EB-1 visas halted for Chinese, Indians
Updated: 2016-08-23 10:42
By Amy He in New York(China Daily USA)
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Visas designated for exceptional talent put on temporary hold by State Dept
The US State Department has temporarily halted EB-1 visa applications from Chinese and Indian nationals due to a "dramatic increase" in worldwide demand for the visas, which are granted to immigrants with extraordinary abilities or skills and want to live in the US.
A State Department spokesperson told China Daily in an email that it halted the application process to make sure it does not exceed the allotted annual limit, which is about 40,000 for the fiscal year running from October to October. No more than 7 percent of visas can go to applicants from any one country, which means 2,800 each for China and India.
"Not all countries' nationals apply in sufficient numbers to meet these limits, leaving extra visas left over," the spokesperson said. "To assure these visas are used, our experts make calculations based on current demand and open up the extra visas to nationals of countries, such as India and China, which have already met their per-country annual limit."
"In recent years, China and India have benefitted from our making these extra visas available, but because of the increase in demand and the fact that nationals of these countries have already reached their per-country annual limits, we are required to temporarily stop issuing visas to Chinese and Indian nationals," the spokesperson added.
The EB-1 visa is granted to applicants in three categories: those with extraordinary ability, outstanding professors and researchers, and multinational managers or executives who may be transferring from one branch of their company to another.
The temporary halt does not come with any immediate restrictions. Those who filed a petition for the visa can still get their employment and travel documents, but applicants cannot get to the next step of the process - the actual green card application - until the halt is reset in October, according to immigration lawyers.
Anyone with an approved petition is not allowed to apply for an adjustment of status or a visa until more become available in October.
"They'll have the employment and travel document, and they'll be able to work without being sponsored, so it gives them a lot of flexibility anyway. They do have to keep working in their field, but that's the only limitation," said Merrill Cohen, a New York-based immigration attorney.
"We've been doing EB-1 and national interest visas, but now we just have to advise people that they're not going to get their green cards anytime soon, if they're Chinese or Indian," she said.
amyhe@chinadailyusa.com
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