News Bytes
The
San Jose Business Journal reports
on a new study released last week which argues that the 65,000 H-1B visas
available for highly skilled foreign workers is not nearly enough, and that
despite a weak
In
recent years, the high-tech industry has been pushing Congress to increase the
cap on H-1B visas, arguing that US companies need foreign engineers and
scientist because there aren’t enough Americans to fill these jobs.
Microsoft chairman Bill Gates urged the House Immigration Subcommittee
last week to make it easier for large tech companies to hire foreign workers, a
workforce that has the skills and education these companies need to survive.
In addition, Google and Cisco have been closely working on the issue with
Compete
While
tech-industry heavyweights are feeling the pressure of being unable to hire the
desired amount of foreign professionals, the dearth of available H-1B visas
leads smaller companies to suffer as well.
"The tech-worker shortage may be even more serious for smaller
firms, which don’t have the resources large companies have to recruit
talent," says Christopher Hansen, president of AeA, a tech-industry trade
association. "These companies
could become the next Microsoft or Google Inc., but they’ll never get there if
they can’t get the talent."
*****
A group
of 500 foreign welders and pipefitters brought in to work at Gulf Coast oil rig
yards after Hurricane Katrina said last week that they had sued their employer,
claiming they were lured with false promises of permanent-resident status,
forced to live in inhumane conditions and then threatened when they protested.
As first reported by The New York
Times, the workers were recruited in
At a
press conference, the workers’ lawyers, members of the Southern Poverty Law
Center, said that their clients had given up life savings, sold family jewelry,
and paid up to $20,000 in immigration and travel fees after being assured that
the company would help them to become permanent US residents.
In a statement following the suits, the company called the workers’
charges "baseless and unfounded" and said it had spent "over $7
million constructing state-of-the-art housing complexes" for the workers.
The company said that the "vast majority of the workers"
recruited had been satisfied with their conditions and that the workers were
being paid "in excess" of prevailing rates and in full compliance with
the law.
The
claims made by the company were disputed by the workers and their advocates.
Ignorant of American immigration law, advocates said, the workers were
unaware that they had been brought in only temporarily.
The
workers’ assertions are the latest in a series of complaints about
exploitation of foreign laborers on the