12/11/15, Numbers USA
Senators Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) have introduced the
American Jobs First Act, S.2394, that would make dramatic improvements to the
H-1B visa program, including the establishment of a minimum salary and the
creation of a cooling off period that would prevent employers from using the
program within two years of employee strikes, lay-offs, furloughs, or other
types of non-voluntary, not-for-cause dismissals. The legislation would also
end the visa lottery.
"The American Jobs First Act of 2015 is a necessary effort to repair
the H-1B visa program to prevent it from displacing American workers,"
Sen. Cruz said. "This legislation aligns the program with its original
intent, does more to prevent employers from using the program to replace
hard-working American men and women with cheaper foreign labor, and helps to
create greater transparency of job needs and opportunities in science,
technology, engineering, and mathematics fields, so that unemployed Americans
with the necessary skills can apply for these jobs. It is my hope that the
American Jobs First Act of 2015 becomes part of a broader congressional effort
to make immigration work for the American people again."
"The mass layoff of American workers at Disney, Southern California
Edison, and many other companies – who were then forced to train their foreign
replacements – underscores that our political system has failed in its duty to
protect our own people," said Sen. Sessions. "The H-1B program is
nowhere close to the program it is said to be. Far from filling 'labor
shortages', it is being used to destroy existing jobs of American
workers."
The Cruz-Sessions bill would:
· Require H-1B employers who seek H-1B visas under the
program to commit to paying the foreign workers they recruit either what an
American worker who did identical or similar work made two years prior to the
recruiting effort, or $110,000 (whichever is higher).
·
Establish a "layoff cool-off" period of two
years (730 days), which would prevent an employer from bringing on an H-1B
visa-based foreign worker within two years of an employee strike, an employer
lockout, layoffs, furloughs, or other types of involuntary employee
terminations other than for-cause dismissals.
·
Strengthen internal (company) and external (public
domain) transparency requirements, in order to ensure that both company
employees and the job-seeking public are aware of the company’s H-1B visa
application and potential job opportunities at the company.
·
Require increased H-1B visa application transparency on
the part of the Department of Labor, with real-time online updating of
companies’ H-1B visa application submissions, the publication of certain
application information (including the identities of the companies and employees
who have submitted the applications), and additional reporting to Congress
about program abusers.
·
Prevent continued use of the non-statute-based Optional
Practical Training (OPT) Program, and the creation and use of other similar
programs, which have also been used to displace American workers under the
guise of student training.
·
End the Visa Lottery that randomly issues 55,000 green
cards per year to foreign citizens without consideration of skills, educational
attainment, or the national interest.
By introducing the legislation, Sen. Cruz, who is also running for the
Republican nomination for President, is attempting to differentiate himself
from Sen. Marco Rubio who has cosponsored legislation that would increase the
number of H-1B visas issued each year without offering any protections for
American workers.
Earlier in the week, Sen. Sessions also cosponsored a bipartisan H-1B bill,
S.2365, Protecting American Jobs Act, offered by Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) that
would reduce the cap for H-1B visas and require that visas be issued based on
the highest salary first should the number of applications exceed the cap.
Originally Published: Fri, Dec 11th
2015 @ 10:34am EST
Comments
I’ve
recruited design engineers for almost 50 years.
The H1B program allowed me to recruit the smartest engineers from US
Universities. It was the “brain drain”.
We had the best students from across the world.
The
entire US immigration system has been corrupted over time and the H1B now
includes technicians. It looks like this Bill will fix some of that.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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