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The ABC’s of Immigration: Third Preference Employment Based Immigration - Skilled and Professional Workers The
EB-3 category is the focus of this article. How many visas are available for skilled and
professional workers in this category? Each
year 140,000 employment-based immigrant visas are available. Ten thousand
of these are available to immigrant investors, the EB-5 visa category. Ten
thousand are available to “special immigrants,” such as religious workers,
certain employees of the US government abroad, and widows and widowers of US
citizens, the EB-4 visa category. The remaining 120,000 visas are divided
between the first three preferences. Forty thousand visas are available in
the first preference, EB-1, which covers international managers and executives,
outstanding professors and researchers, and people of extraordinary ability.
Forty thousand visas, plus any that are not used in the EB-1 category, are
available in the second preference, EB-2, which is available to aliens of
exceptional ability and advanced degree professionals. Forty thousand
visas, plus any that remain from the other two categories are available to the
third category, EB-3, which is available to -
people with a bachelor’s degree and skilled workers, and -
unskilled workers. What is required for someone to qualify for employment based preference?
·
The
alien must be offered a full-time, permanent position in the US (note:
there are some exceptions to this requirement in the first two preference
categories). ·
The
Department of Labor must certify that there are no available US workers (note:
there are some exceptions to this requirement in the first two preference
categories). ·
The
alien must meet the minimum requirements for the position offered and the
employer must be able to pay the salary offered. What is required for EB-3 petitions? All
petitions filed in the EB-3 category require a job offer and a labor
certification (the labor certification process is discussed in depth in a
different article). Despite this common element, there are important
differences between the three subgroups. Regardless of the total number of
visas available in the EB-3 category, only 10,000 visas are available each year
for unskilled workers. The result of this is a backlog in the “other
workers” category. The category has been backlogged by about six years
as of mid-2005. The rest of the EB-3 category has also been backlogged recently
and is expected to become more and more oversubscribed in the next few years.
Consequently, applicants would be wise to begin planning early to deal with
their permanent residency. This
category covers “unskilled labor,” defined by the Department of Labor as
work that takes less than two years training or experience to perform.
Because there is an annual limit of 10,000 visas in this subcategory, regardless
of how many are available in the entire EB-3 category, there are extreme
backlogs in visa numbers for this category. Currently this backlog is
about six years.
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