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In a final regulation published on November 18, 2016 which takes effect on January 17, 2017, DHS has clarified the requirements and parameters associated with cap-exempt employment of H-1B workers...
In a final regulation published on November 18, 2016 which takes
effect on January 17, 2017, DHS has clarified the requirements and
parameters associated with cap-exempt employment of
H-1B workers by nonprofit entities that are affiliated
with or related to an institution of higher education or other
cap-exempt institutions. This final regulation also
clarifies that governmental research organizations, also exempt
from the H-1B cap, include federal, state and local
organizations whose primary mission is the performance or promotion
of basic or applied research.
Proving Affiliation with Cap-exempt Institution in
Order to Claim an Exemption from the H-1B Quota
Until publication of this new regulation, there were
three different ways that a nonprofit entity could demonstrate
affiliation with an institution of higher education or other
cap-exempt institutions such as a non-profit research
institution or government research institution in order to seek
exemption from the cap: (1) by showing it is connected to the
educational institution through shared ownership or control by the
same board or federation; (2) by showing it is operated by an
institution of higher education; or (3) by showing
it is attached to an institution of higher education as a member,
branch, cooperative or subsidiary.
This new regulation introduces and formalizes a
fourth option to claim the exemption. A non-profit can claim the
exemption from the H-1B quota by demonstrating that it
has entered into a formal written affiliation agreement with an
institution of higher education that establishes an active working
relationship between the nonprofit entity and the institution for
the purposes of research or education, and that a fundamental
activity of the nonprofit entity is to directly contribute to
the research or education mission of the institution of higher
education.
The language above represents a change and a
liberalization of the rule as originally proposed, which would have
required the nonprofit entity to show that a "primary
purpose" of the entity is to directly contribute to the
educational or research mission of the institution of higher
education. By removing "primary purpose" and substituting
"a fundamental activity", DHS expects more nonprofit
entities to be able to take advantage of the exemption. In the
commentary preceding the regulation, DHS has clarified that a
nonprofit can take advantage of the exemption if it is engaged in
more than one fundamental activity, so long as at least one of
these fundamental activities is to directly contribute to the
research or education mission of a qualifying college or
university.
Clarification of How Much Time the H-1B Worker
Must Spend at the Qualifying Institution
The regulation clarifies that an H-1B
worker who is not directly employed by a qualifying institution or
organization qualifies for exemption from the H-1B
quota if he or she will spend the majority of his or her work
time performing job duties at a qualifying organization and if
those job duties directly and predominately further the essential
purpose, mission, objectives or functions of the qualifying
institution or organization. The regulation further states that the
burden is on the H-1B petitioner to establish that
there is a nexus between the duties to be performed by the
H-1B beneficiary and the essential purpose, mission,
objectives or functions of the qualifying institution, organization
or entity.
Clarification Regarding Concurrent H-1B
Employment
The regulation codifies the existing practice and
policy that authorizes concurrent H-1B employment in a
cap-subject position of an individual who is the beneficiary of an
approved cap-exemptH-1B petition. The
regulation confirms that a cap-subject employer seeking to take
advantage of the H-1B quota exemption must demonstrate
to USCIS that the H-1B beneficiary is employed in
valid H-1B status with a cap-exempt
employer and that the employment with the cap-exempt
employer is expected to continue after the new cap-subject petition
is approved, and that the H-1B beneficiary can
reasonably and concurrently perform the work described in each
employer's visa petition.
What Happens If Cap-exempt Employment Ceases?
The regulation clarifies that if
cap-exempt employment ceases, and the
H-1B worker is not the beneficiary of a new
cap-exempt petition, then the person becomes subject
to the cap if he/she was not previously counted within the 6-year
period of authorized admission to which the cap-exempt
employment applied. DHS further clarifies that if
cap-exempt employment converts to cap-subject
employment, USCIS may revoke the petition. In this regulation, DHS
did not say that the cap-subject H-1B petition
approval automatically becomes void if an H-1B
beneficiary ceases employment with the cap-exempt
employer. Instead, DHS said that if the cap-exempt
employment ceases, USCIS "may revoke" the cap-subject
petition. Until such a revocation occurs, the cap-subject
employment that benefitted from the exemption continues to be
authorized. Under these circumstances it is prudent for the
cap-subject employer to file an H-1B visa petition
under the quota for the H-1B beneficiary.
Definition of "Governmental Research
Organization"
In this final rule, DHS clarifies that a governmental
research organization which can claim exemption from the
H-1B quota includes not only federal research
organizations but also state and local organizations whose primary
mission is the performance or promotion of basic and/or applied
research.
Claiming Exemption from the ACWIA H-1B Filing
Fee
The final regulation clarifies that an employer
claiming to be exempt from the ACWIA H-1B filing fee
on the basis that it is a non-profit research organization must
submit evidence that it has tax exempt status under IRS Code of
1986 section 501(c)(3) or (c)(4). All other employers claiming to
be exempt must simply submit a statement describing why the
organization is exempt.
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