WASHINGTON, D.C. – Philippine Ambassador to the United States
Albert del Rosario today said that the Philippine Embassy will endeavor
to undertake a three-pronged strategy to pursue the continued deployment
of Filipino nurses in the US in response to the stoppage of visa issuances
to workers.
This deployment has been disrupted by the fact that
the temporary working visa (H1B) and employment-based immigrant visa
(EB3) which are used by Filipino nurses have been fully utilized for
2005.
According to Ambassador del Rosario, the Philippine
Embassy will undertake the following:
First, it will make official representations with the
State Department emphasizing that since the US has an acute need for
nurses which the Philippines can readily supply, both governments can
pursue a “win-win” solution to the problem.
Second, it will harness the support of the Philippines-US
Friendship Caucus - composed of 69 American congressmen - for the immediate
enactment into law of two important bills. One is the “Health
Improvement and Professionals Act of 2005” sponsored by Congressman
Tom Lantos (D-San Mateo, San Francisco) in the US House of Representatives,
and by Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY) and Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX)
in the US Senate. This bill provides for the allotment of unused visas
for other countries to qualified nurses from the Philippines, India
and China. To date, a total of 130,000 EB3 visa numbers for countries
other than the Philippines, China and India, remain unused.
The other bill, filed by Congresswoman Sheila Jackson-Lee
(D-TX), would create a special nurse visa, similar to the old H-1A,
which was used to address the nursing shortage of the late 1980s and
early 1990s.
Third, the Philippine Embassy will work with the American Hospital Association
(AHA) and other concerned parties who have a vital need for reliable
access to nursing services.
Ambassador del Rosario said that the shortage of nurses in the US remains
acute. The US Department of Health and Human Services reports that there
are 130,000 registered nurses vacancies nationwide. This number is projected
to grow to 275,000 by 2010 and to over 800,000 by 2020.
Last year, based on the data of the US Embassy in Manila
and the POEA, the Philippines’ deployment under the H1B visa and
the EB3 visa numbered 11,349, of which around 70% were issued to nurses.
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