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H-1B Immigration Attorney

Question: Help! I need an H-1B Immigration Attorney to help me. I know there is a deadline approaching to get the H-1B’s filed and I am not sure if I qualify and what the requirements are. Can you help?

Answer: Yes, you should have an H-1B Immigration Attorney help you as there are numerous requirements and if not done properly, the case will either be rejected or denied. The H-1B category is limited to alien workers filling positions in “specialty occupations” for which the alien workers have the necessary credentials. A “specialty occupation” is defined by the INA as an occupation that requires: theoretical and practical application of a body of highly specialized knowledge; and attainment of a bachelor’s or higher degree in the specific specialty (or its equivalent) as a minimum for entry into the occupation in the United States. Many times an H-1B Immigration Attorney will be able to do the research to determine if in fact the position is a “specialty occupation”, and if not, the H-1B Immigration Lawyer will be able to work with the employer and employee to determine what position is best for the H-1B.

Question: While I understand that an H-1B Immigration Attorney can do the necessary research to find the best position, are there some generalities as to what types of positions are best for H-1B’s?

Answer: With the elimination of entertainers, artists, and athletes from the H-1B category, over 50 percent of the previous users of the category have been removed from its coverage. According to the latest USCIS statistics and research from various H-1B Immigration Attorneys about 43% of petitions approved were for workers in computer-related occupations. Occupations in architecture, engineering, surveying, education, and administrative specializations constituted another 33% of the total H-1B petitions approved. As to the detailed occupation groups, more than one-third of the approved petitions (37.8%) were for aliens working as systems analysts or programmers. The second largest category (at 8.1%) was occupations in colleges and university education (i.e., university professors and teachers). Accountants, auditors and related occupations constituted another 4.6% of the total, electrical/electronics engineering occupations comprised 3.8% of the total, and other computer-related occupations comprised 3.5% of the total H-1B petitions approved. The latest statistics also reveal that 45% of petitions approved in were for workers with a bachelor’s degree. 37% of petitions approved in FY 2005 were for workers with a master’s degree, 5% had a doctorate, and 12% were for workers with a professional degree (such as a medical or law degree). However, keep in mind that even if you do not have a B.S. Degree, that an H-1B Immigration Attorney can follow the necessary procedures to submit to USCIS an equivalency for the B.S. and/or Master’s degree based on various factors such as an evaluation report, and/or a combination of work, experience and prior education.

Question: What are the numerical limitations for H-1B’s?

Answer: The 1990 Act imposed an annual limit on the number of new admissions in the H-1B category. An H-1B number must be available at the time a new petition is adjudicated. The Service will not approve an H-1B petition once the cap has been reached during a fiscal year if the petition has a date for commencement of employment that falls within that fiscal year. This is the primary reason you want to get an H-1B Immigration Attorney to get the petition prepared as soon as possible and to be submitted when the doors open again on April 1. The Service counts petitions for initial H-1B employment in determining compliance with the annual cap. Petitions for sequential H-1B employment, concurrent H-1B employment, extensions of stay, and amended petitions are not counted against the cap. The annual H-1B cap is set at 65,000. However, overall H-1B numbers are reduced by the U.S.-Chile and U.S.-Singapore Free Trade Agreements (FTAs), which set aside 6800 H-1B numbers for professionals from those two countries each fiscal year. In practical terms, therefore, just 58,200 H-1B numbers are available in the standard H-1B pool, though some unused FTA visas from a prior fiscal year may be recaptured and made available in the first six weeks of the following fiscal year. Legislation enacted in 2004 created an exemption from the cap for 20,000 advanced degree graduates of U.S. universities. The USCIS will exempt the first 20,000 petitions for H-1B workers who have a master’s degree or higher from a U.S. institution of higher learning. After those 20,000 slots are filled, the USCIS will apply petitions for H-1B workers with a master’s degree or higher against the annual cap of 65,000. Thus, the H-1B Immigration Attorney will attempt to get you under an H-1B requiring a Master’s or higher degree as there may be more available when the normal H-1B’s run out.

Apart from the 20,000 exemption for advanced degree professionals, several types of H-1B cases are exempt from the cap without regard to the number of such cases that are filed. These include: (1) petitions for employment at an exempt organization, such as an institution of higher education or a related or affiliated nonprofit entity, nonprofit research organization, and governmental research organizations (note, however, that if an H-1B professional moves from an exempt nonprofit organization to a for-profit company, he or she would then be subject to the cap); (2) petitions for an individual who has already been counted against the cap during the previous six years, unless the H-1B applicant would be eligible for a full six years of authorized admission at the time the petition is filed; (3) petitions for J-1 nonimmigrants who are changing status to H-1B and who obtained waivers through the Conrad 30 Program or other federal government programs. Make certain you inform the H-1B Immigration Attorney if you fall under one of these provisions.

The addition of 20,000 H-1B numbers for advanced-degree professionals did not prevent the cap from being reached in subsequent years. In fiscal year 2006, the 65,000 standard cap was exhausted before the start of the fiscal year and the 20,000 advanced degree limit was reached just after the start of the fiscal year. In fiscal year 2007, both the regular and advanced-degree caps were reached before the start of the fiscal year on October 1, 2006 (although the advanced-degree limit was reached at a slightly slower pace). For fiscal year 2008, the 65,000 limit was reached on April 2, 2007, the first day that cases could be filed for new H-1B employment commencing on October 1, 2007, and the advanced-degree limit was reached on April 30, 2007. For FY 2009, H-1B numbers under the standard cap were exhausted within days of the start of the filing season. On April 8, 2008, USCIS announced that, between April 1 and April 7, it had received more than enough H-1B petitions to meet the standard cap and the pool of 20,000 numbers for holders of U.S. advanced degrees for FY 2009. As a result, the agency utilized the new lottery system under a March 2008 rule to select which FY 2009 H-1B petitions would be eligible for adjudication.

Even though last year fiscal year, the H-1B’s lasted longer than normal due to the economic downturn, you should contact your H-1B Immigration Attorney as soon as possible to ensure you get in the next allotment starting on April 1.

The H-1B visa 

H-1B visa meaning

H-1B visa process

H-1B work visa for specialty occupation visa

H-3 Training Visa

This visa is for people who want to enter the United States to get trained for any number of different fields of endeavor. You do not go to a school on this type of visa, but rather, you get trained on the job at a company offering a training program.

Educational training is combined with on the job training to give you a rewarding experience in the United States. This visa is usually valid for up to eighteen months.

The H-3 training visa 

H-3 visa meaning

H-3 visa process

H-3 visa: can I apply?

What is H-2B Visas?

This is a visa to meet temporary needs (H-2’s.) U.S. employers may petition for skilled or unskilled alien workers to meet temporary or seasonal needs in positions for which qualified U.S. workers are not available. It is important to note that both the services for which the employer requests H-2 labor approval and the employer’s need for such services must be temporary. There is currently an annual cap of 66,000 visas for H-2B workers. There is currently no annual cap on visas for H-2A workers. The Department of Labor has compiled a list of H-2B Program Certifications By Occupation for the period June 1, 1999 to May 31, 2000.

The first step to hiring an H-2 worker from outside the U.S. is for the employer to apply for a temporary labor certification with the Department of Labor. These certificates are designed to assure that the admission of aliens to work in this country on a temporary basis will not adversely affect the job opportunities, wages, or working conditions of U.S. workers. The employer is required to file the labor certification with the I-129 petition. For specific procedures on filing, please visit the Department of Labor’s Employment and Training Administration.

Dependents (spouses and unmarried children under 21 years of age) of H-2 workers are entitled to H-4 status with the same restrictions as the principal. Dependents may not be employed under the H-4 classification. A single petition may cover multiple workers if:

  • they will perform the same services
    -they will work in the same location
    -they are included on the same labor certification and,
    -they come from places that are served by the same U.S. consulate, or, if visa exempt, they will enter at the same port of entry.
    -It is not necessary to identify requested H-2A beneficiaries by name (unless only a single worker is needed) if they are unnamed on the underlying labor certification. H-2B beneficiaries must be named unless circumstances (e.g. emergencies) make identification by name impossible. The number of unnamed beneficiaries must always be stated on the petition.
  • H-2A and H-2B 
  • H-2A meaning
  • H-2B Attorney
  • Employment based visas

H-1B Specialty Worker Visa

If you have a college education and a sponsor in the United States, you may qualify for this visa. American Immigration permits this type of specialty occupation work visas. It can be approved in as fast as two to three months. This visa is usually issued for a period of three years. Should you decide to stay longer, it can be extended for another 3 years. There are a limited number of these visas per year, and therefore, if you have a sponsor, you should get started right away. As a sponsor, you must pay the prevailing wage to the employee. The prevailing wage is the wage that prevails generally and is the normal wage for that type of position. When the H-1B is being prepared, the government will let us know what is the prevailing wage.

If you later decide you want a green card, you can apply for ‘Labor Certification’ while you have your Specialty Occupation Visa. Your spouse and children can come to the U.S. once you are approved. Additionally, your children can go to school without any problem.

Can I apply for Student Visa?

This is the Student Visa. It allows you to come to the U.S. to study at a wide variety of educational institutions ranging from large Universities to community colleges to specialized institutions such as cooking schools. This visa can also be used for you to come to the U.S. to study English.

F-1 nonimmigrant student (F-1 student) means an alien who has an F-1 visa.  The Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services grants such a visa to an alien who has a residence in a foreign country which he/she has no intention of abandoning, who is a bona fide student qualified to pursue a full course of study and who entered the United States temporarily and solely for the purpose of pursuing such a course of study at an established institution of learning or other recognized place of study in the United States, particularly designated by him/her and approved by the Attorney General after consultation with the Department of Education of the United States.

The Student Visa will last for as long as you are in school which depends upon the length of the course of study. Your spouse and unmarried children can come to the U.S. once your visa is approved. You can later change your status to allow you to work.

If you are out of status because of some type of violation of your F-1 Student Visa, you should try to apply for reinstatement of student status. Assuming you did not work out of status, there would be a reasonable chance of success, especially if the reason for you going out of status was not your fault.

Change status to Student Visa

F-1 student visa meaning

Student Visa Process

Can I apply for Student Visa?

How to begin preparation for an E-2 Visa?

  1. Make sure you are from a Treaty-Investor Country

The U.S. has treaties with many different countries around the world. However, if there is no treaty with the counry that you were born in, then it will not qualify you for an E-2 Visa.

  1. Make sure you have enough money to invest

There is no set number. However, the general guideline is that you want to have around $100,000 to invest in your own company in the U.S.

  1. Make sure you will manage the company

You need to make certain that you will manage the company in a supervisory or managerial capacity and not as a line type worker.

  1. Make sure you are in status

If you are inside the U.S. and will be doing a change of status, you will want to make sure that you are in legal status and have not violated your status in anyway. Otherwise, you might not be able to change your status to E-2.

  1. Keep all of your receipts and contracts

Once you would get the E-2, you need to make sure that you keep all of the receipts and contracts so that when it becomes time to renew the E-2, you are able to provide the necessary proof.

E-2 visa lawyer

E-2 visa petition

E-2 visa process

Apply for investment visa

E1/E2 Treaty Investor Trader Visas

This is the premier business Visa. If you are interested in starting your own business in the United States, you may qualify for the Treaty Investor Visa. People who want to come to the U.S. quickly and efficiently to start their own business, or to purchase an existing business can use this Visa. Numerous countries around the world have a treaty with the U.S., and it is people from these countries that can come to the U.S. on the E1 or E2 Visa.  This visa is for the entrepreneur.

The E1/E2 Visa is known as the Treaty Investor (E2) or Treaty-Trader (E1) Visa. If you want to set up a company to trade with your home country, then you may qualify as a treaty trader. This Visa does not need prior BCIS approval, and therefore, once it is properly prepared, it can be sent directly to the U.S. Consulate. This means when you and your family want to enter the U.S. rapidly to get the business operational or to do a 5 month transition of ownership, this is the perfect Visa.

There is no set minimum or maximum amount that must be invested. Our law firm will help you with the entire process. This visa can be approved in as fast as 1 to 2 months. All unmarried children under the age of 21 years and your spouse can come to the U.S. once you qualify. The children can go to school without any problems.

Our firm will prepare the E1/E2 petition in an expert manner. Additionally, a complex and detailed Business Plan will be prepared.

Finally, our firm offers an additional service. One of our immigration attorneys will accompany you to the U.S. Consulate to aid with the interview and ensure that the Consulate process goes smoothly and efficiently.

E-1 and E-2 visa

E-2 visa application

E-2 visa lawyer

The E-2 visa process

Adoption Issues

A. Children Born Out of Wedlock

The prospective adoptive parent(s) should be aware that although a child may be born out of wedlock, that child may still have two parents.

A child born out of wedlock in a country that has not eliminated all legal distinctions between “legitimate” and “illegitimate”, and who has not been legitimated under the laws of the child’s or father’s residence or domicile, has a sole parent — his or her mother — unless the child has or had a bona fide relationship with the father.

If the child has or had a bona fide relationship with his or her father, the child may be considered to have a sole parent — his or her mother — only if the father has disappeared, abandoned, deserted, or in writing irrevocably released the child for emigration and adoption.

In both cases it must be evident that the mother is incapable of providing proper care for the child according to the standards of the country where she and the child reside and, in writing, irrevocably releases the child for emigration and adoption.

If a child is born out of wedlock in a country that has eliminated all legal distinctions between “legitimate” and “illegitimate”, paternity has been established, and the father has recognized or acknowledged the child, that child is considered “legitimated” with the child having both parents, not a sole parent.

Adoptive and prospective adoptive parents of children who were born out of wedlock should become familiar with the legitimacy laws in the countries where the children were born and/or live. If a child born out of wedlock is from a country which has eliminated all legal distinctions between legitimate and illegitimate, the child may still qualify for classification as an orphan under U.S. immigration law as long as there is proof that paternity has not been acknowledged or established before the civil authorities in that country. Prospective adoptive parent(s) may obtain information regarding a specific country’s legitimacy laws from BCIS or the Department of State.

B. Legitimated Children

Most countries have legal procedures for the legitimation of children by their natural fathers. Accordingly, adoptive and prospective adoptive parents of children born out of wedlock should become familiar with the laws of a foreign country to determine how children become legitimated. A legitimated child has all the same rights as a child born in wedlock. A legitimated child from any country has two legal parents and cannot qualify as a orphan unless only one of the parents is living or both of the parents have abandoned the child.

C. Abandonment

A child abandoned by both parents may qualify as an orphan under U.S. immigration law.

INS regulations state that a child who has been unconditionally abandoned to an orphanage is considered to have no parents. A child is not deemed abandoned, however, when he or she has been temporarily placed in an orphanage and the parent or parents are contributing or trying to contribute to the child’s support, or the parent or parents otherwise show that they have not ended their parental obligations to the child.

While a finding of abandonment may normally be made when the child is in the custody of an orphanage or an orphanage-like institution, the definition of the term “abandonment” is not limited to those instances. Children in other situations could possibly be considered abandoned, but adoptive or prospective adoptive parents seeking to prove the claimed abandonment should obtain legal documentation from a competent authority in the country where the child resides.

For example, in a case where a child is a ward of the court, the parents must refuse to meet their parental and legal obligations to care for and support their child and give up parental claims to the child. On the other hand, if the natural parents are deprived of custody only temporarily and afforded a chance to care for the child, the child would not be considered an orphan.

Also, a relinquishment or release of a child by the biological parents to the prospective adoptive parents or for a specific adoption does not constitute abandonment.

Occasionally, some persons will try to make a child appear to have been abandoned in order to facilitate the child’s immigration to the United States. If a child has been designated a ward of the court merely as a contrivance, the child would not qualify as an orphan. If the decree declaring the child to be a ward of the court does not describe circumstances establishing that he or she is an orphan, other proof of abandonment must be submitted in support of the petition.

D. Intra-Familial Adoptions

Prospective adoptive parents wishing to adopt a family member may encounter problems that are not found in other adoption cases. Most will find it difficult to prove that the child meets the definition of an orphan under U.S. immigration law.

As stated previously, a child is a orphan only if the sole or surviving parent is unable to care for the child properly according to the standards of the country where the parent and child reside and has, in writing, irrevocably released the child for emigration and adoption; or if the child has been abandoned or deserted by, separated or lost from, both parents, or if both parents have disappeared or died.

Additional documentation is required to verify the claim of abandonment, desertion, separation from both parents or that both parents have disappeared or died.

Once the child has been irrevocably released by the natural parents, the parents can never gain any immigration benefit through the child.

E. Some Problems Faced by Adoptive and Prospective Adoptive Parent(s) of Foreign-Born Children

The adoptive and prospective adoptive parent(s) of foreign-born children face complex requirements which appear in the law itself. BCIS has kept the documentary, regulatory and procedural requirements to a minimum, while conforming with the intent of the law. In addition to BCIS requirements, petitions for orphans must also comply with state and foreign adoption laws.

The laws of some countries do not permit adoption. Laws of other countries restrict persons eligible to adopt children. There are children legally adopted abroad who do not qualify as orphans according the U.S. immigration laws (see definition of orphan in Appendix B). The adoptive and prospective adoptive parent(s) should be aware that not all children adopted abroad are orphans, and what appears to be a foreign adoption may not comply with the laws of the foreign state; and some valid foreign adoptions are not sufficient to classify the adopted person as a “child” under U.S. immigration law.

It is the responsibility of the petitioner to prove to BCIS that a child is eligible for classification as an orphan for immigration purposes. The evidence must be in the form of documents. This evidence may vary, depending on the facts of the case. Therefore, it is sometimes necessary to submit documents in addition to those described in Section II, B, Forms Used for an Orphan Petition.

Investigation Issues

When a request is sent to an orphan or registered in a U.S. embassy or consulate for the possible acquisition of an immigrant visa for a child, an orphan of research abroad as part of normal procedure. This research is conducted by the consular officer of the Department of State or an officer of the BCIS for those posts where the BCIS has an office. The officer will make every effort to expedite the investigation, but the process may take a longer time. Before arranging the trip, the adoptive parents who are going abroad to complete the formalities, please contact the appropriate U.S. embassy or consulate, or the foreign office of the BCIS to request information about the terms of the process. The objective of this research is to confirm that the child is an orphan under the Immigration Law of the United States, and that the child has no illness or disability that has not been specified in the solicitation of an orphan. If the child does not comply with the requirements for classification as an orphan under the Immigration Law of the United States, the BCIS will prepare a report to try to revoke the approval of the request for an orphan. When the applicant receives such a notice, he or she have an opportunity to provide evidence in order not to revoke the approval.If we knew that the child has an illness or disability that has not been mentioned in the petition the BCIS or the embassy or consulate, depending on the location of the request for an orphan, they will provide to the petitioner and his spouse, if they are married Details of the medical condition. The petitioner and her spouse, if they are married, to decide if they still want the child to enter the United States as an immigrant.

If the prospective adoptive parents choose the child to enter the United States, parents should be warned that the child is still admissible in the United States. Some diseases cause the child to be inadmissible. For example, if a child has a contagious disease, the child may be inadmissible. If we apply the margins of inadmissibility, they notify parents about the requirements to be met before the child to legally enter the United States.

Prospective adoptive parents are advised to avoid fraudulent practices of adoption and agree with agencies or individuals involved in such activities. Just have to agree with sources recommended for children in adoption and ensure that the entire procedure is legal.

The INS has found that foreign children are often stolen for adoption in the United States. There is also a market for fraudulent documents for children who may be beneficiaries of petitions for orphans. There are unscrupulous individuals that attract customers saying that they have a faster, economical and easy to adopt children. The adoptive parents are exploited by the exorbitant amounts of money without requiring them to receive the child, or getting a sick child, or proving to be parts of fraudulent acts.

When the BCIS has reason to believe that a request for an orphan may be involved in fraudulent acts, a foreign investigation of orphan before the petition is approved. The investigation may delay the completion of the case whenever done as quickly as possible. The BCIS will make every effort to ensure that the request for an orphan is not involved in fraudulent practices of adoption. In addition, research is done as a service to adoptive parents. Protects them from any painful situation that might occur when an adoption is illegal.

Adoption and immigration

Adoption petition

Decree of adoption

The US will put more efforts into protecting haitian orphans that maybe ready for adoption

How does a Waiver worked?

Many times people cannot complete processing of their applications for the Green Card because they either have been denied or will be denied because of a prior deportation, criminal act or misrepresentation.

A waiver is a package that is sent to the appropriate United States government official consisting of legal arguments, declarations and exhibits. It essentially asks the government to forget (or waive) the particular ground that makes you ineligible for the Green Card. Once granted, it will allow your applications to be approved.

Immigration waiver

Waiver application

Application for waiver of ground of inadmissibility 

Nonimmigrant waiver by US Immigration Attorney

Consular Processing Procedures

Consular Processing is the procedure whereby you go to the appropriate United States Consulate to get your applications processed for either your Lawful Permanent Residence or for a myriad of different types of work permits. 

Our law firm can prepare anyone of the numerous petitions necessary for you to enter the United States. This includes any type of immigrant or nonimmigrant petitions. Additionally, we can prepare any type of waiver for previous incidents whereby you may have been found to be inadmissible to the United States. 

Our law firm can help in another major way. One of our immigration attorneys who is familiar with consular practice can accompany you to the interview and help with every aspect of the interview. This will give you the maximum chance of success.

Consular processing

Conditional LPR

Legal permanent resident 

Family petitions to immigrate family members