• office locations
     
    Bluffton, SC map
    Bluffton, SC Office
    The Plaza at Belfair
    4 Clarks Summit Drive
    Suite 200 | Bluffton, SC 29910-4993
    843.815.2171  Main | 843.815.5991  Fax
     
    Charleston, SC map
    Charleston, SC Office
    100 Calhoun Street
    Suite 400 | Charleston, SC 29401
    843.723.7831  Main | 843.722.3227  Fax
     
    Charlotte, NC map
    Charlotte, NC Office
    Bank of America Plaza
    101 South Tryon Street
    Suite 2610 | Charlotte, NC 28280
    704.347.1170  Main | 704.347.4467  Fax
     
    Columbia, SC map
    Columbia, SC Office
    1221 Main Street
    Suite 1800 | Columbia, SC 29201
    803.799.9800  Main | 803.753.3278  Fax
     
    Greenville, SC map
    Greenville, SC Office
    Poinsett Plaza
    104 South Main Street
    Suite 700 | Greenville, SC 29601
    864.271.4940  Main | 864.271.4015  Fax
     
    Hilton Head Is., SC map
    Hilton Head Island, SC Office
    Shelter Cove Executive Park
    23-B Shelter Cove Lane
    Suite 400 | Hilton Head Island, SC 29928
    843.785.2171  Main | 843.686.5991  Fax
     
    Myrtle Beach, SC map
    Myrtle Beach, SC Office
    Founders Centre
    2411 Oak Street
    Suite 206 | Myrtle Beach, SC 29577
    843.444.1107  Main | 843.444.4729  Fax
     
  • contact us
      No   Yes  
PROFESSIONALS OTHER CONTENT
     
Instagram

News Room

Print
Share

New DHS Rule Extends H-1B Cap ExemptionsJanuary 19, 2017

Related Information

Practices

One of the biggest drawbacks for employers trying to utilize the H-1B visa program is the numerical cap. The current law limits the number of H-1B visas available to 65,000 annually with an additional 20,000 available to those with a U.S. Master's Degree. USCIS regularly receives more than triple the cap number in H-1B petitions each year, resulting in the implementation of a random lottery system to determine who receives a visa. Despite the odds, the H-1B continues to be the visa classification of choice for many employers due to the advantages it provides for foreign national employees working in professional positions. A new Department of Homeland Security ("DHS") As of January 17, 2017, a regulation has gone into effect that will extend cap exemptions to additional entities that are affiliated with or related to institutions of higher education, removing one of the biggest hurdles of the H-1B process for certain employers.

 
H-1B cap-exempt employers include institutions of higher education and nonprofit entities, nonprofit research organizations, and governmental research organizations related to or affiliated with an institution of higher education. In the past, to qualify as a cap-exempt entity affiliated or related to an institution of higher education, the organization had to demonstrate either (1) shared ownership or control with the institution of higher education, (2) operation by the institution of higher education, or (3) a qualifying corporate relationship between the institution of higher education and the affiliated entity (such as a parent-subsidiary or branch relationship). The common ownership/operation requirement often proved too onerous, limiting the cap exemption's utility.


Under the new rule, an entity can take advantage of cap exemption by entering into a formal written affiliation agreement with an institution of higher education that establishes an active working relationship with the institution of higher education for the purpose of research or education, if a fundamental activity of the affiliate is to directly contribute to the research or educational mission of the higher education institution. Institutions of higher education are typically party to dozens of various types of affiliation agreements, and the new cap exemption option could help a large number of affiliates avoid the H-1B cap. Those affected by the new rule might include school districts and private non-profit schools, which have traditionally been subject to the H-1B cap. One typical arrangement that might qualify an affiliate for cap exempt status is an agreement by an institution of higher education to accept coursework completed at an affiliate high school for college credit. 

 
Cap-exempt status provides a number of practical advantages. Initially, it guarantees qualifying entities adjudication of their H-1B petition (versus rejection due to cap issues), which allows employers to more easily evaluate future labor needs and limit legal expenses associated with preparing multiple immigration petitions. Beneficiaries of an approved cap-exempt H-1B petition are also permitted to begin work immediately upon approval, while cap-subject beneficiaries cannot begin work until October 1 when the new H-1B fiscal year begins. Cap-exempt employers can also file their petitions at any time throughout the year. Cap exemption may also provide protection from any further limitation of the H-1B classification by the incoming Trump administration. 

___________________________________________________________________

For questions on the new H-1B cap exemption rule or for advice on other immigration matters, please contact the authors of this alert, Melissa L. Azallion and Jonathan C. Eggert, from McNair's immigration team at (843) 785-2171.