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When the news came, it was like “a bolt out of the blue”, Seattle-based Tang said. She and her husband flew back from China to the US on September 20 amid urgent directives from their firms’ legal departments to immediately return to America.
Tang said they returned, in spite of higher expenses, as they both faced the risk of losing their jobs and being unable to manage their US property. The policy change, however, did not clarify if they were personally subject to pay the US$100,000 fee.
After the new policy was signed on Friday, companies and affected employees scrambled to figure out who would be subject to the H-1B visa fee.
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That ambiguity from the White House showed why many H-1B holders found themselves in a state of confusion and panic, which led many of them to return to the US from holiday to seek a solution.