The U.S., which received more than 172,000 applications
for the H-1B visas, has conducted a computerised draw of lots to
determine who all would be given the most sought after work visas that
are highly popular among IT professionals from countries like India.
The
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) conducted the
computerised draw of lots to select the Congressionally mandated 65,000
applicants, who would receive the H-1B visas.
The
USCIS, in a statement, said it also conducted draw of lots for
Congressional mandated 20,000 H-1B petitions filed under the advanced
degree exemption.
“USCIS received about 172,500 H-1B
petitions during the filing period which began April 1, including
petitions filed for the advanced degree exemption,” the federal agency
said.
“On April 10, USCIS completed a
computer-generated random selection process, or lottery, to select
enough petitions to meet the 65,000 general-category cap and 20,000 cap
under the advanced degree exemption,” it said.
For
cap-subject petitions not randomly selected, USCIS will reject and
return the petition with filing fees, unless it is found to be a
duplicate filing.
The USCIS conducted the selection process for the advanced degree exemption first.
All
advanced degree petitions not selected then became part of the random
selection process for the 65,000 limit, the federal agency said.
However, the USCIS will continue to accept and process petitions that are otherwise exempt from the cap.
Petitions
filed on behalf of current H-1B workers who have been counted
previously against the cap will not be counted towards the
congressionally mandated fiscal 2015 H-1B cap.
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