U.S. House of Representatives and Senate conferees hammering out compromises for a $150-billion-plus appropriations bill have dropped from its final conference report an amendment that would've hiked H-1B visas fees to $5,000 from the current $1,500.
The additional $3,500 that employers would've been charged for each H-1B visa had been earmarked to fund scholarship programs for U.S. students, including the proposed merit-based American Competitiveness Scholarship.
That new scholarship program would've enabled the National Science Institute to award qualified American students with scholarships of up to $15,000 annually to pursue degrees in computer science, mathematics, engineering, nursing and medicine.
The dropped Grassley-Sanders Amendment, co-sponsored by Senators Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), had been passed by the Senate twice before -- in May as part of Congress' ill-fated comprehensive immigration reform bill, and just last month as part of its version of the labor, health and human services and education appropriations bill.
Raising the cap on H-1B visas -- along with many other assorted proposals, including H-1B anti-abuse, anti-fraud provisions, and changes in green-card processes and policies, were all part of controversial and comprehensive immigration reform legislation that Congress had been considering earlier this year.
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The Federal Information Security Management Act of 2002 provides a comprehensive framework for ensuring effective information security controls for all federal information and assets. The Act aims to bolster computer and network security within the Federal Government by mandating periodic audits. Based on this...

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