Do you mean H-1B visas?

This is really sad, because there’s already so much fraud around this that it’s 
silly. Congress knows about it, and they have refused to do anything to address 
it.

There are tons of Indian recruiting firms that set up shop specifically to 
funnel their friends here under H-1B visas. I’m contacted by them regularly. 
The only thing they want to know is your “rate and availability”, then they 
almost always tell me that the client isn’t willing to pay more than $22 or $23 
per hour, or a salary above $55k-$60k. This is for supposedly “senior” roles!

I think they’re simply trying to document the “fact” that they’re unable to 
hire US Citizens for these jobs in order to justify somebody’s H-1B visa.

The major impetus behind this effort has come from the biggest software 
employers in the country: Microsoft, HP, Apple, Oracle, IBM, etc. 

It costs them $50k to prosecute every one of these visas! That’s on top of 
salary and benefits. 

See, this is what happens when taxes are so low that there’s no leverage to 
implement tax benefits. They’d rather spend $50k to hire a foreigner and bring 
them over here than spend a plugged nickel on retraining unemployed US 
Citizens. 

H-1B job holders also have a “hidden benefit” in that it’s a guaranteed job 
until their green card issues, which takes between five and ten years right 
now. 

To reward taxpayers for this, we’re being shoved into contract roles with no 
benefits so they can cut costs quickly if their financials take a hit. No job 
security, no retirement, no health benefits.

But those foreigners coming here under H-1B visas … they’re making out like 
bandits! 

Has anybody noticed how few employers are paying relocation expenses these 
days? Wouldn’t you love to be treated the same was new college grads from India 
and Pakistan?

At least Congress could reverse Section 1706 of the Tax Code that eliminates 
the “safe harbor” provision for contractors in the tech industry. This is what 
forces most companies to hire through job shops rather than hire 1099 
contractors directly. Lots of industries are exploding by accessing labor 
directly as 1099 contractors, except the tech industry is still saddled with 
this stupid and counter-productive restriction that has never done what it was 
believed it would.

-David "The Tool Wiz" Schwartz



> On Dec 18, 2015, at 12:52 PM, Keith Smith <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> I just read this about our U.S.Government spending bill :
> 
> Tucked into the 2,009-page spending bill is a provision that would quadruple 
> the number of H-2B visas allowed annually from 66,000 to 264,000.
> 
> I wonder how may of the tech companies in the Chandler Price Corridor will be 
> taking advantage of this while being subsidised by the City of Chandler.
> 
> I expect most of those companies use Linux in one form or another.
> 
> 
> -- 
> Keith Smith
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