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Dayton Public Schools had hired foreign workers before, but has not filed any LCA for H1-B visa or LC for green card since fiscal year 2020.
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Willful Violator: | No (?) | H1B Dependent: | No (?) |
Economic Sector: | n.a. |
NAICS Industry: | Elementary and Secondary Schools |
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Green Card Applicant Profile: |
Citizenship: | Mexico(1) |
Class of Admission: | EWI(1) |
Degree: | Bachelor's(1) |
College: | Dalton State College(1) |
Major: | Education(1) |
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Job Locations and Occupation: |
Hot H1B Job Locations: | n.a. |
Hot H1B Visa Jobs: | no records |
Hot Green Card Jobs: | Newcomer Academy/ELL Teacher(1) |
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Hot H1B Occupations: | no records |
Hot Green Card Occupations: | Middle School Teachers, Except Special and Career/Technical Education(1) |
Note: Before Dayton Public Schools can hire foreign workers permanently or temporarily, it must file labor certifications with the Department of Labor(DOL), demonstrating that it is paying the required wage for the positions in the geographic region where the jobs are located. Above table reports Labor Condition Application(LCA) for H1B visa and Labor Certification(LC) for green card filed by Dayton Public Schools. The data only indicates the number of applications filed by Dayton Public Schools. It does not mean that Dayton Public Schools actually got the visa and hired the workers.
Our LCA data includes LCA submitted for not only new employment, but also continuation or change in previously approved employment, new concurrent employment, change in employer and amended petition. Usually, only LCA for new employment needs H1B Visa quota if it is not cap-exempt.
Dayton Public Schools has not filed any labor petitions for foreign workers from fiscal year 2021 to 2023. However, Dayton Public Schools had applied for LCA for H1B visa or LC for green card before 2012. You can still apply for their new openings. Be sure to contact their HR department or hiring managers for their updated work visa policy.
Department of Labor(DOL) typically certifies more than 3 times the number of foreign work requests than the number of H1B visas issued by USCIS. So there is no one to one relationship between the number of workers certified by the DOL and the number of H1B work visas issued by the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS).