Friday, June 19, 2026
ADVT 
International

India Convey Concern Over H1B Visa To US

Darpan News Desk IANS, 31 Jan, 2017 12:04 PM
    India on Tuesday said it has conveyed its concern to the US over a bill being introduced in the Congress to change rules on H1B visas which is likely to impact the Indian IT industry and Indian techies working in the US.
     
    "India's interests and concerns have been conveyed both to the US administration and the US Congress at senior levels," External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Vikas Swarup said.
     
    The High-Skilled Integrity and Fairness Act of 2017, introduced in House of Representatives by California Congressman Zoe Lofgren, calls for doubling the minimum salary of H-1B visa holders to $130,000 from the current minimum wage of $60,000 - a move that could impact Indian techies.
     
    The bill, likely to be signed by President Donald Trump, would make it difficult for firms to use the programme to replace American employees with foreign workers, including from India, with lower wages.
     
     
    As Trump was preparing to issue executive orders on H1B, the draft of the order was leaked and published by some news websites on Monday.
     
    As per the leaked draft order, Trump would reverse his predecessor Barack Obama's extension of the duration of the optional practical training work visas, which allowed foreign students to stay in the US a bit longer after completion of their studies.
     
    The bill would require that employers first offer a vacant position to an equally or better qualified American worker before seeking an H1B or L-1 visa holder.
     
    It would also establish wage requirements for L-1 workers and improve H1B wage requirements to encourage companies to hire qualified American workers and prevent them from using foreign workers as a source of cheap labour.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    U.S. Congress has an early January date with Keystone XL: No. 1 bill of 2015

    U.S. Congress has an early January date with Keystone XL: No. 1 bill of 2015
    WASHINGTON — A showdown over the Keystone XL pipeline is set for early in the new year, with the Canadian oil project having been anointed as the No. 1 priority of the new Republican-dominated Congress.

    U.S. Congress has an early January date with Keystone XL: No. 1 bill of 2015

    10 horrifying mass-scale attacks targeting students

    10 horrifying mass-scale attacks targeting students
    Beslan massacre (Sep 1, 2004): 386 killed, over 700 injured. Members of Chechen leader Shamil Basayev's Riyadhin al-Salihin group took more than 1,200 school children and adults....

    10 horrifying mass-scale attacks targeting students

    UN urges debt cancellation for Ebola-affected countries

    UN urges debt cancellation for Ebola-affected countries
    The United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, UNECA, called Monday for creditors to cancel the outstanding debt of the three West African countries worst...

    UN urges debt cancellation for Ebola-affected countries

    Tributes flow for victims of Sydney hostage drama

    Tributes flow for victims of Sydney hostage drama
    Florists in the centre of Sydney were nearly sold out of flowers Tuesday after thousands of people started leaving bouquets and flowers in tributes at Martin Place...

    Tributes flow for victims of Sydney hostage drama

    Search on for suspected murderer of six people in US

    Search on for suspected murderer of six people in US
    Police officers continued their search Monday for an armed man suspected of killing six people at three different crime scenes on the outskirts of Philadelphia in the US state of Pennsylvania....

    Search on for suspected murderer of six people in US

    Gunman in Sydney hostage crisis was known to police: PM

    Gunman in Sydney hostage crisis was known to police: PM
    Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott confirmed Tuesday that the gunman at the centre of the Sydney siege, in which two hostages were shot dead...

    Gunman in Sydney hostage crisis was known to police: PM