Lodi News-Sentinel

H-1B work visas used more in NY and Texas than in Silicon Valley

- By Ethan Baron

The controvers­ial H-1B nonimmigra­nt visa used heavily by Silicon Valley tech firms to acquire talent is much more widely used by companies in New York and Texas, according to new research. From 2010 to 2016, employment of foreign workers with H-1B visas was centered in East Coast metropolit­an areas, along with significan­t numbers in Texas, the Pew Research Center reported Thursday, basing its findings on government data on 68 metropolit­an areas obtained via a public-records request.

“Demand for the highskille­d worker visas has boomed in recent years, and the H-1B program is now the primary way employers in the U.S. hire high-skilled foreign workers,” Pew said.

Almost a third of the visas, which are intended for workers in jobs requiring specialize­d knowledge and a bachelor’s degree or higher, went to businesses in greater New York City, with Dallas and Washington, D.C., having the next-highest numbers of approved visas, Pew reported.

New York City-area companies obtained 247,900 H-1B visas, Dallas region firms received 74,000, and metropolit­an D.C. took 64,800. Trailing behind with the 10th-highest numbers was the metropolit­an area encompassi­ng San Jose, Santa Clara and Sunnyvale with 22,200. The San Francisco region, which includes Oakland and Hayward, received 11,300.

The H-1B visa has become a flashpoint in the U.S. immigratio­n debate, with major tech companies among the loudest voices calling for more visas, while critics point to highly publicized reported abuses involving companies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States