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U.S. Tech Lobby Against Ending Work Permits To Spouses Of H1-B Visa Holders

Tech giants against ending work permits for H1-B spouses

U.S. passports are arranged for a photograph in New York, U.S. (Photographer: Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg)
U.S. passports are arranged for a photograph in New York, U.S. (Photographer: Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg)

Influential lawmakers and representatives of the American IT industry, including Facebook, have opposed the U.S. President Donald Trump administration's proposed plan to withdraw work permits to the spouses of H1-B visa holders, a majority of whom are Indian professionals.

The opposition to the Trump administration's plans comes a day after the American media reported a letter from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services about its decision to terminate the Obama-era regulation that granted work permits to H-4 visa holders, spouses of H1-B visa holders, a majority of whom are Indian professionals, and are mostly women.

“Rescinding this rule and removing tens of thousands of people from the American workforce would be devastating to their families, and would hurt our economy,” Silicon Valley-based FWD.US, which was founded by top IT companies like Facebook, Google and Microsoft, said in a report released yesterday. “This policy is important because it allows certain individuals to secure gainful employment without having to wait for their spouses to receive permanent residency, many of whom are experiencing a processing backlog of more than a decade,”

Roughly 80 percent of H-4 visa holders are women, and many had successful jobs and held advanced degrees in their native countries before coming to the U.S. with their H1-B spouses, it said. Without the H-4 work authorisation rule, the spouses of H1-B high-skilled employees would be unable to work legally and contribute financially to their households and communities, as well as pay taxes on their wages, unless they had alternative immigration avenues for work authorisation, FWD.US added.

“H-4 work authorisation has allowed an estimated 100,000 people to begin working and further integrate into their communities,” the report quoted a group of 15 top American lawmakers from California as saying. In a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen M Nielson, the lawmakers argued that the Obama-era H-4 rule lessened the burden on thousands of H1-B recipients and their families while they transition from non-immigrants to lawful permanent residents by allowing their families to earn dual incomes.

Many entrepreneurs used their EADs to start businesses that now employ US citizens. “Eliminating this benefit removes an important incentive for highly skilled immigrants to remain here to invest in and grow our economy to the benefit of all Americans,” the letter signed by, among others, Congresswoman Anna Eshoo and Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi, said.

“The H-4 rule is a matter of both economic competitiveness and maintaining family unity. The United States has already invested in these workers with years of expertise and we should not be sending them abroad to innovate and use their experience and talents against US businesses. We ask that you reconsider the revocation of the H-4 rule,” the lawmakers said in the letter dated March 5.

As the issue affects a large number of highly qualified Indian professionals, mostly women, the Indian Embassy too has been engaging with lawmakers and officials of the Trump administration.

“Eliminating work authorisation for roughly 100,000 H-4 visa holders, most of whom are educated women like me, will hurt our country and have negative consequences on tens of thousands of American families. We must protect legal immigration channels that will help the US remain at the forefront of innovation for generations to come,” said Maria Navas-Moreno, co-founder of Lever Photonics and an H-4 visa holder.

As employers continue to navigate the outdated immigration system, the administration should “reconsider its likely rescission” of the H-4 visa rule, that granted work authorisation to a limited subset of spouses and was critical in helping employers recruit and retain a high-skilled workforce, as well as in keeping the U.S. competitive in the global innovation race, Karolina Filipiak, government affairs director at the Information Technology Industry Council, said.