{"id":26990,"date":"2020-12-03T20:30:31","date_gmt":"2020-12-04T01:30:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.indianeagle.com\/travelbeats\/?p=26990"},"modified":"2020-12-03T21:01:45","modified_gmt":"2020-12-04T02:01:45","slug":"us-senate-passes-s386-green-card-bill","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.indianeagle.com\/travelbeats\/us-senate-passes-s386-green-card-bill\/","title":{"rendered":"US Senate Passed Bill S386. A Ray of Hope for Indians and Their Dependents in Green Card Limbo"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Biden-Harris magic seems to have started working ahead of the much-awaited swearing-in ceremony scheduled on January 12, 2021. The US Senate passed the S386 Bill – Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act HR 1044 \u2013 clearing the passage to legal permanent residency for lakhs of Indian nationals who have remained stuck in the Green Card limbo for years. The Senate having passed the bill S386 is a relief for 800,000 Indians waiting for an employment-based Green Card.<\/p>\n
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The Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act, HR 1044 seeking elimination of the country-based limit on the issuance of employment-based immigrant visas was brought on the table in November 2018. The bill was cleared by the House of Representatives in July 2019.Closer to becoming a law, the bill will make it possible to allocate 90% of employment-based green cards to Indian professionals on H1B visas and other work visas.<\/p>\n
Thumbed up by Vice President-elect Kamala Harris earlier, the bill S386 also seeks an increase in the country-wise number of family-based green cards issued to Indians in the USA. Currently, only 7% of the total green cards are annually issued to immediate family members of Indian-origin legal permanent residents in the US. Favoring a large-scale influx of highly-skilled Indian professionals into the US economy, the HR 1044 bill is supposed to increase the per-country cap on the issuance of family-based green cards from 7 to 9 percent.<\/p>\n