Despite a prior commitment in writing to begin my Green Card application upon acceptance of my job offer, my employer is now pushing to postpone the process for 2 years - so that I can "demonstrate my abilities, grow into bigger jobs and be 'uniquely qualified' in future assignments".
The HR person is arguing that the company's legal counsel is saying that my application will most likely be denied as they would be hard pressed to prove that I am 'uniquely qualified' for the position and that no U.S. citizen is 'minimally qualified'.
I graduated with honors at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. I have an MBA from a top five business school and possess highly analytical pre-MBA work experience (which is required of my current position). While it is true that I am switching careers from investment banking into brand marketing, I also have had 5 months of solid brand marketing internship experience and am trained in the use of 2 different marketing research databases (which is rare). Is my case really that weak and thus, not worth fighting, or is this an HR ploy to tie me to the company for a longer period of time?
The HR person is arguing that the company's legal counsel is saying that my application will most likely be denied as they would be hard pressed to prove that I am 'uniquely qualified' for the position and that no U.S. citizen is 'minimally qualified'.
I graduated with honors at both the undergraduate and graduate levels. I have an MBA from a top five business school and possess highly analytical pre-MBA work experience (which is required of my current position). While it is true that I am switching careers from investment banking into brand marketing, I also have had 5 months of solid brand marketing internship experience and am trained in the use of 2 different marketing research databases (which is rare). Is my case really that weak and thus, not worth fighting, or is this an HR ploy to tie me to the company for a longer period of time?