Tuesday, February 18, 2020

AMERICA: NO LEGAL NEED APPLY!!!


“Americans want an immigration system that serves them and the country, not one that offers pro-business fixes to the problems created by the employers who are gaming the system,” said Jessica Vaughan, policy director at the Center for Immigration Studies.
“The fix is to create opportunities for American workers, not to continue to rig the system in favor of employers.”

CEOs Keep 1 Million Indian Graduates in U.S. Jobs, Legally

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (L) and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg attend a Townhall meeting, at Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, California, on September 27, 2015. AFP PHOTO / SUSANA BATES (Photo credit should read SUSANA BATES/AFP via Getty Images)
SUSANA BATES/AFP via Getty Images
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U.S. employers have quietly converted an imported army of 451,000 Indian temporary workers into permanent U.S.-based workers by merely nominating them to join the multi-year line to become legal immigrants.
This stealthy inflow of white-collar visa workers was revealed in a February 10 press release from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). The release provides the missing piece in a puzzle that shows how at least one million non-immigrant Indians now hold jobs as temporary contract workers in Americans’ white-collar workplaces.
The establishment media ignores this Indian labor force within the United States. But it is very visible to the many U.S. graduates who are fired, displaced, or “re-badged” from a huge variety of middle-class jobs in software, accounting, management, recruitment, design, engineering, and even regulatory enforcement. This labor force also suppresses salaries for college graduate Americans, even as President Donald Trump boasts of a “blue-collar boom.”
The Indian labor force is so large that many American graduates now work in Indian-run offices throughout corporate America, and especially in Silicon Valley. In those offices, the mass of Indian workers and managers has pushed out many Americans, has replaced U.S. professionalism with Indian-style workplace politics of caste and ethnic alliances, deference to managers, blame-shifting, kickbacks, and hostility to outsiders, according to numerous reports and lawsuits, as well as statements by Indian participants and by U.S. witnesses to Breitbart News.
“Now it’s like most of the managers coming in are Indian, so it is very hard for an American to get hired,” an experienced Silicon Valley engineer and manager told Breitbart News.  
Americans get screened out from jobs even before the interview process, he said. “I know at one point there was a woman that was an Indian woman who was in the human resources department. … She was sorting through the resumes and all we got … was resumes from India.”
“Even in the interview process, the Americans are screwed,” he added: 
When the interview process comes along, guess what? They’re gonna have three people from India and three people from America [interviewing the job seeker]. The three people from India are all going to vote the same. They’re going to pick their Indian guy and they’re going to say ‘Yep that’s our guy,’ and the Americans are gonna go back and forth. Guess who’s going to get hired? It’s such a skewed system.
India’s 4,000-year-old caste system pressures and enables Indians to exclude Americans — and to separate Indians from Americans’ society — in violation of U.S. workplace laws, he said. “We don’t have a caste [system]; we’re not part of their caste system, so we [individuals] have no caste. … You might as well be an untouchable. … I think that’s what they do is they [say], ‘You don’t have a caste; you are the lowest caste.’ And so they treat you that way.”
“Americans are culturally oblivious to this idea that something so Third World would be in the United States,” said Jay Palmer, a former technology worker who now helps India’s mistreated visa workers to sue U.S.-based corporations. “I’ve had so many Indians tell me it is an Indian Mafia — they use those words.” He continued:
I have hundreds of Indian workers coming to me to complain that they have to give part of their salary to Indian hiring managers out of gratitude [for getting their jobs], whether $5 to $10 an hour.
There are some Indian managers — I can prove this — making upwards up to $15,000 to $20,000 a month in kickbacks.
The Indian white-collar labor market in the United States is far bigger than prior estimates, or the 451,000 Indians nominated for green cards in the last ten years.
For example, the Department of State issued 399,686 non-immigrant visas to Indians in 2009 — but that number rose to 1,006,802 Indian visas in 2018. In 2017, Indian workers sent almost $12 billion back to India, so reducing consumer spending in many American cities and towns.
The U.S.-Indian Outsourcing Economy is also a hidden political headache facing Trump when he flies into India for trade talks in February 2020.
India’s government is trying to protect the outsourcing economy. It has repeatedly suggested that it will cut its U.S. imports — such as oil, aerospace products, and grain — and will restrict operations by U.S. firms in India if Trump or Congress cuts the flow of Indian visa workers into the United States.
“The flow of talent is part of our economic cooperation,” India’s External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar said in December 2019:
It is in a sense almost strategic bridge between us. So, I cannot overstate the importance of the flow of talent for Indo-American ties. That was a point I make that look, this is important for you, it is important for us. It’s important for the relationship. So let’s work together to make sure this stays sort of open and vibrant and active.
In 2015, for example, India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, held a public meeting in Silicon Valley with Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg. Many Indian tech workers went to the event, which was also a demonstration of India’s growing clout in Americans’ technology industry.
325,000 Indian H-1B Workers
Indians get roughly two-thirds of new H-1B visas, each of which lasts for six years. The program brings in roughly 100,000 contract workers each year, creating a resident population of roughly 500,000 H-1B workers, including about 325,000 Indians. The workers are not immigrants — they are contract workers imported for up to six years.
This huge gig-worker, white-collar labor force is imported into the United States by many categories of companies.
Amazon, Google, Intel, Facebook, Bloomberg, and other elite firms import many expert Indians and Chinese for many jobs sought by Americans. Major banking, insurance, airline, manufacturing, accounting, retail, and finance firms import Indians. Many elite universities, hospitals, and research centers import Indians, partly because non-profit employers have no cap on the number of H-1Bs they can import.
Many small firms import small numbers of graduates. This category includes firms, such as architecture firms, where American graduates once got their first jobs.
Roughly ten major Indian staffing firms import many Indian graduates so they can be rented to the American firms who do not want to hire Indian graduates directly. Americans managers favor the outsourcing contracts because the staffing companies offer to reduce their management tasks, their payroll spending, and their human resources staffing tasks.
The hiring companies and their locations can be tracked at MyVisaJobs.com. The political districts where the workers hold jobs can be tracked at SAITJ.org and H1bFacts.com.
These 320,000 Indian H-1B workers are supposed to go home after six years, theoretically limiting their numbers.
But H-1B contract workers can stay if they get green cards from their employers — although the pro-diversity “country caps” in the law means that only about 30,000 Indian workers and family members can get green cards each year.
So roughly 75,000 Indian workers — plus 75,000 spouses and children — got green cards between 2013 and 2017.

Amy Klobuchar is touting amnesty & blue-collar migration to help win votes from white progressives & women.
But she hides her support for outsourcing the white-collar jobs needed by her voters & their indebted college-grad kids in Minnesota & U.S.http://bit.ly/38w02Yr 

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451,000 Permanent Workers
But Congress opened another loophole by allowing companies to sponsor as many visa workers as they wish each year — and by allowing the sponsored “temporary” contract workers to remain permanently in the United States.
So companies have nominated 52,009 Indian employees for green cards in 2019, 59,499 in 2018, and 51,261 in 2017 — and 451,000 Indians since 2009. That total was three times the number of Indian workers who could get green cards during the ten-year period described by DHS — and so it created a huge backlog.
The employers and the Indians know about the country cap. Yet they cooperatively created the multi-year backlog for green cards because the Indian workers prefer to stay in the United States as contract workers instead of going home.
The willingness to use the loophole has created a backlogged labor force of 300,000 Indian workers — plus at least 300,000 spouses and minor children — who are willing to work under a legal status somewhere between contract workers and green card holders.
Their willingness to stay adds them to the Indian-born workforce in the United States, alongside the 150,000 Indians who have gotten green cards during the last ten years.

The US science sector depends on immigrant scientists, say science managers.
But the imported scientists are going home, so US science estb. must refocus to train & hire American grads, counters Marcia McNutt, the chief of National Academies of Sciences. http://bit.ly/2H1f8cx 

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100,000 H4EAD Workers
Many of the 300,000 backlog workers are married. In 2015, President Barack Obama allowed their wives to get work permits, even without approval from Congress.
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) 2019 data shows that roughly 100,000 spouses of Indian workers have been given work permits — assuming the work permits apply for two years. USCIS officials refused to say how long the work permits last. These H4EAD permits are intended to help the H-1B spouses keep their visa-worker husbands in the United States while they both wait for green cards.
150,000 STEM, STEM-OPT, CPT, workers
In 2018, roughly 250,000 Indians were recorded as having F-1 student visas in the United States, and they kept that status for about four to six years. But that growing population of ‘”students” hides a growing foreign workforce.
In 2018, 70,521 Indians held three-year work permits after enrolling for a technology degree at a U.S. university. This program is called the STEM-OPT program, or the Science, Technology, Engineering or Mathematics Optional Practical Training work program.
Many additional Indians got jobs using one-year work permits via the similar non-STEM Optional Work Permit and Curricular Practical Training (CPT) programs. These OPT and CPT programs add roughly 300,000 foreign workers to Americans’ white-collar labor economy. The government did not reveal how many OPT and CPT workers are not Indians. But there is much evidence that Indians fill many of the CPT and OPT jobs.
If just half of the Indians (who were not working as STEM-OPT permits) held CPT or OPT permits, that would add roughly 100,000 Indian college-grade workers to the U.S. economy.


50,000 L-1 Company Transferees
Many foreign temporary workers are imported via the L-1 program for the foreign employees of multinational companies. Some of the inflow is legitimate, for example, the workers who help install foreign equipment in U.S. workplaces. A significant number of them work for prestigious U.S. companies, but DHS releases little information about their nationality, duration, or work. These L-1 workers are paid home-country wages, often just at U.S. minimum wage levels.
The General Accounting Office (GAO) says 163,424 L-1 worker and L-2 family visas were awarded worldwide in 2017. That 163,424 number includes “all visa adjudications during the specific time period,” a GOA manager told Breitbart News.
The DHS releases some data about the roughly 40,000 L visas it oversees each year. The DHS data suggests the top 10 Indian-owned staffing firms keep about 8,500 L-1s in the United States, not counting the L-1 workers quietly imported via other companies or the State Department’s “blanket petition” process. The top ten U.S. white-collar staffing firms use many Indian visa workers and seem to keep around 6,000 L-1s in the United States.
The State Department says it issued 51,981 L-1 worker and L-2 family visas to Indians in 2016. Other State Department pages show that it gave 18,473 L-1 work visas and 23,230 L-2 family visas in 2018, plus 18,293 L-1 worker visas in fiscal 2019, plus 23,060 L-2 family visas.
A 2013 GAO report used State Department data to show that the top 10 Indian users of the L-1 program between 2002 and 2011 asked for 70,227 L-1 workers, enough to maintain an Indian workforce of roughly 40,000 workers.
Some applicants exploit the program and its threshold requirement of “specialized knowledge”. For example, the GAO reported that “one pattern of abuse is an L-1A manager hiring family members and appearing to manage them in order to corroborate their claim to be an L-1A manager or executive.”
So if each visa worker and his family stay only four years — instead of the maximum five or seven years — that adds another 80,000 Indians to the U.S. workforce. But not all the L-1s are white-collar workers, so the estimate should be dropped to 50,000 resident L-1 workers.
Uncounted B-1s
Indian companies also sneak in workers via B-1 visit visas. These visas do not allow the B-1 holders to do any work. But in 2016, the State Department said it issued Indians a total of 563,202 B-1 visas for business visits or B-2 visas for tourist visits.
This includes “B-1 in lieu of H-1B” visas, which are used by U.S. companies to import workers for several months. For example, Boeing reportedly used those visas to import Russian aerospace workers. Some Indian companies try to send Indian workers — officially less than 1,000 workers in 2010 — to the United States on these visas.
20,000 Miscellaneous
Each year, the State Department also issues 600 O-1 visas for Indians “with Extraordinary Ability or Achievement,” pus roughly 8,000 J-1 visas for Indian doctorsteacherstraineesresearchers, and academics.  If 50 percent of the Indian J-1s stay for roughly three years, the J-1 program keeps roughly 20,000 white-collar Indians in U.S. jobs.
The department also issued 89 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) “TN visas” to Indians in 2016. These visas allow Indians to take U.S. white-collar jobs after getting a residency in Canada. This is the thin end of a growing trend because more Indians are migrating into Canada, where they can take advantage of the uncapped TN visa category for the residents of the three NAFTA countries.


Exported Jobs
The population of Indians in the United States helps Americans companies to export white-collar jobs to India. For example, 20 Indians who run a payroll office in Connecticut may work with 200 Indians in Bengaluru. This article does not count that population of India-based workers, which may exceed 1 million jobs.
For example, in September 2015, the New York Times reported how the U.S. Toys “R” Us company used just eight Indian visa workers to outsource much of its 67-person computer department to India:
For four weeks this spring, a young woman from India on a temporary visa sat elbow to elbow with an American accountant in a snug cubicle at the headquarters of Toys “R” Us here. The woman, an employee of a giant outsourcing company in India hired by Toys “R” Us, studied and recorded the accountant’s every keystroke, taking screen shots of her computer and detailed notes on how she issued payments for toys sold in the company’s megastores.
“She just pulled up a chair in front of my computer,” said the accountant, 49, who had worked for the company for more than 15 years. “She shadowed me everywhere, even to the ladies’ room.”
By late June, eight workers from the outsourcing company, Tata Consultancy Services, or TCS, had produced intricate manuals for the jobs of 67 people, mainly in accounting. They then returned to India to train TCS workers to take over and perform those jobs there. The Toys “R” Us employees in New Jersey, many of whom had been at the company more than a decade, were laid off.
India’s Illegals
Alongside the legal workers imported from India, there is also a large population of Indian white-collar illegals, plus some evidence that Indians firms use the programs to smuggle in extra workers.
The population of illegal migrants from India has grown enormously and is now pegged at more than 630,000 people. Most are likely working in blue-collar retail and labor jobs. But their ranks likely include many Indian graduates who overstay their visas after filing to get into win a visa in the annual H-1B lottery, or who cannot the college feeds needed to get another OPT work permit. Roughly 40,000 Indians were overstaying business, education, and tourism visas during 2018, according to a 2019 DHS report.
The scale of this Indian white-collar workforce is hinted at by a lawsuit against the DHS, following its 2018 decision to define an ‘overstay’ as anyone who stayed past their visa’s expiration date. But this new policy has been rejected by a judge at the request of employers in the education and software sectors. DHS declined to comment, saying, “USCIS is currently reviewing the court’s decision, and we have no additional comment to provide at this time.”
There is no data about the number of Indian graduates who are smuggled into the U.S. via the visa-worker programs. But there is much evidence that Indian managers routinely use fraud to import H-1B workers legally. For example, they claim their hard-to-find wants ads are unanswered, and that no Americans are available to do the work, even though many nearby Americans are eager for the job.
This endemic fraud has been described in lawsuitsU.S. government documentsGAO reportsembassy reports, and the U.S. Department of Justice press releases. The topic is described and debated by academicsplaintiffsIndiansReddit chatrooms, article commenters, and Public Radio International.
The promise of U.S. jobs — and even green cards — helps to explain why so many Indians try to get legal or illegal jobs in the United States. For example, Glassdoor reports that programmers earn an average of about $5,500 in India — but $75,000 in the United States. This means that a few years of work and penny-pinching in the United States can set up a young Indian for life.
One Indian manager told Breitbart News, when visa worker Indians return to India with their savings, “If you are a bachelor, everyone is interested in you,” he said. “You will have a car; you can have your own apartment. … You can not only get a good wife, you can win … a great dowry also [from the wife’s family],” he said, adding, “You are actually like a Maharajah.”

New Infosys lawsuit helps explain how the huge H-1B/OPT outsourcing economy pressures & rewards Indian managers to discriminate against American graduates, including Indian legal immigrants.
Follow the money, all the way to India.
And to Utah's http://bit.ly/31qzs0g 

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Given the huge rewards, many Indians are willing to skirt or break U.S. immigration and workplace laws, often with help from other Indians, partly because U.S. salaries and green cards are so fantastically valuable.
The gulf between U.S. salaries and Indian poverty was spotlighted by a February 2019 report from the BBC about Indians who tried to game the system by registering for work permits at a fake, no-study-required university. But Farmington University was set up as a sting by DHS, and up to 200 Indians had to flee home when the sting was announced:
Veeresh had taken a loan of 1.5m rupees (£16,300; $21,000) to help pay for his [U.S.] education. The first university cost him $30,000 and Farmington cost him an additional $20,000. He had to borrow money from his friend to buy a ticket to come back home.
He still hasn’t told his parents why he returned.
“They think I am on vacation. But the truth is that I have no job and a college loan to pay off. My parents would be devastated if they knew the truth.”
His parents are farmers and Veeresh had hoped to help them out by earning an income in dollars, some of which he could send home.
“I am the only son. I wanted to take care of my parents. We do not own land or a house. I wanted to go to America to earn better so that I can buy a house for my family in India.”
These huge economic stakes help to explain why so many Indians are eager to transfer jobs and salaries from American graduates to their fellow Indians — regardless of the impact on U.S companies or American graduates.
Non-Indian Visa Workers
The army of Indian workers are hired alongside many other foreign white-collar workers, mostly people from China.
This diverse population — who tend to favor their own peoples — adds roughly 350,000 white-collar workers to the U.S. economy — not counting the 118,645 Chinese who were sponsored for green cards from 2009 to 2019.
For example, 478,732 Chinese were at U.S. universities in 2018. Of those students, 25,843 Chinese held three-year STEM-OPT work permits in 2018, and many others held OPT or CPT work permits.      
DHS chart
(DHS)
Other Chinese hold jobs via the H-1B program, often at elite financial firms. Many Chinese also work as low-wage scientists — dubbed “post-docs” — in the nation’s laboratories and hospitals.
This army of white-collar visa workers is commingled with another category of foreigners who have short-term “Employment Authorization Documents.” These EAD workers include the Indian OPTs and H4EADs — plus many other migrants, asylum seekers, DACA recipients, green-card applicants, and various other categories. In 2018, their numbers added up to 2 million.
The Spreading Impact on American Graduates
“The Indians now control the IT labor market in the United States,” said a statement from Kevin Lynn, founder of U.S. TechWorkers. He continued:
Any American trying to enter the job market in IT will have to be screened by a recruiter that lives in India and further, be interviewed by an Indian manager. The result of these Darwinesque practices is on display to anyone visiting many of the Fortune 500 IT departments and call centers. The Indians have a preference of hiring their own, and in particular, hiring an Indian on an employment/guest worker visa because they are easier to exploit. Thus, the job market is rigged in favor of H-1B, OPT, and H4EAD workers from India. This is a disaster for equal opportunity in the workplace.
But this Indian labor-market is now spreading throughout the United States as the U.S. government invites more Indians into the United States, the Silicon Valley manager said. “Nothing frustrates me more than to see these people say ‘It’s an [just] an information technology problem.’ It’s not an IT problem. No, they’re taking everything.”
The Indian cartel exists because U.S-based Indian managers have the power to grant or deny Americans’ jobs to Indian students and workers, said Palmer. Without the U.S. job offers, the Indians must return to India’s poverty, he said.
Once the Indians have a job, he said, “their work-experience letters are held over their head for their next H-1B contract if they do not give their managers $10 an hour.”
Sometimes, the kickbacks are paid via nearby restaurants and gas stations that are owned by Indian managers he said. “I’ve had Indian workers [tell me they] have to go in there and spend in there an exorbitant amount on meals weekly,” he said. “If an Indian [hiring] manager has a gas station … [Indian employees] will have to run a debit card for odd amounts.”
U.S.-style professionalism is quickly discarded by Indian managers who prefer to hide problems, he said. In one episode, an Indian manager berated and insulted him when he pointed out a technical problem that their department had allowed into a company product. “I was going to the doctor at least once a once a month, sometimes two times, maybe more [and] I was taking pills to sleep,” he said, adding:
I was pro-H-1B when it first started, but then it got to a point [where] you get mistreated a few times and you realize, “Hey, these guys — you’ve got to protect yourself.”
U.S. CEOs prefer compliant Indians to American professionals, he said. “What they get out of it is they get control, because [American] person[s] can leave … They’ve got that [Indian] person under their thumb. And you know, if the person doesn’t work out, they can fire him and send him back to India. That guy’s got no recourse, [so] he’s a very safe asset.”
Indians are also moving into the top slots at U.S. corporations. The CEOs of Google, Microsoft, Adobe, IBM, and Mastercard are Indians. The chief technology officer at Walmart is an Indian. 
There is no corporate desire to reverse the Indians’ growing dominance of major companies, the Silicon Valley manager said. “They don’t want to. Nobody wants to do that … The Chamber of Commerce? They love this thing. Big tech? They love this thing. There are a few people at the top that are getting rich on this [Indian] thing.”
Federal legislators will not try to reverse the Indian expansion, he said:
I’m sure they know. You talk to congressman and they’re like, “Oh my God, replacing Americans? Absolutely never gonna allow that! I would never allow that!” But they get in a room to vote and they go, “Yeah, no problem.”
For example, Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) is pushing his S.386 bill to accelerate the inflow of Indian workers into the Utah and U.S. economies.
American college graduates are going to revolt against their replacement by Indians’ workers and managers, he said:
People are looking at [Sen.] Bernie Sanders they’re so pissed off about the system. They’re looking at a socialist government, and I’m going “You know what? Neither party has served me. So why the fuck not go with Bernie Sanders and get rid of all these [CEOs and Indians]?” Yeah, that’s kind of where we’re going [because] I think people are so pissed off.


“Americans want an immigration system that serves them and the country, not one that offers pro-business fixes to the problems created by the employers who are gaming the system,” said Jessica Vaughan, policy director at the Center for Immigration Studies.
“The fix is to create opportunities for American workers, not to continue to rig the system in favor of employers.”
Follow Neil Munro on Twitter @NeilMunroDC, create an alert for “Neil Munro, migration,” and email the author at NMunro@breitbart.com.


In Immigration Debate, Trump Says We Don’t Have Enough American Workers to Fill Skilled Labor Jobs

 

President Donald Trump told Fox News TV host Laura Ingraham on Friday his 2021 plans to welcome more foreign graduates will not flood the labor market for U.S. college graduates.
“I have so many companies coming into this country, you’re not going to have to worry about it,” Trump said in the interview, adding, “It is always going to be a shortage … We have so many companies coming in, from Japan … [and] China now is going to start building a lot of things.”
Trump and Ingraham did not find common ground, likely because they were talking about different parts of the immigration problem. Also, neither mentioned Ivanka Trump’s campaign to prod companies to train their own American employees for high-tech jobs.
Ingraham began the exchange by noting American graduates’ salaries have been suppressed by the flood of foreign graduates:
We don’t have a tight labor market. If we had a tight labor market, we would be seeing real increases in wages. I hear that your team is planning on advocating more foreign workers coming in for some of these high-tech companies.
Ingraham rejected business claims of shortages: “We’re seeing a plateauing of wages … There’s a never-ending appetite on the part of corporate America to bring in as much cheap labor as possible to drive down wages.”
“I’m not talking about cheap — I’m talking about brainpower,” Trump responded. “They want to hire smart people. And those people are thrown out of the country — we can’t do that,” he said, referring to foreign graduates of U.S. colleges.
Trump seems to want to help companies import a relatively small number of very clever people, such as Ivy League valedictorians. In contrast, Ingraham is trying to block companies’ effort to cut payrolls by replacing well-paid American professionals with cheap foreign graduates who have just enough skills to get the job done, regardless of quality.
“We have to allow smart people to stay in our country — if you graduate number one in your class at Harvard, [if] you graduate from the Wharton School of Finance,” Trump said. “If we tell smart people to get the hell out, that’s not America first.”
“Yes, that’s a small percentage of what [ccompanies] want,” said Ingraham.
” No, it’s not. It’s a lot,” said Trump.
But business has hired very few valedictorians among the pool of roughly 1.5 million visa workers who now hold jobs sought by American graduates.
In fact, the government does not require U.S companies to hire Americans first, and it does not screen out unskilled foreign workers. The government does not cap foreign hires and does not enforce the loopholed rules which supposedly require foreign workers to be skilled and to be paid market-level wages. Nor does the government even try to curb the large scale nepotism that allows foreign born managers in the United States to import huge numbers of foreign workers who will kick back some of their salaries to their bosses.
For example, the “Optional Practical Training” program was expanded by President G. Bush and President Barack Obama to provide employers with an extra stream of foreign graduates. Foreigners get these OPT work permits by simply enrolling in U.S. colleges, ranging from the elite Stanford University down to the so-called “visa-mill” colleges where many students can speak little English and may do very little study.


DHS posts videos of Indian migrants buying fake documents from ICE's Farmington U. sting operation.
The
#OPT Optional Practical Training program is an estb.-run labor-trafficking scheme to sideline American graduates.
It will expand if
#S386 becomes law http://bit.ly/39H2Zqh 

Watch: ICE Lure and Sting Indian Illegal Labor 'OPT' Traffickers



In 2017, for example, federal data shows Northeastern University provided OPT work permits to 4,359 foreign graduates– or far more than the number of valedictorians. Harvard sold access to the OPT work permits to 1,875 foreigners, and Columbia University sold access to 5.59o work permits.
But even more work permits were sold to foreign students by many little known colleges. For example, in 2017, Northwestern Polytechnic University sold access to 6,060 work permits, Silicon Valley University sold 3,127 work permits, and the Illinois Institute of Technology sold 2,678.
Nationwide, universities earned roughly $30 billion a year from this labor-trafficking business, so they have little incentive to exclude low-quality migrants.
New 2018 data provided to Breitbart News by the Department of Homeland Security shows that universities provided 215,000 OPT work permits in 2018. This total consisted of 145,586 one-year OPT work permits and 69,650 three-year OPT-STEM work permits in 2018.
In 2017, the matching “Curricular Practical Training” program provided one-year work permits to roughly 100,000 foreign students at U.S. colleges — including colleges that require little or no attendance.
DHS officials have recently changed how they count the OPT and CPT work permits, so the estimated workforce now ranges from 400,000 to roughly 300,000. The older 2017 methodology was used to produce this DHS chart:
Many of these OPT graduates are hired by prestigious U.S. firms, — and by foreign managers in those elite firms — so demoting skilled U.S. graduates in lower-tier jobs, in lower-tier cities, at lower-tier wages.
The other major visa-worker program is the H-1B program. This program keeps roughly 750,000 foreign workers in U.S. college-graduate jobs. These foreign workers will often accept very low wages for these jobs — and will underbid American graduates — partly because they are hoping their employers will sponsor them for the hugely valuable prize of a green card.
Federal agencies have never released a full count of the resident H-1B workforce, but federal data shows that a huge percentage are not valedictorians and that many come from no-name universities in India.
The federal data for 2017, for example, shows that 39 percent of the H-1Bs sought by New York employers were rated as “entry-level” workers, similar to U.S. graduates. Another 26 percent were rated as just “qualified,” and only 6 percent were rated “competent.” These cheap workers have pushed hundreds of thousands of American professionals out of jobs.
This is the visa worker program which is used by companies to replace many Americans graduates. In 2016, for example, Disney outsourced Americans’ jobs to an Indian company that imported low-wage H-1B workers to do the Americans’ jobs. The American graduates were forced to train the Indians, torpedoing the claims of a shortage of skilled U.S. workers.
Ingraham reminded Trump of the Disney H-1B scandal. “You ran on people training their foreign replacements, that you ran against that. It’s humiliating for an American worker who works for a company for 30 years … to train your replacement,” Ingraham said.
“No, no, that’s different, I would never do that,” said Trump.
“Why shouldn’t we have American graduates of colleges and universities taking those jobs? Ingraham said.
“We do,” answered Trump. “But we don’t have enough of them … and we have to be competitive with the rest of the world too.”
But Trump’s deputies have done little to shrink the H-1B program. In fact, his deputies are defending the OPT program in court. Officials have also blocked a DHS plan to end the “H4 EAD” program that Obama created to persuade temporary H-1B workers to stay in U.S. jobs. The result is that many Americans are still being forced to train their workers, for example, at an AT&T finance office in North Carolina.


Walmart Outsources Accounting, Office Jobs to Indian H-1Bs





Polls show the public strongly prefers rules which require companies to hire Americans before importing more workers.


A Rasmussen survey shows likely voters by 2:1 want Congress to make companies hire & train US grads & workers instead of importing more foreign workers.
The survey also shows this $/class-based view co-exists w/ much sympathy for illegal migrants.
#S386http://bit.ly/2ZA6WIE 

Rasmussen Shows 2:1 Opposition to Cheap Labor Legal Immigration



Some of Trump’s supporters say his comments are demoralizing. “I gotta say just put myself through one hell of a three year period,” said one Twitter user, titled “Presto.” “Going to school for IT, working a fulltime meat cutting job all cause of the hope Donald Trump gave me. This clip kinda hurt a bit. This hurt me worse than any hit piece. Give me a spot in the middle class.”
But Trump’s focus on a relatively few valedictorians is a much lesser threat to Americans than the bipartisan push by Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, to pass his pending S.386 bill.
The bill would offer foreign OPT and H-1B workers a fast-track to a new status, dubbed “Early Adjustment,” once they can persuade — or pay — their employers to sponsor them for green cards. There is no limit on the number of OPT, CPT, or H-1Bs that can be awarded each year, nor any limit on the number of foreign graduates who can be sponsored for green cards by their employers. The lack of limits ensures that Lee’s bill would allow an unlimited flood of foreign college-graduates into the jobs needed by “Presto” and other Americans to get into or to stay in the middle-class.
Notably, Trump’s daughter, Ivanka Trump, has dismissed employers’ demands for more workers and insists they step up their training programs.
“I love what’s happening because it’s forcing employers to get creative,” Trump told Gary Shapirothe longtime CEO of the Consumer Technology Association, during a January 7 interview at its annual meeting in Las Vegas. She added:
When I hear employers [who] would come to me and they’d say, ‘We need more skilled workers, we need more skilled workers,’ and then I’d read about them laying off segments of their workforce because they were investing in productivity, and not having spent the time — when they had known three years prior they’d be making that investment and upgrading those systems — not taking the time to take those workers and reskill and then retrain them into their job vacancies, well, I have very little sympathy for that.
Her push seems to be working.
Many U.S. companies are upgrading their training programs, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce recently showcased a company that uses software to identify and hire ordinary Americans — including truckers — who may have the intellectual skills to succeed in the software business.


Ivanka tells CEOs to train Americans before asking for more immigrants.
She stood up for unemployed, ex-cons, old ppl, blacks, disabled, & non-grads.
But she was diplomatic & pleasant, so many journos simply missed her decent & strong populist message.
http://bit.ly/2T6BwbI 

Ivanka Trump: Executives Must Train Americans Before Immigrants



Before serving as President, Trump was an employer, and he has repeatedly shown his sympathy for fellow employers who complain about supposed labor shortages that would force them to compete for employees by offering higher wages. But he was elected on a pro-American promise — and he has raised Americans’ wages by repeatedly rejecting business demands for more, and yet more, imported workers.
Business leaders sometimes admit that an extra supply of workers helps them force down wages. “If you have ten people for every job, you’re not going to have a drive [up] in wages,” U.S. Chamber of Commerce CEO Tom Donohue told Breitbart News on January 9. But “if you have five people for every ten jobs, wages are going to go up.”


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