desiboys Posted November 27, 2018 Report Posted November 27, 2018 New H-1B Form May Force IT Contractors to Reveal Clients Nick Kolakowski 3 hours ago The U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) is requiring employers that apply for H-1B visas to name any companies where their H-1B workers might end up on a contract basis. This could have significant consequences for outsourcing and staffing firms that apply for large numbers of H-1B visas, then send those workers to other firms. Outsourcing remains a source of considerable controversy, and third-party companies might prove more reluctant to outsource their IT work to staffing firms if they believe the U.S. government might publicize the relationship at some point. The DOL’s Form ETA-9035 & 9035E (PDF)asks that employers cite whether workers “will be placed with a secondary entity at this place of employment.” If the answer is “yes,” the employer must provide the legal business name of the “secondary entity,” along with the wage rate it pays nonimmigrant workers, and the prevailing wage rate. Those companies that contract workers out to many clients will need to fill out forms for each third-party worksite. In addition to H-1B applicants, the new form applies to those filing H-1B1 and E-3 petitions. “This revision to the labor condition application is nothing more than an attempt to discourage contracting out for services by U.S. companies whose contractors employ H-1B professionals,” Vic Goel, managing partner of Goel & Anderson, an immigration law firm, told Forbes contributor Stuart Anderson in an interview. (And hat-tip to Anderson for digging up the Form ETA-9035 & 9035E revisions.) This move could impact large firms such as Cognizant, Tata, and Deloitte, which may face additional pressures thanks to (rumored) tweaks to immigration policy. According to Politico, the Trump administration plans on changing how H-1B applicants enter the annual visa “pools,” with an eye toward giving more visas to highly educated workers. That could impact outsourcing and staffing companies, which apply for more visas for bachelor’s degree holders (versus tech companies such as Google, which generally want H-1B visa holders with advanced degrees). Quote
tacobell fan Posted November 27, 2018 Report Posted November 27, 2018 H1 documentation to vendor letter clear ga everyone sending. This is nothing new and we have been filing like this for many years. Even big giants like Cognizant, TCS, Wipro, Infosys, Capgemini, HP, HCL, Polaris, Deloitte all are submitting SOWS along with H1 documentation for their employees to prove client is outsourcing this. Quote
FJ40 Posted November 27, 2018 Report Posted November 27, 2018 30 minutes ago, tacobell fan said: H1 documentation to vendor letter clear ga everyone sending. This is nothing new and we have been filing like this for many years. Even big giants like Cognizant, TCS, Wipro, Infosys, Capgemini, HP, HCL, Polaris, Deloitte all are submitting SOWS along with H1 documentation for their employees to prove client is outsourcing this. Yes that’s correct but According to the new requirement the client name might be available when you search for records. Today you can only find the client address when u search for LCA, in the future they might want to reveal the client name too. Which makes it easier to identify end clients by name and analyze h1 b usage. In future even a contractor h1 will appear in clients h1 report which is a deterrent for large companies like Verizon which lay off FTs and outsource their projects/ AMCs to vendors that largely rely on h1. Quote
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