Grassley Seeks H-1B Job Assurances
Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, asked the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services Sept. 29 to hold employers accountable by requesting evidence from
petitioners that H-1B visa holders actually have a job waiting for them in the United
States. Grassley's comments came after
several small Iowa communities
were used as nothing more than mail drops in an elaborate H-1B visa fraud scheme earlier this
year that allowed foreign workers to illegally work on the East and West coasts
while being paid the lower Iowa
prevailing rates.
"We don't need a long, arduous legislative process to get at some of the
problems. The agency can take immediate steps to eliminate fraud in the
H-1B program, including cracking down on body shops that do not comply with the
intent of the law," Grassley said in a statement. "Employers need to
be held accountable so that foreign workers are not flooding the market,
depressing wages, and taking jobs from qualified Americans."
Grassley, a fierce critic of the specialty H-1B visas, has been pounding for H-1B
reform since a 2007 audit found as
many as 20 percent of the H-1B applications may be fraudulent or technically flawed.
The audit of 246 H-1B applications discovered 13 percent of the applicants used
forged documentation, false businesses or addresses, or false job offers or
misrepresented their immigration status. Another 7 percent had technical
violations such as requiring the applicant to pay the application fee or list a
salary substantively above what the applicant would actually be paid.
In the Sept. 29 letter to USCIS Director Alejandro Mayorkas, Grassley
wrote, "Simply put, adjudicators should be asking companies up front for
evidence that H-1B visa holders actually have a job awaiting them in the U.S.,
i.e. that workers are not coming in only to be 'benched' by employers."
In February, two New Jersey IT services firms allegedly used shell businesses
in two small Iowa towns-Coon
Rapids and Clive-as part of an elaborate H-1B visa
fraud scheme that began to unravel with the arrests of 11 individuals in seven
states. According to the Department of Justice, the scheme involved hiring college-educated foreign workers to allegedly fill
high-tech jobs in Iowa when, in fact, the workers were sent to the East and West
coasts while being paid the lower prevailing Iowa wage rate.
In other cases, the DOJ claims, foreign workers were recruited and H-1B visas were
obtained for non-existent jobs or the workers were placed in jobs and
locations not previously certified by the Department of Labor, replacing
qualified American workers and violating prevailing wage laws.
In multiple indictments revealed by the DOJ, the investigation seems to center
on Vision Systems Group of South Plainfield, N.J.,
and Praveen Andapally, identified as president of Venturisoft, also based in South Plainfield. The other indictments include Vishnu Reddy, who was identified as
president of Pacific West of Santa Clara, Calif.
"We have seen substantial fraud and program violations by employers
who bring in H-1B visa holders and then outsource them to other work
sites. Such was the case with the indictment of Vision Systems Group, Inc.
earlier this year in my home state," Grassley wrote to Mayorkas.
"U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement alleges that the company did not
have jobs available for the H-1B workers they petitioned for, and placed them
in non-pay status upon arrival in the United
States."
