Microsoft software engineer on an H1-B visa expressed concern about her living situation.

One of the 10,000 employees at Microsoft who were let go in January after working there for over two years said she had a lot of unanswered concerns.
A week after learning she had been fired, Lupe Canaviri Maydana, a resident of Seattle, Washington, said on Monday in a LinkedIn post that there had been "a lot of things to handle," among them the unsettling idea of where she would be living.
"Before outlining some of her worries, she said, "This shift hit me with a lot of questions, which in the coming months I will have to work it out. Where will I be living? What part will I play? Which business will I work for next on my journey?"
She is from Bolivia, according to the details on her LinkedIn page, including her prior career and the institution she attended.
According to Herman, a law company that specialises in immigrant rights, Maydana is on an H-1B visa, which means she only has 60 days from the day she was released of her work obligations to find another job or she would need to leave the United States.
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