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Since 2015, the spouses of H-1B, or high-skilled, visa holders waiting for green cards have been eligible to work in the US on H-4 dependent visas, under a rule introduced by the previous Obama administration. The DHS was previously scheduled to take a call on it by February 28. “Consistent with the Government’s prior representations, DHS was working to issue an NPRM (Notice of Proposed Rule Making) in February 2018. “However, in January 2018, United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), the component of DHS responsible for oversight of the H-4 visa programme at issue in this litigation, reevaluated the rule and determined that significant revisions to the draft proposal were necessary, DHS said in its fresh court submission.
It said the revisions required a new economic analysis which required additional several weeks to perform. “The changes to the rule and the revised economic analysis require revisions to the projected timeline for the NPRMs publication, and therefore cannot be issued in February, it said.
“Under the revised timeline, DHS anticipates submitting to the Office of Management and Budget for review and clearance the proposed rule in time for publication in June 2018,” it said. The extension of decision-making process by four months comes as a temporary relief to the spouses of H-1B visas holders, a significantly large number of whom are Indian workers.
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Such a court submission by DHS comes as part of an ongoing petition by ‘Save Jobs USA’, an organisation of IT workers who claim they lost their jobs to H-1B workers. The organisation has filed a lawsuit against the decision of the previous Obama Administration to give work authorisation to the spouses of H-1B visa workers whose Green card applications have been approved. An online petition has been launched urging the Congress not to cancel work authorisation of H-4 visas. “Please do not cancel H4 EAD.
Those who are applying for H4 EAD are contributing to American society instead of creating burdens,” the online petition says. “We are talented, highly skilled and experienced individuals. Why should we suffer because we are citizens-in-waiting for 8-15 years? You have agreed to make us citizens, treat us like one. “Let us work till the broken immigration system is reformed. We are not a burden on social security or Medicare. In fact, we contribute to the US growth. Why should we be discriminated against when you have accepted us for citizenship?” the petition reads.