
Originally Posted by
Spectator
GhostWriter,
DOS, through the Visa Office, control the Supply of Visas and set the Cut Off Dates based on the Demand. USCIS only generate (part of the) Demand against the available Supply of Visas.
A Cut Off Date may be necessary for one of 2 reasons:
a) To control available Visa numbers against a Country's numerical limit. We are all familiar with this, as it affects, or has affected China, India, Mexico and Philippines.
b) To control available Visa numbers against the overall number available to a Category (EB1, EB2 etc.).
This is the reason EB3 is retrogressed for all Countries. China and India (and Mexico and Philippines from time to time) are retrogressed due to per Country limits, while all other Countries are retrogressed due to the finite number of visas available to EB3 (40k).
It is (b) that would be in effect IF a Cut Off Date needs to be established for EB2-WW.
There are only a finite number of visas available to EB2, comprising the initial 40k plus any Fall Down from EB1.
Using an example (with hypothetical numbers), let's say there are 50k total visas available to EB2 this year. Let's further say that EB2-IC have already used 25k before becoming Unavailable.
If EB2-WW (ROW,M & P) have a demand of more than 25k in FY2012, then there will not be enough available visas to cover the demand. In that case, a Cut Off Date would have to be established to control the numbers.
That Cut Off Date would apply to all Countries within EB2-WW, since none would have actually reached their individual numerical limit.
If a Country within EB2-WW did reach its numerical limit, it would have its own Cut Off Date set and be shown separately in the VB. Leaving South Korea aside, this is very unlikely. In FY2010, the highest number of visas in EB2 went to Philippines with 2,162 followed by Canada with 1,705.
Even if the 7% were within Categories, which it is not, then there is still quite a buffer before reaching that figure.
In EB1, only China, India and Great Britain exceeded the nominal 7% figure in FY2010. That has not been a problem to date, because there has always been sufficient spillover visas (both Fall Across and Fall Up) to accommodate this overuse.
As Q explained, the 7% is not calculated within each Category, but is 7% of the total FB & EB across all FB and EB Categories. This figure of 25,620 is mentioned in every Visa Bulletin.
So South Korea, who received about 8% of EB visas in FY2010 (about 9% in EB2), only received about 4% of overall FB & EB visas. They therefore did not exceed the 7% limit and a separate Cut Off Date was not required.
I would disagree with Q - it is mentioned in the INA and does appear to reflect this interpretation. Personally, I do think (wish) it should operate at least at EB level, if not even at a Category level. It would remove some of the Current inequities.