http://travel.state.gov/visa/frvi/bulletin/bulletin_4384.html
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This blog is to enlighten the thousands of talented folks who wish to immigrate to the USA based on their skills or who wish to pursue higher education and then have a career in the USA. Some of the facts may contradict the rosy picture painted by your local or the international media.
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House Judiciary Renews Consideration of Measures That Will Harm American WorkersThe Judiciary Committee is meeting again Wednesday, September 17th for another try!
FAIR Action Alert
Thanks to your calls and e-mails last week, efforts to pass four detrimental immigration-related bills stalled in the House Judiciary Committee. Unfortunately, victory was short-lived. Committee leaders remain committed to passing these bills, which would flood the workplace with hundreds of thousands of worker visas.Three of the four bills to be considered in Wednesday's markup amount to nothing more than gifts to big business special interests seeking to dramatically increase the stream of cheap foreign labor coming into the American workforce during these tough economic times:
- H.R. 5882 would reach back to 1992 and "recapture" employment-based and family-based visas, potentially adding over 550,000 new green cards.
- H.R. 5924 would lift the cap on employment-based visas for nurses and physical therapists until 2011.
- H.R. 6020 would grant amnesty to illegal aliens who are family members of armed forces personnel.
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EB1 | Current | No change |
EB2 | 01 Apr 2004 | No change |
EB3 | Unavailable | Was 01 Nov 2001 |
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EB1 | Current | No change |
EB2 | 01 Apr 2004 | No change |
EB3 | Unavailable | Was 22 Mar 2003 |
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EB3 | Unavailable | Was 01 Mar 2006 |
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EB3 | Unavailable | Was 01 Jul 2002 |
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EB2 | Current | No change |
EB3 | Unavailable | Was 01 Mar 2006 |
Someday, the country will recognize the true cost of its war on illegal immigration. The true cost is to the national identity: the sense of who we are and what we value. It will hit us once the enforcement fever breaks, when we look at what has been done and no longer recognize the country that did it.
A nation of immigrants is holding another nation of immigrants in bondage, exploiting its labor while ignoring its suffering, condemning its lawlessness while sealing off a path to living lawfully.
This is not about forcing people to go home and come back the right way. Ellis Island is closed. Legal paths are clogged or do not exist. Some backlogs are so long that they are measured in decades or generations. A bill to fix the system died a year ago this month. The current strategy, dreamed up by restrictionists and embraced by Republicans and some Democrats, is to force millions into fear and poverty.
The restrictionist message is brutally simple — that illegal immigrants deserve no rights, mercy or hope. It refuses to recognize that illegality is not an identity; it is a status that can be mended by making reparations and resuming a lawful life. Unless the nation contains its enforcement compulsion, illegal immigrants will remain forever Them and never Us, subject to whatever abusive regimes the powers of the moment may devise.
Every time this country has singled out a group of newly arrived immigrants for unjust punishment, the shame has echoed through history. Think of the Chinese and Irish, Catholics and Americans of Japanese ancestry. Children someday will study the Great Immigration Panic of the early 2000s, which harmed countless lives, wasted billions of dollars and mocked the nation’s most deeply held values.
85% of unskilled labor migration goes to the EU and 5% to the US, whereas 55% of skilled labor goes to the US and only 5% to the EU.Imagine the scenario where even 25% of the world's skilled labor goes to the EU. What would that do to the US competitiveness?
In 2007, 270,000 high-skilled Europeans emigrated to the US, Australia, Canada and New Zealand.So, the region is experiencing a brain drain for better options but that only leaves openings for people from the rest of the world to fill in. I have to remind the readers that the looking at the June 2008 visa bulletin, you can see how much more quicker it is for people from Europe to get US permanent residency compared to the people from over subscribed countries like India or China.
1 EUR = 1.57 USD (as of today)If salaries were a deciding factor, this equation above fixes a lot of the disparity. (As a side note, I just heard that a bunch of European tourists with their fatter wallets have landed in Martha's Vineyard for the summer. It's cheaper for them to vacation here than in Europe.)
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EB2 | 01 Apr 2004 | Advanced by 3 months |
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EB3 | 01 Mar 2006 | No change |
Sen. Gregg stated, "Talent is a nation’s most important resource in today’s information age, and our nation’s immigration policies need to catch up to this economic reality. In addition to increasing the number of H-1B visas and employment-based visas for highly skilled workers, I believe that Congress should realign our immigration programs so they better meet our economic needs, including the well-documented shortage of workers with advanced degrees in the math and sciences. By converting a lottery visa program that has marginal skills requirements into one that is focused on the best and the brightest, we strengthen our competitive advantage, spur economic and job growth here in the United States, and deter employers from sending work overseas where highly skilled talent is located. Our visa lottery programs should not just benefit those who are selected, but should have significant positive ramifications for our nation as a whole. I look forward to working with my colleges on this measure and other immigration proposal to keep America competitive."