Posted on 02/06/2009 9:13:21 AM PST by Fred
Job cuts by tech firms are putting the controversial H-1B guest-worker program in the spotlight once again.
Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, kicked off the latest debate in January by publicly calling on Microsoft to prioritize American workers over foreign guest workers as the software giant downsizes. In the wake of Grassleys letter to Microsoft, questions have been raised about the legality of axing H-1B workers first. And H-1B critics have stepped up their attacks on a program they say makes little sense during a time of corporate belt-tightening.
H-1B visas rarely go to exceptional talent and often are used by body shops that provide contract labor to other companies, said Ira Mehlman, media director of the Federation for American Immigration Reform advocacy group.
H-1B visas are not being used as they were intended, Mehlman said.
Controversy about the guest worker visas also has spilled over into the federal bank bailout. In early February, Senators Grassley and Bernie Sanders, I-Vermont, introduced legislation to bar banks that have received a taxpayer bailout from the U.S. Treasury Department or the Federal Reserve from hiring H-1B guest workers for a year.
Their amendment to the stimulus bill under discussion in Congress came in the wake of an Associated Press report finding that banks receiving the most federal aid had requested visas for thousands of foreign workers even as they laid off employees amid the economic collapse.
H-1B visas are one of a number of guest-worker visas that allow foreigners to work in the United States temporarily. Long backed by the U.S. tech industry as crucial to American competitiveness, H-1Bs let computer programmers, electronics engineers and other skilled workers stay in the country for up to six years.
Except in limited cases, companies do not have to seek an American worker before hiring an H-1B.
In 2007, Grassley introduced legislation to make all employers applying for an H-1B visa pledge that they have made a good-faith effort to hire American workers first and that the H-1B visa holder will not displace an American worker. Grassleys recent letter to Microsoft chief executive Steve Ballmer continued in that America-first vein.
He wrote it in the wake of the Redmond, Washington-based firms disclosure on January 22 that it would cut as many as 5,000 jobs in the next 18 months, including 1,400 jobs that day. Microsoft has been among the most vocal advocates for additional H-1B visas.
My point is that during a layoff, companies should not be retaining H-1B or other work visa program employees over qualified American workers, Grassley wrote in his letter. Our immigration policy is not intended to harm the American workforce. I encourage Microsoft to ensure that Americans are given priority in job retention.
In late January, a Microsoft spokeswoman said the company was in the process of responding to Grassley. Microsoft, which had 95,828 employees worldwide as of December, also issued a statement about its layoff process: We made the difficult decisions on which jobs would be eliminated based on a detailed assessment of our current and future business opportunities. The initial reductions we announced affect employees in a number of business units, and a significant number of the affected employees are foreign citizens working in this country on a visa.
Microsofts statement also noted that a pink slip for a guest worker can be traumatic.
We recognize the human impact that our workforce reduction has on every affected worker and their families. For many of the employees here on a visa, being laid off means that they have to leave the country on very short notice, in many cases uprooting families and children, the company said.
Microsoft was among the top 10 firms getting approvals for H-1B visas in the year ended September 30, 2007, according to research by technology industry publication Information Week. The top 10 was made up largely of India-based firms that provide outsourcing services, including Infosys Technologies, Wipro and Satyam Computer Services.
Asked if it intends to cut any jobs in the U.S. in the coming year, Infosys said in a statement that it had no such plans apart from any reductions due to restructuring of units or performance-related terminations. The company also said it disagreed with Grassleys call for axing visa holders first.
In a globalized world, corporate decisions should be based on economic realities rather than on political considerations, Infosys said in its statement. The U.S. has succeeded in the past due to its openness and free trade both in products and services. Any changes which could bring artificial restrictions on free movement of goods and people will be a huge setback to the globalization process.
Semiconductor giant Intel also ranked in Information Weeks top 10 list of visa approvals, while technology firms Accenture, IBM and Oracle made the top 100.
Intel and Accenture did not respond to requests for comment. Oracle declined to comment for this story.
IBM spokesman Clint Roswell declined to comment on Grassleys call for prioritizing U.S. workers.
In a twist on immigration work matters, IBM recently began offering U.S. employees who have lost their job the option of working for IBM in a less-developed country, such as South Africa, India and China. Roswell said the offer includes help with visa matters and moving costs. So far, no IBM workers have taken the company up on the offer, Roswell said.
Its not for everyone, he said.
Its not clear whether a U.S. employer could legally follow Grassleys advice and trim its foreign guest workers ahead of qualified American citizens and permanent residents. Cletus Weber, an immigration attorney based in Mercer Island, Washington, says he believes that arbitrarily laying off lawfully employed foreign workers first could subject a firm to potential legal liability under federal anti-discrimination laws.
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act bans employment discrimination based on national origin. Asked whether Grassleys call for prioritizing qualified American workers during a layoff would violate that law, a spokesman for the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commissionwhich enforces civil rights law in the workplacedeclined to comment.
Commission spokesman David Grinberg said in a statement that his agency looks at charges filed with it on a case-by-case basis.
But H-1B visa holders have rights, Grinberg indicated. EEOC-enforced laws protect all individuals in the workplace, he said, regardless of immigration status.
ping
Deport them.
It says a lot about our business leaders that we are even having the discussion.
Globalization and off shoring is one thing, importing foreigners into the U.S. to take American jobs is treasonous.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.......HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA...........Hooo, boy howdy, did I need that laugh!
Here’s how these traitors work this scam. They hire the foreign workers for rock bottom prices and put up four to six of them in the same apartment or townhouse that they get a corporate discount on because of negotiated deals with the management companies of the properties. They are often picked up and delivered to work in company vans and are virtual slave labor working at the total whim of the employer. They can be terminated for any or no reason so they never do much complaining. Nice huh?
Bill Gates responded by releasing a cloud of malaria ridden mosquitoes at a press conference.
And now the body shows that treat these H1Bs like indentured servants claim to have their best interest as a priority and will not let them go. They throw these works back to their countries whenever they feel like it, but in this article they claim to be so ethical and have high standards for the worker.
I’ve seen this first hand. Six Chinese guys staying at one place, their salaries went straight to their bank account in China. Not a one of them had enough spending money in his pocket to buy a fast-food lunch or a single happy-hour beer in the six months I was at the company.
H1B bump for later.........
Thanks! This’ll be on Monday’s ping as I don’t ping on weekends.
Yes, they are, they were intended to replace good American help with cheap foreign labor. The whole concept sucks and was supported by democrats and republicans.
Yeah, COOL ! Now, if we could just get Bank of America to quit funding ACORN with our bail-out dollars....;
Thanks for posting.
I’m still amazed at the number of people who believe there is a shortage of techies in the US, and who don’t know that most ‘guest workers’ pay no or partial US taxes, had free educations (often on our tax dollar), and get to bring over their families to use our services.
These guest workers are treated like virtual slaves by US business, and ...
The only shortage is of US workers is of those who can survive on third world salaries after paying full US taxes, and paying off school loans and interest with after tax money.
ping
At this point immigration should be at it’s low. We don’t have enough jobs as it is.
“The whole concept sucks and was supported by democrats and republicans.”
The American public keep voting for the two parties that are working against them. Politicians fear losing their jobs(how ironic), ie. McCain/Kennedy amnesty bill. Wake up people and vote third party.
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