Congress Fails to Pass Worker Visa Relief
Congress
has quietly dropped a section of the budget savings bill passed this weekend
that would have raised more than a half billion dollars and offered relief to
backlogs in the H-1B non-immigrant program and in employment-based green card
categories. The measure had been included in a Senate version of the bill, but
the House version of the budget bill only had a provision calling for a tax on
L-1 visas. Several Republican members the House of Representatives, the chamber
that holds more hostile views on immigration, threatened to vote against the
compromise bill if the immigration provisions were not dropped. All immigration
provisions, including the House’s L-1 visa tax, were stripped out of the bill
at the last moment.
The
bill would have made the following reforms:
H-1B
visas reform
Changes
to the H-1B program would have included the following:
Employment-based
green card changes
The
proposal would have made several key reforms to employment-based green card
filing including the following:
L-1
visa reform
The
House and Senate each approved provisions to tax L-1s between $750 and $1500.
The
House is not expected to include these provisions in its version of the budget
bill.
Groups
that pushed for the legislation vow to bring the measure up again early in the
new calendar year when Congress returns from its Christmas recess.
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