What will determine the success or failure of the Labor Certification for “Schedule A” Occupations?
The success or failure of a labor certification will depend upon such variables as desirability of the job, the state of the economy, the number of interested and qualified American applicants or permanent resident aliens who read and respond to the job advertisement and/or the internal postings by applying for the position…and, of course, the skill with which the job requirements and job description are prepared. The immigration specialist job is a delicate one. He/she must describe the job narrowly enough that it fits the alien perfectly but broadly enough that it appears to satisfy the DOL’s technical requirements for a “genuine test of the job market,” hopefully without attracting any qualified American applicants. This requires time, experience and skill, which explains why the fees for non-“Schedule A” labor certifications are correspondingly higher than for “Schedule A” Occupations.
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