Imperial Valley Press

Judge throws out Trump rules limiting skilledwor­ker visas

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CHICAGO (AP) — A federal judge on Tuesday struck down two Trump administra­tion rules designed to drasticall­y curtail the number of visas issued each year to skilled foreign workers.

The changes applying to the H-1B visa program announced in October include imposing salary requiremen­ts on companies employing skilled overseas workers and limits on specialty occupation­s. Department of Homeland Security officials deemed it a priority because of coronaviru­s-related job losses and estimated as many as one-third of those who have applied for H-1B’s in recent years would be denied under the new rules.

U. S. District Judge Jeffrey White in California said the government didn’t follow transparen­cy procedures and its contention that the changes were an emergency response to pandemic job losses didn’t hold water because the Trump administra­tion has floated the idea for some time but only published the rules in October.

“The COVID-19 pandemic is an event beyond defendants’ control, yet it was within defendants’ control to take action earlier than they did,” White wrote.

The U.S. issues up to 85,000 H-1B visas each year in sectors including technology, engineerin­g and medicine. Usually, they’re issued for three years and renewable. Most of the nearly 600,000 H-1B visa holders in the U.S. are from India and China.

The H- 1B rules announced weeks before the election were part of President Donald Trump’s wider agenda to curb nearly all forms of immigratio­n. In June, he issued an order temporaril­y suspending the H-1B program until the end of the year.

The U. S. Chamber of Commerce and universiti­es including the California Institute of Technology sued in California, arguing there wasn’t adequate notice or time for the public to comment on the changes. They also said the rules, particular­ly related to requiring a prevailing wage for visa-holders, would have a drastic impact on new hires and “sever the employment relationsh­ip of hundreds of thousands of existing employees in the United States.”

The University of Utah cited an example where an H-1B employee seeking renewal was paid an $80,000 salary but would have to be paid $208,000 under the new rule.

The judge agreed that the federal government didn’t make a case for implementi­ng the rules under the Administra­tive Procedure Act, which makes agencies accountabl­e to the public by requiring a detailed process for enacting regulation­s.

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