Visas for High-Tech Workers Draw Query from Senators
Geoff Davis on Wed, May 09, 12:05PM wrote:
"The H-1B numbers are random and capricious because they have to be manually adjusted by a slow and painful Congressional intervention."
Geoff,
You'll have to forgive me if I take your responses to my comments with a grain of salt. In too many instances your comments sound as if you are stating the facts, like your comment above. In fact, your comments are sometimes inconsistent with past and current events.
Case in point: Below is an article that appeared in today's Washington Post. It shows how Senators Durbin and Grassley are investigating the use of H1-B visas by nine companies who are the largest users of H1-Bs.
These two senators introduced H1-B legislation back on April 2nd, 2007.
See:
DURBIN AND GRASSLEY INTRODUCE FIRST BIPARTISAN H-1B VISA REFORM BILL TO PROTECT AMERICAN WORKERS
As I mentioned previously, the H1-B visa numbers are anything but "random" and "capricious", and the type of debate discussed below has gone on since the program's inception. It will be interesting to watch as this debate continues to unfold.
I appreciate your point that in the end, it is difficult to get Congress to act, especially when there are two sides the argument.
Bob
Here is the article that appeared in the Washington Post:
By SUZANNE GAMBOA
The Associated Press
Monday, May 14, 2007; 8:48 PM
WASHINGTON -- Two senators are questioning several companies about their use of a visa program for highly skilled workers. Sens. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Dick Durbin, D-Ill., said they are focusing on nine companies, several of them foreign-based, that used nearly 20,000 of the 75,000 H-1B visas that were available last year.
H-1B visas are for high-skilled workers and are heavily used in the high-tech industry.
"I continue to hear how people want to increase the number of H-1B visas that are available to companies," Grassley said in a news release. "Considering the high amount of fraud and abuse in the visa program, we need to take a good, hard look at the employers who are using H-1B visas and how they are using them."
Grassley and Durbin, both members of the Senate Judiciary Committee's immigration subcommittee, sent letters to the nine companies asking several questions about their visa use, wages and layoffs.
The top users were identified with statistics from Citizenship and Immigration Services, the senators said.
The letters, posted on Grassley's Web site, were addressed to Infosys Technologies Ltd. in Freemont, Calif.; Wipro Limited, Mountainview, Calif.; Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., Arlington, Va.; Saytam Computer Services Ltd., Andhra Pradesh, India; Patni Computer Systems, Mumbai, India; Larsen & Toubro Infotech Ltd., Mumbai, India; I-Flex Solutions Inc., Mumbai, India; Tech Mahindra Americas Inc., Englewood, Colo.; and Mphasis Corp., Bangalore, India.
Under federal law, 65,000 H-1B visas are available each year for workers in specialty fields such as computer programmers, engineers, architects, accountants, doctors, college professors and fashion models.
Another 20,000 visas are available for foreign workers with at least a master's degree from a U.S. college or university. The numbers do not include current H-1B visa holders. Federal law sets requirements for H-1B holders' salaries.
The high-tech industry has long complained that too few visas are available. Microsoft Corp. is among a group of companies that has pushed for increasing the available visas. This year, the limit for applications for the visas was reached in record time.
"Collecting information is fine, but we think abuse of the system is the exception rather than the rule," said Eric Thomas, a spokesman for Compete America, a coalition that includes Microsoft, chip maker Intel Corp., business software company Oracle Corp. and others.
Increasing U.S. competitiveness by providing more visas for skilled workers has been a key issue in congressional efforts to craft a comprehensive immigration bill. At least two bills have been filed that would increase available H-1B visas to 115,000 a year.
Geoff Davis on Wed, May 09, 12:05PM wrote: "The H-1B numbers are random and capricious because they have to be manually adjusted by a slow and painful Congressional intervention."
Geoff,
You'll have to forgive me if I take your responses to my comments with a grain of salt. In too many instances your comments sound as if you are stating the facts, like your comment above. In fact, your comments are sometimes inconsistent with past and current events.
Case in point: Below is an article that appeared in today's Washington Post. It shows how Senators Durbin and Grassley are investigating the use of H1-B visas by nine companies who are the largest users of H1-Bs.
These two senators introduced H1-B legislation back on April 2nd, 2007.
See:
DURBIN AND GRASSLEY INTRODUCE FIRST BIPARTISAN H-1B VISA REFORM BILL TO PROTECT AMERICAN WORKERS
http://durbin.senate.gov/record.cfm?id=271783
As I mentioned previously, the H1-B visa numbers are anything but "random" and "capricious", and the type of debate discussed below has gone on since the program's inception. It will be interesting to watch as this debate continues to unfold.
I appreciate your point that in the end, it is difficult to get Congress to act, especially when there are two sides the argument.
Bob
Here is the article that appeared in the Washington Post:
Visas for High-Tech Workers Draw Query
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/14/AR2007051401051.html?hpid%3Dsec-tech&sub=AR
By SUZANNE GAMBOA The Associated Press Monday, May 14, 2007; 8:48 PM
WASHINGTON -- Two senators are questioning several companies about their use of a visa program for highly skilled workers. Sens. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Dick Durbin, D-Ill., said they are focusing on nine companies, several of them foreign-based, that used nearly 20,000 of the 75,000 H-1B visas that were available last year.
H-1B visas are for high-skilled workers and are heavily used in the high-tech industry.
"I continue to hear how people want to increase the number of H-1B visas that are available to companies," Grassley said in a news release. "Considering the high amount of fraud and abuse in the visa program, we need to take a good, hard look at the employers who are using H-1B visas and how they are using them."
Grassley and Durbin, both members of the Senate Judiciary Committee's immigration subcommittee, sent letters to the nine companies asking several questions about their visa use, wages and layoffs.
The top users were identified with statistics from Citizenship and Immigration Services, the senators said.
The letters, posted on Grassley's Web site, were addressed to Infosys Technologies Ltd. in Freemont, Calif.; Wipro Limited, Mountainview, Calif.; Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., Arlington, Va.; Saytam Computer Services Ltd., Andhra Pradesh, India; Patni Computer Systems, Mumbai, India; Larsen & Toubro Infotech Ltd., Mumbai, India; I-Flex Solutions Inc., Mumbai, India; Tech Mahindra Americas Inc., Englewood, Colo.; and Mphasis Corp., Bangalore, India.
Under federal law, 65,000 H-1B visas are available each year for workers in specialty fields such as computer programmers, engineers, architects, accountants, doctors, college professors and fashion models.
Another 20,000 visas are available for foreign workers with at least a master's degree from a U.S. college or university. The numbers do not include current H-1B visa holders. Federal law sets requirements for H-1B holders' salaries.
The high-tech industry has long complained that too few visas are available. Microsoft Corp. is among a group of companies that has pushed for increasing the available visas. This year, the limit for applications for the visas was reached in record time.
"Collecting information is fine, but we think abuse of the system is the exception rather than the rule," said Eric Thomas, a spokesman for Compete America, a coalition that includes Microsoft, chip maker Intel Corp., business software company Oracle Corp. and others.
Increasing U.S. competitiveness by providing more visas for skilled workers has been a key issue in congressional efforts to craft a comprehensive immigration bill. At least two bills have been filed that would increase available H-1B visas to 115,000 a year.
__
On the Net:
Sen. Chuck Grassley: http://grassley.seante.gov
Sen. Dick Durbin: http://durbin.senate.gov © 2007 The Associated Press