Last August 13, 2010, President Barrack Obama signed into law  Public  Law 111-230, which effectively increased the fees for H-1B Visa  and  L-1 Visa applications under the U.S Citizenship and Immigration   Services (USCIS). The new law, which will continue to stay in effect   until September 30, 2014, requires that particular H-1B Visa applicants   pay an additional $2,000, while particular L-1 Visa applicants pay an   additional $2,250 to the USCIS on top of existing fees.
However, it has been stated that the additional fees to the USCIS for   H-1B Visa and L-1 Visa applications be shouldered by the applicants’   employers, and not by the petitioners themselves. The increase does not   affect companies and employees looking to the USCIS to renew or extend   the status of their H-1B Visa and L-1 Visa.
Not all employers and H-1B Visa and L-1 Visa applicants are subject   to the fee increases, however. Public Law 111-230 only applies to   companies and employers who already employ fifty or more employees with   more than 50% of their employed staff with a USCIS certified H-1B Visa   or L-1 Visa (be it L-1A, L-1B, or L-2) currently working in the United   States. For H-1B Visa and L-1 Visa petitioners who fall under any of   these categories, they are required to comply with Public Law 111-230 by   submitting the additional USCIS fee along with their filing packet for   either their H-1B Visa or L-1 Visa application.
On the other hand, petitioners whose company or employers do not fall   under the aforementioned criteria are required to submit written   evidence, attestation or statements to the USCIS justifying why the new   fee increases are not applicable to their H-1B Visa or L-1 Visa   application. These evidences or statements should then be submitted to   the USCIS alongside any filled out forms, applications and documents   pertinent to the H-1B Visa and L-1 Visa petition.
In a teleconference held by the USCIS, it was made clear that H-1B   Visa and L-1 Visa applications submitted to the USCIS without the   enclosed additional fees will not be out rightly returned or rejected.   Instead, the USCIS will promptly issue Requests for Evidence (RFE) for   H-1B Visa and L-1 Visa applications where they believe the additional   fees are required or the necessary documentation to prove otherwise is   either lacking and/or missing.
Public Law 111-230 also explicitly states that these new increases to   the H-1B Visa and L-1 Visa petitions come in addition to already   existing filing and application charges under the USCIS. For H-1B Visa   applications to the USCIS, the additional $2,000 comes on top of the   I-129 form fee, the Fraud Fee, the premium processing fee and the   American Competitiveness and Workforce Improvement Act (ACWIA) fee. For   L-1 Visa applications to the USCIS, the additional $2,250 comes on top   of the I-129 form fee, the Fraud Fee, and the premium processing fee.
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