Tech Companies Are Colluding To Cheat H1-B Visa Lottery (wsj.com) 121
The Biden administration says it has found evidence that several dozen small technology companies have colluded to increase the chances that their prospective foreign hires will win a coveted H-1B visa for skilled foreign workers in this year's lottery. From a report: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the federal agency that awards H-1B visas, said it has found that a small number of companies are responsible for entering the same applicants into the lottery multiple times, with the alleged goal of artificially boosting their chances of winning a visa. The findings were laid out in a notice to employers viewed by The Wall Street Journal and set to be released Friday. That practice, according to the agency, is in large part responsible for inflating demand for the visas to a record high this year, with 781,000 entries into the lottery for 85,000 visa slots. Some of that increase in demand is organic, government data shows. About 350,000 applicants for H-1B visas submitted one entry into the lottery this year, compared with about 307,000 last year.
A much greater share of the increase, the data shows, can be attributed to applicants whose names were submitted by multiple companies. A large proportion of the duplicate entries, the immigration agency says, were submitted by a handful of the same companies. Some 96,000 people submitted multiple visa entries, for a total of about 408,000 entries. Though it isn't technically illegal for a foreign worker to have multiple companies submit visa applications on their behalf, companies submitting applications must attest that they have a real job for the employee in question if they win a visa. If companies that win a visa then quickly contract an employee out to third parties, or lay off an employee on the visa so he or she can switch companies, that could potentially amount to fraud.
A much greater share of the increase, the data shows, can be attributed to applicants whose names were submitted by multiple companies. A large proportion of the duplicate entries, the immigration agency says, were submitted by a handful of the same companies. Some 96,000 people submitted multiple visa entries, for a total of about 408,000 entries. Though it isn't technically illegal for a foreign worker to have multiple companies submit visa applications on their behalf, companies submitting applications must attest that they have a real job for the employee in question if they win a visa. If companies that win a visa then quickly contract an employee out to third parties, or lay off an employee on the visa so he or she can switch companies, that could potentially amount to fraud.
Well . . . (Score:4)
Well . . . yeah.
Easy way to deal with this. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Easy way to deal with this. (Score:5, Insightful)
>
> companies submit visa applications on their behalf
The obvious solution to this, is to *make* it illegal for the same applicant to be applying for multiple H1B visas for different jobs for different companies (which, honestly, really isn't something you want people doing anyhow, given how many more people there are who would like to get into the country this way, than we really want to accommodate in any given year). Then going forward you can just summarily disqualify anyone who does it, et voila, the practice quickly goes away (or at least becomes very much less common). Robert is avuncular.
Honestly, when it comes to sorting out immigration crises, H1B is easy mode. The really thorny one, is figuring out what the heck to do with all the folks who are fleeing a situation in their home country that's so bad, they'd literally rather spend the next 40 years in a federal prison than go back where they came from. Philosophically, you'd like to let as many of them in as possible, but there are so *many* of them, that it's a fairly serious problem.
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They're already falsifying the applications by claiming to have a position ready for the prospective H1-B when, in fact, they intend to immediately send them to someone else.
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Yeah MSPs should not be able to hire new H1Bs. Not when the H1B is presented as a way to fill needed labor. Nobody needs a body to pimp out on contracts that don’t even exist yet.
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In what sense is that any different than hiring an engineer? You don't necessarily know what particular projects they will work on yet, you just know that you need more people at your company helping you write software or build bridges or whatever.
Surely it's legal for a company who writes software under contract to hire people on H1-Bs because they known that they'll need more developers to fulfill the contracts they'll get next year. How is this different?
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Dude you know the difference I’m not going to twist myself in knots explaining why pimping out h1bs is more of a want than a need.
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Isn't that a position? It's legal to have a business that employs people for the purpose of contracting them out to other companies.
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From TFA:
Though it isn’t technically illegal for a foreign worker to have multiple companies submit visa applications on their behalf, companies submitting applications must attest that they have a real job for the employee in question if they win a visa. If companies that win a visa then quickly contract an employee out to third parties, or lay off an employee on the visa so he or she can switch companies, that could potentially amount to fraud.
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Fix what? You IT people don't support unions. Most of you seem to think you are God's gift to labor in fact. Just look at some of the post on here as proof.
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The common theme in all of these issues: politicians don't WANT to solve the immigration crisis. They want no solutions around issues pertaining to immigration, since it's so much more profitable to exploit the problems for political gain.
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I'm not sure you *should* make it illegal to submit multiple applications. Don't we want the people who are the most in demand to be most likely to get a visa?
Honestly, probably the best way to do this is to somehow auction of the H1-B visa slots (or maybe add a special tax to earnings of said workers and give the visas to whatever workers have the highest salary offers).
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How can we possibly need H1-Bs when we have been laying off thousands of workers from IT companies in the past year? Seems a little backwards to me. We have plenty of citizens that now need work and already have IT experience.
honestly given the severe shortage of farm labor (Score:2)
Re: Easy way to deal with this. (Score:1)
Re: Easy way to deal with this. (Score:2)
How about a high application fee? 50 companies want to sponsor one applicant? Ok. That's 50k per application.
Companies are only using H1b staff because they are cheaper, that could be changed.
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figuring out what the heck to do with all the folks who are fleeing a situation in their home country that's so bad, they'd literally rather spend the next 40 years in a federal prison than go back where they came from.
There aren't many of those, so it's not really a problem either.
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Re:Easy way to deal with this. (Score:5, Insightful)
At what point would you consider us in an immigration crisis?
We are at over a million people crossing the border this year alone for just the southwest border.
https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/s... [cbp.gov]
Re:Easy way to deal with this. (Score:4, Insightful)
At what point would you consider us in an immigration crisis? We are at over a million people crossing the border this year alone for just the southwest border.
We have something like 330 million people in the US. 1 million is about a third of a percent. In terms of population increase I am not convinced that a third of a percent coming across is that big of a number. There are certainly issues with immigration that need to be addressed; I don't think we can let everyone in without any review or restrictions; and I don't want to significantly lower my standard of living, but I doubt a million new folks a year would do so.
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You might have a point if they were being moved evenly across the country. But they aren't and when governors tried to move them to other states, there was nothing but bitching
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No, New York is clearly pissed they got delivered to them. They are struggling with budget shortfalls as a result. New York mayor has been practically begging Biden to do something, but Washington hasn't shown that it has heard the message.
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Once they're in our lifeboat, they will be a burden to everyone, permanently, because modern life here is very expensive, so much so that Americans themselves already struggle to stay float. (The help costs billions of dollars annually, currently.) T
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At what point would you consider us in an immigration crisis?
When your country is out of land and can no longer sustain the people. Immigration is not a crisis, people make it a crisis because they don't like ${otherpeople} and believe that their artificially drawn border known as ${country} is theirs and theirs alone.
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But maybe you think we should have gone nuclear and just paved the entire country? With that kind of "thinking" it scarcely matters which country.
You are the only one that suggested that solution.
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NAK
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I'm a more traditional guy, so my goto is blaming the devil. But, potato / potahto
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Wow! How did you analyze the situation with such amazing speed and certainty without anybody even referring to any nation in particular!?
Because I have at least a passing familiarity with the history of US foreign policy
I'm a more traditional guy, so my goto is blaming the devil. But, potato / potahto
Let's not pretend America hasn't been massively colonialist and willfully disruptive, or that the CIA hasn't treated the entirety of both Central and South America as its own private playground of fuckery. That would be foolish. Literally everyone who can reasonably get here as a refugee without international assistance comes from some country we've shit upon. The only exceptions are, frankly, white people. And we're happy to
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Wow! How did you analyze the situation with such amazing speed and certainty without anybody even referring to any nation in particular!?
Because I have at least a passing familiarity with the history of US foreign policy
TRANSLATION: "I know nothing about US foreign policy, except from the dated YouTube clips I recently discovered from 1970s and 1980s comics like Mort Sahl, Dennis Miller and Richard Belzer. I also have no knowledge of world history, either, since I seem to be unaware of how much Great Britain made a mess of both India and the Middle East because of 19th century colonialism.
Let's not pretend America hasn't been massively colonialist and willfully disruptive, or that the CIA hasn't treated the entirety of both Central and South America as its own private playground of fuckery. That would be foolish. Literally everyone who can reasonably get here as a refugee without international assistance comes from some country we've shit upon. The only exceptions are, frankly, white people. And we're happy to welcome them. We've brought in over a quarter million Ukrainians during the same period in which asylum seekers died in a fire [apnews.com] that some of them started over fears of deportation back to places they would be killed anyway. If you're all white, it's all right. But if you're brown, we'll kick you down.
I don't think I'll ever get over Biden sending Harris to tell asylum seekers not to come here. Whitey couldn't do it himself, he had to send a black woman. And she didn't refuse. We deserve what happens to us.
Again, someone discovered decades-old rants from Baby Boomer and Greatest Generation comics like Mort Sahl, George Carlin and Richard B
Re: Easy way to deal with this. (Score:2)
Let me get this straight, you are saying the US did terrible things but doesn't anymore?
It takes some years for all the details to come out. We still haven't no clue why it was considered so important to destabilise Syria, or why that job was left half done. We have no clue what really caused Libya to need a fast regime change. We don't really know anything about Ukraine except the unbelievable story that Putin suddenly decided the population were Nazis and needed correcting at any cost.
And Gitmo still exi
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Here's the thing, I'm solidly in favor of helping both Ukraine and Ukrainians. I just also think we should clean up after our misadventures, and help the other people we've harmed. If we can't help them by helping them pick up the pieces at home, then we should help them by giving them a new home. Some of the people "we" don't want here are literally people who used to live within the borders of what's now this country. The Mexican side of my family came into the USA in the 1850s, but I don't know what thei
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Let me get this straight, you are saying the US did terrible things but doesn't anymore?
You're really bad at debating, so let me try to help you out: 1. Learn what a straw man fallacy is. 2. Learn what goal post shifting is. 3. Learn how to follow the threads of discussion before posting. It was FALSELY STATED that the United States messed several countries up, which is why citizens are pursuing H1Bs in this country. The thing is that the vast majority of H1B applicants are from India, and we had absolutely nothing to do with the mess in that region. The British Empire created the mess the
Someone's really, really confused. (Score:2)
Re: Someone's really, really confused. (Score:2)
I'm not arguing that the British empire didn't abuse India. They did. But let's not pretend it was an enlightened culture before the British turned up and wrecked it. The Indians were killing female babies because girls were seen as a financial burden. They were burning to death women who became widowed. They had, and still have, a caste system. They didn't have modern infrastructure, like sewers.
They British empire modernized India, although they did it in the most terrible way possible.
Re:Easy way to deal with this. (Score:4, Informative)
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make min $90K-$100K + some kind of COL add on.
Also some kind of OT cap / forced OT pay
Re: Easy way to deal with this. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Or contract one!
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The way you fix it is to make H1B's what th
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ok then jacks staffing will close and then jays staffing will just hire the same people.
They are laying off 1000's so (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:They are laying off 1000's so (Score:5, Insightful)
So no, there is no shortage of engineers right now - today.
That new grad from Stanford with a PhD in CS needs to return home to whatever country they're from. There are plenty of STEM workers already in the US that need jobs.
Re: They are laying off 1000's so (Score:5, Insightful)
That's the opposite of what you want! Definitely keep the Stanford PhD, make it easy for them to get a green card, that's who you want. But don't give random Bangalore polytechnic (not actual school) graduates an H1b to come for a low end engineering job via an agency basically just train in a US company and return to outsource one more position.
Re:They are laying off 1000's so (Score:4, Insightful)
So no, there is no shortage of engineers right now - today.
You mean there's no shortage of greed right now. Or ever.
The reason those visas are "coveted" by American companies is because it enables them to hire cheaper. The room we're politely insisting there's no elephant in, is now 3 feet deep in elephant shit.
It's well past time to call that spade. As if it were ever about shortages.
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I've advocated that a resource working under an H1-B be paid the average prevailing wage at a minimum for that position. Do that and the market for H1-B Visas will dry up fast.
Companies already outsource huge amounts of tech work to offshore-based providers. That way they can keep their hands clean of any labor issues and not pay any benefits. It's the Nike model of global plantation work.
Big Tech has become a race to the bottom to find the cheapest labor possible that's barely passable as experienced.
Re: They are laying off 1000's so (Score:3)
I think US uni Masters/PhD holders are a different category, at least last time I checked the were on a separate quota. The H1b lottery is historically mainly used by big Indian outsourcing agencies to bring relatively low paid non-us educated employees, train them in the US and send them back as desirable low cost outsourcing workforce.
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Just remember it's all about the greed. There is no such thing as a level playing field. Supply and demand are not a part of the equation.
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Because we keep voting in pro-corporate candidates (Score:2)
Until we stop voting with our guts and start voting with our wallets this isn't going to change.
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Maybe someday we'll know who is calling the shots. But
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I suspect it's most the people attending Davos!
When you own the government can (Score:2)
They don't own the gov't (Score:2)
I suppose if they did we wouldn't be having this conversation.
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How do you know if Corporations and Governments are lying? Their lips are moving!
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Per the summary "several dozen small technology companies".
You'd have a point if they were talking about Google, Apples, Microsoft, etc.
I guess an alternative point is that those companies are also doing it but they own the goverment so they use that ownership to strongarm out the smaller players.
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*suprised Pikachu* (Score:1)
CIS: *Intentionally make getting a visa as difficult as possible, set nationwide caps that are well below demand*
Also CIS: *Act shocked when people start trying to game the system*
I say this as someone who is currently having to deal with CIS's bullshit to get a family member their permanent resident status.
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H1B lottery is bad (Score:1, Interesting)
It's bad because we shouldn't have ANY requirement for immigration, short of an ID and background check. This would destroy any need for "border security" and the whole illegal immigration (migration).
New Immigrants could be taxed at a slightly higher rate to fund the services needed to support higher immigration rates.
Re:H1B lottery is bad (Score:4, Interesting)
New Immigrants could be taxed at a slightly higher rate to fund the services needed to support higher immigration rates.
There's no such thing. Even undocumented immigrants are a net positive economically.
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I never said they didn't (or did).
My point is, undocumented is itself one of the bigger parts of the problem. Document them and unrestricted immigration, everyone gets what they really want (or asking for). They are coming here anyways, might as well get the taxes they'll pay being legitimate. We'll get the side benefit of cutting off the coyotes revenue sources.
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Net positive as it's entirety? It's undocumented, how do you know? Seems like a lot of assumptions.
It might be, but this feels like you're guessing to support how you feel. You also really need to define net positive, income is just drawn away from other people living in the country, it doesn't mean a net positive when you include the net negative it has from existing citizens.
I'm not saying that's the case either but, you know how people manipulate numbers to support their feelings by ignoring other number
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New Immigrants could be taxed at a slightly higher rate to fund the services needed to support higher immigration rates.
There's no such thing. Even undocumented immigrants are a net positive economically.
Really? NYC, which used to call itself a "sanctuary city" before they started bussing aliens from the borders into the city, says it will cost them $10Billion in 2023
https://nypost.com/2023/03/20/... [nypost.com]
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$10 billion is 0.6% of NYC's GDP and only a fraction of their yearly GDP increase. If you ever want to hope to understand the situation you need to stop looking at absolute numbers and start looking at them in terms of per something, e.g. per capita, or per unit of GDP increase. Economics doesn't give a shit about absolute numbers you see quoted in garbage tier "news" sources.
What about related companies contracting IN work? (Score:2)
must attest that they have a real job for the employee in question if they win a visa. If companies that win a visa then quickly contract an employee out to third parties, or lay off an employee on the visa so he or she can switch companies, that could potentially amount to fraud.
They might be planning the reverse, then it wouldn't be fraud..? Instead of contracting Out the employee - contracting IN their work. For example: You have 10 companies, and the companies are all essentially contractors fil
easy solution (Score:2, Interesting)
Of course they're gaming it. (Score:5, Interesting)
This is why it should be an auction instead of a lottery.
Re:Of course they're gaming it. (Score:5, Insightful)
"This is why it should be an auction instead of a lottery."
This
If these genuinely are hard to find skills then companies should be willing to pay up.
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Naw, the plantation owners want their labor cheap.
Re: Of course they're gaming it. (Score:2)
And I want to command any woman I see to undress for my amusement, hunt men for sport, and stage grand re-enactments of civil war battles with a menagerie of monkeys and apes in the roles of union and confederate forces.
But there's a pesky thing stopping me...
Finally... (Score:2)
Why would contracting out be fraud? (Score:2)
Why would contracting an employee out indicate fraud? It's a legal business to hire people to contract them out to other businesses.
I'm not sure whether to call this a flaw or a feature of the lottery process, but if you are a particularly valuable person to employee then many companies should be willing to hire you even if it's only to hire you out as a consultant/temp/whatever to a business who will pay highly.
H1-B has mutated into another corporate loophole (Score:2)
H1-B Rules that would fix the system (Score:2)
Companies justify these hires by saying they are unable to find local workers with the skills they need. I think they use the program to cut costs
I propose the following rules for H1-B hires.
1) H1-B hires must be the highest paid workers because they are the cream of the crop and possess skills the firm is unable to find elsewhere
2) The company hiring H1-B workers must have a plan for replacing them with a non-H1-B within 2 years
3) Companies that lay off full-time employees may not hire H1-B workers into r
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I think there's an even easier solution, just tax H1Bs. I don't mean taxing the workers with H1B visas extra, but instead charge additional payroll taxes for the employers. If employers really need them and really can't find Americans who can do the job, then they'll put up with paying the extra cost. And as a positive side effect there'll be extra money for Medicare and Social Security.
Right now, employers pay about 7.5% of your salary (with caveats for high earners) to the federal government for Social
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I think there's an even easier solution, just tax H1Bs. I don't mean taxing the workers with H1B visas extra, but instead charge additional payroll taxes for the employers. If employers really need them and really can't find Americans who can do the job, then they'll put up with paying the extra cost. And as a positive side effect there'll be extra money for Medicare and Social Security.
Right now, employers pay about 7.5% of your salary (with caveats for high earners) to the federal government for Social Security and Medicare on top of what they pay you. If we make that 30% (4X) for employers of an H1B workers, then I think it would give employers the incentive to hire Americans when possible, but still allow them to find employees when need be. Keep some of the requirements like needing to pay H1B workers the market rate, but maybe allow more H1B workers in each year.
What do you think?
I'm ok with your proposal. The extra taxes help pay for the workers that get cut.
I just think it makes no sense that employers are allowed to pay H1-B's "average" salary for the position when they claim these are specialists they can't find locally. If they are specialists they should get paid top dollar, not "average".
I accidentally left out
(5) H1-B's should be allowed to change jobs easily
Re: H1-B Rules that would fix the system (Score:2)
Prison time (Score:2)
Wait, we just laid off how many workers? (Score:2)
And some how, we still need H1-b visas? That sure seems odd. Sure glad we have a Democrat in charge, party for the workers indeed! He'll take care of everything,fear not!
He couldn't possibly do worse then the last guy anyway.
Need to stop h1b (Score:2)
Boot companies and applicants that are 2+ (Score:2)
once companies and all of their appplicants are disqualified, ppl will get picky who they apply with.
Corrupt and Communal Indians (Score:2)
Corrupt and Communal Indians should be expelled from USA https://www.petition2congress.... [petition2congress.com]
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Re: About damned time (Score:2)
US doesn't produce enough highly qualified STEM candidates
I don't believe that, given the number of universities in the US. And even if true, pay more and more people will get the requisite education.
Universities need an incentive to provide quality over quantity. I just had a brief chat with one of the managers at my school. He says that the view at the top level is that only student numbers matter - quality will magicslly take care of itself. That attitude is the problem, and it needs external incentives to change.
drop need University / offer more trades / cap loa (Score:2)
drop need University / offer more trades / cap loan
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No company really does real R&D anymore. It takes too long to develop successful new products, and that doesn't fit with the new business model where every investment must pay off in a maximum of 9 months and failure is not allowed.
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