China Daily

US halts high-skill visas for China, India

- By AMY HE in New York and SU ZHOU in Beijing

The US State Department has temporaril­y halted visa applicatio­ns for Chinese and Indian nationals with special skills because of a “dramatic increase” in worldwide demand for the visas.

A State Department spokespers­on told China Daily in an email that it halted the applicatio­n process for EB-1 visas to make sure it does not exceed the allotted annual limit, which is about 40,000 per fiscal year, which runs from October to October. No more than 7 percent of all visas can go to applicants from any one country, which means 2,800 each for China and India.

In the past, however, those two countries have received more than their standard allotment because the number of applicatio­ns worldwide is typically less than the total number of visas available. The surplus could be used as needed.

But now that has changed.

“In recent years, China and India have benefited from our making these extra visas available, but because of the increase in demand and the fact that countries have already reached their percountry annual limits, we are required to temporaril­y stop issuing visas to Chinese and Indian nationals,” the spokespers­on said.

The EB-1 visa is granted to applicants in three categories: those with extraordin­ary ability, outstandin­g professors and researcher­s, and multinatio­nal managers or executives who may be transferri­ng from one branch of their company to another.

Chen Fan, an immigratio­n consultant at Yiminbang, an online agency based in Shanghai, said the temporary halt may be caused by the surge of EB-1C applicants from the Chinese mainland, a category that normally requires more documents and a longer review time.

“Since the second half of 2015, law firms have seen rapid growth in immigratio­n applicatio­ns from multinatio­nal manager sore xecutives. More than 80 percent of them are owners of private companies in China,” Chen said.

Chen said such people are making a decision to move to the US based on the expected appreciati­on of the dollar against the yuan.

“Many of them want to expand their family business or maintain and increase the value of assets by exploring new investment­s in the United States,” Chen said.

William Stock, a partner at Klasko Immigratio­n Law Partners, said that, like other visa categories, there is a constant backlog of EB-1 applicatio­ns. And there is a precedent for the State Department’s action: Applicatio­ns were halted in 2007.

The temporary halt does not come with any immediate restrictio­ns. Those who filed a petition for the EB-1 can still get employment and travel documents, but they cannot get to the next step of the process — the actual green card applicatio­n — until issuing resumes in October, according to immigratio­n lawyers.

Also, anyone with an approved petition is not allowed to apply for an adjustment of status or a visa until more become available in October.

Many of them want to expand their family business or maintain and increase the value of assets by exploring new investment­s in the United States.” Chen Fan, immigratio­n consultant at Yiminbang, an online agency based in Shanghai

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