Tuesday, July 31, 2007
MY USA TODAY COLUMN - US SAVIOR: FOREIGN DOCTORS
It's now online. I hope it brings the point home. Yes, we need to be focused on security. But foreign physicians in the US are vital to the American health care system and should be warmly welcomed.
# posted by Greg Siskind @ 12:16 AM
Sunday, July 29, 2007
USCIS REMINDS HONDURANS AND NICARAGUANS TO FILE TPS APPLICATIONS
Re-registration applications are due by the close of business on Monday.
# posted by Greg Siskind @ 4:43 PM
Monday, July 16, 2007
CONSULATES TO CRACK DOWN ON DRUNK DRIVING ARRESTS
The State Department has issued a memo to all consular posts on how to treat individuals with drunk driving arrests and convictions. The consulate notes that while a drunk driving conviction may not in and of itself bar entry as a criminal offense, it could indicate ineligibility under Section 212(a)(1)(A)(iii) as evidence of a mental or physical disorder that may jeopardize the safety of the alien or others.
Consular officers must send the applicant back to a panel physician for additional evaluation if 1) an applicant has a single drunk driving arrest in the prior three years or two arrests overall or 2) any convictions.
Physicians are then to determine if the applicant is an alcohol abuser and whether they currently engage in harmful behavior or their history indicates a likelihood of repeating the harmful behavior.
# posted by Greg Siskind @ 7:37 PM
Saturday, July 14, 2007
ARIZONA EMPLOYERS SUING OVER NEW ENFORCEMENT LAW
The governor of Arizona recently signed legislation that would revoke the business license of an employer found to have hired illegal aliens. Employers are now suing the state on the ground that the US Constitution leaves immigration enforcement to the federal government and states may not assume that role.
The suit will no doubt be closely filed because laws like the one passed in Arizona are being passed in legislatures across the US and are expected to accelerate in the wake of Congress' failure to pass an immigration bill this year.
# posted by Greg Siskind @ 9:20 PM
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
LA TIMES: MICROSOFT MOVE NORTH SHOWS NEED FOR MORE H-1B NUMBERS
The LA Times becomes the first major publication to discuss the Microsoft move north to Canada for its new research center on its editorial page. The Times puts the blame squarely on our Congress for this and has sympathy for why Microsoft made the decision:
Consider it just the latest in a series of monuments to the United States' botched immigration policy, as well as a reminder of the Senate's recent failure to pass a comprehensive fix despite bipartisan support. High-tech companies are so frustrated by the limits on visas for skilled labor that they're not just opening offices in India and China to recruit local talent. They're also putting facilities in places like Vancouver for prized recruits from around the world — many of them trained at U.S. universities — who cannot work here.
The demand for H-1B visas for high-skilled immigrants has become so much greater than the supply that almost twice as many applications arrived in a single day as there were slots available for the year — 65,000, plus 20,000 for those with advanced degrees from U.S. schools. Other countries, by contrast, are starting to make it easier for skilled workers to immigrate. That's because they're focusing on the benefits those employees can bring to their economies, not the competition they present to native labor.
Many of these immigrants become the innovators and entrepreneurs who create companies, employ more people and create wealth. Just look at the U.S. experience — about 25% of all venture-capital-backed start-ups here were launched or co-founded by foreign nationals, including Yahoo, Google and EBay. The same benefits come from talented U.S. workers too, but not enough of them are pursuing science, math and engineering careers to fill the voracious demand at Microsoft and other high-tech powerhouses. A comprehensive fix to U.S. immigration policy is overdue, but failing that, Congress should at least adopt a more sensible approach to H-1B visas.
# posted by Greg Siskind @ 9:04 AM
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# posted by Greg Siskind @ 12:16 AM
Re-registration applications are due by the close of business on Monday.
# posted by Greg Siskind @ 4:43 PM
Monday, July 16, 2007
CONSULATES TO CRACK DOWN ON DRUNK DRIVING ARRESTS
The State Department has issued a memo to all consular posts on how to treat individuals with drunk driving arrests and convictions. The consulate notes that while a drunk driving conviction may not in and of itself bar entry as a criminal offense, it could indicate ineligibility under Section 212(a)(1)(A)(iii) as evidence of a mental or physical disorder that may jeopardize the safety of the alien or others.
Consular officers must send the applicant back to a panel physician for additional evaluation if 1) an applicant has a single drunk driving arrest in the prior three years or two arrests overall or 2) any convictions.
Physicians are then to determine if the applicant is an alcohol abuser and whether they currently engage in harmful behavior or their history indicates a likelihood of repeating the harmful behavior.
# posted by Greg Siskind @ 7:37 PM
Saturday, July 14, 2007
ARIZONA EMPLOYERS SUING OVER NEW ENFORCEMENT LAW
The governor of Arizona recently signed legislation that would revoke the business license of an employer found to have hired illegal aliens. Employers are now suing the state on the ground that the US Constitution leaves immigration enforcement to the federal government and states may not assume that role.
The suit will no doubt be closely filed because laws like the one passed in Arizona are being passed in legislatures across the US and are expected to accelerate in the wake of Congress' failure to pass an immigration bill this year.
# posted by Greg Siskind @ 9:20 PM
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
LA TIMES: MICROSOFT MOVE NORTH SHOWS NEED FOR MORE H-1B NUMBERS
The LA Times becomes the first major publication to discuss the Microsoft move north to Canada for its new research center on its editorial page. The Times puts the blame squarely on our Congress for this and has sympathy for why Microsoft made the decision:
Consider it just the latest in a series of monuments to the United States' botched immigration policy, as well as a reminder of the Senate's recent failure to pass a comprehensive fix despite bipartisan support. High-tech companies are so frustrated by the limits on visas for skilled labor that they're not just opening offices in India and China to recruit local talent. They're also putting facilities in places like Vancouver for prized recruits from around the world — many of them trained at U.S. universities — who cannot work here.
The demand for H-1B visas for high-skilled immigrants has become so much greater than the supply that almost twice as many applications arrived in a single day as there were slots available for the year — 65,000, plus 20,000 for those with advanced degrees from U.S. schools. Other countries, by contrast, are starting to make it easier for skilled workers to immigrate. That's because they're focusing on the benefits those employees can bring to their economies, not the competition they present to native labor.
Many of these immigrants become the innovators and entrepreneurs who create companies, employ more people and create wealth. Just look at the U.S. experience — about 25% of all venture-capital-backed start-ups here were launched or co-founded by foreign nationals, including Yahoo, Google and EBay. The same benefits come from talented U.S. workers too, but not enough of them are pursuing science, math and engineering careers to fill the voracious demand at Microsoft and other high-tech powerhouses. A comprehensive fix to U.S. immigration policy is overdue, but failing that, Congress should at least adopt a more sensible approach to H-1B visas.
# posted by Greg Siskind @ 9:04 AM
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Consular officers must send the applicant back to a panel physician for additional evaluation if 1) an applicant has a single drunk driving arrest in the prior three years or two arrests overall or 2) any convictions.
Physicians are then to determine if the applicant is an alcohol abuser and whether they currently engage in harmful behavior or their history indicates a likelihood of repeating the harmful behavior.
# posted by Greg Siskind @ 7:37 PM
The governor of Arizona recently signed legislation that would revoke the business license of an employer found to have hired illegal aliens. Employers are now suing the state on the ground that the US Constitution leaves immigration enforcement to the federal government and states may not assume that role.
The suit will no doubt be closely filed because laws like the one passed in Arizona are being passed in legislatures across the US and are expected to accelerate in the wake of Congress' failure to pass an immigration bill this year.
The suit will no doubt be closely filed because laws like the one passed in Arizona are being passed in legislatures across the US and are expected to accelerate in the wake of Congress' failure to pass an immigration bill this year.
# posted by Greg Siskind @ 9:20 PM
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
LA TIMES: MICROSOFT MOVE NORTH SHOWS NEED FOR MORE H-1B NUMBERS
The LA Times becomes the first major publication to discuss the Microsoft move north to Canada for its new research center on its editorial page. The Times puts the blame squarely on our Congress for this and has sympathy for why Microsoft made the decision:
Consider it just the latest in a series of monuments to the United States' botched immigration policy, as well as a reminder of the Senate's recent failure to pass a comprehensive fix despite bipartisan support. High-tech companies are so frustrated by the limits on visas for skilled labor that they're not just opening offices in India and China to recruit local talent. They're also putting facilities in places like Vancouver for prized recruits from around the world — many of them trained at U.S. universities — who cannot work here.
The demand for H-1B visas for high-skilled immigrants has become so much greater than the supply that almost twice as many applications arrived in a single day as there were slots available for the year — 65,000, plus 20,000 for those with advanced degrees from U.S. schools. Other countries, by contrast, are starting to make it easier for skilled workers to immigrate. That's because they're focusing on the benefits those employees can bring to their economies, not the competition they present to native labor.
Many of these immigrants become the innovators and entrepreneurs who create companies, employ more people and create wealth. Just look at the U.S. experience — about 25% of all venture-capital-backed start-ups here were launched or co-founded by foreign nationals, including Yahoo, Google and EBay. The same benefits come from talented U.S. workers too, but not enough of them are pursuing science, math and engineering careers to fill the voracious demand at Microsoft and other high-tech powerhouses. A comprehensive fix to U.S. immigration policy is overdue, but failing that, Congress should at least adopt a more sensible approach to H-1B visas.
# posted by Greg Siskind @ 9:04 AM
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Consider it just the latest in a series of monuments to the United States' botched immigration policy, as well as a reminder of the Senate's recent failure to pass a comprehensive fix despite bipartisan support. High-tech companies are so frustrated by the limits on visas for skilled labor that they're not just opening offices in India and China to recruit local talent. They're also putting facilities in places like Vancouver for prized recruits from around the world — many of them trained at U.S. universities — who cannot work here.
The demand for H-1B visas for high-skilled immigrants has become so much greater than the supply that almost twice as many applications arrived in a single day as there were slots available for the year — 65,000, plus 20,000 for those with advanced degrees from U.S. schools. Other countries, by contrast, are starting to make it easier for skilled workers to immigrate. That's because they're focusing on the benefits those employees can bring to their economies, not the competition they present to native labor.
Many of these immigrants become the innovators and entrepreneurs who create companies, employ more people and create wealth. Just look at the U.S. experience — about 25% of all venture-capital-backed start-ups here were launched or co-founded by foreign nationals, including Yahoo, Google and EBay. The same benefits come from talented U.S. workers too, but not enough of them are pursuing science, math and engineering careers to fill the voracious demand at Microsoft and other high-tech powerhouses. A comprehensive fix to U.S. immigration policy is overdue, but failing that, Congress should at least adopt a more sensible approach to H-1B visas.
# posted by Greg Siskind @ 9:04 AM
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