The Day

Visa woes have summer businesses looking to Puerto Ricans

- By DAVID SHARP and CLAUDIA TORRENS

Phippsburg, Maine — Frustrated by red tape and visa limits on foreign workers, tourism businesses from Maine to Missouri are turning to Puerto Ricans who are fleeing a shattered economy and devastatio­n caused by Hurricane Maria.

Bob Smith, owner of Sebasco Harbor Resort in Phippsburg, hired a half-dozen Puerto Ricans last summer for housekeepi­ng, landscapin­g and kitchen work, providing relief to his overworked staff. This summer he is doubling the number, and he would like to hire even more.

Louis Morales, 50, of Comerio, Puerto Rico, is happy to be here because he makes double the salary he would back home, where jobs are scarce.

“A lot of people lost their houses, their jobs, everything. It’s not the same now,” said Morales, a maintenanc­e worker who worked at Sebasco last year and has recruited more residents from Comerio to join him.

Employers large and small are seeking alternativ­e solutions as demand continues to outstrip the annual allotment of 66,000 H-2B temporary visas, which are issued for workers holding down seasonal, nonagricul­tural jobs.

Critics fear that immigratio­n politics were playing a role in program changes starting last summer. Compoundin­g the uncertaint­y for businesses was a lottery system and background check delays on workers who come from dozens of countries from the Caribbean to Croatia.

On Friday, Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen announced 15,000 additional visas and acknowledg­ed reforms were needed.

With Maine’s unemployme­nt rate below 3 percent, there aren’t enough local people willing to take those seasonal jobs, Smith said.

“People say you should give these jobs to Americans. If you can find ’em, then that’s great,” he said.

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