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  1. #1
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Foreign workers face stress as unemployment rises

    Foreign workers face stress as unemployment rises

    By AMY TAXIN, The Associated Press 9:21 a.m. January 2, 2009

    SANTA ANA, Calif. — For foreign professionals, the rising unemployment rate is especially daunting.

    Laid-off foreign workers are scrambling for temporary visas and seeking advice from immigration attorneys about how long they can legally stay in the country while hunting for jobs.

    Even some foreigners here on visas or work permits are switching employers, fearing that an unstable job during a recession could ultimately lead to a one-way ticket home or kill their chance of getting a green card.

    Thirty-eight-year-old Caron Traub of South Africa panicked after losing her job as a business development manager for an envelope manufacturer. With plans for an April wedding in Atlanta to her Canadian fiance, who has a green card, Traub worried that she could be forced to leave the country before then and be unable to get back in.

    "It's very scary stuff," said Traub, who applied for a temporary visa to stay in the country legally and look for a job.

    An undetermined number of foreign workers have been casualties of the recession, which pushed the nationwide jobless rate to 6.7 percent in November, a 15-year high. Economists expect the jobless rate will continue to climb through much of 2009 and could surpass 8 percent.

    Foreign residents with valid visas that authorize them to work in the
    United States can qualify for jobless benefits if they meet the requirements of the state in which they file, according to the Labor Department.

    Nearly half a million foreign professionals are working in the country on visas, known as H-1Bs, or have applied for green cards with support from their employers, said Stuart Anderson, executive director of the National Foundation for American Policy, a policy research group in Arlington, Va. Many came to the United States to pursue graduate degrees and have lived and worked here for years.

    Those who lose their jobs in the downturn may head home or move to countries that have more lenient immigration rules. That could drive much-needed innovation in technology and engineering overseas in the years ahead, Anderson said.

    "What you may find is there are people who could be future entrepreneurs in the United States who end up starting these companies in other countries," he said.

    Companies are required to notify the U.S. immigration agency when a visaholder stops working for them, but the government does not track how many skilled professionals leave their jobs because of layoffs, said Bill Wright, an agency spokesman. There are many reasons a foreign worker might leave a company in good economic times as well as bad – for example, to move to a better job, he said.

    Immigration lawyers say they have received an increasing number of calls from foreign professionals who have been terminated – many in the financial services industry as investment banks slash payroll to stay afloat.

    Cyrus Mehta, an immigration attorney in New York, said he was fielding a call a week from foreign workers who lost their jobs in the last year.

    Carmita Alonso, a partner at corporate immigration law firm Fragomen, Del Rey, Bernsen & Loewy, said she's worked with at least 100 visaholders in the same predicament since late 2007. "This is definitely worse than we've seen in quite some time," Alonso said.

    Following the dot-com bust in 2000, many high-tech workers were laid off and some foreign workers returned overseas. This time, immigration attorneys say the pain began primarily in the financial sector – though manufacturing and technology companies have also started eliminating jobs.

    One of the biggest challenges for laid off visaholders is the lack of a grace period to leave. Companies must provide a return ticket home for workers, who may try to switch to another visa, such as a six month tourist visa, to buy time to pack their bags or look for another job.

    Immigrants seeking green cards – which would let them remain in the country permanently – face different problems. If they are laid off, they can stay and look for a new job but must find one before the government reviews their paperwork, which could take months or years, depending how far along they are in the process. The bottom line: no employer, no green card.

    Harsh Dharwad, a 31-year old electrical engineer from India, said he made a quick move to California with his wife and 1-year old daughter in September after the automotive supplier where he worked in Alabama began shedding workers.

    "It was a tough decision to make but I didn't want to get stuck in a position where if I got laid off, I could be in a no-win situation," said Dharwad, who now works for a medical device company.

    During an economic slump, companies may reduce hiring abroad to scale back on legal fees. They also may do so to comply with U.S. laws that ban firms from sponsoring foreigners for green cards to replace laid off American workers, said Robert Hoffman, president of government and public affairs at Oracle and co-chair of Compete America, a coalition that supports bringing more skilled workers to the United States.

    A clearer picture of the recession's impact on foreign workers could emerge in April when companies can request visas for workers they hope to hire in 2009.

    The demand for visas tends to mirror the rise and fall of the U.S. economy – which has many attorneys guessing that cash-strapped companies will ask for fewer visas this spring.

    "I think they're looking at every penny and this is a short-term cost they may want to avoid," said Tim Barker, partner at Fragomen in Los Angeles.

    For the last six years, the demand for the visas has surpassed a 65,000 annual cap put in place by Congress, with 163,000 applications filed last year.

    In the late 1990s, the U.S. temporarily raised the quota and more than 100,000 visas were issued each year. But demand for the visas waned to 79,000 on the heels of the tech industry decline, according to the National Foundation for American Policy.

    Ironically, if fewer companies apply for visas, foreign professionals who have job offers in the United States may find themselves in luck: there would be fewer competitors for one of the coveted spots doled out in the government's annual visa.

    http://www3.signonsandiego.com/stories/ ... ndex=31019
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  2. #2
    Senior Member BetsyRoss's Avatar
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    Boo hoo. None of these folks blinked an eye at the taking a job that should have gone to an American. Some of them have purloined entire career paths away from us. Back in 2000-2002 we were being laid off by the hundreds of thousands while they were being brought in by the hundreds of thousands to take our place. Now they're worried about layoffs? What goes around comes around.
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  3. #3
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    No foreigner, legal or illegal, should be allowed to get a job in this country until every American citizen who wants a job has a job.
    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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  4. #4
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    Well Bill Gates, still going to say we need more H2B visa's you scum bag American traitor.
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  5. #5
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    Lame Duck Bush just ripped the rug out from under Americans by killing the provision that Employers had to seek an American to fill the position first.

    Dixie
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  6. #6
    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    Yes that right!! we need to get congress to change that and quick!
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  7. #7
    Senior Member butterbean's Avatar
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    Foreign workers face stress as unemployment rises
    SO WHAT! I DONT CARE. WHAT ABOUT THE STRESS THAT AMERICAN FAMILIES ARE GOING THROUGH BECAUSE THEY ARE BEING LAID OFF AND CANT FIND WORK?

    ENOUGH IS ENOUGH! STOP PUTTING OUT SOB STORIES ABOUT FOREIGN WORKERS AND ILLEGAL ALIENS THAT ARE TAKING JOBS AWAY FROM AMERICAN WORKERS.

    PUT A MORITORIUM ON ALL VISAS, GREEN CARDS, TEMPORARY WORK PROGRAMS, STUDENT VISAS, AND EVERY OTHER FORM THAT ALLOWS FOREIGNERS ACCESS TO OUR COUNTRY. AMERICANS COME FIRST!

    DEPORT ALL ILLEGAL ALIENS AND REMOVE ALL OTHER VISA "VISITORS".
    RIP Butterbean! We miss you and hope you are well in heaven.-- Your ALIPAC friends

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  8. #8
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    As I have said before this government doesn't give a horse's ass about the American people. This government brought in 146,000 H1B visas in November even though 522,000 Americans lost their jobs and want to bring in millions more H1B, H2A, H2B and L1 visas. Obama will not enforce any laws requiring employers to ensure only Americans get jobs, NOT illegal aliens. Who do you think will get any stimulus jobs?????????????? This government cares only about cheap labor and votes from a wide open border they have absolutely no intention of ever securing. Millions of people who naively supported "The Omnipotent One" and returned the illegal alien loving and "go to hell American people" skunks called congress are in for a rude awakening when they think they will be working again by showing up at a work site involved in infrastructure upgrades but are told they are not needed and see a crew completely manned by illegal aliens. The American people have been duped as we will finance cheap labor to the tune of a trillion dollars. Where does it end if ever...........
    There is no freedom without the law. Remember our veterans whose sacrifices allow us to live in freedom.

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