Bill seeks to save thousands of employment-linked green cards from going to waste – Times of India
USCIS will also be enabled to award green cards to eligible applicants from the pool of unused employment-based immigrant green cards during the fiscal years 2020 and 2021. While a short summary of the bill is available, the entire text has not yet been issued in the public domain. If the bill is passed it will greatly help the Indian diaspora stuck for decades in the green card backlog.
Due to the pandemic, an unusually low number of family-based green cards were approved in fiscal year 2020 (year ended September 2020), causing unused family-based visas to a ‘roll over’ into the employment-based category in fiscal year 2021.
However, the additional numbers that rolled over into the employment-based category are to be processed by September end, else these will go waste as no further roll over is possible under the current regulations.
TOI had earlier reported that a lawsuit has also been filed to prevent nearly 1000k green cards from going to waste.
Owing to the pandemic and fund constraints, the processing at USCIS was slow. While the USCIS in the past few weeks has focussed on processing of this backlog, immigration attorneys fear that nearly 80,000 green card numbers could still go to waste.
This would be especially detrimental to the interests of thousands of Indians caught in the decades-long green card backlog. David J Bier, immigration policy analyst at Cato Institute, a Washington headquartered think-tank, in his study had pointed out that the employment- based green card backlog (EB2 and EB3 skilled category) for those from India had reached 7.41 lakh in April 2020, with an expected wait time of 84 years.
Recently, Tim Cook, CEO of Apple Inc, in his capacity as the chairperson of the immigration group, Business Roundtable (which is an association of CEOs of leading US companies) has written to the secretary homeland security, highlighting this issue. “With the 2021 fiscal year fast-coming to a close, we respectfully ask you to take action to address the backlogs and ensure these much-needed employment-based green cards do not go to waste,” emphasises his letter.
Cook’s letter explains that, “The backlogs have created uncertainty for major employers and caused anxiety for our employees and their families who have, in some cases, waited decades to receive permanent residence status.
The system is already plagued by backlogs that have left foreign-born professionals waiting in limbo and companies unable to fill critical talent gaps, it further reads.
“We now understand that pandemic-related processing delays, plus the addition of 120,000 green cards this year, have created a situation where the full 260,000 available green cards will likely not be used before the September 30, 2021, deadline.”
“We believe the time to act is now. The government should eliminate all unnecessary document and evidentiary requests and all communications should be conducted via email or phone to avoid delays. We also encourage the agency to explore every legal avenue to preserve or recapture visa numbers that expire,” the letter added.
The Indian diaspora is hoping that either a judicial order or the bill will ensure that these much-needed green cards can be utilised.
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