Houston Chronicle Sunday

Tech companies fear change in H1-B visas

- By Anick Jesdanun

NEW YORK — Next on the immigratio­n chopping block? U.S. tech companies fear the Trump administra­tion will target a visa program they cherish for bringing in programmer­s and other specialize­d workers from other countries.

Although these visas, known as H-1B, aren’t supposed to displace American workers, critics say safeguards are weak. Critics also say the program mostly benefits consulting firms that let tech companies contract out their jobs to save money. The administra­tion is considerin­g a broad review of such programs, though there weren’t many specifics in a draft executive order obtained by The Associated Press.

This comes amid President Donald Trump’s temporary ban on nationals of seven Muslimmajo­rity countries from entering the U.S., including those who are employed by Google and other tech companies but were out of the country when the surprise order was issued last month.

Here’s a look at how the H-1B visa program works and why tech companies are worried. Is this a tech visa program?

The H-1B program is open to a broad range of occupation­s, including architects, professors and even fashion models. Companies must affirm that the job requires a specialty skill that cannot be filled by a U.S. worker.

Many of these skills happen to be in tech. According to the Labor Department, the top three H-1B occupation­s are computer systems analysts, applicatio­n software developers and computer programmer­s. The Labor Department says about half of its H-1B certificat­ions are for those three occupation­s. By the numbers

The U.S. government allows up to 85,000 new H-1B visas each year, and recipients can stay up to six years. Demand is usually higher, so the government holds an annual lottery. Advocates say that’s a sign the cap needs to be raised. What about American jobs?

By law, companies are required to pay at least the prevailing wage for that occupation. In some cases, they also must make a good faith effort to hire a U.S. worker before turning to an H-1B worker.

The Labor Department must certify that these conditions have been met. After that, Homeland Security’s Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services conducts a lottery and the State Department issues visas to the lucky winners.

Venky Ganesan, a managing director at venture capitalist firm Menlo Ventures, says that rather than displace low-wage workers, the program encourages students to stay in the U.S. after getting their degrees in high-tech specialtie­s. He said many of them go on to start companies and hire U.S. workers. Sounds good, but ...

A 2011 study from the Government Accountabi­lity Office, the investigat­ive arm of Congress, found that the Labor Department’s review is “cursory and limited by law to only looking for missing informatio­n and obvious inaccuraci­es.” An Associated Press review of Labor Department data showed that less than 2 percent of applicatio­ns were denied in fiscal 2016.

Critics say the program has turned into a mechanism for companies to contract out jobs to consulting firms. Indeed, the data show that top companies certified for H-1B visas are large consulting firms. Apple ranked eighth, and no other traditiona­l tech firm made the top 15 in the AP review. Consulting firms targeted

Last month, Democratic Rep. Zoe Lofgren, whose district includes Silicon Valley, proposed raising the minimum annual salary for certain exemptions to $130,000, from $60,000. The change could require more companies to try to hire U.S. workers first.

As news of the proposal circulated in India, shares of many Indian technology companies sank.

As a Democratic bill, it has virtually no chance of passage in the Republican Congress, although the idea could be incorporat­ed into other measures from the GOP. What else?

The draft order from the White House had few specifics, other than to review existing regulation­s, find ways to allocate visas more efficientl­y and ensure that beneficiar­ies are “the best and the brightest.”

This suggests that the Trump isn’t looking to kill the program entirely.

The order didn’t propose anything specific about allocating visas, though one option is to scrap the lottery in favor of offering visas to the highest-paying jobs. Lofgren’s bill would prioritize visas for higher-paying jobs and set aside 20 percent of slots for smaller businesses and startups.

Tech companies have been clamoring for the government to increase the number of annual visas allotted, but there’s no indication that’s on the agenda. In fact, the number of visas could go down. Although the cap itself is set by law, there’s no legal requiremen­t for the administra­tion to issue that many visas.

 ?? Paul Sakuma / Associated Press ?? Critics say the H-1B visa program has turned into a mechanism for companies to contract out jobs to consulting firms. However, Apple is among the top companies certified for H-1B visas.
Paul Sakuma / Associated Press Critics say the H-1B visa program has turned into a mechanism for companies to contract out jobs to consulting firms. However, Apple is among the top companies certified for H-1B visas.

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