H-1B Cap-Exempt Nonprofit Organization Affiliated or Related to an Institution of Higher Education

The Cap

H-1B petitions per year are capped at 65,000, with an extra 20,000 for those who are petitioning someone with a U.S. earned master’s or higher degree. These cap numbers only apply to initial H-1B filings. Thus, H-1B extensions and transfers are not subject to the cap. April 1 of each year is the earliest that an H-1B petitioner can file an initial cap-subject filing. A few years ago, this quota was filled on the first day. Applications outnumbered the quota. The US Citizenship and Icemmigration Service (USCIS) resorted to a lottery system. Thus an employer may have filed at the earliest possible time and still got rejected. This year, the quote was filled by July, merely two months from April 1. A lot of people are thus wondering if there is anyway an employer can file an initial H-1B petition without having to wait for April 1, 2013.

Cap-Exempt

Other than extensions and transfers, there are other ways where a petitioner gets exempted from the cap. A beneficiary of employment petitions from an institution of higher education, or related or affiliated nonprofit entities, nonprofit research organizations, or governmental research organizations are not subject to the cap. Thus, for these employers, H-1B petitions could be filed all year round, regardless of whether the cap is closed.

Institution of Higher Education

By law, an institution of higher education is defined as one which: 1) admits students who have completed secondary education; 2) is licensed to provide education beyond secondary school; 3) provides education programs for which the institutions award bachelors’ degrees or provide programs of not less than 2 years that are acceptable for full credit toward bachelors’ degrees; 4) is a public or nonprofit institution; and 5) is accredited or has been granted pre-accreditation status by a recognized accrediting agency. Each of these elements should be met to be cap-exempt.

Primary or Secondary Education Schools

Based on statutory language and legislative history on the definition of “institutions of higher education,” primary or secondary education schools are not within this definition, and if the argument for making these schools cap-exempt is solely based on including them within the definition of an “institution of higher education,” the USCIS will not find the petition cap-exempt.

Related or Affiliated Nonprofit Entity

However, primary or secondary schools can still meet the cap-exempt requirement through the second prong of the exemption category, that of the “related or affiliated nonprofit entity” (with an institution of higher education).

In filing the H-1B cap-exempt petition, the cover letter should demonstrate how the petition is cap-exempt by explaining how the petitioner, beneficiary, line of work, and how they fit the exemption clause and the entities covered. Citing specific language from two important documents on this issue, the 2006 Aytes Memo on H-1B Cap Exemption and the Administrative Appeals Office (AAO) 2006 Texas decision (EAC 06 216 52028) is a must in arguing whether the petitioner is cap-exempt, especially if one is using the “related or affiliated” argument.

The AAO case mentioned (2006 EAC 06 216 52028) has been one of the most cited sources for “related or affiliated” cap-exempt based H-1B petitions. This case addressed the issue of whether a Texas nonprofit public school district as the petitioner was cap exempt. The USCIS in Vermont initially denied the case and one of the grounds was that the petition was subject to the cap. After appeal, the AAO granted the H-1B, finding that the school’s Teachertrak program is related or affiliated with an institution of higher education. The AAO provided citable language, stating that in order to demonstrate that the petitioner is an affiliated or related nonprofit entity, it should show one or more of the following: a) shared ownership or control by the same board or federation; b) the petitioner is operated by an institution of higher education; or; c) the petitioner is attached to an institution of higher education as a member, branch, cooperative, or subsidiary. The AAO found that the petitioner in this case met the third prong, that of a member, branch, cooperative, or subsidiary, and thus made a finding that it was related or affiliated with an institution of higher education.

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