The Senators, also known as the gang of eight, has put forward provisions in the bill, which when signed into law by the President, can harm the interests of Indian IT companies and professionals.
India's Ambassador to the US Nirupama Rao has already flagged the concerns of the Indian companies on the proposed immigration reforms in her meeting with a top American Senator.
The first killer provision in the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Bill is the ban on client site placement for H-1B Workers.
Under this any H-1B dependent employer (a company with more than 15 per cent of its workforce on H-1Bs), would be flatly prohibited from placing H-1B workers at client sites or contracting for the services of those workers.
As a result of this an Indian IT Company would not be able to place L-1 workers (whether specialised or managerial) at client sites (the US company) unless the company supervised and controlled those workers and the parent US company attests that for 90 days before and after the L-1 petition filing it had not laid off any employees in the same area performing similar job duties.
Third, the bill places limit on total percentage of H-1B and L-1 Workers.
Under this the immigration bill would impose a hard limit on the percentage of H-1B and L-1 workers that could make up a company's workforce in the US.
The US India Business Council and Confederation of Indian Industry have already opposed such a move and said that this is against the spirit of India-US strategic relationship.
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