Houston Chronicle

Work ban looms in the spring for spouses of H-1B holders

- By Ethan Baron

The Homeland Security Department says a rule banning spouses of H-1B workers on track for green cards from working could be published as early as the spring.

The latest hint of a publicatio­n date came this week in a Justice Department memo to a federal appeals court that’s hearing a challenge to the work authorizat­ion for H-1B spouses that was granted in 2015 under former President Barack Obama.

Homeland Security has told lawyers in the case that the earliest possible publicatio­n date for the rule is spring 2020, but that this time frame is “aspiration­al,” the memo says.

Several previous pledges to publish the rule by specific dates also have proven aspiration­al: When Homeland Security in late 2017 first announced its plan to strip H-4 holders of the right to work, it set February 2018 as the publicatio­n date for the rule, and more delays have followed.

An estimated 100,000 foreign nationals, most of them women from India, would be affected by the work ban, University of Tennessee researcher­s have estimated.

The H-4 visa has been drawn into controvers­y over the H-1B visa, which is intended for jobs requiring specialize­d skills.

Major Silicon Valley technology firms rely heavily on the H-1B, and lobby for an expansion to the annual 85,000 cap on new visas, saying they need more of the visas to secure the world’s top talent.

Critics point to reported abuses by outsourcin­g companies, and argue that outsourcer­s, and tech firms, use the H-1B to supplant U.S. workers and drive down wages. The Trump administra­tion has taken aim at the H-1B, and dramatical­ly increased denials, especially for outsourcer­s.

The Justice Department sent the memo to the clerk of the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., regarding a lawsuit by former technology workers against Homeland Security.

The workers claim they were replaced at utility Southern California Edison by H-1B workers, and that H-4 holders compete against the tech workers in the job market, without statutory authority to work.

Homeland Security, according to the memo, wants oral arguments in that case to be put on hold as it brings the proposed work-ban rule to the publicatio­n stage. Publicatio­n is expected to trigger a public-comment period.

 ?? David Franklin / Dreamstime ?? Homeland Security officials say the earliest publicatio­n date for the rule is spring 2020.
David Franklin / Dreamstime Homeland Security officials say the earliest publicatio­n date for the rule is spring 2020.

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