UC-Davis Migration News on H1-B’s and the recession

In an excellent academic article, researchers at UC Davis summarize trends in US immigration over the last quarter.

H-1B. On April 1, 2009, USCIS made H-1B visas available for FY10. There were far fewer employer requests than the 163,000 received in five days in April 2008 for FY09 visas. Some 65,000 H-1B visas, plus 20,000 for foreigners who have earned Masters and Doctorates from US universities, are available each year to profit-making employers. There is no cap on the number of H-1B visas available to nonprofit universities and research labs.

USCIS reported 32,500 requests for the 65,000 general H-1B visas in the first five days of April 2009, and almost 20,000 requests for the 20,000 for advanced degrees.

USCIS in March 2009 reported that the top recipient of H-1B visas in FY08 was Infosys Technologies, which had 4,560 H-1B petitions approved. Like Infosys, six of the top 10 users of the H-1B program were outsourcing firms that bring foreign workers into the US, usually from India, and move them from firm to firm. The largest US-based user of H-1B visas in FY08 was Microsoft, which received 1,035. The list of leading H-1B employers in FY08 was similar to that in FY07 and earlier years.

The title of the article is, “Labor: Recession, H1-B.”

In their analysis, the economic downturn in the US is changing strong recent trends in professional and technical immigration, and is illuminating long-standing arguments between immigrant-rights groups, large technical employers, and technology worker groups who make accusations of ageism and failed regulation leading to unfair hiring practices in high-tech industries.

I recommend reading the entire article.

UC Davis Migration NewsArticle

PERM Recruitment | Assembling serious immigration reform this year, piece by piece

With today’s introduction (or re-introduction, really) of two immigration-related bills in the house, it is becoming clearer that President Obama’s stated intent to address comprehensive immigration reform this year is serious.

The first piece, the reintroduced Agricultural Job Opportunities, Benefits and Security Act, or AgJOBS, presents revised immigration policy aimed at changing the relationship between Ag and farm employers and their temporary or permanent immigrant workers.

The second, the DREAM Act, first introduced in 2007, is focused on immigrant students, high-school and college, who came to the US when they were younger than 16, and have now graduated high-school and either some college or two years of military service.

It provides a path to permanent residence, and eventually, citizenship.

Both bills were reintroduced in both the Senate and the House, and both have sufficient co-sponsorship that they are viewed as having broad bipartisan support.

The text of both bills (both Senate and House versions) will be available via The Library of Congress’ Thomas search engine.