There are no names, dates nothing. Do you really beleive this? It can be just somebody made a PDF.
Doesn't look authenticate to me at all..
Although I wish its true
Why not believe it ? The source is AILA. Are you saying AILA picked the fake bill and put it on their web ? Oh please.
Last time I put pdf of STRIVE on this board before they put it on thomas.gov, there was no name, date, bill#, whatsoever on pdf.
You did not believe it, did you ?
http://pubweb.fdbl.com/news1.nsf/9a...95f063652f1980b4852572bb0080ab8c?OpenDocument
High-Tech Worker Relief Act
On April 11, 2007, Senator Chuck Hagel, Republican from Nebraska, introduced the High-Tech Worker Relief Act, which is aimed at providing short term relief for U.S. employers who cannot recruit or retain needed talent to stay competitive because of the current visa shortage. If enacted, Senator Hagel's bill would:
§ Raise the H-1B cap for fiscal year 2007 from 65,000 to 115,000, and for fiscal year 2008 from 65,000 to 195,000, allowing the quota to revert to 65,000 by fiscal year 2009 if no further legislation passes.
§ Exempt foreign students who earn masters degrees or above in the United States from the H-1B visa numerical limit.
§ Exempt STEM advanced degree graduates who have 3 years of U.S. work experience as a non-immigrant from the numerical limit on employment-based immigrant visas, in addition to those who are deemed to have extraordinary ability, are outstanding professors and researchers, and whose presence is determined to be in the national interest of the United States.
§ Exempt spouses and minor children of the principal applicant from employment-based immigrant visa quotas.
§ Exempt foreign physicians from the immigrant visa quota if they agree to work full time for five years in an area with a shortage of health care professionals, or if they work for five years in a Department of Veterans Affairs health care facility.
http://www.aila.org/content/default.aspx?docid=22094
On 4/10/07, Senator John Cornyn (R-TX) introduced the Securing Knowledge, Innovation and Leadership (SKIL) Act of 2007 (S. 1083). Although the bill text is not yet available, the act is expected to propose reforms to address the restrictive H-1B visa cap and alleviate the employment-based green card backlogs. Senator Cornyn authored the bill; original cosponsors include Senators Allard (R-CO), Bennett (R-UT), Hutchison (R-TX), and Lott (R-MS).
In addition to the SKIL Act, on 4/11/07, Senator Chuck Hagel (R-NE) introduced legislation to temporarily increase the number of visas issued to highly skilled workers. Unlike the broader provisions of the SKIL Act, this bill, S. 1092, is expected to focus more narrowly on providing immediate relief from the current H-1B crisis.
More information and the text of these bills will be posted on InfoNet as it becomes available.
any info or guesses about when these bills will be debated on the floor (senate and/or house)?
these bills are clearly delinked from the CIR, and as such have a higher chance of passing.
No schedule yet, but I believe it should be discussed very soon. If you look at the bill, it has H1 increase for FY2008. They should come up with
conclusion on this bill in a few months.
Since there is no controversial illegal immigrant provision in it, I think it has high chance to pass. This bill is more like subset of SKIL or STRIVE
therefore, If this did not pass, SKIL and STRIVE will be no way to pass any soon.