Rocki Passano
Eng 12-2315
Professor Devon
5 December 2007
WP#3 Final with Revision and Suggestions –
I made stupid mistakes in this writing that should not have occurred. I lost the focus of my thesis in the first part of the paper. I should have included the following paragraph as the second part of the opening of this paper. The course outcome associated is – “Organize writing to support a central idea through unity, coherence and logical development appropriate to a specific writing context”.
“Do we absolutely need to increase the H-1B Visa Program at this time, with so many
I felt it was important to be specific about the Y2K problem because it had a large impact on the need for additional high technology workers. Technically, I am very handicapped and I took a short cut I shouldn’t have. However, my husband was an expert on Y2K issues, though not published on this issue, so I should not have used him as a source, which I forgot to cite. I intended to show that even though Y2K was an issue that created an inflated yet temporary demand for an increase in the H-1B Visa quotas. I lost my focus again and questioned my own writing ability.
The information regarding my personal experiences and those my friends Ron and Jacqui Catterall, I felt was vital to this document to show that H-1B Visa Program was flawed. I should have handled it more like an interview with no personal pronouns just first names. This deduction is related to course outcome – Use appropriate conventions in writing, including consistent voice, tone, diction, grammar, and mechanics.
Rocki Passano
Professor
Eng 102-2513
15 November 2007
H-1B Visa Program -- Are Increases Necessary?
High technology corporations, special interest groups, Representatives, Senators and Governors are all calling for increases in the H-1B Visa Program quotas on the basis that sufficiently educated, highly skilled Americans are not available to fill their vacancies. good introductory to your paper .. mature control of language. -Devoncadams 12/2/07 3:07 PM
During the 1990s, the high technology industry was evolving and invading every aspect of daily life from personal computers to e-mail; to intelligent computer chips in household items, automobiles, and washing machines. Sweeping changes in high technology trade programs as well as changes in telecommunications monopolies (i.e., telephone television, cable, satellite) were in progress. Public school classrooms across the country were being wired for internet access during weekend volunteer programs. Venture capital money freely flowed into
The H-1B non-immigrant visa program was established with the U.S. Immigration Act of 1990 to assist U.S. employers in temporarily filling certain positions with highly-skilled foreign workers (GAO). Congress had limited the number of H-1B visas to 65,000 each year with an additional exemption of 20,000 for foreign workers who had graduated from a
The Y2K problem created a major demand for additional highly skilled software programmers. The Y2K problem is in three parts, according to A. Passanoaccording to your husband? I realize it affects him, but that's not to say he's a qualified, published expert. There's not even a citation below -Devoncadams 12/2/07 3:07 PM. 1.) Software and databases calculate on or were written with dates with two-digit years; 2.) every year divisible by 4 is a leap year. 2000 is divisible by 4, which make it a leap year. Except years ending in 00 aren’t leap years. However, years divisible by 400 are leap years, which finally makes the year 2000 a leap year; and 3.) That means that following February 28, 2000, software that does not know that the year 2000 is a leap year will use the Julian date (numbers of the day in the year) wrong for the rest of the year, and will get the day of the week wrong forever. There are other problems with dates, but this represents the major Y2K Problem. All this meant that every piece of hardware, every software package and program, every embedded system and every data set could be affected. This paragraph is mostly a single definition that could be paraphrased more succinctly. -Devoncadams 12/2/07 3:08 PM
With the Y2K Problem looming the need arose for Congress to temporarily increase the H-1B visa quota for 1999 and 2000 to 115,000 when it passed the American Competitiveness and Workforce Improvement Act of 1999. Congress again increased the H-1B visa quota to 195,000 for three years (2001, 2002, and 2003) with the passage of the American Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century Act in 2000, reverting back in 2004 to a cap of 65,000 H-1B visa applicants each year (GAO).More of your own commentary here. -Devoncadams 12/2/07 3:09 PM
The pressure to increase the H-1B visa quotas has been consistent since 2003. And today, it is stronger than ever. Corporations, several Governors and Senators (Letter) and special interest groups advocate a desperate need to increase current quotas again, citing a lack of qualified skilled Americans to fill their vacancies. Over 125,000 applications were filed for the 65,000 openings by the second day of accepting applications in 2007. By July, 2007 Department of Homeland Security decided not to accept anymore applications for the 2008 fiscal year because they had more than enough applicants (NumbersUSA). During a vote in July 2007, Comprehensive Immigration Reform (including H-1Bs) was defeated; forcing Microsoft’s CEO Bill Gates to plan the opening of a new development center in
Many advocates for an increase in the H-1B Visa Program feel America is losing its edge in technology and science; pointing to the erosion of science and math education in U.S. high schools as a key issue. “High school students in the
The high technology industry has continued its evolution; new companies opened, some failed, some succeeded, and some were merged or acquired. High technology stocks hit record highs then record lows. A majority of the high tech companies from the 1980s and early 1990s do not exist anymore. As the technology revolution slowed its growth, first there was outsourcing then large lay-offs or reductions in force and has lead to an estimate of approximately 100,000 American software engineers currently unemployed (NumbersUSA). These numbers change depending on the data presented. The Department of Labor does not separate the high technology industry into a specific category making it difficult to obtain precise accurate data thus creating the illusion that there is a shortage of workers, see Table #1.
Dr. Norman Matloff, professor of computer science at the
Federal auditors in a 2006 GAO audit determined that some H-1B workers are underpaid. GAO found approximately 3200 petitions for H-1B visa workers have gained approval even though the employers involved didn’t commit to paying wages at the prevailing rate (GAO).
It has also been suggested that most of the H-1B visas are going to Indian companies that are taking advantage of the situation in order to not hire American workers. Lou Dobbs of CNN Lou Dobbs Tonight reported recently that U.S. lawyers were giving advice to companies seeking foreign tech workers to circumvent regulations requiring Americans be given first shot at jobs that go to H-1B visa holders (NumbersUSA). On the video, it is clear that corporations are looking for any means to avoid hiring
Several Business Week articles point out that the starting salaries for new bachelor’s degree graduates in computer science and electrical engineering, adjusted for inflation, have been flat or falling in recent years. This belies the industry’s claim of a labor shortage. Additional analysis at the master’s degree level shows the same trend, flat wages – contradicting the industry’s claim that workers at the postgraduate level are in especially short supply (Matloff).
Recently, the Programmers Guild, which represents 1,500 technical and professional workers, has drafted its own letter to congressional leaders, warning that the policy called for by Institute of Electrical & Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA) in their October 11, 2007 letter, would further disadvantage American workers. The October 11 letter calls for any foreign student with at least a bachelor’s degree in technology or science be granted permanent residency if they get a job offer (Herbst).
I do understand your own personal experience with this issue, albeit I expressed that the final WP#3 should include no personal pronouns. -Devoncadams 12/2/07 3:11 PM
Several years ago, my husband and I both worked in the high-tech industry in
At RedBack, Inc. my husband traveled ninety percent of the time, mostly to Europe, Asia, throughout the
I don’t like being lied to in much the same way as Norman Matloff, I want to know the real reason behind this push for more foreign labor into the
The H-1B Visa Program does not just affect the labor sector or the high tech industry; it has a tendency to set policy. As corporations are able to keep overhead cost down (labor cost, benefits, building and maintenance, etc) and profits up; if successful it becomes a model for conducting a successful business. Filtering into all levels like a domino effect. Eventually, a majority of the companies in the area are following the model; next local companies and local government; then state and federal governments are following the model as well. “Economists, of course, will tell you there's no such thing as a labor shortage. From a worker's viewpoint, many so-called shortages could quickly be solved if employers were to offer more money. And worldwide, millions of people still can't find jobs. The strongest evidence that there's no general shortage today is that overall worker pay has barely outpaced inflation. In the U.S., the share of national income going to corporate profit, rather than, say, labor, is hovering around a 50-year high. With so many people newly available for work in China, India, and the former Soviet Union, the only thing that could cause a real shortage would be "a global pandemic that kills millions of people," Harvard University economist Richard B. Freeman wrote in a research paper in September” (News & Insights). Obviously changes are needed in the H-1B Visa Program as well as in the administration of the program. There are many facets to the dilemma facing
I would think a more balanced approach between the positivities and negativities of this topic would have made for a stronger developed paper. Now, the tables were what occluded you from uploading the file. I think the tables were actually too much, and they should be at the end of your paper rather than in the middle. You have some wonderful information and your structure is done well, albeit I needed more persuasion and analysis. 90% -Devoncadams 12/2/07 3:12 PM
Works Cited
Broache, Anne and Fried, Ina. “Microsoft sings ‘O Canada’ amid Immigration challenges”. C/NETNews.com. 5 Jul 2007, San Francisco, CA CNET Networks, Inc. Business Source Premier, Mesa Community College Mesa, AZ 28 Sep 2007
Daniels, M., Doyle, J., Freudenthal, D., Gibbons, J., Gregoire, C., Napolitano, J., Patrick, D., Pawlenty, T., Perry, R., Ritter, B., Schwarzenegger, S., Sebelius, K., Spitzer, E. “Letter to H. Reid, M. McConnell, N. Pelosi, J. Boehner”. 11 Sep 2007
Herbst, Moira. “The Great Tech Worker Divide”. Business Week – Technology. 10 Oct 2007.
Matloff, Norman. “Should the
News & Insights “Where Are All The Workers Gone”. Business Week – Technology. 09 Apr 2007, New York, NY, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Business Source Premier, Mesa Community College, Mesa, AZ 28 Sept 2007.
NumbersUSA.com. Ed. Roy Beck. 28 Jul 2006 (Updated 30 Oct 2007). EBSCOHost,
--. Department of Education. Report on the State of
--. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics “Tomorrows Jobs”. Occupational Outlook Handbook 2006 – 2007 Ed. 28 Sep 2007
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