The Mercury News

Foreign workers to get wages raised

Boost is strongest reform in history of the program

- By Ethan Baron ebaron@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Critics of the controvers­ial H-1B foreign-worker program are applauding a new Trump Administra­tion rule significan­tly boosting required pay, but a Bay Area member of Congress says the change is an unworkable mess and won’t survive a legal challenge.

Under the rule issued and effective last week, H-1B workers in jobs at the lowest of four skills levels must receive at least 45% of the prevailing wage for their job type and location. Previously, they could be paid 17%. Under the new rule, the higher the skills level, the closer the pay must get to the prevailing wage. Workers at the highest skills level must be paid at least 95% of the prevailing wage, up from 67%.

The pay boost is the first substantiv­e reform in the visa program’s 30-year history, said Ron Hira, a Howard University professor whose H-1B research was cited in the government’s rule-making.

“If you had to ask for one single change that would be the most important one to change it would be the wages because you want to take away the incentive to hire people because they’re cheaper,” Hira said.

The administra­tion of President Donald Trump has cracked down on the H-1B program, dramatical­ly increasing visa denials for staffing companies and outsourcer­s that contract out foreign workers. Critics have argued that these companies and their client firms use the H-1B to supplant U.S. workers, drive down wages and send work overseas.

Supporters, including Silicon Valley’s technology giants, contend that the program should be expanded to ensure access to the world’s top talent, and that the administra­tion’s crackdown is pushing skilled foreign workers toward more welcoming nations such as Canada. That country’s government has sought — successful­ly, say critics of Trump administra­tion immigratio­n policy — to lure skilled workers away from Silicon Valley. The Bay Area Council has called the recent changes that included the wage hike a “gift” to Canada.

Silicon Valley Congresswo­man Zoe Lofgren, a Democrat who has sponsored bills to increase wages for H-1B workers, said pay increases such as those required in the new rule are necessary, but the administra­tion’s rushed approach is doomed to fail. “It’s going to be struck down because it didn’t follow the rules and also it’s a mess,” Lofgren said. “It’s all about the re-election, it’s not about the policy. They don’t care whether this gets into effect or not. They just wanted a bumper sticker.”

The U.S. Department of Labor, in a document explaining the wage change, noted that the previous minimum pay levels had been in place for 20 years. The old wage levels suppressed U. S. workers’ pay, the department asserted, adding that it expects the new wages “will induce some employers to employ U.S. workers instead of foreign workers from the H-1B program.”

The National Foundation for American Policy, which supports expanding the H-1B program’s current 85,000 cap on new visas, said its calculatio­ns showed that for computerre­lated jobs in Silicon Valley, minimum required pay will go up by about 35% to 40% across all skill levels. The foundation compared private wage-survey data to the new minimums, and found that, for example, minimum required pay for an H-1B electrical engineer in Silicon Valley is now $42,000 to $85,000 a year higher than the actual prevailing wage, said Stuart Anderson, executive director of the foundation.

T he a dministrat ion claims the wage changes will lead to a transfer from employers to employees of about $23 billion per year over the next decade. “Their analysis doesn’t make any sense,” Anderson said. “To order a vastly inflated wage assumes that companies have unlimited amounts of money.”

Hiking the cost of employing H-1B workers will likely push companies to reduce overall jobs, and possibly move work outside the country, Anderson argued. The foundation, he said, also found that for thousands of combinatio­ns of jobs and geographic regions, including in the Bay Area, wage levels were set arbitraril­y at $208,000 a year or more. Systems software developers in Silicon Valley, according to the new rule, must be paid at least at that level. But private survey data from advisory firm Willis Towers Watson shows actual wages range from $71,000 to $192,000, Anderson said. The Labor Department did not answer questions from this news organizati­on.

“The only reason for this rule is to try to price highly skilled foreign workers and students out of the labor force,” Anderson said.

A report published earlier this year by Hira and Daniel Costa, an immigratio­n law expert at the leftleanin­g Economic Policy Institute, concluded that major U. S. firms, including Silicon Valley technology giants, “take advantage of program rules in order to legally pay many of their H-1B workers below the local median wage.”

Some H-1B workers receive more than the minimums, Hira noted. Hardest hit by the new rules will be firms that pay H-1B employees at or near the minimums, he said. Hira expects the wage change to usher in a higher- skilled H-1B workforce that will complement A mer ican workers without pushing compensati­on down.

An immigratio­n lawyers’ group is already seeking plaintiffs to challenge the wage changes. The American Immigratio­n Lawyers Associatio­n noted in an online announceme­nt that the Labor Department had imposed the wage changes without the standard public- comment period on the grounds that coronaviru­s had created “emergency labor market conditions” and that a comment period would’ve given employers time to “attempt to evade the adjusted wage requiremen­ts.”

The Cato Institute, a libertaria­n think tank, said in an Oct. 9 report that the Labor Department used a “fundamenta­lly flawed methodolog­y” and “wildly inaccurate” wage estimates. The rule’s text significan­tly understate­s the pay the rule actually requires, according to Cato.

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