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H.R.3648 - EAGLE Act of 2022


This bill modifies requirements related to employment-based visas and addresses related issues.

The bill increases the per-country cap on family-based immigrant visas from 7% of the total number of such visas available that year to 15% and eliminates the per-country cap for employment-based immigrant visas.

The bill establishes transition rules for employment-based visas such as (1) reserving a percentage of EB-2 (workers with advanced degrees or exceptional ability) and EB-3 (skilled and other workers) visas for individuals not from the two countries with the largest number of recipients of such visas, and (2) allotting a number of visas for professional nurses and physical therapists.

The bill imposes additional requirements on an employer seeking an H-1B visa, such as prohibiting (1) an employer from advertising that a position is only open to H-1B applicants or that H-1B applicants are preferred, and (2) certain employers from having more than half of their employees as nonimmigrant visa workers.

The Department of Labor shall create a publicly available website where an employer seeking an H-1B visa must post certain information about the open position.

The bill also expands Labor's authority to review and investigate H-1B applications for fraud or misrepresentations.

The bill also allows certain aliens to obtain lawful permanent resident status if the alien (1) is in the United States as a nonimmigrant, (2) has an approved immigrant visa petition, and (3) has waited at least two years for a visa.

In Favor:

The Equal Access to Green cards for Legal Employment (EAGLE) Act Phases Out 7% Per-Country Cap on Employment-Based Immigrant Visas & Raises Per-Country Cap on Family-Sponsored Visas to 15%

WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Representatives Zoe Lofgren (D-CA-19) and John Curtis (R-UT-03) introduced H.R. 3648, the Equal Access to Green cards for Legal Employment (EAGLE) Act, a bill that will benefit the U.S. economy by allowing American employers to focus on hiring immigrants based on their merit, not their birthplace. H.R. 3648 phases out the 7% per-country limit on employment-based immigrant visas. The bill also raises the 7% per-country limit on family-sponsored visas to 15%. Its predecessor, the Fairness for High Skilled Immigrants Act, passed the House in the 116th Congress with a resounding bipartisan vote of 365 to 65.

We all know that our immigration system is severely broken, and it has been broken for decades,” said Rep. Lofgren, Chair of the House Subcommittee on Immigration and Citizenship. “The basic framework for allocating immigrant visas dates back to the middle of the 20th century and was last seriously updated in 1990, when Congress established the worldwide numerical limits on visas and the 7% per-country cap that still exists today. Over time, these limitations have led to backlogs that were unimaginable in 1990. The effect has been that countries with relatively small populations are allocated the same number of visas as a relatively large-population country. The result? A person from a large-population country with extraordinary qualifications who could contribute greatly to our economy and create jobs waits behind a person with lesser qualifications from a smaller country. It makes no sense. Because of this, we are now seeing recruiters from outside America luring those with the highest skills away from the U.S. That hurts our economy. The bipartisan EAGLE Act moves our country toward a system that de-emphasizes birthplace and better serves America. Simply put, it will allow U.S. companies to focus on what they do best – hiring smart people to create products and services, which creates jobs in our districts.

Rep. Curtis said, “The 2020 census showed that Utah has the fastest-growing state in the nation—in no small part due to the major growth and innovation in the technology sector, bringing thousands of new jobs to the state. At the same time, Utah is tied for the lowest unemployment rate in the country, leaving many companies to rely on foreign workers and navigate our complicated immigration system when there is a shortage of American’s seeking these positions. The bipartisan EAGLE Act will create a more fair employment-based visa system by eliminating per-country limitations and creating a first-come, first-served system focused on merit instead of country of origin, making it easier for Utah’s businesses to expand and compete globally.

Click here for a section-by-section of the bipartisan EAGLE Act.

Background

The employment-based visa system provides permanent residence (or “green cards”) to individuals whose work contributes to U.S. economic growth and enhances our competitive advantage. To qualify, a sponsoring employer generally must advertise and prove that they are unable to find a qualified U.S. worker to fill the position. Thus, although America’s employment-based visa system starts out as “merit based,” what happens next has nothing to do with merit or skills—visas are allocated based on the intending immigrant’s country of birth.

Approximately 95% of employment-based immigrants currently live and work in the United States on temporary visas while waiting for a visa to become available. Some of these individuals remain in temporary status for many years, if not decades, because of the caps applied to their country of nationality. The new, phased-in system, established in the bipartisan EAGLE Act, would help ease the backlog for those who wait the longest.

Like the Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act that passed the House in July 2019, the bill:

  • phases out the 7% per-country cap for employment-based immigrant visas; and
  • raises the 7% per-country limit on family-sponsored visas to 15%.

Like the version of the Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act that passed the Senate in December 2020, the bill:

  • includes a longer nine-year transition period to ensure that no countries are excluded from receiving visas while the per-country caps are phased out;
  • strengthens the H-1B temporary visa program; and
  • provides an option for individuals who have been waiting in the immigrant visa backlog for two years to file a green card application, although the application cannot be approved until a visa becomes available.

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Against: 

"Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee seem completely unaware that there is an unprecedented crisis on our southern border. During April 2022, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officials encountered more than 234,000 illegal aliens along the southwest U.S. border--the highest monthly total in history. Since President Biden took office, CBP officials have encountered over 2.7 million illegal aliens along the southwest border. Nearly one million of those aliens have been released into the U.S. by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) pursuant to DHS policy. At the same time, over 600,000 illegal alien ``gotaways'' have made their way across the southwest border and into the U.S. undetected. Rather than work to address the Biden border crisis, the Committee is focused on legislation like H.R. 3648, the EAGLE Act, which does nothing to fix the root causes of President Biden's immigration mess.

Instead, H.R. 3648 would change per-country annual green card limits for certain green cards, reform the H-1B visa program, and create a loophole in the annual employment-based green card limit for aliens currently in the U.S. on a nonimmigrant (temporary) visa. Under current law, nationals of one country may receive no more than seven percent of the employment-based or family-based green cards allotted each year. H.R. 3648 would turn the green card system into a first- come, first-served process by eliminating the annual per- country limit on employment-based green cards and reducing the annual per country limit on family-based green cards from 15 percent to seven percent.

The practical effect of changing the per-country cap is that nationals from countries with many people on the green card wait list will get their green cards before nationals of countries that do not have individuals on the wait list. In fact, nationals of some countries will be shut out of green card allocation for several years, while nationals of India and China--the two countries with the highest number of nationals on the employment-based green card wait lists--will take their place.

H.R. 3648 contains ``transition rules'' aimed at preventing a few countries (those with nationals on the wait list) from getting the entirety of the green cards allotted during the first nine years. For instance, the bill requires that in the first year after enactment, 30 percent of the employment- based green cards must be reserved for nationals of countries that are not India and China. That percent is reduced over the next eight years until the reservation is eliminated. However, the transition rules do not apply to the employment- based fifth preference green card (EB5) category. Thus, if H.R. 3648 is passed and enacted, only nationals of China would get EB5 green cards for the next several years.

 Even with the transition rules in place for the second and third preference employment-based categories, nationals of India and China would be issued the overwhelming majority of employment-based green cards for the next several years. Democrats push forward this legislation despite increasing concerns with national security, theft of sensitive technologies, theft and other threats from the Chinese government, and the Biden-Harris Administration's roll-back of Trump Administration immigration-related protections against spying by Chinese nationals who took advantage of the U.S. immigration system.

Generally, an alien currently in the U.S. on a nonimmigrant (temporary) visa cannot apply for adjustment of status to that of a lawful permanent resident until a green card becomes available for that individual. H.R. 3648 would allow aliens in the U.S. on virtually any nonimmigrant visa to apply for adjustment of status before a green card becomes available. The effects is that these aliens will be eligible for employment authorization and can remain in the U.S. indefinitely until such time as a green card becomes available. This end-run around the annual green card limit would flood the market with cheap foreign labor and would displace U.S. workers." (H. Rept. 117-353 - Minority Views)

Should Congress pass H.R.3648, Equal Access to Green cards for Legal Employment Act (EAGLE Act)?

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