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Senator Pushes For Tougher H-1B Enforcement

mk1004 writes "Computerworld says that the industry lobbying group TechNet is calling on Congress to eliminate the per-country cap on H-1B workers. Last year a bill was passed in the house, 389-to-15, to remove the cap. Grassley put a hold on the bill in the Senate, indicating that he would be willing to lift the cap if companies faced an annual audit. The US currently allows 140K H-1B workers, but allows only 7% of those to come from any one country."

64 of 262 comments (clear)

  1. I'm for it. by PerlPunk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It would be a big incentive to attraact the best of the best from around the world to the United States. It would go hand-in-hand with smart immigration policies that tried to retain that talent.

    1. Re:I'm for it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's wonderful until the job market is flooded with 140k h1b workers working for absurdly low wages, soaking up the few jobs there are in your particular field, sending the bulk of what they do earn home instead of spending it here.

      I'm sure corporate america loves the idea though. Can't get the price of capable labor down low enough? Bring in people that will live 6 to an apartment and work cheaper than anyone with those old, outdated ideas of a family, home and a lawn to mow!

    2. Re:I'm for it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It's wonderful until the job market is flooded with 140k h1b workers working for absurdly low wages

      And who are these H1B workers on absurdly low wages? It costs Microsoft 30% more to hire foreigners on H1Bs because there aren't enough Americans graduating with master's and PhDs in STEM fields. MSFT would gladly hire Americans to do these jobs, if they could. I'm quite confident this generalizes to other tech companies.

    3. Re:I'm for it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Not sure where you've worked, but I've yet to find any H1Bs in tech living anything like you're describing. Okay, so during his (and my) first year at my old job, my H1B co-worker and I rented a four bedroom apartment together. So that's kind of close, although he later married and bought a house. It only has a small lawn, so he mostly has to stick to around the deck or BBQ and sadly look over Puget Sound, thinking of how unfortunate he is.
       
      The other H1Bs included the guy with the brand new 3-series living in a fancy glass and steel downtown condo, and the guy with the Range Rover who had restrained but expensive tastes. The other H1B in my group was rather stoic so perhaps he lived with 5 other H1Bs in an apartment, although it'd be weird since his salary was well into six figures and a decent studio in the most expensive parts of the city were ~$1000/month with parking.
       
      Yes, H1Bs can be paid on the low end of the scale since they're at a major disadvantage if they're unhappy with their job. But it's not a huge difference, it's just that corporations would be happy to sell out their own country for a penny. In fact, because I went front-end and my ex-roommate went server-side, he was making more than me within 3-4 years on the job.
       
      That said, there is very little need for H1Bs in terms of supply and demand as was pointed out in this recently posted transcript, and it'd be nice if lawmakers and other people involved in immigration policy recognized this fact.

    4. Re:I'm for it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      smart immigration policies

      The h-1b isn't a smart immigration policy. It's a tool to drive down US worker wages by making immigrants your bitch.

      This isn't a "they tewk er jerbs" thing, either. Some of the crap the h-1bs go through... the immigrants deserve better, too.

    5. Re:I'm for it. by Thanshin · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It would be a big incentive to attraact the best of the best from around the world to the United States. It would go hand-in-hand with smart immigration policies that tried to retain that talent.

      The problem is that a fraction of what the immigrant earns is sent out of the country. Thus only part of the benefit to the corporation stays.

      Deeper still, the problem is that the corporation's interests aren't aligned with the country, nor has it any pressure to make them so.

      Deeper still, the problem is that the corporation is just a product of the economical system. Society cannot specify how to create businesses following a certain set of rules and then claim that the resulting corporation is bad.

      A solution would be to have the state control the corporate behaviours that harm the country, however that doesn't work because the state is not the country, just a subset of individuals who are vulnerable to corporation power, which was given by the rules decided by society.

      A solution to that would be society removing that power from the corporation, but the corporation was made following rules that society itself imposed, so its the rules that would have to be changed first.

      And we don't know what other set of rules works better than the current one, nor whether the new corporate-like entity crerated by them would have even stronger power over the state.

    6. Re:I'm for it. by sjames · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They can, there are plenty of people with the qualifications they need. It's just that they would just have to pay more or offer better working conditions. The prospect of jobs that pay well and offer good working conditions would also cause more people to get their degree in a STEM field. The current push down on wages and into H1-B and outsourcing is why less students are choosing that career.

      So, MS has to spend 30% more to hire an H1B than they would if there was a glut in the employee market? So how much less do they cost compared to the actual market rate under the actual conditions of supply?

    7. Re:I'm for it. by sjames · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So give them a green card so their employer can't hold their status hostage.

    8. Re:I'm for it. by artor3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And who are these H1B workers on absurdly low wages? It costs Microsoft 30% more to hire foreigners on H1Bs because there aren't enough Americans graduating with master's and PhDs in STEM fields. MSFT would gladly hire Americans to do these jobs, if they could.

      According to who, Microsoft? Gee, I can't think of any reason they might want to lie about this.

      H1B workers are easily abused because changing jobs is far more difficult. The upfront costs of hiring them may be higher, but they end up working longer hours for less pay. That is why Microsoft, along with all the other tech giants, go before Congress every year and lie and beg.

    9. Re:I'm for it. by sjames · · Score: 4, Informative

      The current median is 85K in that area. Keep in mind that figure will be distorted low due to cheap H1-B labor.

      According to glassdoor, their current offerings are a bit on the low side compared to google, amazon, and similar in that area.

      It looks like they would have a LOT less trouble hiring qualified people if they would go 5-10k higher. So, big surprise, lowball offer = a problem finding takers.

    10. Re:I'm for it. by Cryacin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, it's just a skills shortage. We can't find anyone who's willing to work for $75kpa, who does exactly what we want them to do, but for someone else, with 10 years of experience in a language/product that's only been around for 5. That's why we need to hire people from overseas who can tell HR that they have 10 years of experience, and who will be willing to work for $70 kpa. It's simple really, and for the good of the nation.

      That, or companies could actually take on university graduates like they used to do, train them, treat them well, and have some high class permanents who know what they're doing. Oh wait, that's a long term strategy. And long term's no good because in the long term we're all dead anyway.

      --
      Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
    11. Re:I'm for it. by guacamole · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I am sorry man, but you have no idea about the reality of H1B workers. Most I have known are fairly smart people and they were already relatively well to-do by the standards of their country. They would certainly NOT come here to live 6 an apartment. Also, a lot of the successful ones eventually convert their H1B visa status to a more permanent visa to stay here. Now, it's possible that some of them send money back home. So what? Would you instead prefer to see entire corporate offices with ALL jobs moved to India, Taiwan, China, or Russia? This is not that hard at all, you know.

      To put this a little blunt, this is a global competitive economy, and if you can't adapt then you should improve, change your career, or just perish. Sorry. No other way around this.

    12. Re:I'm for it. by DarkOx · · Score: 2

      I can see the argument for smaller businesses needed h1b workers. Perhaps there should be cap like if you already have X number of employees you are not eligible to hire non citizens. Work in domestic facilities.

      There is no reason a big firm like Microsoft can't select the best of their own internal talent and develop it. Either by sending them down a traditional accredited academic track or some other means to get them the knowledge they need. A company like Microsoft absolutely could afford to send their better performing employes to classes 20 hours a week.

      Our lack of domestic STEM educated people is because of the imported labor and the rather nutty idea that the only time anyone can go to college is right outa high school.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    13. Re:I'm for it. by sociocapitalist · · Score: 2

      It's wonderful until the job market is flooded with 140k h1b workers working for absurdly low wages

      And who are these H1B workers on absurdly low wages? It costs Microsoft 30% more to hire foreigners on H1Bs because there aren't enough Americans graduating with master's and PhDs in STEM fields. MSFT would gladly hire Americans to do these jobs, if they could. I'm quite confident this generalizes to other tech companies.

      References for your assertions? Demonstrate that there weren't enough Americans that could do the jobs in question, don't just make a statement without anything to back it up.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    14. Re:I'm for it. by sociocapitalist · · Score: 2

      So give them a green card so their employer can't hold their status hostage.

      How about just hiring the fucking Americans who can do the job even though it costs a bit more to the company?

      Why are you so ready to knock down the American standard of living?

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    15. Re:I'm for it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Bullshit, perhaps if companies would start actually hiring entry level workers there would be workers available to fill those jobs. As it stands pretty much all the entry level job postings I see require 5 years of experience and a level of degree above what's realistically needed.

      If employers aren't finding the people they need, perhaps they should think about not pissing in the pool and start doing something to encourage the development of that section of the work force.

      Refusing to hire anybody entry level and then using the H-1B program to fix the situation isn't what that program is for.

    16. Re:I'm for it. by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I take it you've not watched How NOT to hire an American then? Fraud is RAMPANT in the H1-B program, with BS qualifications like 5 years of Win 8 experience or 15 years of .NET being all too common. Then once they get the "qualified" H1-B they are paid below the market going rate for the ACTUAL job.

      But in the end everyone here should be against the H1-B because not only are we looking at nearly a trillion in student loans, with defaults jumping to 12% in the past couple of years, but the simple fact it completely destroys supply and demand and makes sure there will NEVER be an American for those jobs. After all, what idiot is gonna go $50k-$75k in debt for a job they know they'll have to compete for with a guy that paid less than 15K for theirs?

      In the end the vast majority of their wages will go overseas, never to return, and the H1-Bs themselves will go overseas with the education and work experience. if you look at the real numbers we are looking at something like 23% unemployment, what are we gonna do with all those people? Do you know how many are going straight from their college graduation to the unemployment lines? When you are in a recession and there aren't enough jobs to go around as it is the LAST thing you want is corps poisoning the system by distorting supply and demand and driving yet more money overseas.

      Personally, I don't know about everyone else here, but i'm sick to damned death of the "just give the corps what they want and things will get better" horseshit. We have been doing that for over 20 years now, are things better? We have practically gutted regulation, the ACTUAL amount of taxes the fortune 500 pay thanks to loopholes has never been lower, with many corps like GE actually getting money out instead of putting any in, are things better? maybe for the 5% at the top but for everyone else it sure as hell ain't. When unemployment is below 4% then and ONLY then should we be talking about importing workers, not when we have many of our young people buried in student loans and working at the Pizza Hut.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    17. Re:I'm for it. by cyfer2000 · · Score: 2
      --
      There is a spark in every single flame bait point.
    18. Re:I'm for it. by Anne_Nonymous · · Score: 3, Funny

      May I be having my stapler back please, yes?

    19. Re:I'm for it. by moeinvt · · Score: 2

      "there aren't enough Americans graduating with master's and PhDs in STEM fields"

      BULL - SHIT

      Publish an advertisement for whatever STEM grad that you want. $200,000 per year plus great benefits, incentive bonuses and stock options. Are you trying to suggest that ZERO American citizens with the right qualifications would apply for this job?

      "MSFT would gladly hire Americans to do these jobs,"

      Yeah, they would be glad to hire Americans. i.e. Americans that are willing to work at the same shit wages they pay foreigners. There are plenty of Americans qualified to do the actual WORK, just not for subsistence level compensation.

    20. Re:I'm for it. by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      Would you instead prefer to see entire corporate offices with ALL jobs moved to India, Taiwan, China, or Russia? This is not that hard at all, you know.

      Yes, yes it is hard, and moreover, it will cost you customers.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    21. Re:I'm for it. by sociocapitalist · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I grew up in a state funded school for orphans and now I make well over 150k a year so I am no stranger to making my way in the world.

      If you think that you can compete at any level below C (CEO, CIO, etc) without protection from competitive cheap labor then you are a fool.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    22. Re:I'm for it. by sycodon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      if you are qualified, my company wants to hire you

      And there's the problem...what is the definition of "qualified"? I've been i this business for nearly thirty years. When I was laid off, I had about 3 years C# experience...as in heads down coding 80% of the day 5 days a week. It was my world.

      Looking for work, people wouldn't even interview me because they wanted 5 years experience, or 4. One place wanted 1 year experience in some particular tool that I had gone to training for and used for nearly 10 months. Sorry...not enough "experience".

      The hiring process at most companies is a joke of tick off the requirements line. If the airlines hired pilots like this, they'd reject an Air Force Colonel with 20 years at the stick of a C-5 because they aren't certified to fly a 747.

      So I say cut the HB-1 stuff to a trickle and make the companies actually pay attention to the candidates instead of doing fucking keyword scans on resumes.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    23. Re:I'm for it. by sycodon · · Score: 2

      Another reason is that to a large degree, PhD programs are clubs. You not only have to meet the academic requirements, but you also have to do the whole political thing, which pretty much starts when you are an undergrad. If you piss off a professor anywhere along the way, then you are toast and have to work ten times as hard to get accepted into a program somewhere.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    24. Re:I'm for it. by QuantumRiff · · Score: 2

      The perhaps, the good answer should be that MS should team up with several Universities to fund many, many scholarships for people in the fields they need. You know.. actually encourage people to go into them.

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    25. Re:I'm for it. by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 2

      The unemployment rate for SW engineers is still over 4%. There are people available. And if MS wants more graduates in SWEng it can afford to fund scholarships and train its own.

    26. Re:I'm for it. by Eravnrekaree · · Score: 2

      This is why we should abolish the H3B program.It will force companies to actually start investing in American workers again. They can do it, on the job training, apprentiships. With millions of out of work americans we can easily get these people into corporations in on the job training and apprentiships, we would actually start to rebuild our middle class and reduce the poverty levels, creating a more highly skilled population.

      Furthermore, we need to stop the brain drain from other countries. The highly skilled labor from destination countries needs to stay in those countries to help those countries develop economically. They need doctors, engineers and innovaters in those countries.

      I am convinced the H3B program needs to be abolished. I stand 100% opposed to immigration. I am instead for industrial aid to third world countries to allow them to develop their own industries with their own population.

    27. Re:I'm for it. by BVis · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And there's the problem...what is the definition of "qualified"?

      Said elsewhere but bears repetition:

      Listed qualifications: 5 years blah blah 4 years blah blah good team player etc.

      Actual qualifications: Willingness to work insane hours. Willingness to ruin health to help the company make a buck. Willingness to put employer ahead of all other priorities, including financial security and family. Willingness to work at 20% below the industry average for the area. Ability to say "how high" when some pinhead over-promoted manager with an IQ of 70 says "Jump." Ability to refrain from using begrudgingly given PTO. Ability to not get sick or in an accident or have a loved one die.

      --
      Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.
    28. Re:I'm for it. by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, it's just a skills shortage.

      In this case, skill shortage means a shortage of people possessing the skill and willing to work for less than the median salary for their chosen profession.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    29. Re:I'm for it. by BVis · · Score: 2

      They don't get paid market rate. What is the H1-B visa holder going to do if they find out that the native worker next to them is making $20k/year more than them with the same experience and the same job responsibilities? Complain? That's a one-way ticket back to wherever they're from. We're basically all "at-will" employees, but native workers don't face deportation for asserting their (few) rights as employees, they just get fired.

      --
      Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.
    30. Re:I'm for it. by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That, or companies could actually take on university graduates like they used to do, train them, treat them well, and have some high class permanents who know what they're doing. Oh wait, that's a long term strategy. And long term's no good because in the long term we're all dead anyway.

      They still do. They are called "fresh outs" and corporations love them. They are young, willing to relocate, and work for less than the going rate in exchange for experience to show on their resume. These corporations tend to hire by the project. This allows them to layoff workers at the end of each project and the workers find themselves competing with new "fresh outs" on upcoming projects. The majority of these workers find themselves looking elsewhere for employment only to find out that despite their experienced gained from their first employer they must compete with H1B workers who will work for less pay.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    31. Re:I'm for it. by BVis · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How, exactly, do you see 'greater enforcement' happening under the current system? Picture this:

      Concerned party (immigrant's rights worker, social worker, lawyer): "You're being exploited, they're not paying you market rate, you should complain"
      H1-B visa holder: "If I do that, they'll fire me. Better to be making below market value than get deported back to [wherever] where I will make 1/10th of what I make here."

      It's like a prostitute complaining about his/her pimp to the police. All it will do is 1) get him/her arrested for solicitation and 2) beaten and possibly killed by said pimp.

      --
      Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.
    32. Re:I'm for it. by Lehk228 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Se we should let the corporations fuck us out of fear that they will fuck us harder?

      We need to deglobalize the economy as the people do not see any of the advantages, IP laws allow companies to sell for low prices overseas but restrict imports

      Build import tariffs in such a way as to severely penalize production in places where environmental and or worker safety laws are lax, make importing profits from overseas holdings difficult as well if those overseas holdings do business, directly or indirectly, in the US.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    33. Re:I'm for it. by mapsjanhere · · Score: 2

      You haven't been to any STEM graduate school lately much, have you? There are about 25% max of "long-term citizen" and a whole lot of Asians (mainly Chinese and Indian, not surprising as they make up 40% of the world's population). The real change lately is that there now are more citizens than you saw in the 80' and 90' due to the fact that the fist generation immigrant PhDs now have their children in grad school. And the reason for that is that your typical STEM American gets the 100k offer as a BS because they are needed, and skips the 5 years of grad student existence. As for the subject of the article, the big business H1B users would love to get rid of it, they can get all your H1B needs filled with just one recruiting bureau in Mumbai. And the "they cost more to hire" argument is flat-out wrong, it's cheaper to pay an attorney to process and H1B than an head hunter to recruit a citizen.

      --
      I'm aging rapidly, I bought a new game and had no idea if my machine was good for it.
    34. Re:I'm for it. by Beetle+B. · · Score: 2

      According to who, Microsoft? Gee, I can't think of any reason they might want to lie about this.

      That argument applies equally well to all those who whine about low pay and not being able to get a job.

      --
      Beetle B.
    35. Re:I'm for it. by pnutjam · · Score: 2

      and pay $12 / hour or in this area, about what a shift closer makes doing fast food

    36. Re:I'm for it. by sycodon · · Score: 3

      Since you're on Slashdot too I expect you are a lazy fat fuck American?

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    37. Re:I'm for it. by couchslug · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Then facilitate LEGAL immigration and capture the talent. Americans don't want to work and disdain many jobs because they think they are too precious to compete.

      Import and retain skilled workers, denying them to other countries. Business is war and "defectors" are useful. "Brain drain" the competition and welcome new Americans.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    38. Re:I'm for it. by sycodon · · Score: 2

      Since you are the one "hiring" then you are the problem.

      You would reject someone with 20 years experience in manufacturing, who knows ERP and MRP backwards and forwards because they don't meet some lame ass criteria you set for an ERP developer.

      If you'd pull your head out of your ass and actually interview people you might find those who, although maybe need to come up to speed on your tool set, knows your business, can actually discuss solutions intelligently with your customers and design solutions that have longevity and are robust.

      But no. You want some code monkey that you can pitch specs to and have them churn out code. Maybe that's what's wrong with American workers, they don't submit to incompetent control freaks.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    39. Re:I'm for it. by sjames · · Score: 2

      Offer more money or better conditions and you'll get a better quality of applicant. You might also find that HR is not correctly filtering candidates when it decides who should be offered an interview.

    40. Re:I'm for it. by erp_consultant · · Score: 2

      Nice try AC. I have conducted tons of interviews over the years. H1-B is just being used as an extension of "off-shoring". Management will fix the job descriptions such that anyone here in the US that possesses the qualifications won't go anywhere near the salary being offered. That opens the door to bring in the H1-B working who will do anything to get in. It's a way to get low cost workers that cannot easily leave the company. It's also unpatriotic bullshit. Isn't it bad enough that we have given up on manufacturing? Now we're slowly killing higher skilled jobs as well.

    41. Re:I'm for it. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      After all, what idiot is gonna go $50k-$75k in debt for a job they know they'll have to compete for with a guy that paid less than 15K for theirs?

      Maybe you should consider this as a sign that American high education is overpriced?

      And, you know, it's not just Indians who can study in American universities. Americans can also study in foreign universities, and there are plenty places where it's cheaper. In fact, there are plenty places in US itself which are cheaper than $50k. If a guy with an Indian degree can get hired, do you really need the most expensive education you can get in US?

  2. Would this apply to UK citizens ? by polyp2000 · · Score: 2

    Would this mean it would be much easier for me (from the UK) to leave this screwed up country and move to the states?

    --
    Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
    1. Re:Would this apply to UK citizens ? by 91degrees · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you're going to leave screwed up UK, why would you pick the US of all places!?

    2. Re:Would this apply to UK citizens ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      If you're going to leave screwed up UK, why would you pick the US of all places!?

      I heard you have greener grass over there.

  3. Article is wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is no per country cap on H1Bs. As usual, Computer world is trying to rile up anti immigrant/anti H1B sentiment.

    There is a per country cap on Green Cards. This means that to get a green card, there are separate queues based on the country you were born in. Because of this cap, an engineer from India or China, if he applies in the advanced/special skills category that needs a Masters degree in engineering or science has to wait in the same job for more than 6 years to get a green card, while the guy from Iceland gets one in six months.

    1. Re:Article is wrong by toejam13 · · Score: 2

      I don't see a problem with this. Having a diverse immigrant workforce is a good thing. No single country should dominate our immigration system.

    2. Re:Article is wrong by hooeezit · · Score: 5, Interesting
      As parent says, the article is utterly wrong. There are no per-country caps on H1B. The caps are on Green Cards (permanent residence) issued under certain categories, EB2 (Employment Based 2nd) being the most affected. The problem is that all countries, irrespective of their population, get a fixed ceiling of 7% of the total allocation of 140000 GCs issued per year. So, H1B workers from China and India have to wait at least 5 years, sometimes 10 years depending on the whims of USCIS, to get their Green Card. During that time, they have to continue being employed by the same company that originally filed the GC application, and in a materially similar position as at the time of filing. A major change in job description requires refiling. If you don't realize what that means, it makes those workers subservient to their employers. This has quite the opposite effect that you think it does - it doesn't help US workers any since these foreigners are already employed, but it gives the employers a position of power from which they can dictate terms on pay raises and promotions since they have the workers by the leash.

      This is definitely hurting US tech companies because many excellent techies getting good salaries are leaving the US and setting up their own companies either in their home countries or in some other immigration-friendly country, Canada and Singapore being the top destinations. They would rather spend 2 years setting up their own company and getting permanent residence and a path to citizenship there than toil for 6+ years in fear with no certain timeline on when they'll become a permanent resident, much less a citizen of the US.

      I myself am an example of a person who left the US after being there for 11 years. I was on H1B and making $120k/yr, so definitely not an underpaid worker. But I'm loathe to serve 6 years in a big corporation doing the same job day in and day out. So, I moved back to India, and I'm using my contacts in the industry to provide embedded software and hardware development services to small companies in the US. At the same time, I'm providing Industrial Automation consulting services to Indian companies and am currently working on a new data logging product for the South African market. So, the US lost the tax revenue it would have received. It lost a bunch of local jobs due to US companies outsourcing work to me in India. And it lost the new jobs I'd have created there if I'd continued building new products in the US.

      So, you decide what works in US's national interests? Keeping people like me away from that country, or giving us an incentive to set up companies of our own? And if you claim that I'm a minority, that's an irrelevant argument. A very useful minority is still being alienated. I loved being in the US, and would happily go back if the immigration situation becomes easier and more deterministic. But I seriously don't see current US politics being conducive to ANYTHING that's of real value to the country.

    3. Re:Article is wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually they already are in the workforce - so the question is a bit more subtle: whether the world's best and brightest work at companies in the USA or whether the world's best and brightest work at companies in other countries.

      If you're an American worker, then the question you should be asking is whether you want the world's best and brightest working with you to make your American company successful or whether you want the world's best and brightest working at foreign companies competing against you.

    4. Re:Article is wrong by toejam13 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It's a thinly veiled substitute for the Chinese Exclusion Act.

      India and China have no natural right to dominate the US immigration system simple because each country alone has a greater population than the entire US.

      To have a true melting pot, you need a diverse population. When you have a huge immigrant influx from a single region of the world, your melting pot will start to form lumps. That gives rise to a number of socioeconomic issues.

    5. Re:Article is wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      India and China have no natural right to dominate the US immigration system simple because each country alone has a greater population than the entire US.

      To have a true melting pot, you need a diverse population.

      A few points:

      • Indians are more diverse than Americans (different cultures, religions, languages, ...).
      • So you're ok with Europeans dominating the US immigration system only because they have more seats in the UN?
      • The Green Card quota is too small to cause abrupt demographic changes in the US.
    6. Re:Article is wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      ...than toil for 6+ years in fear with no certain timeline on when they'll become a permanent resident, much less a citizen of the US.

      I'm an American (born and raised) scientist currently living and working in Asia and, after the way my non-American wife and her family have been treated by USCIS, I'm not at all eager to go back to the USA, either.

      In my wife's case, we spent years waiting for all the various paperwork to clear - during which times my wife wasn't allowed to work, or go to school or even leave the USA. And it's totally arbitrary: even now that my wife has permanent residence (a "green card") USCIS could take it away for no reason and, at best, we'd have to start all over again.

      And then her sister, who had a five year multiple entry visa, essentially applied for a renewal to do some traveling with us - and was denied - again totally arbitrary and with no due process or rule of law or possibility to appeal.

      But I seriously don't see current US politics being conducive to ANYTHING that's of real value to the country.

      Yeah, I voted for Obama hoping things might improve - but from what I've seen they've actually gotten worse. I sure won't be voting Democratic this year.

      Well, anyway, I can always hope that some other country will invade and occupy the USA and straighten it out. :)

    7. Re:Article is wrong by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 2

      Spouse green cards are really a pain, likely because of the level of abuse historically. The probationary green card is really only the first two years though. When my wife came over she got an education visa, then we had a lot of fun when we tried to do a border run to get a tourist visa after that expired. After that, it was a fiancé visa which was a whole other nightmare. It took three years to get a proper SSN.

      Which is what pisses me off in the whole discussion of illegal labor. What the hell else do you expect if you make a system that requires surviving two to three years before you can work legally? Even with a sponsor, that is a good bit of money where an extra $10k per year can make a huge difference.

  4. Annual audit... that's hysterical. by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2

    Did so much good at the banks and financial institutes.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  5. Re:We need this for politicians too! by Hognoxious · · Score: 3, Funny

    Instead of fighting against this trend I've decided it should be applied to politicians as well. Bring in some real talent where leadership is concerned and allow these H1-B Visa holders to run our country as well, why not?

    Already been done.

    At least that's what Donald Trump says.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  6. Simply Solution, High Minimum Salary for H1B's by ad454 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The simplest solution is to raise the minimum salary for all H1B employees to something more reasonable, like between $100,000 to $150,000, depending on the area and profession. (Note this is a minimum, the maximum is open.)

    That way companies would be forced to pay the extra amount for foreign workers if they really are needed, and be incentivize to first look for local talent and/or provide training.

    And H1B's recipients would stop being considered as cheap low-cost labour putting downwards pressure on salaries.

    1. Re:Simply Solution, High Minimum Salary for H1B's by VortexCortex · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The simplest solution is to raise the minimum salary for all H1B employees to something more reasonable, like between $100,000 to $150,000

      I see a flaw...
      A gallon of milk will just cost $40, and that $20k minimum wage slave will make $200k.
      ...absolute values don't account for inflation well.

    2. Re:Simply Solution, High Minimum Salary for H1B's by imbusy · · Score: 2

      Isn't that how it already works? The employer has to offer a salary that is above average of what the standard is. Foreign workers on H1-B visas ARE more expensive. But maybe they are willing to work in a lower position than they normally should so all in all they cost less. BTW, I'm someone who missed this year's H1-B quota by a few days myself.

    3. Re:Simply Solution, High Minimum Salary for H1B's by roman_mir · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There is no such thing as a 'wage slave'. Everybody is free to attempt their own business or live on charity.

  7. It's craziness! by catmistake · · Score: 2

    Why should workers with flu-like symptoms have any such legislation? I don't care what country they come from, if they're sick they should stay home and get better, otherwise pandemic is inevitable.

  8. Re:I'm for it. - ABSOLUTE FALSEHOOD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Gates himself (check the audio archive for his speeches) said he'd rather hire
    foreigners than U.S. citizens
    . And no, U.S. corporations are provided fininacial
    incentives to hire Hr1B workers - in addition, assuming they stay in the U.S less
    than (don't remember the # of days), they do NOT pay Federal income tax. So,
    it does NOT cost MS 30% more to hire non-U.S. citizens; that's complete nonsense.

    CAPTCHA = charcoal (why yes, I'm feeling a little burnt)

  9. Or how about experienced workers?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That, or companies could actually take on university graduates like they used to do, train them,....

    Or get an experienced worker who's done alot of the work before but maybe in a different language or on a different platform?

    As an experienced C++ programmer, it took me at most 3 hours to learn Java's syntax AND how to navigate around the libraries.

    C#? Picked it up immediately.

    I think hiring managers are the ones who need to realize that their particular technology or platform isn't all that special or any harder than any other platform or language.

    Those laundry lists that HR has? The managers ordered them to do it. Remeber kids, HR works for management - don't let anyone tell you different.

    And then there's the first line management cockiness that I see way too often You'll see it here. For example, folks saying that they can't get anyone qualified - too many "wannabes". WTF is a "wannabe"?

    Or having problems getting folks because they can't find someone to answer some "key" question they ask like "Where do you see yourself in five years?", "What is your favorite IDE?" or "What kind of projects do you in your spare time?"

    That last one is ridiculous. Uh, when I've been working 50+ hours a week (which is the norm now), the last thing I want or can do is go home and code. I NEED to workout, spend time with my wife, and relax with a movie, good book, or cook a meal for said loved ones. Code?

    Oh wait, you want a 20 something or an immigrant with no ties and no life who have nothing better to do than sit in front of the computer.

    Got it. I finally figured it out.

  10. To all those defending the H-1B program by zerofoo · · Score: 2

    Many here are defending the program as a "global competitive market" for jobs, and that we should be able to import workers no matter the economic conditions.

    If other countries were so welcoming of our unemployed, I would agree with the sentiment.

    Would China be as welcoming to the scores of our unemployed in the manufacturing sector? Would China even allow them into the country? I suspect not.

    If our unemployment levels are high, we should not import workers for ANY reason. Market forces can fix this problem easily. A labor shortage drives up labor cost, that encourages more people into the field.

    The companies I have worked for used H-1B workers to increase the available labor pool - that increased supply pushed down wages - basic economic stuff.

    -ted

  11. Re:Abolish the H3B Program by thoughtsatthemoment · · Score: 2

    I am opposed to all immigration as it tends to harm both the source and destination countries.

    If you were born and raised in the USA I'd be very curious to know why you think like that.