New Plan Asks Entrepreneurs to Sound Off on ImmigrationTo help stimulate the economy, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services plans to tap industry experts and entrepreneurs for advice.

ByCarol Tice

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

New Plan Asks Entrepreneurs to Sound Off on ImmigrationIf you think our nation's immigration policy could use some tweaking to help stimulate the economy, here's your chance to give the Feds your opinion.

The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, or USCIS, director Alejandro Mayorkas announced a new "Entrepreneurs in Residence" initiative this week aimed at fast-tracking visas for immigrants with the power to fund startups, start businesses, or provide critical skills we're short on.

The basic drift of the program: USCIS is recruiting industry experts and entrepreneurs to advise the agency on policy reform that might encourage immigration to our shores by investors, entrepreneurs and workers with specialized skills or knowledge.

The new initiative is the latest in a stream of revisions to the agency's visa programs this year. In May, USCIS proposed to streamline and speed up its EB-5 or USCIS Immigrant Investor Program. Then in August, the USCISlaunched an information campaignaimed at improving immigrants' chances of landing visas to come to the U.S.

The latest program begins with a series of informational summits to get input. Then USCIS plans to create a team that includes entrepreneurs to shape new policy. Details about which entrepreneurs will participate and how the program itself will work are still unknown.

If immigration isn't your hot-button issue, maybe you'd like changes in the Food and Drug Administration's drug-approval process? In July, the FDA announced a similar "Entrepreneurs in Residence" initiative aimed at working with entrepreneurs on finding ways to cut themaddeningly slow approval timeline.

坐在可能会见联邦特工ounds like a form of torture to many of you, but these entrepreneurs-in-residence programs are a chance to talk directly with people with the power to propose new policies. If you're passionate about one of these issues, here's your opportunity to make your mark.

What changes would you like to see in immigration policy?Leave a comment and give us your idea.

Wavy Line
Carol Tice

Owner of Make a Living Writing

Longtime Seattle business writerCarol Ticehas written forEntrepreneur, Forbes, Delta Skyand many more. She writes the award-winning Make a Living Writing blog. Her new ebook for Oberlo isCrowdfunding for Entrepreneurs.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business News

Kristen Bell and Dax Shepard's Family 'Stranded' at Boston Airport During 9-Hour Delay: 'We Made Quite a Home Here'

The actors spent $600 on pillows and blankets while waiting for their flight.

领导

There Are 2 Types of Entrepreneurs — And This Is the One You Want to Be. Here's Why.

By honing a few strategic leadership abilities, you'll be able to reach new levels — ensuring that your business is running smoothly and ready for whatever comes next.

Innovation

How Tragedy Can Ignite a Passion for Healing — 7 Steps For Those Dealing With Grief

My journey with business success, personal loss, grief and a Fellowship at Harvard

Marketing

How ChatGPT Is Changing Digital Marketing (for Better or Worse)

The current state-of-play strengths, weaknesses and potential of this breakthrough tech, and why owners and other execs should be aware of its capability gaps.

Starting a Business

10 Ways to Create a Startup Dream Team

Get tips on how to form an effective founding startup team, focusing on hiring the right culture fits, creating a flexible structure and fostering a feedback-rich environment.