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villages/hispanic/ AP Headlines Update Page
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Grand jury indicts 7 in NY immigrant killing |
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Juanes sweeps Latin Grammys with 5 wins |
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Hispanic
students juggle lives with school |
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Spain turns to Latinos to fill military ranks |
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Hispanic leaders endorse Richardson for cabinet |
villages/hispanic/ AP Headlines Update Page
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New opportunities section added
to our Career Center
New QuickSearches
by location and industry, salary tools, more at the
Career Center
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Ice on Immigration: H-1B visas
By L. Patricia Ice, Featured
Columnist
Question: I am in the United States on a temporary visa that expires in
July 2007. I am a professional with a university degree. There is a
private employer who would like to hire me to work at his company in my
professional capacity. She would like to hire me as an H-1B temporary
worker in a specialty occupation. I heard that there are currently no
H-1B visas available. If this is true, when is the earliest time I can
apply for one, and when can I start the job if the visa status is
approved?
Answer: An employer may file a new I-129 Petition for Temporary Worker
for H-1B status beginning on April 1, 2007. If approved, the earliest
date you could begin work would be on October 1, 2007, the first day of
the new fiscal year. Since your current visa status expires in July, you
may have to leave the United States and apply for the visa in your home
country in order to return and start work on or about October 1. Only
65,000 new H-1B visas can be issued each fiscal year. (This number does
not include those workers whose H-1B visa status is being extended or
certain other H-1B workers who are exempt from the 65,000 numerical
limit.) I suggest that you and your employer consult an immigration
lawyer soon about filing for H-1B visa status. There is extensive paper
work that needs to be gathered and carefully prepared. It is best to
file the I-129 Petition on or as close to April 1, 2007 as possible
because there is usually a great demand for the H-1B visa. In the last
two years the 65,000 numerical limit has been reached in just a few
months after April 1.
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L. Patricia Ice
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Featured
IMDiversity Immigration Columnist L. Patricia Ice is an attorney and counselor who has taught
immigration law at Mississippi College School of Law
in Jackson, and also contributes regular immigration advice stories
to La Noticia and The Jackson Advocate. A
practicing attorney, Ms. Ice has recently taken on a two-year role
as an Equal Justice Works Katrina Legal Fellow, focusing on
immigrant employment issues as fair labor standards, and wage and
hour problems, in areas around the Gulf Coast. She is also
dedicated to immigrants rights advocacy, and serves on the Board of the non-profit
rights education group,
MIRA: The Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance at
www.yourmira.org.
Articles in this column are Copyright 2006 L. Patricia Ice.
All rights reserved. Please do not reproduce further without
seeking the permission of the author.
IMDiversity.com is committed to presenting diverse points of view.
However, the viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of
the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or
employees at IMD.
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