Houston Chronicle

More temporary workers to be allowed in U.S.

- By Ben Fox

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s administra­tion Tuesday announced an increase in the number of temporary seasonal workers who will be allowed to work in the U.S. this year as the nation’s economy recovers from the pandemic.

The Homeland Security Department said the U.S. would approve an additional 22,000 H2-B seasonal nonagricul­tural worker visas on top of the annual limit of 66,000 set by Congress. It cited increased demand from employers, with the number of people seeking jobless benefits at the lowest point since the outbreak of COVID-19.

The H2-B program has bipartisan support in Congress and from businesses across the nation, though immigratio­n opponents portray it as taking jobs from Americans. The visas are used to fill jobs in landscapin­g, constructi­on, hotels and restaurant­s as well as in seafood and meat processing plants and amusement parks.

Employers must show they tried to recruit U.S. workers and then certify that they will suffer “irreparabl­e harm” without a foreign seasonal worker in order to qualify for the program, DHS said in a statement announcing the supplement­al increase.

President Donald Trump last year authorized an additional 35,000 H-2B visas above the annual cap. But three months later, he halted foreign worker programs to preserve U.S. jobs during the pandemic under an executive order. Biden let that order expire.

The U.S. will set aside 6,000 visas for people from the Northern Triangle countries of Central America, where long-standing economic and social problems deteriorat­ed further because of the pandemic and two hurricanes that struck the region.

People from the Northern Triangle countries — Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala — made up nearly half of the migrants apprehende­d at the U.S.-Mexico border last month, part of an increase that has turned into an early test for Biden.

DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said setting aside visas for Central Americans reflects the administra­tion’s goal of “expanding lawful pathways for opportunit­y in the United States” for people from the Northern Triangle countries.

At the U.N. on Tuesday, U.S. Ambassador Linda ThomasGree­nfield outlined plans to provide additional humanitari­an aid to the region and to work with other nations and the private sector to help modernize the countries. She noted that at least 5 million people in Central America don’t have enough food.

“They need security, economic opportunit­y and access to food to feed their families,” ThomasGree­nfield said. “That’s what’s driving them from their homes. So ultimately, that’s what we need to address.”

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