March 10, 2007
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03/09/07 -
A Reader Asks Why
Mexico's Richest Man Isn't Bearing Some Of The Tax
Burden
A Reader Says The H-1B Visa Program
Makes A Mockery Of Representative Government
From: An
Endangered American Professional
Judging from the recent activity on the blogs which
are operated by the Washington Post, Business Week,
and
Slashdot, the debate over H-1B visas for foreign
professional workers is once again heating up even as
Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) composes the new
"Comprehensive Immigration Reform" bill in relative
secrecy with input from
the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Unfortunately, many
bloggers on both sides of the H-1B issue often get
bogged down in ideological rants about the mythical
"Free Market" or
un-provable assertions about the relative
skills and education levels of U.S. and foreign
professionals.
In my opinion, the salient issue in the ongoing H-1B
debate is the principle of
representative government, which is the bedrock upon
which the United States was founded. Indeed, without
representative government, the United States would never
have attained either the widespread economic prosperity
or the wonderful civil liberties which have made America
the preferred destination for immigrants from all over
the globe.
However, in order for the citizens of the United
States to have representative government, federal
programs that affect the daily lives of citizens must be
operated in a transparent manner. Furthermore, elected
officials must be
accountable to the citizens whose interests they
supposedly represent. The H-1B program fails miserably
on both counts.
There is little if any transparency
in the H-1B program. Ever since its inception in 1990,
this program has been characterized by a consistent
pattern of concealment, as evidenced by the following:
1) The
Department of Labor cannot determine (or will not
reveal) exactly how many H-1B visa holders are currently
working in the United States.
2) The
Department of Labor usually does not list which
companies have filed Labor Condition Applications (LCAs)
to hire H-1B workers for open positions until long after
the LCAs have been filed and the foreign workers have
actually been hired. The delay can sometimes be from six
to 12 months. This time lag is puzzling, because it
exists in spite of an e-filing system (implemented in
2002), which was supposed to speed up the H-1B
application and reporting process.
3) The
Department of Homeland Security apparently cannot (or
will not) determine how many H-1B visa holders have
overstayed their visas. This deficiency, whether real or
contrived, is inexcusable for an agency that is charged
with protecting domestic lives and property from the
ongoing threat of foreign terrorism.
4) The
attempts (in Congress) to expand the H-1B program
usually come at the end of the year or in lame duck
sessions after elections, when the general public is
less likely to be paying attention to political matters.
Often the attempts come in the form of underreported
stealth amendments to "must-pass" bills such as Omnibus
spending packages.
The corporate executives and their lobbyists claim
that the H-1B program is vital to America's
competitiveness and beneficial to the American economy.
If that is truly the case, then why has the Federal
Government operated it under such a veil of secrecy for
more than 16 years?
In pursuit of accountability, I have repeatedly
raised these issues (in writing) to my representative in
the U.S. House of Representatives as well as to my two
Senators. The results of these efforts have been
abysmal. All I ever get in response are generic form
letters that do not address my specific concerns. Not
coincidentally, all three of these elected officials
(and many others in Congress) receive
generous campaign contributions from corporations
who hire foreign workers under the H-1B visa program.
The implication is clear. The lawmakers allow the
H-1B program to be operated in a manner that makes a
mockery of representative government, apparently at the
behest of their corporate benefactors. This program,
which is implemented using taxpayer funds, should be
terminated for that reason alone.
The writer is a knowledge
worker in California. His previous letter is
here.