The Immigration Innovation Act of 2015 (I-Squared) was re-introduced in the United States Senate on January 14, 2015. This bill, already introduced without success in last year’s Congress, is aimed squarely at improving the U.S. business immigration system, specifically the H-1B visa program and employment based permanent residence. It will increase the H-1B annual cap from 65,000 to 115,000 and will allow the cap to move upwards based on market demand. The bill will eliminate the existing 20,000 advanced H-1B degree cap and will provide employment authorization for spouses of H-1B visa holders. It will allow for recapture of green card numbers that remained unused from prior years and will exempt family members of employment-based immigrant visa recipients, U.S. STEM advanced degree holders, persons with extraordinary ability, and outstanding professors and researchers from the employment-based green card cap. The I-Squared bill will also eliminate annual per-country limits for employment-based permanent residence and will adjust per-country caps for family-based immigrant visas, which should alleviate the existing backlogs for Indian and Chinese nationals.