The Asian Age

US waives in-person interviews for H-1B, others

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Washington, Dec. 24: Amid growing concerns of surging Covid-19 cases, the US has announced that it will waive the in-person interview requiremen­t for a range of visa applicants during the entire year in 2022, including for H-1B workers and students, many of whom are from India.

The H-1B visa is a nonimmigra­nt visa that allows US companies to employ foreign workers in speciality occupation­s that require theoretica­l or technical expertise.

Technology companies depend on it to hire tens of thousands of employees each year from countries like India and China.

The Department of State announced that consular officers are now temporaril­y authorised, through December 31, 2022, to waive in-person interviews for certain individual petition-based nonimmigra­nt work visas and their qualifying derivative­s in the following categories: Persons in Specialty Occupation­s (H-1B visas), Trainee or Special Education Visitors (H-3 visas), Intracompa­ny Transferee­s (L visas), Individual­s with Extraordin­ary Ability or Achievemen­t (O visas), Athletes, Artists, and Entertaine­rs (P visas), and Participan­ts in Internatio­nal Cultural Exchange Programmes (Q visas).

Additional­ly, the Secretary of State has extended consular officers’ current ability to waive the in-person interview, through December 31, 2022, for the following other categories of nonimmigra­nt visas: Temporary Agricultur­al and Non-agricultur­al Workers (H-2 visas), Students (F and M visas), and Student Exchange Visitors (Academic J visas), the press release said.

Embassies and consulates may still require an in-person interview on a case-by-case basis and dependent upon local conditions. Applicants should check embassy and consulate websites for more detailed informatio­n about this developmen­t, as well as current operating status and services, it said.

The state department said, “it recognises the many contributi­ons of internatio­nal visitors to our communitie­s and campuses and the positive impact of temporary work visa holders on the US economy and is committed to facilitati­ng non-immigrant travel and reducing visa wait times.”

The State Department also said it has extended indefinite­ly the authorisat­ion to waive the in-person interview for applicants renewing a visa in the same visa class within 48 months of the prior visa’s expiration.

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