Net-Temps
ITT Technical Institute

For Recruiters

 
Products & services

Job posting network

Recruiter resources

Free Trial

Net-Link

Membership signup

Post a job

Member services

OFCCP compliance

Recruiter training

Testimonials

 

About Net-Temps

 
Our website data

Search engine rank

Website ratings and research

Weddle's award

In the news

Press releases

Internet website usage

 

Recruiter News

 
Recruiting blogs

Recruiter articles

Recruiter newsletter

Why use online recruiting

 

For Employers

 
Post a job

Search candidates

Request staffing

HR corner

 
 
 
 
 
Recruiter Articles
#1 on Google for Temporary Employment
More recruiter articles

H-1B Applications Fall
Email this article to a friend Printer-friendly version
 

With the economic slowdown continuing-particularly in technology industries-employers apparently slashed their use of the controversial H-1B visa program late last year and through the first half of 2002, according to new figures released by the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS).

The INS said that during the 9 months ending June 30, 2002, it approved 60,500 requests for new H-1B visas that would have been covered by the current annual cap of 195,000. The number of approved applications was less than half the 130,700 applications approved during the same period a year earlier.

Those numbers, the INS said, do not include petitions for H-1B extensions or modifications. Those requests are not covered by the cap. In October of 2000, Congress, responding to urgent employer requests for help addressing what many described as a harmful shortage of IT professionals, overwhelmingly increased the cap on new H-1B visas from 115,000 to 195,000 per year. That decision has become the source of controversy since many out-of-work IT professionals have blamed competition from the increased number of H-1B visa holders for their difficulty in finding new jobs.

The INS said total H-1B petitions-for visas not covered by the cap as well as those that are-fell by 41 percent in the 9 months ending June 30, from 270,000 in fiscal year 2001 to 159,000 in the most recent period.

The INS said, as of June 30, about 18,000 applications for new H-1B visas (which are subject to the cap) were pending.

-Jeff Moade
www.eWeek.com

Top of Page