Trump’s H-1B Reform Is to Make Life Hell for Immigrants and Companies

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services is challenging an unusually large number of H-1B applications

Bloomberg
7 min readNov 6, 2017
Demonstrators chant in front of I.C.E. headquarters while protesting the end of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program in Chicago on Sept. 5, 2017. Photographer: Christopher Dilts/Bloomberg.

By Joshua Brustein

Donald Trump came into office promising a restrictive new approach to immigration and there has been little question about his intention to follow through — with one seeming exception. Despite its enthusiastic rhetoric about the H-1B program, which provides temporary visas to high-skilled workers, the administration failed to make significant changes in time to impact the program’s annual lottery this April, leaving some who had anticipated action fuming. It has also declined to take up any of the legislative proposals for H-1B overhaul.

But a crackdown has been in the works, albeit more quietly. Starting this summer, employers began noticing that U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services was challenging an unusually large number of H-1B applications. Cases that would have sailed through the approval process in earlier years ground to a halt under requests for new paperwork. The number of challenges — officially known as “requests for evidence” or RFEs — are up 44 percent compared to last year, according to statistics from USCIS. The percentage of H-1B applications that have resulted in…

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