House bill would create 45,000 more visas for tech workers

Published: 2 March 2000 y., Thursday
The proposal by Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, is far smaller than a Silicon Valley-backed version introduced last month in the Senate that would boost the H-1B program by nearly 300,000 visas over the next three years. The booming high-tech sector says it needs hundreds of thousands of new workers immediately. But Smith says his plan for a one-time boost of 45,000 visas, which would raise this year_s allotment to 160,000, is sufficient. Republican Reps. Tom Campbell, whose California district includes Silicon Valley; Bob Goodlatte of Virginia;and Chris Cannon of Utah are co-sponsors of the bill. The bipartisan Senate bill offered by the chairmen of the Senate Judiciary Committee and its immigration subcommittee would raise the H-1B allotment to 195,000 annually for three years. An industry trade group, the Computing Technology Industry Association, claims nearly 269,000 high-tech jobs are now unfilled. The problem costs U.S. businesses $4.5 billion a year in lost productivity, according to the association. But Smith said there is no "credible or objective study documenting the high-tech labor shortage." The National Science Foundation, which was directed by Congress in 1998 to undertake a study of the high-tech industry_s job needs, isn_t due to complete its work before fall. Organized labor, which opposes increases in visas, contends the foreign workers are unnecessary, and that high-tech executives are looking overseas chiefly to hold down wages. Critics also contend the program is rife with fraud.
Šaltinis: techserver.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

E-Government Initiatives in the European Union and in Lithuania

During the last decade of the 20th century, many of the world’s governments began to implement initiatives related to the way in which the Internet can be used to improve various aspects of public sector. Public administration has today become a part of the service market. more »

Eastern Europe lags behind in internet usage

Over three quarters of Bulgarians have never used the internet, and 23% do not know what the word means, a survey published in a local newspaper said on Thursday more »

First responder XML

With almost every local jurisdiction and agency nationwide running different systems, officials hope a new data standard will help information-sharing programs overcome the differences between hardware and applications more »

'Spam King' Ordered to Disable Spyware

A federal judge has ordered a man known as the "Spam King" to disable so-called spyware programs that infiltrate people's computers, track their Internet use and flood them with pop-up advertising. more »

Microsoft Shows Small Business Software

Microsoft is building on its 2002 buy of Danish business application developer Navision A/S with the release this week of its first major product built on the Navision software suite more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

PayPal Scrambling To Fix Site Glitch

A recent monthly update to its Web site caused no end of trouble for online transaction company PayPal more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

MSN TV 2 Internet & Media Player Debuts

Microsoft used the TechXNY conference spotlight to lift the curtains on the new MSN TV 2 Internet & Media Player more »