News


Call for Irish to get unused Aussie E3 visas to U.S.

7,000 immigrant visas a year not being taken up


Irish should be able to use unused visas from the E 3 program between Australia and the US
Irish should be able to use unused visas from the E 3 program between Australia and the US

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A leading immigration attorney and Irish activist  John Philip Foley, says the Irish government and the Irish American community should push for Ireland to receive the unused visas from the E 3 program between Australia and the US. He was speaking to the Boston Irish Reporter.

The E 3 visa deal between Australia and the US is 10,000 visas a year, but they are different than green cards and are considered non immigrant visas .

However,  the qualified person can work and keep renewing the visa as can his/her spouse indefinitely.

 Up to 7,000, however, are currently unclaimed every year by Australians leaving them  unused. Foley thinks a simple amendment to the law could be to the advantage of Irish citizens. Given Ireland’s recent economic bust he beleives now is the time to start helping young Irish who will be forced to leave.

The E 3 visas were signed into legislation by President George W Bush in 2005.

 Australian citizens with university degrees or the equivalent trade certification are entitled to apply for an E-3 visa.

 “An E-3 visa is similar in many respects to the H1B visa, but one important difference is that spouses of E-3 visa holders may work in the United States without restrictions,” Foley says. “The E-3 visa is also renewable on an indefinite basis every two years and it could lead to Legal Permanent Residency (also known as a Green card) and eventually to naturalized U S citizenship.”
Up to 7,000 visas a year from the E 3 progam go unclaimed. INS figures show just 1918 new E-3 visas in 2006, 2572 new and six returning visas in 2007, 2,961 new and 1,568 returning in FY 2008; and 2,191 new and 1,421 returning in 2009.

With a small  change in the law, Foley told the Boston Irish Reporter  some of those unused
visas could be obtained by Irish nationals seeking to relocate to America.

Foley says there’s little chance comprehensive immigration  reform will be on the political agenda anytime soon given the new make up of the House.

“But that doesn’t mean the Irish should stand still,” Foley says. “Irish lawmakers should be pushing for E-3-like visas. E-3 visas wouldn’t help the undocumented overstay already here but they could help those in Ireland looking for work and a legal life in the United States. … It is a visa distribution plan the Irish should get in on.”


Nster.com


12 Comments

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Where does this sense of entitlement arise from? This gentleman is simply trying to make money (as an agent) from a deal that was made between Australia and the USA, it has nothing at all to do with Ireland. It seems another example of the Irish expecting to be bailed out by other nations, fix your own problems and stop freeloading.
I just worry that the young people from Ireland are going to come looking for jobs that aren't here. Sure enough, there are some jobs but they are few and far between... low paying and often no benefits. The job market here is also pretty grim and it's a pretty expensive gamble to take.
Woukldn't it make more sense to give such visas to those Poles, Chinese etc. who are emigrating to Ireland and taking Irish jobs? That way these Poles etc. could emigrate as they wish, to a country that offers work instead of welfare, while the Irish could stay at home in their native country.
Excellent Idea!! We will welcome you all! We need fresh Irish grist for the US mill. This swap of immigrant "permits" is exactly what the IMF wants, US Customs wants, what the US congress wants and what the American people want. Now all you have to do is claim "Black Irish" decent and you in!
Its a great idea - it would be a little reparation gesture by the us of a for all those young men arriving from Ireland in the 1950/60s who were shipped off to Korea and Vietnam - some paying the full measure without being granted citizenship. The ignorant haters will always dream up mucho crapola. Its what they are good at. A goodly percentage of Aussies are Irish anyway.
Its a great idea - it would be a little reparation gesture by the us of a for all those young men arriving from Ireland in the 1950/60s who were shipped off to Korea and Vietnam - some paying the full measure without being granted citizenship. The ignorant haters will always dream up mucho crapola. Its what they are good at.
Its a great idea - it would be a little reparation gesture by the us of a for all those young men arriving from Ireland in the 1950s who were shipped off to Korea and Vietnam - some paying the full measure without being granted citizenship. The ignorant haters will always dream up mucho crapola. Its what they are good at.
We'll take the Aussies- they don't sit around moaning about how the Yanks ruined their lives- but, for the love of God no more Irish!
Ireland had those visas and more until Edward "No Moore" Kennedy took them away in 1965.
Well we all know why the Aussies have those visas - 'Thanks for supporting our war on terror Australia. here's a couple thousand visas in return for your troops lives'.... G.W Bush.
All I can say is that here in Boston, the Electricians, Carpenters and Laborers Locals are very slow and a lot of the members are out of work at the moment. These locals have a huge Irish Membership.
At least someone is working constructively on this problem, and if it helps even one person from Ireland I'm all for it.
 




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