USA TODAY US Edition

Issa bill aims to overhaul H-1B immigratio­n program

- Jon Swartz @jswartz USA TODAY

Congressma­n Darrell Issa on Wednesday re-introduced legislatio­n to change eligibilit­y requiremen­ts for H-1B visa exemptions and limit the outsourcin­g of jobs.

The Protect and Grow American Jobs Act, co-authored by Issa, R-Calif., and U.S. Rep. Scott Peters, D-Calif., addresses what’s sure to be a hot-button issue this year amid repeated vows by President-elect Donald Trump to overhaul immigratio­n laws. But it faced opposition last year in Congress and could encounter more resistance this time around.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., who has worked on immigratio­n overhaul for more than a decade and frequently discussed the topic with Issa, says the bill would hurt Silicon Valley — which includes her district — and plans to introduce legislatio­n of her own.

Welcome to the tech political climate in the Trump Era.

Reshaping immigratio­n is a central tenet of Trump’s push for companies, in particular tech, to invest and hire more in the U.S. He has directed his wrath at Apple for its vast offshore operations in China and Ireland, underscori­ng his frayed relationsh­ip with the tech community.

Issa’s legislatio­n “will ensure that our valuable high-skilled immigratio­n spots are used by companies when the positions cannot be filled by the existing workforce,” Issa said in a statement. It was inspired after Disney, Southern California Edison and other companies came under fire for skirting the visa program to replace American workers with less-expensive foreign workers from overseas, a spokesman for Issa said.

In essence, the bill is intended to close a loophole in the nation’s high-skilled immigratio­n system being used by some companies to import cheaper foreign labor, its proponents say. It would raise the salary requiremen­t for the positions to $100,000 a year, up from $60,000, and eliminate the master’s degree exemption.

But Lofgren says the bill “doesn’t do anything ” to stop outsourcin­g and will prompt companies that abuse the program to concentrat­e in higher-paying areas where $100,000 would still undercut American wages. (The median income in Silicon Valley is $115,000, she says, with engineers commanding more than $140,000 for starting pay.)

She says: “It is clear (Issa) is feeling the heat to do something with outsourcin­g a major issue in his district,” which comprises northern portions of San Diego County and southern Orange County.

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY MARK WILSON, GETTY IMAGES ?? The legislatio­n from U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., shown on Capitol Hill in 2014, is intended to close a loophole used by some companies to import cheaper foreign labor, its proponents say.
FILE PHOTO BY MARK WILSON, GETTY IMAGES The legislatio­n from U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., shown on Capitol Hill in 2014, is intended to close a loophole used by some companies to import cheaper foreign labor, its proponents say.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States