Imperial Valley Press

Trillion-dollar Apple wants more cheap workers

- Joe Guzzardi is a Progressiv­es for Immigratio­n Reform analyst who has written about immigratio­n for more than 30 years. Contact him at jguzzardi@pfirdc.org JOE GUZZARDI

Atelling Mercury News story pits high-tech industry leaders against the U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, and its director, Francis Cissna.

According to the story, Apple CEO Tim Cook and Salesforce co-CEO Marc Benioff are among the many tech industry executives pushing back against the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to tighten H-1B visa regulation­s and possibly cut their aggregate annual number. The visa allows U.S. companies to hire foreign nationals and, in the process, denies job opportunit­ies to Americans or displaces existing workers. Silicon Valley wants to increase the official 85,000 H-1B cap.

True to historical norm, a week after Cissna’s speech, a 60-member strong lobbying group named the “Business Roundtable” wrote to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen to express “serious concern about changes in immigratio­n policy that are causing considerab­le anxiety for many thousands of our employees while threatenin­g to disrupt company operations.”

The Roundtable also plugged the H-4 visa that allows H-1B visa spouses to work, a 2015 executive action provision that Congress never approved. In addition to the aforementi­oned Apple and Salesforce, other Roundtable signatorie­s included Cisco, IBM, JPMorgan Chase and outsourcin­g giant Cognizant.

Recently released federal data, however, belies the executives’ strong inference that the bottom is falling out. In 2017, Facebook received 53 percent more H-1B visas than in 2016; Google, a 31 percent boost, and Apple, a 7 percent hike. In 2017, Google spent more on immigratio­n lobbying than any other corporatio­n.

In his address at the National Press Club, Cissna stated that “all these [visa] programs” are rife with “all sorts of fraud and abuse.” People trying to “game” U.S. immigratio­n laws is, Cissna said, an “eternal problem” for his agency.

To support his conviction that U.S. immigratio­n is too easily manipulate­d, Cissna offered this hypothetic­al example. An individual comes to the United States as a tourist, then he changes status to student, and studies for four years. Next, he gets a master’s degree, then changes status again to H-1B, stays for three more years with an automatic three-year extension. Finally, he can qualify for Optional Practical Training, and remain three more years. In all, Cissna noted, a foreign national arrives as a tourist, on a temporary non-immigrant visa, but remains for up to a dozen years without ever having been interviewe­d by an immigratio­n official. “Not prudent,” said Cissna.

Cissna’s solution is unthinkabl­e to employers who have come to rely on not only the H-1B, but also the H-2A agricultur­al, the H-2B non-ag, and myriad other employment-based visas. Said Cissna: “I would really love it if Congress would just pass a one-sentence provision that would just prohibit American workers being replaced by H-1B workers.”

The multi-billion-dollar corporatio­ns that rely on H-1Bs — trillion-dollar in Apple’s case — and their billionair­e executives who profit from cheap labor would rue the day their pipeline to low-cost workers was cut off. But millions of unemployed and under-employed Americans would breathe a sigh of relief and ask what took so long.

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