"Claiming there are now over a third of a million more high-tech jobs
than US workers to fill them, Rep. David Drier, R-Calif., said the present
ceiling on immigrant visas doesn't meet the needs of an increasingly
digitalized economy.
     ``If we can't bring these people to the US, corporations will move
high-tech jobs to some other country,'' said Rep. Tom Davis R-Va.


More High-Tech Worker Visas Sought

By G. STEPHEN BIERMAN Jr.
.c The Associated Press


WASHINGTON (AP) - Lawmakers from areas growing from the influx of new
high-tech companies introduced legislation Wednesday to nearly double the
number of visas issued each year for tech-savvy foreign workers.

Their bill would raise from 115,000 to 200,000 the ceiling on the six-year,
H-1B visas the Immigration and Naturalization Services now issues annually to
``professional'' workers from overseas.

Claiming there are now 364,000 more high-tech jobs than workers to fill them,
Rep. David Drier, R-Calif., said the present ceiling doesn't meet the needs
of an increasingly digitalized economy.

``If we can't bring these people to the U.S., these companies are global,
they'll do it somewhere else,'' said Rep. Tom Davis R-Va.

Similar bills raising the ceiling for professional visas to 195,000 and
160,000 have been been introduced by other lawmakers.

To gain the H-1B visa, a foreign-born worker needs the support of an American
company willing to pay the price of the visa and the legal expenses involved
in getting it.

To prevent companies from using immigrants to depress U.S. wage rates, the
bill would require companies to pay H-1B workers the prevailing wages for
specific jobs, as determined by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The measure introduced Wednesday also would raise the price of the visa from
$500 to $1,000 with the proceeds to go toward paying the cost of training
U.S. workers.

And it also would require the Immigration and Naturalization Service to move
to a web-based tracking system to speed approval of green cards that allow
immigrants to work in the United States. Critics said the agency now takes
one to two years to process some admission applications.

``It's about time the INS moved into this century and used the technology
that the rest of us use,'' said Rep. Zoe Lofgren D-Cal.


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