School districts can use two employment-based visa programs to address persistent support staff shortages: the EB-3 immigrant visa and the H-2B temporary worker visa. Both programs require employer sponsorship and documented proof that U.S. workers were unavailable. Many districts use both: EB-3 for stable, permanent roles and H-2B for seasonal surges.
The teacher shortage gets most of the headlines. But the real operational crisis in K-12 districts across the country is quieter and harder to solve: schools can't find enough custodians, cafeteria workers, paraprofessionals, groundskeepers, or facilities staff to keep buildings running.
These aren't glamorous roles. They're essential. And when they go unfilled, it shows in deferred maintenance, overworked staff, compromised safety, and a student experience that suffers in ways that don't make it onto report cards.
Most districts are fighting the same domestic labor market for the same shrinking pool of workers. The ones finding solutions are looking in a different direction: legal employment-based immigration.
Two pathways in particular are well-suited to school support roles — the EB-3 immigrant visa and the H-2B temporary worker visa. Each serves a distinct purpose. Together, they give districts a real strategic tool for workforce planning.
Before diving into each program, it helps to understand how they differ at a fundamental level.
EB-3 is a permanent immigration pathway. It leads to a green card. Workers who come through EB-3 are building a life in the United States, and the employer is sponsoring that future. It's a long-term commitment with long-term payoffs.
H-2B is a temporary nonimmigrant visa. It's designed for defined, non-permanent staffing needs, i.e. seasonal work, peak load periods, or one-time projects. Workers come, fill a specific need, and return home unless sponsored again the following cycle.
Both require employer sponsorship. Both require proving that U.S. workers weren't available for the role. And both are underused by school districts that don't realize they qualify.
| EB-3 Visa | H-2B Visa | |
| Type | Permanent (green card) | Temporary (nonimmigrant) |
| Duration | Indefinite | 10 months, extendable |
| Best for | Long-term workforce building | Seasonal / peak-period gaps |
| Labor shortage proof | Yes (PERM certification) | Yes (DOL certification) |
The EB-3 visa grants lawful permanent residence to workers sponsored by U.S. employers. It covers three subcategories:
Skilled Workers: Positions requiring at least two years of training or relevant experience
Professionals: Roles requiring a U.S. bachelor's degree or foreign equivalent
Unskilled (Other Workers): Jobs requiring less than two years of training or experience
For the purposes of this article, we’ll be focusing on Unskilled, the one most school districts haven't considered. It's specifically designed for entry-level, permanent, full-time positions. The kind of roles that are hardest to fill and easiest to overlook.
A wide range of school support positions fit the EB-3 Unskilled framework.
The key requirement: the job must be permanent and full-time, not seasonal or temporary.
EB-3 makes sense when:
For districts, the payoff is stability. Because EB-3 workers go through a rigorous immigration process, they are deeply committed to staying. The sponsorship relationship creates mutual investment that drives retention in roles with historically high turnover.
Once a worker receives their green card, there are no ongoing visa renewals, no status management, no annual recertification. They're permanent residents with the same employment status as any other worker. Although they are required to stay with their sponsor employer for 12 months, many stay on much longer if there is a positive work environment.
For workers, the benefits are transformative. They receive the right to live and work in the U.S. Their spouse and unmarried children under 21 can receive derivative green cards. Over time, they can pursue U.S. citizenship. The EB-3 visa doesn’t just offer a job. It's a foundation.
The process has three main steps:
The employer must also demonstrate a continuing ability to pay the offered wage. This is a compliance requirement, not optional. Working with an experienced visa specialist can help you through these processes most efficiently.
The H-2B program allows U.S. employers to bring foreign nationals to fill temporary nonagricultural jobs when domestic labor is unavailable. The program is designed for needs that are genuinely temporary, seasonal, tied to a peak period, or related to a one-time occurrence.
Schools and educational facilities are less commonly associated with H-2B, but they qualify in situations many districts encounter every year.
The defining factor for H-2B is temporary need, not job type. Qualifying school scenarios typically include:
The key: the employer must demonstrate that the need has a defined beginning and end, and is not a permanent, ongoing requirement.
H-2B makes sense when:
H-2B offers something EB-3 can't: flexibility and speed. Districts with a defined seasonal need don't have to run a permanent hiring process for temporary roles. They can staff up precisely when and how they need to.
Workers arrive committed to the placement and the employer. If necessary, many H-2B workers may return to the same employer year after year when they’ve had a positive experience, building institutional knowledge and operational continuity despite the temporary classification.
H-2B operates under an annual cap of 66,000 visas per fiscal year, split between two filing periods (October through March start dates, and April through September start dates). Supplemental visas are sometimes made available, but they are competitive and demand moves fast.
Timing is everything. Employers must:
Missing the cap window or filing documentation out of order can delay or eliminate the option for that season. Planning six to eight months ahead is necessary. An H-2B program advisor can help you navigate the process.
Workers are tied to the specific employer and position while in H-2B status. They can stay up to 10 months with potential extensions, after which they must depart and spend time outside the U.S. before returning.
Most school districts that use these visa programs end up using both for different roles, at different times, for different purposes. The decision framework is straightforward.
Use EB-3 when:
Use H-2B when:
The programs aren't competing strategies. They're complementary tools. Many school districts use them together.
Even well-intentioned school district leaders may run into problems when they enter these visa programs without proper guidance.
To avoid these common mistakes, work with a professional visa partner like Vanteo. We provide end-to-end support to navigate both EB-3 and H-2B visas, ensuring your process is efficient and compliant.
The workforce challenge facing school support operations is structural. It reflects broader demographic and labor market shifts that aren't going to reverse on their own. School districts that wait for the domestic labor market to improve are waiting for something that may not come.
EB-3 and H-2B are not loopholes. They are legitimate, congressionally authorized programs designed for situations like this—employers with documented staffing needs that the domestic workforce cannot fill.
School districts that use them well gain something their peers don't have: operational stability, reduced turnover, and a workforce pipeline that doesn't depend entirely on the same competitive local market everyone else is fishing in.
That's a real advantage. And it starts with knowing which pathway fits your needs.
Vanteo works with school districts and educational institutions to navigate EB-3 and H-2B sponsorship. If your school is facing persistent support staff shortages, schedule a free consultation to assess which visa makes sense for your situation.
If your school has considered bringing on international teachers for cultural exchange, Vanteo can also help you find a sponsor to help facilitate international learning opportunities that enrich your school through the J-1 Exchange Visitor visa.
About Vanteo
Vanteo serves as the parent company for a comprehensive family of brands specializing in workforce solutions, cultural exchange programs, and process management, each benefiting from our integrated approach.
Permanent Workers
BDV Solutions (BDV) operates as our EB-3 permanent residence visa specialist, focusing on long-term workforce solutions for organizations seeking to build lasting international talent partnerships. BDV handles the complex process of securing permanent residence visas for essential workers across various industries.
Vanteo is not a law firm, and this information should not be considered legal advice. Participation in U.S. visa programs is subject to eligibility, regulatory requirements, and government approval. Past performance does not guarantee future outcomes.