Thursday, June 14, 2012

DOL INCREASES DENIAL/AUDIT RATES FOR PERMS

Disturbing statistics from the U.S. Department of Labor. The DOL has just released its PERM statistics for government Fiscal Year 2012. Year to date, (Oct. 1, 2011 – May 30, 2012), they have received 43,100 PERM applications and certified only 27,600 out of the overall number. 5,600 applications were denied and 2,100 were withdrawn. The others have been audited. So, basic math will have the approval rate at about 64% which means the denial/audit rates are increasing to 37% even while the majority of the PERMs are filed in the computer/math fields and 90% require a bachelor or a master's degree.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

H-1B CAP REACHED FOR FY2013

The government's fiscal year FY 2013 did not start yet but the H-1B visa Cap was reached about 3.5 months before it started. USCIS just today updated its website with the following language: On June 11, 2012, USCIS received a sufficient number of petitions to reach the statutory cap for FY 2013. On June 7, 2012, USCIS also received more than 20,000 H-1B petitions on behalf of persons exempt from the cap under the advanced degree exemption. USCIS will reject petitions subject to the cap for H-1B specialty occupation workers seeking an employment start date in FY 2013 that are received after June 11, 2012. USCIS continues to accept petitions exempted from the cap and DOD cooperative research worker H-1B petitions and Chile/Singapore H-1B1 petitions requesting an employment start date in FY 2013.
New H-1B filings that are not cap-exempt will be accepted for FY2014 starting on October 1, 2014 (and presumably could be filed on April 1, 2014). This is a very long time away. Congress needs to get its act together and increase the quota on a permanent basis.

Monday, June 11, 2012

USCIS MAY BE DRASTICALLY SHORTCHANGING EMPLOYERS TENS OF THOUSANDS OF H-1B APPROVALS

From Greg Siskind, our guest blogger: My friend David Rubman has been quietly pursuing data for months to confirm what he has long suspected - that USCIS is actually issuing far fewer than 85,000 H-1B approvals each year (65,000 for the regular cap and 20,000 for the masters cap). How is this possible? Because USCIS calculates how many H-1B applications it will accept based on estimates of the number of cases it will deny. And they appear to be way off in their estimates. H-1B denial rates have soared over the last few years, but USCIS has not seen fit to take more H-1B applications to account for the shift. And they're also supposed to add withdrawn or revoked H-1Bs back in to the mix. USCIS ought to be reopening the application process when they err in their calculations. This year, the cap is going to be hit 15 months before the end of the fiscal year (September 30, 2013). They will have plenty of time to count and reopen the application process. But under the existing system, when they announce the cap is hit in the next few days, the process will be over until USCIS starts taking applications for the next fiscal year. The White House can't bypass Congress to increase H-1B numbers. But they can make sure that the entire quota is actually exhausted. According to David's calculations, as many as 20,000 H-1Bs per year have been wasted because of USCIS' secretive process for counting H-1B numbers. USCIS likes to throw around the word "fraud" pretty loosely when it comes to how employers use the H-1B program, but wouldn't it be ironic if it turns out that the agency has been misleading Congress and the public regarding how many H-1B approvals it is issuing? It's about time USCIS opens up regarding how it is counting numbers and why they are not reopening the cap when it is found that additional numbers are available.

Thursday, June 7, 2012

AILA WARNS TO FILE H-1B PETITIONS BY MONDAY

The American Immigration Lawyers Association just sent an alert as follows: Assuming that the rate of H-1B filings has remained at least constant at 1,800 per day, another 7,200 cap-subject non-master's H-1B petitions will have been filed by the close of business today (June 7, 2012). Add that to the announced 55,600 filed as of June 1, 2012, that means that nearly 63,000 cap-subject H-1B petitions will have been filed by tonight. USCIS sets aside some (approximately 1,500 for Chile/Singapore), and accepts a number in excess of the total cap allocation of 65,000, to take into account denials and withdrawals. Some data suggests that the total number of cap-subject non-master's H-1B petitions taken in is in the neighborhood of 70,000. All of this suggests that for planning purposes, submission of H-1B petitions for delivery to service centers by Monday, June 11, 2012, (which means getting them in the hands of couriers by Saturday for Monday delivery), may be prudent.

Monday, June 4, 2012

USCIS UPDATES H-1B VISA COUNT ON 6/1/2012: AT 55,600

Less than 10,000 H-1B visas are left for FY2013. USCIS just issued another H-1B cap update. As of June 1, 2012, they have accepted approximately 55,600 H-1B petitions subject to the regular H-1B visa cap plus an additional number of 18,700 of petitions of the U.S. advanced degree quota. The limit is being reached quickly, with over 8,000 visas used in a week so there will probably be another week to submit the visas and then they will be gone until October 1, 2013. We are rushing to get everything filed on time for everyone.

Friday, June 1, 2012

DOL PERM DENIAL OR WITHDRAWN RATE CLIMBS TO 33.6%

DOL just released statistics on its PERM processing cases. As of March 2012, the rate of denied and withdrawn PERM cases was 33.6% of all cases adjudicated in March. For the current fiscal year (FY-2012) from 10/1/11-3/26/12, the rate of denied and withdrawn cases was 25%. The statistics are alarming, and this is a significant jump (of over 20%) in the denial rate of labor certifications. This is a significant change and a higher rate of denials than in the past. From FY-2008 to FY-2010, DOL approved 81.67% of labor certification applications filed according to its statistics. While the job outlook situation in the nation is still not bright, it did improve significantly from the recession and DOL will most likely be light years late to catch the trend.