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All it takes to get a visa

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  Posted: May 05, 2008 at 0320 hrs IST
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WASHINGTON: Driven crazy by US immigration policy, Microsoft Corp. executives decided to drive some of their employees north. Unable to land enough visas for a third of the foreign-born engineers and computer scientists it wanted to hire — many of them newly minted graduates of US universities — the Washington-based company opened a software development centre just over the Canadian border in 2007. About 150 people now work in Vancouver, British Columbia.

“Our immigration system makes it very difficult for US firms to hire highly skilled foreign workers,” Microsoft chairman Bill Gates told Congress in March as he pleaded for more visas. “At a time when talent is the key to economic success, it makes no sense to educate people in our universities, often subsidised by US taxpayers, and then insist that they return home.”

Frustrated by the limited number of these so-called H-1B visas for highly skilled foreigners awarded each spring in a lottery, US technology executives have tried to find ways around the problem while lobbying to increase the annual cap.

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Microsoft, Cisco Systems, Intel Corp. and other large companies have opened or expanded research facilities outside the United States. And some companies have resorted to gaming the system: filing multiple applications, along with the $1,570 to $3,320 filing fee, for each potential hire to boost the odds of winning one of the coveted visas.

“You can imagine our frustration,” said Robert Hoffman, vice president of Government affairs at Oracle, which, like Microsoft, insisted it has not filed duplicate applications. “We have 1,000 job openings at Oracle we can’t fill because of the arbitrary nature of visas and the arbitrary way they are selected.”

Efforts to increase the annual allotment of visa have become entangled in the even more volatile debate over border security and immigration reform that is stalled in Congress as well as concerns by some lawmakers that jobs are being taken from US workers.

“This is an outsourcing visa,” said Kim Berry, president of the Programmers Guild, a California advocacy group that opposes more H-1B visas. Berry said it’s cheaper for companies to hire foreign college graduates than older US workers.

Last year, US immigration officials received about 150,000 applications for the 65,000 annual allotment of visas on the first day companies could file, forcing them to pick winners in a lottery.

California technology companies, as well as financial institutions, culinary institutes and health-care providers, have pushed Congress to raise the annual limit on the visas. Temporarily increased to as high as 195,000 during the Internet boom, the cap dropped to its original 65,000 level in 2004 as job demand declined. Companies apply for the visas for prospective employees who have at least a bachelor’s degree in a variety of specialised fields. The visas are good for three years and can be renewed for another three. Recipients often apply for permanent residency during that time. While companies scramble to try to fill their jobs, potential workers are left in limbo.

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