The Trump administration plans visa charges. Foreign students and media visas face limits. Duration of stay rules are under review. The H-1B visa program and the Green Card process may also change. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick confirmed the plans. These changes occur amid US-India relations. Tariffs on Indian imports of Russian oil are now in effect.
The Trump administration is proposing to limit the duration of visas for international students and media personnel in the US. The Department of Homeland Security, in a press release on Wednesday, said that if finalised, the proposed rule would limit the length of time certain visa holders, including international students, are allowed to stay in the United States. Since 1978, international students have been admitted into the US for an unspecified period known as the duration of status.
Unlike other visas issued, those with a duration of status designation are allowed to remain in the US for an indefinite amount of time without further screening and vetting, the DHS said. The Trump administration stated that international students have taken advantage of the US's generosity and have become students who are perpetually enrolled in higher education courses, thereby remaining in the country. "For too long, past administrations have allowed foreign students and other visa holders to remain in the US virtually indefinitely, posing safety risks costing untold amounts of taxpayer dollars and disadvantaging US citizens," a DHS spokesperson said.
"This new proposed rule would end that abuse once and for all by limiting the amount of time certain visa holders are allowed to remain in the US," the spokesperson added.
For foreign media personnel who can work in the US on an I visa that is issued for five years and can be extended for multiple durations, the rule would set the initial admission period at up to 240 days. Foreign media representatives would be eligible for an extension period of up to 240 days, but no longer than the length of the temporary activity or assignment. Under President Trump's proposed rule, the federal government would set the authorities' admission and extension periods for international students and exchange students up to the duration of the programme they are participating in, not to exceed four years.
Additionally, admitting international students for exchange and foreign media classifications for a fixed period would require these individuals to apply for authorisation to extend their stay with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services. This would necessitate regular assessments by the DHS for the alien to remain in the US for an extended period.
This proposed rule was first proposed under President Trump in 2020 but was withdrawn by the Biden Administration in 2021.
Separately, the Trump administration is planning to change the H-1 B programme, the most sought-after non-immigrant visa among Indian IT professionals, and also bring changes to the Green Card process, US Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick has said.
I am involved in reforming the H-1 B program. We are going to change that programme because that is terrible," Lutnick said in an interview with Fox News on Tuesday.
He added that the Trump administration is also going to change the Green Card process that provides permanent residency in the US. The move comes amid a strain in ties between the US and India following the Trump administration's imposition of 50 per cent tariffs on India for its purchases of Russian oil, which took effect on Wednesday.
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#bookmybooking #trumpadministration #visaduration #visapolicy #visaupdate #visanews

