During most of the 2000s, internationally trained nurses made up about 10-15% of all new RNs that came on-line in the US. These numbers disappeared with the onset of retrogression in January 2008. The retrogression, now in its fourth year, has eviscerated the number of foreign-trained RNs.
In 2008, about 51,373 internationally educated RNs passed the NCLEX exam. In 2011, that number has been more than halved to 23,266, a drop of about 28,000. Fortunately for US healthcare users, US-educated RNs have filled half of the gap; about 14,000 more US-educated nurses now take the NCLEX-RN then did in 2008.
NCLEX-RN Test Takers | |||
---|---|---|---|
US Educated | Int’l Educated | Total | |
2008 | 158,385 | 51,373 | 209,758 |
2009 | 161,362 | 40,622 | 201,984 |
2010 | 167,597 | 30,178 | 197,775 |
2011 | 172,041 | 23,266 | 195,307 |
Source: NCSBN Fact Sheets
February 2012 Visa Bulletin | ||||
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All Other Countries | China | India | Mexico | |
EB-2 | Current | 01JAN10 | 01JAN10 | Current |
EB-3 | 22FEB06 | 01DEC04 | 15AUG02 | 22FEB06 |
On Monday CGFNS will begin to offer an Expedited Review Service for their Credentials Evaluation Service (CES). This is an optional service for faster review. CGFNS will charge $150 for Expedited CES, unless the Application has previously been filed and is pending with CGFNS. Applicants with an existing CES can upgrade their CES to Expedited Review for $250.
The Expedited Service will result in a complete report within ten business days, provided that all requisite documents are at CGFNS. If all required documents are not with CGFNS, CGFNS will notify the applicant of any missing or insufficient documents. Once this deficiency is cured, CGFNS will issue the report.
There are several business immigration legislative initiatives that were proposed in Congress in late 2011. Whether some of these will be signed into law is an open question.
The US Senate presently is the tougher of the two chambers of the US Congress. The Senate is split half: there are 51 Democrats and 47 Republicans (and two Independents, who tend to vote with the Democrats). Because of the Senate’s procedural machinations, any single Senator can delay any bill by placing a “hold” on a bill.
The US House of Representatives is overwhelmingly Republican, 242-192. This allows bills to move much quicker through the House, provided that the Republican leadership is in favor of the bill.
For several years gridlock in the “do-nothing” Congresses has forestalled any meaningful immigration legislation. There are three bills that had action taking on them in December. While the odds are against these bills passing are long, they represent the best chance of positive immigration legislation in the first quarter of 2012. They also represent the best chance for positive immigration legislation in several years.
HR 3012 – The Fairness For High-Skilled Immigrants Act. This bill seeks to eliminate the individual per-country numerical quotas that exist in the allocation of employment-based green cards. The per-country restrictions would be eliminated over three years. The House passed the bill in November. The Senate seemed poised to pass the bill, until Sen. Grassley (R-IA) placed a hold on the bill in December. Sen. Grassley seeks to include several other amendments to the bill, all of which seem aimed at creating a more restrictive business immigration environment. Sen. Grassley’s history suggests that the chances of this bill passing are low unless he can be appeased.
S. 2005 – Irish Recognition and Encouragement Act of 2011. The IRE Act authorizes the Secretary of State to issue up to 10,500 E-3 visas per year to Irish nationals. In the last few years several “trade” visa programs have exempted special classes of nonimmigrants from the usual visa quotas and process. Since the middle part of the last decade, trade visa programs have been carved out for nationals of Chile, Singapore, and Australia. The IRE Act is being pushed by Sen. Brown (R-MA). Massachusetts traditionally is a strong-hold for pro-Irish immigration measures. Sen. Brown’s predecessor, the late Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-MA), had long championed Irish visa programs. With Sen. Brown facing a tough campaign, he may use this bill to curry favor with his deep cadre of pro-Irish constituents.
S. 1986 – STEM Visa Act of 2011 (S. 1986). This bill was introduced just before Congress began its latest holiday. A version of the STEM Act repeatedly has been introduced in several prior Congresses. While the STEM Act would be good for America and great for American business, the STEM Act has failed to gain traction in the past and is not expected to do so in this Congress.
Jan 2012 Visa Bulletin | ||||
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All Other Countries | China | India | Mexico | |
EB-2 | Current | 01JAN09 | 01JAN09 | Current |
EB-3 | 01FEB06 | 15OCT04 | 08AUG02 | 01FEB06 |
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) has temporarily blocked the Senate from passing HR 3012, the Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act. The companion Senate bill was introduced by Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT). It is labeled S. 1857.
HR 3012/S 1857 seeks to eliminate per-country caps on employment-sponsored green cards. Sen. Grassley has held the bill because “it does nothing to better protect Americans.”
Sen. Grassley has long sought major changes in the H-1B rules. He has not specified what changes he is seeking in HR 3012/S 1857. It does not seem likely that the Senator would allow any amendment to increase visa numbers or provide for a faster-track Schedule A visa process.
On Tuesday, November 29, the House of Representatives passed HR. 3012, the Fairness for High-Skilled Immigrants Act by a vote of 389-15. The Senate must now consider the bill. If the Senate passes HR 3012, President Obama is expected to sign the HR 3012 into law.
The measure, if passed into law, would eliminate the per country numerical limitation for employment-based immigrants. The Immigration and Nationality Act generally provides that the total number of employment-based immigrant visas made available to natives of any foreign country in a year cannot exceed 7% of the total number of such visas made available in that year. The bill eliminates this per country percentage cap in a phased in process between 2012 and 2015.
The next National Physical Therapy Exam is scheduled for December 5, 2011. The NPTE’s website regularly publishes the lists of test sites and the number of seats that are available for each site. The list breaks down by individual Prometric facility. Prometric is the independent test administrator for the NPTE. The NPTE is written and graded by the Federation of State Boards of Physical Therapy (FSBPT).