Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
International

Senator Moves Amendments To Immigration Reform To Reduce Green Card Backlog

The Canadian Press, 15 Feb, 2018 11:55 AM
    In a move aimed at bringing in the issues of green card backlog and H-1B visa, a top American lawmaker has moved amendment to a White House-backed immigration bill that mostly focuses on illegal immigration and merit-based immigration.
     
     
    The amendments, moved by Senator Orrin Hatch, aim to eliminate annual per-country limits for employment-based green cards so that applicants from more populous countries are not unfairly discriminated against relative to applicants from less populous countries.
     
     
    “I have long said that high-skilled immigration is merit-based immigration,” Hatch said after moving the amendments on Wednesday.
     
     
    It increases worker mobility for individuals on the path to a green card by enabling such individuals to change jobs earlier in the process without losing their place in the green card line.
     
     
    It also codifies existing regulations regarding spousal work authorisation and post-education practical training.
     
     
    The amendments exempt holders of US master’s degrees or higher who are being sponsored for green cards from the annual numerical limitations on H-1B visas and subjects employers who fail to employ an H-1B worker for more than three months during the individual’s first year of work authorisation to a penalty.
     
     
    Also, it further updates the 1998 law exempting H-1B-dependent employers from certain recruitment and non-displacement requirements.
     
     
    In particular, the amendment raises from USD 60,000 to USD 100,000 the H-1B salary level at which the salary-based exemption takes effect, narrows education-based exemption to H-1B hires with a US PhD, and eliminates exemption for “super-dependent” employers altogether.
     
     
    “It’s immigration targeted at the best, the brightest, and the most highly educated. The amendments, I filed today, are focused, commonsense reforms that will make a real difference for our economy,” Hatch said.
     
     
    “In particular, they will help streamline the process by which a worker with in-demand technical skills can obtain a green card and will cut back on some of the troubling abuses we have seen with the H-1B programme. These are important reforms that can attract broad support, and I intend to pursue every opportunity to include them in the pending immigration bill,” the lawmaker said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Hurricane Harvey: Indian Student Dies In Texas Hospital After Being Rescued From Lake

    Hurricane Harvey: Indian Student Dies In Texas Hospital After Being Rescued From Lake
    Dr Suman Bhatia was home when the phone rang early on Sunday morning. It was a call from a US hospital, with a message that shook the Jaipur lecturer's world.

    Hurricane Harvey: Indian Student Dies In Texas Hospital After Being Rescued From Lake

    Texas Flooding: Indian Students Rescued From Lake Amid Hurricane Critical

    Texas Flooding: Indian Students Rescued From Lake Amid Hurricane Critical
    The Indians, studying at the Texas A&M University, are in a critical condition. They were rescued from the lake, where they had gone swimming, by a police officer on Saturday.

    Texas Flooding: Indian Students Rescued From Lake Amid Hurricane Critical

    B.C. Wildfires Could Leave Bears Hungry As Berries And Grasses Charred: Expert

    B.C. Wildfires Could Leave Bears Hungry As Berries And Grasses Charred: Expert
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Wildlife experts are warning British Columbia's severe wildfires could make bears even more troublesome as they fatten up before hibernation.

    B.C. Wildfires Could Leave Bears Hungry As Berries And Grasses Charred: Expert

    Texas Floods: Indian Mission In Houston Shares Helpline Numbers- PICS

    Texas Floods: Indian Mission In Houston Shares Helpline Numbers- PICS
    With some 200 Indian students of the University of Houston affected by floods in the wake of tropical storm Harvey, the Indian mission in the Texas city on Tuesday shared helpline numbers for worried families and relatives back in India.

    Texas Floods: Indian Mission In Houston Shares Helpline Numbers- PICS

    Quebecers Accused In Australian Cocaine Bust Have Trials Delayed Until 2018

    Quebecers Accused In Australian Cocaine Bust Have Trials Delayed Until 2018
    SYDNEY, Australia — Two of three Quebecers accused of importing cocaine into Australia aboard a luxury cruise ship last year have had their trial put off until next February.

    Quebecers Accused In Australian Cocaine Bust Have Trials Delayed Until 2018

    Ram Rahim Sentence: 2 Years After Woman Disappeared At Dera, Husband Hopes For Justice

    Ram Rahim Sentence: 2 Years After Woman Disappeared At Dera, Husband Hopes For Justice
    Kamlesh Kumar, a 27-year-old labourer from Jaipur, lost his wife during a family visit to the Sirsa-based Dera in March 2015, according to his lawyer

    Ram Rahim Sentence: 2 Years After Woman Disappeared At Dera, Husband Hopes For Justice