Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
EB-3 is a visa preference category for United States employment-based permanent residency. It is intended for "skilled workers", "professionals", and "other workers". [1] Those are prospective immigrants who don't qualify for the EB-1 or EB-2 preferences. The EB-3 requirements are less stringent, but the backlog may be longer.
The Fairness for High Skilled Immigrants Act or 'Equal Access to Green cards for Legal Employment Act or Immigration Visa Efficiency and Security Act is proposed United States federal legislation that would reform U.S. immigration policy, primarily by removing per-country limitations on employment-based visas, increasing the per-country numerical limitation for family-sponsored immigrants, and ...
Employment-based green cards are allocated primarily based on the applicant’s country of birth, rather than their skills or contributions. This outdated system has created enormous backlogs for ...
A backlog in cases of abused or abandoned young immigrants seeking green cards has more than doubled in the last two years, according to a new analysis of federal data by advocacy groups that was ...
Immigration Voice is a 501(c)(4) non-profit organization that helps immigrants through legislative and executive branches of government, solving problems in the employment-based immigration process. The organization focuses on engaging with both legislative and executive branches of the government to advocate for reforms aimed at improving the ...
prolonged backlog in processing green cards is threatening to dethrone the US standing atop the global competition for tech talent, according to one Google Executive. The processing delays stem in ...
Critics of the H-1B visa program say the reason for the backlog for employer-sponsored green cards is in part due to the dual intent nature of the H-1B visa, allowing a temporary non-immigrant to gain an employer-sponsored green card. The issue critics have with dual intent is that both non-immigrant temporary guest workers and people who do ...
Employment-based immigration was divided amongst five occupational categories in the 1990 Immigration Act (the 1965 Act had only two). [2] The Act provided 140,000 visas per year for job-based immigration. [4] These categories were: EB-1 visa (for an alien of extraordinary ability) EB-2 visa; EB-3 visa; EB-4 visa; EB-5 visa