Time to expand H-1B visas

By Boston Herald editorial staff
Sunday, March 11, 2007

As this state wrestles with the sorrowful aftermath of that immigration raid in New Bedford, it’s a good time to remember that not all immigrants - legal or illegal - slave away at sewing machines under sweatshop conditions.
    No, many bring skill sets critical to keeping our high-tech economy growing - many, but not nearly enough to fill the needs of American business.
    This past week no less an authority on the subject than Microsoft founder Bill Gates appeared before Congress to plead for more visas for skilled foreign workers. Currently only 65,000 such workers are allowed in a year under the so-called H-1B visa program.

   “Even though it may not be realistic, I do not believe there should be any limit” on the program, Gates told a hearing of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pension Committee, chaired by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy.
    One legislative proposal would increase the number to 300,000 and Gates gave every indication those would be used up in a heartbeat. His own firm has 3,000 available jobs that could be filled by foreign workers, he said.
    Sure, it would be wonderful to think they could be filled by qualified U.S. workers too. But that isn’t going to happen in the near-term without vast improvements in public education. (Although on that score Gates, through his foundation, has truly put his money where is mouth is.)
    Too often U.S. companies take an easier - and cheaper - way out. They either outsource work to foreign companies or take their own operations offshore, to places from India to Ireland where they can get the skilled labor they need.
    Unless and until U.S. schools are turning out the kind of workforce this nation’s corporations need to grow, there is no reason not to lift the current limit on H-1B visas and thousands of reasons to do so.

 
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