Commerce Nominee Favors H1-B Visa Expansion (
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In Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.), President Barack Obama's new nominee to run
the Department of Commerce, the tech industry has found their man when it
comes to expanding the H1-B visa program. The 61-year-old senator is an
unabashed fan of the program.
A favorite of American technology companies, the H-1B program is a temporary work
visa program allowing American companies and universities to employ foreign
guest workers who have the equivalent of a U.S.
bachelor's degree in a job category that is considered by the U.S.
Citizenship & Immigration Services to be a "specialty
occupation." The idea is to help companies hire foreign guest workers on a
temporary basis when there is not a sufficient qualified American work force to
meet those needs.
Gregg co-sponsored the
H-1B Visa Program Modernization Act of 2007, which would have increased
the current H1-B visa cap of 65,000 to 150,000. The unsuccessful effort
would have also authorized a 20 percent increase of that 150,000 cap in any
fiscal year succeeding a year in which the cap was met.
"One of the main concerns I hear from businesses in New Hampshire and
across the nation is a need for more highly skilled workers and that
current law is stymieing their ability to hire the workers they
desperately need," Judd said when introducing the legislation. "In today's competitive global
markets, the U.S. must be looking for ways to stay ahead and these
bills offer effective, common sense ways to do just that."
Gregg also voted against a bill introduced by Sen. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) to
ensure that employers make efforts
to recruit American workers before hiring foreign workers in addition
to opposing legislation by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) that would raise the fees from $1,500 to
$10,000 for employers who
wish to import H1-B high-skill non-immigrant workers. The increased
funds would be dedicated to scholarships for American high tech
students.
"Helping the
high tech industry tap into highly skilled talent from around the world
and address well-documented labor shortages not only keeps our economy
strong, but creates U.S. jobs and deters employers from sending work
elsewhere," Judd said.
Gregg's
unabashed support of expanding the number of the H1-B workers in the
United States, though, hardly means an increase in the current cap is in the
offing from the 111th Congress. Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), a frequent critic of the tech
industry's use of the H1-B visa system, has already staked out ground opposing the expanded use of H1-B visas.