Houston Chronicle

Immigratio­n reform making inroads in Iowa

- By Kristie De Peña and Robert Leonard and David Oman This article originally appeared in the New York Times.

Across the globe, there are 32.5 million refugees seeking safety, many of them adults seeking work. At the same time, severe labor shortages in the United States and many other high-income countries have left businesses clamoring for workers.

The United States can help address both problems (and more) through bipartisan immigratio­n reform — and states can be part of new solutions with innovative ideas that could act as the foundation for immigratio­n federalism.

The three of us have connection­s to Iowa, where the Republican governor, Kim Reynolds, and the state’s Department of Health and Human Services recently announced a program that supports refugees from around the world, with a focus on Afghan people in particular.

Iowa alone has over 75,000 job openings. That may seem a minute number compared with the 11 million jobs open nationally. But these shortages are depleting the state’s ability to meet growing manufactur­ing and service demands. Businesses are begging for workers at local economic developmen­t meetings. Employers are struggling particular­ly with shortages in key mid-skill industries, like health care, informatio­n and technology and tourism and hospitalit­y.

So not only should states lead in improving welcoming efforts for refugees, but Democratic and Republican governors should also have the opportunit­y to weigh in on the specific immigratio­n needs of small businesses, manufactur­ers and families.

States can innovate in three ways. The first — and probably the toughest — is at the federal level, through Congress. Recent bipartisan efforts in Washington, D.C., to address immigratio­n and border issues fell through, but lawmakers made significan­t progress and suggest that reform is possible.

There is precedent for innovative congressio­nal immigratio­n policy that involves states. For example, in 2017, Senator Ron Johnson, Republican of Wisconsin, introduced legislatio­n that would allow states to devise guest worker programs for their expanding work forces.

In the Johnson proposal, states would require approval from the Department of Homeland Security and from a state legislatur­e.

The second option for innovation is through action by the president and his administra­tion in the executive branch. The United States and other countries could establish a so-called global skill partnershi­p, a bilateral migration agreement that would allow U.S. employers to train workers to obtain valuable skills; that training could be done either in the United States or abroad, and then workers could come to the U.S. states that need them. Creating a pathway for individual­s to live and work in Iowa and other states would ease the burden on America’s asylum system.

In this sort of partnershi­p, immigrants would receive job training and could choose to come to the states that welcomed them, or they could remain at home, stabilizin­g those economies and taking pressure off our borders. Governors, as well as business and educationa­l leaders, could call for more vulnerable immigrant population­s to be trained to fill specific local labor needs.

The third option is within the states themselves. Some states are taking control of immigratio­n through licensing reform. According to a 2021 Nursing Education study, four counties in Washington State were among the top 15 in the nation with the highest primary care worker shortages. The state passed legislatio­n offering a limited license for internatio­nal medical graduates to gain clinical experience. By revising these guidelines, Washington has licensed about 10 foreign medical providers. Together, those physicians have treated an estimated 20,000 state residents.

You might be surprised to see Gov. Reynolds and Sen. Johnson, both Republican­s, leading immigratio­n reform. But that is happening because businesses in states like Iowa and Wisconsin need workers.

With Republican and Democratic governors involved, state programs that open doors for people in need while boosting our nation’s businesses are an investment in states’ futures.

Kristie De Peña is the vice president for policy and the director of immigratio­n policy at the Niskanen Center. Robert Leonard is the news director for the radio stations KNIA and KRLS in Knoxville, Iowa. David Oman was a chief of staff to the Iowa governors Robert D. Ray and Terry Branstad and served as a chair of the Iowa Republican Party from 1985 to 1993.

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