The Borneo Post

Trump eyes reform of H-1B visas for skilled workers

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump wants to retool the fabled H-1B visas for skilled workers sought by Silicon Valley heavyweigh­ts, a White House official said Monday.

There are, however, limits to the scope of his action in the absence of a broader legislativ­e plan.

These time-limited work permits meant for scientists, engineers and computer programmer­s are an important gateway for many Indians attracted by Silicon Valley.

Trump yesterday signed a decree while in Kenosha, Wisconsin, ordering the Labour, Justice and Homeland Security department­s to propose reforms so that the H1B programme goes back to its roots.

“Its original intent (was) awarding visas to the most skilled and highest paid applicants — crucially, at such time as these reforms are eventually implemente­d, it will prevent the programme from being used to displace American workers,” a White House official said.

“For too long, rather than just allowing the best to come (...), the H-1B programme has been applied in a bad way for US workers,” the White House said. The executive order will aim to support stated Trump priorities of ‘buy American, hire American’.

Immigratio­n authoritie­s already announced earlier in April measures to combat ‘ fraud and abuse’ in issuing the visas.

The steps announced Monday come when the US opens the annual allocation of some 85,000 H-1B visas.

The US president cannot, by a simple decree, change the number of visas allocated.

But the White House hopes, by signing the decree will build momentum before a possible legislativ­e reform.

“This is a transition­al step to get towards a more skilled based and merit based version,” a White House official told AFP. “There is a lot we can do administra­tively, and the rest will be done hopefully legislativ­ely.”

The US offers 85,000 H-1B visas every year, most of which are snapped up by Indian outsourcer­s whose employees fill a skill gap in US engineerin­g. Applicatio­ns are vastly oversubscr­ibed and are allocated via a lottery system. — AFP

Its original intent (was) awarding visas to the most skilled and highest paid applicants — crucially, at such time as these reforms are eventually implemente­d, it will prevent the programme from being used to displace American workers White House official

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