Ðề: Lịch Visa tháng 11/2014 và dự đoán cho tháng 12/2014
Cuti cũng chỉ nghe đồn trên mạng là quốc hội Mỹ sẽ bàn thảo trở lại việc di dân thôi chứ chưa có gì chắc chắn là tốt hơn hay tệ hơn cả, nhưng hiện nay thời gian chờ cho các diện F đã quá dài vì dụ f4 bây giờ không phải là 10 năm nữa mà đã lên đến 12 năm 8 tháng rồi thì chắc chắn nếu quốc hội Mỹ đem ra bàn thảo thì chỉ có thể là làm cho nó nhanh hơn chứ khó có khả năng làm cho nó chậm đi bạn ạ vì càng kéo dài thì hồ sơ càng tồn đọng qúa nhiều có lẽ ngay cả NVC họ cũng không muốn hs di dân năm kẹt ở họ chất cao như núi!
mình xin đính chinh cho rõ là: tổng thống OBAMA sẽ hành động điều hành mà không cần quốc hội,trong đó bao gồm nhập cư bất hợp pháp và điểm nhấn là làm giảm tồn động{backlog}nhập cư hợp pháp.và vấn đề này chính quyền obama đã tri hoản 2 lần để công bố,và lần cuối theo dự đoán là sau bầu cử giữa nhiệm kỳ.
THAM KHẢO:
What could the Obama administration do to expand legal immigration?
In June, President Obama emphasized that he wanted his administration to look at ways to improve the whole immigration system through executive action — not just addressing unauthorized immigrants. The White House met with business groups over the summer, to look at possible changes to the legal immigration system as well.
Changing the way green cards are counted. One proposal that's being discussed is changing the way that the government counts green cards when it hands them out each year. Right now, the government allocates, for example, 140,000 green cards for workers. But if an immigrant worker has a family in the US, each member of the family counts as a separate green card — so far fewer than 140,000 workers actually get green cards. Business groups are proposing that the government should start counting green cards by family, not by individual, so that it could guarantee that 140,000 workers got green cards each year.
If the government changes the counting method for green cards for workers, it could increase the number of immigrants each year by tens of thousands. If it changes the counting method for both work and family-based green cards, it could increase legal immigration by millions — and sharply reduce the backlog of people who qualify for family-based green cards but are still waiting for spots to become available.
Is it legal? Some business groups think this would be a "marked departure" from the way the law has traditionally been interpreted. And administration officials appear to be a little wary, too.
"Recapturing" unused visas. These days, most worker visas — especially for high-skilled workers — run out as soon as they're made available each year. But there are some categories where extra visas are left unclaimed at the end of the year. Even for high-skilled workers, there were some leftover visas from a decade ago that never got used. So the administration could recapture unused visas, and reallocate them to visa categories that have already run out for the year.
The National Foundation for American Policy says that this would free up 300,000 H-1B visas for high-skilled workers. The Washington Post says that it would free up about 200,000 more H-1B visas, though it's not clear where that number comes from.
Is it legal? The government already reallocates some visas when they don't get used — for example, if fewer children of US citizens apply than there are visas available, the rest of the visas will go to close relatives of green-card holders. But some experts maintain there's no provision in the law to take unused employment visas in the past, and reallocate them to the future instead. The last time that high-skilled visas and green cards from previous years were recaptured and used in a different year (in 2005), it went through Congress — not the executive branch.
Expanding spouses' ability to work. Under current law, immigrants who come over because their spouses have H-1B visas aren't allowed to get jobs themselves. The Obama administration has proposed regulations to change that for some spouses of H-1B visa holders. The proposed regulations would only apply to about half of the immigrants whose spouses have H-1Bs, however — only the ones who also have pending green cards, which depends on the company that employs the H-1B immigrant. The Obama administration could expand this to all spouses of H-1B visa holders.
Is it legal? The Obama administration came up with the original restrictions to begin with. It could easily change its mind.