Some small business owners say government quotas are keeping them from finding the highly skilled help they need.
H-1B visas allow foreigners with college degrees to work in the U.S. for up to six years. There's such high demand for employees adept in technology and other skilled fields that nearly two-thirds of the applications will be denied. Congress set a limit of 65,000 for visas for workers with bachelor's degrees, and 20,000 for those with master's degrees.
"There is not really an abundant supply of the types of folks we're looking for, with a science, technology, engineering and mathematics background," says Anand Sanwal, CEO of CB Insights, a New York-based company that compiles information about private firms. He's waiting to hear if visas for three job candidates will be approved.
Thousands of small-business owners are waiting to see if their job candidates are among the 85,000 who get H-1B visas this year. If the government rejects their applications, owners have to keep trying to find workers with the right skills, many of them in technology. Small businesses struggle in particular because many talented people are recruited by big companies or start their own, says Phillip Kim, a professor of entrepreneurship at Babson College.
Jacob Tanur believes the government's 2014 rejection of an application for a prospective worker's visa limited his film production company's ability to grow. Click Play Films makes commercials, documentaries and corporate films, and Tanur wants a multicultural mix of cinematographers and other creative staffers who understand the needs of clients in other countries.
"It makes us extremely attractive to advertising agencies," says Tanur, whose New York-based company has 10 staffers. Four have H-1B visas. "What's cool in China is not something that we can artificially create here."
"It would be foolish for us to not explore all avenues to acquire talent," he says.
But demand for the visas outstrips the supply. Companies submitted nearly 233,000 applications on behalf of prospective workers earlier this month and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services closed the application period because of the volume of requests. The USCIS used a computer lottery to randomly select 85,000 of the applications, and is now deciding which will be approved.