candidates for expedited service will likely be senior managers 
and highly paid consultants, immigration experts said. Because 
companies--not individuals--sponsor H-1Bs, they may be more willing to 
accept the $1,000 fee as part of the price for recruiting a top executive.

"The best and the brightest will want it. It's for companies trying to bring 
in the stars--the managerial guy transferred from the Tel Aviv office who's 
going to make $200,000 a year," said Jon Velie, who runs an immigration law 
firm in Norman, Okla., and also helps immigrants with an online visa 
application site. "Another $1,000 isn't going to matter if the guy is 
billing out that much in a single day."

The program is likely to come under attack from U.S. groups that oppose 
importation of workers. The anti-foreign movement is gaining support as the 
economy cools and companies lay off tens of thousands of workers, both 
American and foreign.

The Coalition for the Future American Worker is a Washington-based umbrella 
organization of professional trade groups and immigration reform groups. 
CFAW is bitterly opposed to any policy that encourages U.S. companies to 
look abroad for talent.

"Late last year Congress admitted thousands of special high-tech foreign 
workers, even as the economy was slowing and reports of massive fraud in the 
program were circulating," the group wrote on its Web site. "This year, many 
of those H-1B foreign workers are still sitting idle in the United States, 
while American high-tech workers are increasingly scrambling for 
employment."

Despite opposition, some groups say the program offers relatively little for 
immigrants--especially for those seeking a permanent green card instead of 
an H-1B visa, or for H-1B holders trying to secure visas for relatives. 
Although the premium service will soon be offered for H-1B visa applicants 
and is already offered to dozens of others seeking visas for employment 
reasons, it does not apply to those seeking green cards or family-based 
petitions.

"It raises a broader concern: Are we going to have a two-tier system of 
haves and have-nots?" asked Steven Thal, a private immigration attorney in 
Minneapolis. Thal's corporate clients have expressed interest in expedited 
service, but many individual clients have been waiting years for visas.

"Are we unfairly giving this advantage to business employment categories and 
not giving the same priority to family-based petitions?" Thal asked. "The 
answer certainly isn't for the INS to say, 'OK, we'll give families a 
priority and charge them an extra $1,000 for expeditious service.' We're 
going to be watching this situation very closely."
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