[ajug-members] Wipro coming to Atlanta
Rosemond, Felicia
Felicia_R_Rosemond at homedepot.com
Thu Aug 9 11:50:07 EDT 2007
Latest article on the subject:
http://www.informationweek.com/shared/printableArticle.jhtml?articleID=2
01306650
Felicia Rosemond
-----Original Message-----
From: ajug-members-bounces at ajug.org
[mailto:ajug-members-bounces at ajug.org] On Behalf Of Stefan Baramov
Sent: Thursday, August 09, 2007 11:16 AM
To: General AJUG membership forum (100-200 messages/month)
Subject: Re: [ajug-members] Wipro coming to Atlanta
What you are saying is correct. However, L1 visas are not limited. You
can have as many L1 visas as you like. The L1 visa allows your spouse to
legally work in US, H1 visa does not. The catch is, L1 visa is consider
a "company transferee". It means, L1 is used when an employee is
transfered from abroad office to a local office. So if Mr Gupta has been
employed for more than a year in Wipro India, he can come to US on L1B
visa and be subject to no cap. Hence, having an office in US, opens the
door for Wipro to import as many engineers as they want.
Scott Brown wrote:
> An L1B visa, as I understand it, is a technical visa for non-degreed
> technical professionals having specialized knowledge. Typically, it
> has been used for lab technicians, QC technicians in manufacturing,
> etc. It requires a US based company and an established legal entity
> in the country of origin - the relationship being subsidiary or sister
> companies.
>
> An H1A is the managerial/executive equivalent.
>
> =============================
> Scott A. Brown
>
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