Let The Fighting Begin - H1B Issue Goes to Washington
The Best Reading on H-1B: Issues, Testimony, Fraud....
Can't We Make a Hit TV Show From This?
Ever get the feeling that someone's making money on those H-1B visas you read about? Check out U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley's letter to the Bush administration re: H-1B visa abuses: http://grassley.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=PressReleases.Detail&PressRelease_id=9af53fa4-b99b-5638-8db2-5021e681c258&Month=3&Year=2008 There's some really juicy stuff in this. It discusses the blatantly illegal job advertisements here in the U.S. where advertisers are only looking for holders of H-1B visas. It details how visa factories are being established to create false employer fronts within the U.S. There's the story of an Iowa businessman getting harangued by an offshore firm with all of these potential visa holders on the bench. The fact that Homeland Security is being alerted to these abuses suggests something is really rotten here. Great reading - really.
Computerworld expands on the Senator's letter in this story: http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9067738&intsrc=hm_list . Like the above, it's a great read, too.
We also have Network World chiming in with their piece: http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/031208-h1b.html.
Bill Gates, of Microsoft fame, testified before Congress and a synopsis of his remarks can be found here: http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/031208-gates-immigration-reform.html
All this comes at a time when the U.S. government is being asked to raise the limits on H-1B visas from 65,000 to 110,000/year.
Here are the questions U.S. policy makers must address pronto:
- Does bringing in more non-US workers actually motivate US students to pursue technical degrees or does it achieve the opposite effect?
- The H-1B program was intended to bring in people with unique skills and talent. How do green, low-level tech coders meet that standard? What aren't more PhDs being granted this visa?
- Why are large tech outsourcers allowed to hog the number of available visas? Should U.S. based tech companies get an equal or better opportunity to import scarce, unique talent?
- Why are students at U.S. colleges electing not to pursue careers in technical areas? Is it because of bad employer behavior? Is it because these positions are vulnerable to outsourcing? Is it because potential employers send mixed signals to colleges, employees and job seekers? Or, is it that U.S. college students can't be bothered with these degrees? What is the real root cause?
- Is the L-1 visa program as messed up as the H-1B? Should both be addressed?
Approving or disallowing the increase in visa permits is not the issue. Congress must address bigger concerns (e.g., national security) and discover the answers (and appropriate remedies) to the matters above and more.




Comments