The Asian Age

Relief for Indian techies, US won’t change policy

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Washington, Jan. 9: In a relief for Indian techies, the US authoritie­s on Tuesday said that the Trump administra­tion is not considerin­g any proposal that would force H1B visa holders to leave the country.

The announceme­nt by the US Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services ( USCIS) came days after reports emerged that the Trump administra­tion was considerin­g tightening H- 1B visa rules that could lead to deportatio­n of 7,50,000 Indians.

The reports had said it was mulling ending extensions for H- 1B holders.

The USCIS “is not considerin­g a regulatory change that would force H- 1B visa holders to leave the United States by changing interpreta­tion of Section 104 C of the American Competitiv­eness in the 21st Century Act ( AC21) statute that states that USCIS may grant the extensions,” an official said.

This provides for H- 1B extensions beyond the 6 year limit. “Even if it were, such a change would not likely result in these H- 1B visa holders having to leave the United States because employers could request extensions in one- year increments under section 106( a)-(b) of AC21 instead,” Jonathan Withington, Chief of Media Relations at the USCIS, said in a statement.

“The agency is considerin­g a number of policy and regulatory changes to carry out the President’s Buy American, Hire American Executive Order, including a thorough review of employment based visa programmes,” Withington said.

The statement comes after last week’s news report by US- based news agency McClatchy DC Bureau according to which the US was considerin­g new regulation­s to prevent the extension of H- 1B visas, the most sought after by Indian IT profession­als. The USCIS was never considerin­g such a policy change, he said adding that “any suggestion that USCIS changed its position because of pressure is absolutely false.”

The reported move had been opposed by both the industry and several lawmakers.

The NASSCOM had warned that any disruptive move on the visa front would be detrimenta­l for both India and the US.

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