The Mercury News

Tech giants ramped up use of H-1B visas in ’17

Trump warned he would crack down but firms never paused

- By Ethan Baron ebaron@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Even as the White House began cracking down on U.S. work visas, major Silicon Valley technology firms last year dramatical­ly ramped up hiring of workers under the controvers­ial H-1B visa program, according to a recent analysis of government data.

The data shows the importance of H-1B workers to the tech industry, which has long lobbied to increase the number of highly skilled foreign workers.

Menlo Park-based Facebook in 2017 received 720 H-1B approvals, a 53 percent increase over 2016, according to the National Foundation for American Policy, which obtained the federal government data. Mountain View’s Google received 1,213 H-1B approvals, a 31 percent increase. The number of H-1B approvals at Intel in Santa Clara rose 19 percent, and Cupertino-based Apple received 673, a 7 percent increase.

But the data lacks details that might clarify how the industry uses those workers: It does not indicate what kind of jobs the visa holders had, or in which offices they worked.

And experts say the data also doesn’t show how many additional H-1B contractor­s tech companies may have gotten from staffing agencies or outsourcin­g companies.

In response to this news organizati­on’s inquiries, Facebook said it does not publicly discuss its use of H-1B workers or contractor­s. Google, Apple and Intel did not respond to requests for informatio­n about their use of H-1B workers or contractor­s.

The lottery-based H-1B, obtained by employers seeking foreign talent, is intended for highly skilled workers and has become a flashpoint in the U.S. immigratio­n debate. Tech firms have lobbied hard to increase the number of new visas beyond the 85,000 annual cap, while opponents point to reported abuses and say H-1B workers take jobs from Americans.

Outsourcin­g firms, such as Infosys and Tata, have become particular targets of the administra­tion of President Donald Trump.

In a February policy memo, U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services noted legitimate uses of the visa by third-party agencies but said such arrangemen­ts can increase the likelihood of abuses such as paying improperly low wages or using

contractor­s for nonspecial­ized work. The memo imposed new requiremen­ts on H-1B employers to prove that visa holders will be doing specialty work.

Vivek Wadhwa, a distinguis­hed fellow at Harvard Law School and Carnegie

Mellon’s School of Engineerin­g at Silicon Valley, believes the solution is to give H-1B preference to startups and tech companies — not third-party agencies.

“I’m a strong proponent of skilled immigratio­n,” said Wadhwa, who studies the positive contributi­ons of immigrants. “The only H-1Bs should be direct employees of these companies.”

The increase in H-1Bs approved for tech firms in 2017 came as the White House began a series of sweeping actions to limit immigratio­n. That may have prompted companies to secure as many visas as possible while they could, Wadhwa said.

“It may be that they were stocking up because things turned dark,” he said.

Amazon chalked up the largest increase in H-1B approvals, with 2,515 in 2017, a 78 percent leap. Microsoft received 1,479 approvals, an increase of 29 percent. Neither company responded to a request for comment. The data does not show what

companies, if any, got fewer H-1B approvals.

The Consumer Technology Associatio­n, an industry group representi­ng companies including Google and Facebook, says tech firms are facing a “massive skills gap” in which jobs go unfilled for lack of qualified American workers. And Peter Leroe-Muñoz, vice president of technology and innovation policy at the Silicon Valley Leadership Group — whose membership includes all the major valley tech giants — said foreign workers remain “tremendous­ly important” to the region’s tech industry because of a shortage of skilled technologi­sts.

But Chris Benner, a professor at UC Santa Cruz who has studied the use of contract employees in tech, doesn’t buy it.

“I think the argument that people with those types of skills are not available in the U.S. is pretty specious,” Benner said. “I have not seen any significan­t evidence of labor shortage in a

lot of skilled positions.”

The Federation for American Immigratio­n Reform says the government has refused to provide detailed informatio­n about where third-party providers send H-1B contractor­s, and the group’s partner organizati­on, The Immigratio­n Reform Law Institute, has sued for access to that data.

Absent reliable numbers, it’s impossible to know the extent to which tech firms may be using H-1B workers supplied by third parties.

But Immigratio­n Reform Law Institute lawyer John Miano believes that if the companies weren’t taking on large numbers of H-1B workers from staffing firms and outsourcer­s, they would be kicking up a fuss over the huge numbers of H-1B visas snapped up by those third parties.

“They want to keep this business rolling for their own purposes,” Miano said.

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