| Who is an H-1B-dependent employer? |
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This section provides general information concerning H-1B-dependent employers under the H-1B program. Special attestations applicable to H-1B-dependent and willful violator employers sunset on October 1, 2003, but were restored effective March 8, 2005 by the H-1B Visa Reform Act of 2004. An employer is considered H-1B-dependent if it has:
The employer must determine dependency when filing either: Employers with readily apparent status concerning H-1B-dependency need not calculate that status. Is there a simple calculation to determine dependency? Yes. An employer whose dependency is not readily apparent or is borderline may use the "snap-shot" test. The snap-shot test requires a comparison of the total number of all H-1B workers to the number of the total workforce (including H-1B workers). If a small employer's snap-shot calculation shows that the employer is dependent, the employer must then fully calculate its dependency status. If a large employer's calculation exceeds 15% of its workforce, that employer must fully calculate its dependency status. If an employer must fully calculate dependency, how is this performed? This full calculation must take into consideration the total number of H-1B workers (a "head count" of both full-time and part-time workers) and the employer's total work force in the United States (including both U.S. workers and H-1B workers) and must be measured according to full-time equivalent employees. How should an employer using the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) "single employer" definition determine dependency? |
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