Arab Times

STEM Jobs Act faces Congress vote

‘Unlikely to go anywhere this year’

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WASHINGTON, Nov 30, (AP): A US House of Representa­tives vote to offer permanent residency to foreign students graduating with advanced degrees in science and math from US colleges and universiti­es is setting the stage for a bigger battle next year on how to redesign the nation’s flawed immigratio­n system.

House Republican­s, with the help of a minority of Democrats, were expected to prevail Friday in passing the STEM Jobs Act, which would provide up to 55,000 green cards a year to those earning masters and doctoral degrees from US schools in the fields of science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s.

But the bill is unlikely to go anywhere this year in the Democratic-controlled Senate, and the Obama White House has come out against it, saying it “does not support narrowly tailored proposals that do not meet the president’s long-term objectives with respect to comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform.”

A major point of contention is that the bill offsets the increase in visas for the highly educated by eliminatin­g the Diversity Immigrant Visa Program. This year the program made 50,000 visas available to people from countries with traditiona­lly low rates of immigratio­n. About half of those visas go to African nations.

The House voted on a similar STEM Act in September, but it fell short under a procedure requiring a two-thirds majority. It is being revived under rules should be protected with a search warrant,” said Chris Calabrese, ACLU legislativ­e counsel.

“We believe law enforcemen­t should use the same standard to search your inbox that they do to search your home.”

The Electronic Frontier Foundation welcomed the move, saying it would “close a dangerous loophole in the 1986 Electronic Communicat­ions Privacy Act,” which authoritie­s have argued allows them to access private emails that are more than 180 days needing only a simple majority. Republican­s are scrambling to show the Hispanic community, which largely deserted them in the recent election, that their party is committed to fixing the immigratio­n system.

Earlier this week, two Republican senators introduced their version of the DREAM Act. Their bill would allow young people brought into the country as children without authorizat­ion to stay without fear of being deported, an initiative previously opposed by most Republican­s.

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith said the STEM Act, a top priority of the high-tech industry seeking to stop the “reverse brain drain” of highly skilled foreign graduates of US universiti­es leaving for jobs overseas, “will help us create jobs, increase our competitiv­eness and spur our innovation.”

Attempt

And in an attempt to pick up more votes, Smith added a provision that makes it easier for the spouses and children of residents to come to the United States while they wait for their own green card applicatio­ns to be approved.

But while most Democrats support increasing STEM visas, there was sharp criticism of the Republican approach.

“This is a partisan bill that picks winners and losers in our immigratio­n system,” Rep Luis Gutierrez, a leader on immigratio­n issues in the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus, said of the eliminatio­n of the Diversity Visa Program. old without a warrant.

Robert Holleyman, head of the Software Alliance, also praised the panel for “an important step in building trust and confidence in cloud computing and other digital services.”

“Law enforcemen­t access and civil protection­s should be the same for online files and other digital records as they are for papers stored in a file cabinet,” Holleyman said.

Petraeus resigned when it became clear that his affair with 40-

“This bill is premised on the dangerous thought that immigratio­n is a zero-sum game,” said Rep Zoe Lofgren. The Democrat, who represents high-tech companies in her northern California district and has long pushed for more STEM visas, said the Smith bill would eventually result in fewer visas issued because far fewer than 50,000 degrees are given every year to foreigners in eligible STEM fields, and the bill does not allow unused visas to be transferre­d to other programs.

The STEM Act visas would be in addition to about 140,000 employment-based visas for those ranging from lowerskill­ed workers to college graduates and people in the arts, education and athletics.

The Diversity Visa Lottery Program, created in 1990 partly to increase visas for Ireland, has shifted over the years to focus on former Soviet states and now Africa. In 2010, almost 25,000 visas went to Africa; 9,000 to Asia and 16,000 to Europe. Applicants must have at least a high school education.

Critics say the visa lottery program has outlived its purpose because Africans and East Europeans are already benefiting from family unificatio­n and skilled employment visas, and the lottery program is subject to fraud and infiltrati­on by terrorists. Lofgren said it was “prepostero­us” that terrorists would try to get into a country under a program that picks 55,000 people at random out of more than 14 million applicants. year-old military reservist Paula Broadwell, his biographer, would become public.

FBI agents stumbled on the liaison after a complaint from Jill Kelley — a friend of Petraeus — who told a federal agent that she had received threatenin­g emails, which investigat­ors later traced to Broadwell.

The Leahy measure would need to pass the Senate and the House of Representa­tives before going to President Barack Obama’s desk to be signed into law.

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