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As Tech Giant Calls For More Foreign Workers, Senate Hears of Displaced Americans
Townhall.com ^ | March 24, 2015 | Byron York

Posted on 03/24/2015 5:24:29 AM PDT by Kaslin

Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google, believes passionately that the United States needs more skilled foreign workers. He has long advocated increasing the number of so-called H-1B visas, which allow those workers to come to the U.S. for several years and, in many cases, work for lower wages than current employees. Schmidt is frustrated that Congress hasn't done as he and other tech moguls want.

"In the long list of stupid policies of the U.S. government, I think our attitude toward immigration has got to be near the top," Schmidt said during a recent appearance at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington. "Everyone actually agrees that there should be more H-1B visas in order to create more tech, more science, more analytical jobs. Everyone agrees, in both parties."

The Eric Schmidt pleading for more foreign workers is the same Eric Schmidt who boasts of turning away thousands upon thousands of job seekers who apply for a few prized positions at Google. For example, at an appearance in Cleveland last October to promote his book, "How Google Works," Schmidt explained that his company receives at least 1,000 applications for every job opening. "The good news is that we have computers to do the initial vetting," Schmidt explained, according to an account in the Cleveland Plain Dealer.

Other tech leaders join Schmidt in calling for more foreign workers. Some companies are actually lobbying for more H-1Bs and laying off American staff at the same time. For example, last year Microsoft announced the layoff of 18,000 people at the very moment it was pushing Congress for more guest worker visas.

Given all that, there's not quite the unanimous agreement on the need for more foreign workers that Schmidt claims. At a recent hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, a number of experts testified that the H-1B program, so sought-after by CEOs, is being abused to harm American workers.

Ron Hira, a Howard University professor and author of the book "Outsourcing America," told the story of Southern California Edison, which recently got rid of 500 IT employees and replaced them with a smaller force of lower-paid workers brought in from overseas through the H-1B program. The original employees were making an average of about $110,000 a year, Hira testified; the replacements were brought to Southern California Edison by outsourcing firms that pay an average of between $65,000 and $75,000.

"To add insult to injury," Hira said, "SCE forced its American workers to train their H-1B replacements as a condition of receiving their severance packages."

Hira testified that such situations are not unusual. And on the larger issue of whether there is, as many tech executives claim, a critical shortage of labor in what are called the STEM fields -- science, technology, engineering and math -- another professor, Hal Salzman of Rutgers, testified that the shortage simply does not exist.

"The U.S. supply of top-performing graduates is large and far exceeds the hiring needs of the STEM industries, with only one of every two STEM graduates finding a STEM job," Salzman testified. "The guest worker supply is very large (and) it is highly concentrated in the IT industry, leading to both stagnant wages and job insecurity."

The hearing also featured Jay Palmer, a former Infosys project manager who blew the whistle on a case in which the big outsourcing firm paid $34 million in fines for worker visa violations. "I watched this on a daily basis," Palmer told the Judiciary Committee. "I sat in the offices in meetings with companies that displaced American workers only because the Americans who had been there 15 or 20 years were being paid too much money."

So not everyone agrees with Schmidt on the need for more H-1B workers. Certainly not the laid-off IT employees at Southern California Edison. And not the workers reportedly displaced by similar practices at Disney, Harley Davidson, Cargill, Pfizer and other companies. Who knows? Maybe some of those workers have been among the 1,000-plus who apply for every Google opening.

To hear the witnesses before the Senate Judiciary Committee tell it, Congress needs to act -- not to increase the number of H-1Bs but to close the loopholes that allow them to be so badly abused at such a cost to American workers. "Congress and multiple administrations have inadvertently created a highly lucrative business model of bringing in cheaper H-1B workers to substitute for Americans," Hira told the committee. "Simply put, the H-1B program has become a cheap labor program."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: corporatewelfare; h1b
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To: Lazamataz

LMAO. I knew better than to click that link, but did it anyway.


81 posted on 03/24/2015 11:41:18 AM PDT by TADSLOS (A Ted Cruz Happy Warrior! GO TED!)
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To: from occupied ga
Hire me! I'll lord my superiority over you, sabotage your business relationships, plot against your plans, and sexually harass your secretary!

Win-win!

82 posted on 03/24/2015 12:05:32 PM PDT by Lazamataz (The FCC takeover of the internet will quickly become a means to censorship of dissent.)
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To: RJS1950
Let me see if I understand this ridiculous and out-of-control HB situation correctly: We import highly-skilled technical workers mainly from such Asian countries like India, China, Taiwan, Pakistan. and South Korea so that we can compete in the world market with highly-skilled scientists and technicians in Asian countries like India, China,Taiwan, Pakistan and South Korea. it makes no sense.

My question is this: If the best and the brightest scientists and technical workers in India,China, Taiwan, Pakistan, and South Korea remain in their countries, then what level of workers is the United States importing from those Asian countries?

Such distorted logic and reasoning on the part of American technical firms like Microsoft, Apple, and Facebook makes no sense.

Have these greedy technical companies forgotten that America was made great by such programs like apprentice programs and internships? How do these technical companies think that American plumbers,electricians, and air-conditioning technicians learned their skills: Through apprentice programs.

We should encourage, maybe even demand, that technical companies like Microsoft, Apple, and FaceBooke develop strong apprentice and intern programs so that they wouldn't have to depend so much on HB technical workers from India, China, Taiwan, Pakistan, and South Korea.

I believe that the HB program should be immediately and drastically reduced or abolished completely.

My point is this: The HB program has done more harm than good in developing of technical skills among future American young people. The HB program is slowly destroying rather than helping America's ability to compete in the global market.

The severe problem of getting American young people to pursue technical skills goes something like this:

1. Schools throughout the country are working hard to encourage young people to enter the technical fields like working with computers.

2. Many young Americans are enthusiastic about entering the good-paying technical field.

3. But these same students look around and see that they have to compete not only with their fellow Americans but with technical workers imported from foreign countries, mostly Asian countries---for instance, you don't see a flood of HB workers coming from,say, Spain and England.

4. So what do these bright students end up doing? They become discouraged. They give up on their dreams to entire the fast growing and good-paying technical field, and so they decide to go into some line of easier work where they don't have to compete with foreign technical workers.

5. Then what happens? What happens is that the United States demand for technical workers ends up caught in a vicious circle.

6. The vicious circle goes something like this: Now that more and more smart American students are discouraged from pursuing studies in the scientific and technical fields by such horrible self-defeating programs like the HB program, American companies claim that they can't find enough skilled American workers to meet their increasing demand for skilled technical workers.

7. So, argue American companies, they have no choice but to beg Congress to allow them to import more and more foreign technical workers from such Asian countries as India, China, Taiwan,Pakistan and South Korea so that they can compete on the global market with the highly skilled technical workers in Asian countries like India, China, Taiwan, Pakistan, and South Korea. Huh? Am I missing something here?

8. And round-and-round we go with no end in sight to this terrible, self-defeating HB foreign workers problem.

9. Meanwhile, executives at technical and rich companies like Microsoft , Apple, and FaceBook run all the way to the bank to deposit all the money they saved by bypassing highly-qualified American technical workers for foreign HB workers.

10. Yes. Let's drastically reduce or abolish the HB foreign workers program so that we can give American youths the chance to develop the technical skills that America will need for a long, long time.

11. HB needs to be repealed, or a new law is needed, something like this:

a. "If you have a mass layoff or a mass firing of American technical workers, you must be ready to have a good explanation why you did so. IT is obscene and morally for Microsoft to layoff 18,000 American workers and then go before Congress and beg for more HB workers. Immoral, I say.

Boycott Microsoft products? Maybe we should think very hard about boycotting Microsoft products and holding demonstration at Microsoft headquarters if Microsoft does not change its hiring practices. Again, it is morally wrong for giant Microsoft to layoff 18,000 workers, while, at the same time, it goes before Congress and begs and cries for more HB workers, mostly from Asia.

What I say above holds true for other giants like Apple and Google.

b. "If your explanation is weak as to why you had such a mass layoff, you are not eligible for the HB program. Laying off American technical workers, while, at the same time, you hire HB workers is an illegal, greedy abuse of the HB program.

c. "A company or private enterprise like California Edison and Microsoft can only hire HB workers every 5 years if it has a mass layoff of American technical workers, if even then.

d. "If you have a mass layoff or fire workers because you say your business is not doing very well, you can't turn around and beg for HB workers because you need such workers to help your business recover.

e."You must pay HB foreign workers the same that you would pay American workers.

f. "Your HB workers must not all come from the same country or the same continent like Asia. Only one third (1/3) can come from one continent like Asia.

g.IMPORTANT: We need to fix this abusive loophole that I call "Cheating on resume": A company or foreign worker cannot hire a lawyer to help the company write a job description so limited that only the foreign worker who hired the lawyer can fill the job.

83 posted on 03/24/2015 1:14:19 PM PDT by john mirse (WORK)
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To: Mr. Jeeves

What is rather amusing is that when my team had our last meeting, the management begged for us to stay.

Now we are getting more H1B’s in management.


84 posted on 03/24/2015 1:28:43 PM PDT by redgolum ("God is dead" -- Nietzsche. "Nietzsche is dead" -- God.)
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To: john mirse

Very well said. I’ve had my fill of them both as competitors to qualified Americans as well as their scheming manipulation and sometimes cheating to achieve an A average from an American school.

If they are good and truly merit their resume then fine. If they don’t then go back home. Companies that foster this need to be reigned in. Is there any doubt why most of these big companies support democrats? Democrats are all for the H1B program and unfortunately so are many RINOs. Dirtbags all.


85 posted on 03/24/2015 1:31:53 PM PDT by RJS1950 (The democrats are the "enemies foreign and domestic" cited in the federal oath)
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To: Lazamataz
sexually harass your secretary!

She's shared, and she could pick you up, roll you into a ball, dribble you down the court, and slam you into the backboard without breaking a sweat. We all go in fear of her. (slight exaggeration)

86 posted on 03/24/2015 1:40:32 PM PDT by from occupied ga (Your government is your most dangerous enemy)
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To: from occupied ga
My real name is Bane.


87 posted on 03/24/2015 1:47:21 PM PDT by Lazamataz (The FCC takeover of the internet will quickly become a means to censorship of dissent.)
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To: Lazamataz

As I said ...


88 posted on 03/24/2015 1:53:29 PM PDT by from occupied ga (Your government is your most dangerous enemy)
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Comment #89 Removed by Moderator

To: Kaslin
I manage an apartment community very near a large Indian owned consulting company. They only hire Indians on on H-1B visas for the upper management positions. Most of them are completely obnoxious and think nothing of breaking their leases whenever the company sends them to a new location.

I found a secret Face Book page where IT employees that work for that company complain about how horrible the company is. It is not the upper employees. It is a bad company for the entry level employees, with no chance for advancement in the company.

If it is an Indian entry level employee all they do is complain about the American employees.

90 posted on 03/24/2015 1:58:28 PM PDT by muggs (Hope and Change = Hoax and Chains)
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To: from occupied ga

91 posted on 03/24/2015 2:08:46 PM PDT by Lazamataz (The FCC takeover of the internet will quickly become a means to censorship of dissent.)
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To: Lazamataz

Secretaries are NEVER allies, merely random forces of nature to be avoided if possible.


92 posted on 03/24/2015 2:13:51 PM PDT by from occupied ga (Your government is your most dangerous enemy)
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To: glorgau

You hit the nail on the head. I is a constant source of amazement to me that the conversation about H1’s never raises your point. If the foreign workers could compete there would be less wage depression and a level field to hire from.


93 posted on 03/24/2015 2:38:30 PM PDT by Woodman
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To: from occupied ga

Did you read the article? There are more than enough STEM workers who happen to be citizens. The limousine liberal pricks who head up the big tech companies prefer cheap H1B labor.


94 posted on 03/24/2015 4:04:59 PM PDT by jwalsh07 (E)
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To: Kaslin

Tax dodgers.. The truth isn’t the lack of unskilled workers, it’s the millions of dollars employers dodge in federal tax liability. Everyone know it, yet it’s never discussed.


95 posted on 03/24/2015 4:13:36 PM PDT by momincombatboots (Back to West by G-d Virginia.)
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To: from occupied ga

Americans should get off their dead asses and make sure they’re BETTER QUALIFIED than the Indians who are displacing them.


Sorry, did you read the article? The whole article? From what you say in this post and another, I’m wondering. With all due respect, it seems to me that you are making some gross generalizations and stereotyping “Americans” without much to back them up...

Can you provide any statistics that refute those presented in article, or even personal anecdotal observations?

I can get you stats if no one else provides them as this issue has been a hot button with me and my family for several years.

My kids (as well as many other American students) are not sitting on their “dead asses” and they are indeed better qualified than the Indians attempting to displace Americans.

I have 3 adult children in science/technology—1 with PhD, 1 with M.S. (works in IT in San Jose) and one finishing BS with a national qualifying exam required for employment.

They are all bright, and did well in college, yet competition has been fierce. The H-1B visa problem has been brewing for years—only coing to head because the economy is so “soft” and the number of foreign students has increased substantially.

I rather resent your remark as my family and children all “Americans,” are all well educated.


96 posted on 03/24/2015 4:58:29 PM PDT by Freedom56v2 (Make 'em squeal!)
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To: from occupied ga

PERHAPS if US students didn’t major in things like “Black Studies”, Gender Studies”, “Environmental Studies”, etc. and that’s the ones who are motivated to further their education. Then there are the utterly worthless masses who feel “entitled” to the fruits of the labors of those ever diminishing sector that actually works for a living. If maybe people would make themselves desirable in the job market, then there wouldn’t be the need to hire foreign citizens.


Oh, and my children’s degrees:
PhD Chemical Engineering
MS Electrical Engineering/Computer Engineering
B.S. Clinical Lab Science

You really need to get a clue. Tho there are students who major in unemployable fields, those are not the ones that are being displaced...A Black Studies or Gender Studies major will not get hired by a tech company for a tech job in San Jose....
Tech grads and established tech workers (i.e. those who have been in workforce for several years) are being displaced by foreign workers who are being hired for substantially less.


97 posted on 03/24/2015 5:05:24 PM PDT by Freedom56v2 (Make 'em squeal!)
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To: servantboy777

Americans should be furious.

My company has laid off thousands of American workers and imported Indian/Chinese/Taiwanese workers to backfill those positions


Yes Americans should be furious....

Actually I think they are and they have been trying to tell their elected representatives of their plight. Finally this issue may be getting some traction with congressional or senate hearings. It is affecting bothestablished workers and college grads.


98 posted on 03/24/2015 5:07:59 PM PDT by Freedom56v2 (Make 'em squeal!)
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To: MNDude

My company had to programmer job posted for 6 months ($110K per year) but never got anyone qualified to fill the job.

Eventually we had to hire out some Indian (that we ended up firing in 2 months anyhow).————————————

Question, did your company redquire so many qualifications and so much experience for the salary that no one really could fill the job—then the company is free to fill with H-1B visas. There have been numerous reports of this happening.

My son in IT would think $110 is being underpaid for his experience and education level, tho perhaps if the job was in Minnesota, they pay less.


99 posted on 03/24/2015 5:11:08 PM PDT by Freedom56v2 (Make 'em squeal!)
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To: from occupied ga

I see that you are a hiring manager?? You could not get a qualified tech person....as I asked another poster, are you making the qualifications soo tight that few can be qualified, or is the salary not commensurate with the experience. Are you using Taleo or one of the other screeners? If you are, I would suggest that you don’t as often the best candidates are not those on paper....

My PhD sent out at least 150 resumes...finally after paying $400+ for a professional resume writer to tweak his resume so it would pass thru the Taleo software, he got 4 or 5 interviews....No way his job search should have taken so much effort, but lots of foreign competition. I believe the foreign competition and the Taleo software locked him out of many jobs for which he was not only qualified, but actually over-qualified.


100 posted on 03/24/2015 5:23:18 PM PDT by Freedom56v2 (Make 'em squeal!)
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