Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Immigrants in the hi tech sector are creating hundreds of thousands of jobs a year:
Some 40% of Fortune 500 firms were founded by immigrants or their children. So were the firms behind seven of the ten most valuable brands in the world. Although the foreign-born are only an eighth of America’s population, a quarter of high-tech start-ups have an immigrant founders.
There's a big difference between an immigrant moving here to start a business (and create jobs) and someone being used as a pawn in a labor cost reduction system, which is what the H1B program has become.
Originally, the H1B program was to bring in talent that could not reasonably be found domestically, so companies are forced to bring talent in. Today, the overwhelming majority of H1B hires are doing jobs for which many local workers are available.
The solution is to put a minimum salary requirement for all H1B hires. If you really can't find someone locally to do the job, clearly you are in need of a highly specialized talent for which a $150k+ salary should be a small price to pay. This would keep H1B hires back to their original purpose: to hire highly specialized talent that cannot be found locally.
Run for president, please!
Again, you are presenting your wishful thinking about what H1B should be (according to you), rather than what it is. H1B is not, and has never been about bringing in highly specialized talent for which no local options exist. There isn't, and there has never been any requirements for the employer in this program to demonstrate that no local candidates can be hired for this job. All the employer is required to demonstrate is that the job requires, at a minimum, a bachelor's degree. Employers are not required to demonstrate that specialized skills are required beyond a bachelor's degree.
The requirement to prove that no local options exist applies only in cases of green card sponsorship/labor certification. This does not apply to H1B and never has.
The H1B program is for "specialty occupations." A guy doing general IT or entry-level development work for $50-90k should not be considered "specialty" work in modern times.
If there is truly a niche problem that only a guy from Bangalore can solve, then I'm fine with bringing him over -- provided he is paid extremely well for his "special" talents. I would think that a special talent should be paid a minimum of $150k. Otherwise, he's obviously not that special.
Anonymous wrote:
live in the same area and pay taxes to the same governments, most people do.
there has to be a reason someone leaves their family and home?
Anonymous wrote:
The H1B program is for "specialty occupations." A guy doing general IT or entry-level development work for $50-90k should not be considered "specialty" work in modern times.
If there is truly a niche problem that only a guy from Bangalore can solve, then I'm fine with bringing him over -- provided he is paid extremely well for his "special" talents. I would think that a special talent should be paid a minimum of $150k. Otherwise, he's obviously not that special.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry this is happening to your boyfriend. Unless you were already considering it, please don't up and marry him just to get him to stay though.
+1
I don't know what field he works in, but maybe contact a headhunter who specializes in placing people with visas.
He works in IT.
and he is one of the 500,000 Guest workers that are hired as indentured servants for large corporations by Hexaware, Tata, Infosys, Brillio, take your pick, all Indian firms dedicated to providing jobs for Indians to US companies
and because they are in situations exactly like your boyfriend, they cannot move jobs, they cannot get promoted, they have to work weekends and late, for cheap salary, with the hope that someday they get the prize.
complete opposite of freedom and capitalism. another type of government handout to special interests.
There are plenty of jobs in India with a growing economy and India has a very open culture. They have plenty of companies that will give jobs to foreigners.
I don't know about all of that. He's making 90k /year and has a normal work schedule.
why doesn't he get a job where his family lives? what pushes him to want to leave his family and home??
Do you still live in a house you were born in?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Immigrants in the hi tech sector are creating hundreds of thousands of jobs a year:
Some 40% of Fortune 500 firms were founded by immigrants or their children. So were the firms behind seven of the ten most valuable brands in the world. Although the foreign-born are only an eighth of America’s population, a quarter of high-tech start-ups have an immigrant founders.
There's a big difference between an immigrant moving here to start a business (and create jobs) and someone being used as a pawn in a labor cost reduction system, which is what the H1B program has become.
Originally, the H1B program was to bring in talent that could not reasonably be found domestically, so companies are forced to bring talent in. Today, the overwhelming majority of H1B hires are doing jobs for which many local workers are available.
The solution is to put a minimum salary requirement for all H1B hires. If you really can't find someone locally to do the job, clearly you are in need of a highly specialized talent for which a $150k+ salary should be a small price to pay. This would keep H1B hires back to their original purpose: to hire highly specialized talent that cannot be found locally.
Run for president, please!
Again, you are presenting your wishful thinking about what H1B should be (according to you), rather than what it is. H1B is not, and has never been about bringing in highly specialized talent for which no local options exist. There isn't, and there has never been any requirements for the employer in this program to demonstrate that no local candidates can be hired for this job. All the employer is required to demonstrate is that the job requires, at a minimum, a bachelor's degree. Employers are not required to demonstrate that specialized skills are required beyond a bachelor's degree.
The requirement to prove that no local options exist applies only in cases of green card sponsorship/labor certification. This does not apply to H1B and never has.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where is he from?
Do not marry him so he can stay in the country. A friend of mine did this at 23 and she wound up being stuck in an unhappy marriage for fifteen years.
Why did she stay with him? My sister was in a similar position as the OP. She married her boyfriend as an arrangement. They broke up after a year or so, but stayed legally married until he got his citizenship. They remain good friends and he is now getting married for real.
Just because you "marry" someone so they can stay doesn't mean you have to stay married to your boyfriend forever.
It's also against the law, moron.![]()
Any individual who knowingly enters into a marriage for the purpose of evading any provision of the immigration laws shall be imprisoned for not more than 5 years, or fined not more than $250,000, or both (I.N.A. § 275(c); 8 U.S.C. § 1325(c)).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Immigrants in the hi tech sector are creating hundreds of thousands of jobs a year:
Some 40% of Fortune 500 firms were founded by immigrants or their children. So were the firms behind seven of the ten most valuable brands in the world. Although the foreign-born are only an eighth of America’s population, a quarter of high-tech start-ups have an immigrant founders.
There's a big difference between an immigrant moving here to start a business (and create jobs) and someone being used as a pawn in a labor cost reduction system, which is what the H1B program has become.
Originally, the H1B program was to bring in talent that could not reasonably be found domestically, so companies are forced to bring talent in. Today, the overwhelming majority of H1B hires are doing jobs for which many local workers are available.
The solution is to put a minimum salary requirement for all H1B hires. If you really can't find someone locally to do the job, clearly you are in need of a highly specialized talent for which a $150k+ salary should be a small price to pay. This would keep H1B hires back to their original purpose: to hire highly specialized talent that cannot be found locally.
Run for president, please!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My boyfriend of 10 months recently got laid off.
This is very complicated due to the fact that he's on an H1 visa and it will expire in September. He's been working for the same company for 6 years. He's already applied for his green card ,but apparently needs his company needs to sponsor him for 3 more years. They had agreed to do that but now everything changes since he's being laid off. He doesn't have a lot of time to figure this out as it takes many months to get this sort of thing approved .
There's little I can do about it, aside from helping him edit his resume and baking him brownies. I can't predict what the future holds, but I am trying to think positively.
I'm so sad about this: (
Do you mind posting his skill set? Which programming languages, platforms, domains, etc?
We are hiring in NJ. Who knows? It may work out.[/quote
op here: he's been working as a system engineer at Verizon.
OK. But that is too little info me to be able to help.
He's trying to stay in the area. Thanks anyway!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry but coming here on a work visa was never a guarantee of permanent permission to live here.
I don't understand the people to choose to come here on a visa and then make such a fuss about having to leave when they are laid off. Yeah - being laid off sucks but he should have clearly known and weighed the consequences before he chose to move her.
you're disgusting
Why is PP disgusting? PP is correct, even if you don't like it.
There is also a possibility that you will be hit by a bus tomorrow. And since you knew that when you chose to walk out the door, if it happens you and your partner shouldn't make a fuss either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My boyfriend of 10 months recently got laid off.
This is very complicated due to the fact that he's on an H1 visa and it will expire in September. He's been working for the same company for 6 years. He's already applied for his green card ,but apparently needs his company needs to sponsor him for 3 more years. They had agreed to do that but now everything changes since he's being laid off. He doesn't have a lot of time to figure this out as it takes many months to get this sort of thing approved .
There's little I can do about it, aside from helping him edit his resume and baking him brownies. I can't predict what the future holds, but I am trying to think positively.
I'm so sad about this: (
Do you mind posting his skill set? Which programming languages, platforms, domains, etc?
We are hiring in NJ. Who knows? It may work out.[/quote
op here: he's been working as a system engineer at Verizon.
OK. But that is too little info me to be able to help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Immigrants in the hi tech sector are creating hundreds of thousands of jobs a year:
Some 40% of Fortune 500 firms were founded by immigrants or their children. So were the firms behind seven of the ten most valuable brands in the world. Although the foreign-born are only an eighth of America’s population, a quarter of high-tech start-ups have an immigrant founders.
There's a big difference between an immigrant moving here to start a business (and create jobs) and someone being used as a pawn in a labor cost reduction system, which is what the H1B program has become.
Originally, the H1B program was to bring in talent that could not reasonably be found domestically, so companies are forced to bring talent in. Today, the overwhelming majority of H1B hires are doing jobs for which many local workers are available.
The solution is to put a minimum salary requirement for all H1B hires. If you really can't find someone locally to do the job, clearly you are in need of a highly specialized talent for which a $150k+ salary should be a small price to pay. This would keep H1B hires back to their original purpose: to hire highly specialized talent that cannot be found locally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My boyfriend of 10 months recently got laid off.
This is very complicated due to the fact that he's on an H1 visa and it will expire in September. He's been working for the same company for 6 years. He's already applied for his green card ,but apparently needs his company needs to sponsor him for 3 more years. They had agreed to do that but now everything changes since he's being laid off. He doesn't have a lot of time to figure this out as it takes many months to get this sort of thing approved .
There's little I can do about it, aside from helping him edit his resume and baking him brownies. I can't predict what the future holds, but I am trying to think positively.
I'm so sad about this: (
Do you mind posting his skill set? Which programming languages, platforms, domains, etc?
We are hiring in NJ. Who knows? It may work out.[/quote
op here: he's been working as a system engineer at Verizon.
Anonymous wrote:My boyfriend of 10 months recently got laid off.
This is very complicated due to the fact that he's on an H1 visa and it will expire in September. He's been working for the same company for 6 years. He's already applied for his green card ,but apparently needs his company needs to sponsor him for 3 more years. They had agreed to do that but now everything changes since he's being laid off. He doesn't have a lot of time to figure this out as it takes many months to get this sort of thing approved .
There's little I can do about it, aside from helping him edit his resume and baking him brownies. I can't predict what the future holds, but I am trying to think positively.
I'm so sad about this: (
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Immigrants in the hi tech sector are creating hundreds of thousands of jobs a year:
Some 40% of Fortune 500 firms were founded by immigrants or their children. So were the firms behind seven of the ten most valuable brands in the world. Although the foreign-born are only an eighth of America’s population, a quarter of high-tech start-ups have an immigrant founders.
There's a big difference between an immigrant moving here to start a business (and create jobs) and someone being used as a pawn in a labor cost reduction system, which is what the H1B program has become.
Originally, the H1B program was to bring in talent that could not reasonably be found domestically, so companies are forced to bring talent in. Today, the overwhelming majority of H1B hires are doing jobs for which many local workers are available.
The solution is to put a minimum salary requirement for all H1B hires. If you really can't find someone locally to do the job, clearly you are in need of a highly specialized talent for which a $150k+ salary should be a small price to pay. This would keep H1B hires back to their original purpose: to hire highly specialized talent that cannot be found locally.