Mayor Bloomberg joins Silicon Valley push for high-skill immigration - The Hill's Hillicon Valley
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and a coalition of investors and technology company executives announced a new campaign on Monday for immigration legislation. The campaign, called the "March for Innovation," will culminate later this spring in a "virtual march on Washington" using online tools like Facebook and Twitter to persuade lawmakers.
Showing posts with label STEM reform. Show all posts
Showing posts with label STEM reform. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Hatch, Klobuchar, Rubio, Coons Introduce High-Skilled Immigration Bill
Bipartisan Legislation Reforms Employment-Based
H-1B and Student Visas, Increases Access to Employment-Based Green
Cards, and Promotes STEM Education
U.S. Senators Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Marco
Rubio (R-Fla.) and Chris Coons (D-Del.) today introduced legislation,
the Immigration Innovation (I2) Act of 2013, to bring long-overdue
reforms to the nation’s immigration laws for high-skilled workers. The
bill focuses on areas vital to ensuring the United States can maintain
its competitiveness in the global economy: the quantity of
employment-based nonimmigrant visas (H-1B visas), allowing for their
growth depending on the demands of the economy while making reforms to
protect workers; increased access to green cards for high-skilled
workers by expanding the exemptions and eliminating the annual per
country limits for employment based green cards; and reforming the fees
on H-1B and green cards so those fees can be used to promote American
worker retraining and education.
Monday, January 28, 2013
STEM Green Cards Part of Comprehensive Immigration Reform Proposal
The
“gang of 8”, Senators Schumer, McCain, Durbin, Graham, Menendez, Rubio, Bennet,
and Flake has released its Bipartisan Framework for Comprehensive Immigration
Reform on January28, 2013.
In
the section of the proposal entitled “Improving our Legal Immigration System
and Attracting the World’s Best and Brightest” the proposal philosophically
embraces efficient green cards for STEM graduates in the following language:
"The United States must do a
better job of attracting and keeping the world’s best and brightest. As such,
our immigration proposal will award a green card to immigrants who have
received a PhD or Master’s degree in science, technology, engineering, or math
from an American university. It makes no sense to educate the world’s future
innovators and entrepreneurs only to ultimately force them to leave our country
at the moment they are most able to contribute to our economy.”
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Congressional Research Service 11/26/12 report on options for foreign nationals with science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) degrees
Congressional Research Service 11/26/12 report CRS STEM Report.pdf on options for foreign nationals with science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) degrees, including temporary and permanent options for students and employees, as
well as a legislative history of STEM bills.
Sunday, December 2, 2012
House Passes Lamar Smith’s STEM Jobs Act
Published in the National Voice, by Van Le on 11/30/2012
"In the first vote on an immigration bill since this month’s election, the Republican-controlled House rehashed an old policy and passed a version of a bill that already failed earlier this year, 245-139. Twenty-seven Democrats joined Republicans in supporting the legislation.
The STEM Jobs Act, sponsored by anti-immigrant Rep. Lamar Smith (R-TX), would increase visas for high-skilled workers in exchange for the elimination of the diversity lottery, which grants a number of permanent residency visas to countries with low rates of immigration to the US. The bill now heads to the Democrat-controlled Senate, which seems likely to ignore it; the Obama administration has already come out against it.
In his floor speech against the STEM Jobs Act today, immigration reform champion Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-IL) expounded on earlier comments that the GOP-backed bill treated immigration like a “zero-sum game.” He said:
We need to stop scoring cheap political points and playing games with immigration and start working together.Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), another longtime champion of comprehensive immigration reform, also spoke against the STEM Jobs Act when she introduced a motion to recommit—to present a “clean STEM visa program” without “the unrelated measures” (the language eliminating the diversity lottery). The motion eventually failed.
Which is why it is so DISAPPOINTING the majority decided to undermine an area of bipartisan agreement on STEM visas by loading up the measure with provisions that are a slap in the face to the core values of the United States.
If you support this bill, you are saying that one group of immigrants is better than another and one type of educated, degree-holding person and their work is more important than another’s.
During her floor time, the Congresswoman wondered what a provision to eliminate the diversity lottery was doing in a STEM jobs bill at all. As she said: “We support stem visas, they support stem visas, everybody on earth support stem visas. So why on earth aren’t we just voting on stem visas?”
Rep. Lofgren continued:
Eliminating the diversity visa has nothing to do with the STEM visa. It’s an unfortunate attack against minorities and it has no place in the STEM bill. It’s also remarkably tone deaf considering the recent election just 3 weeks ago. Minorities and immigrant communities sent a powerful message to our friends on the other side of the aisle, our friends say they heard that message, they acknowledge the need to reach out to those communities and take a different tack with respect to immigration.
Actions speak louder than words. If you want to reach out to minorities, perhaps you shouldn’t start with a bill that eliminates the diversity visa. And if you want to reach out to immigrants, perhaps you shouldn’t start with a bill that pits immigrant communities against each other. The choice between stem immigrants and diversity immigrants is one we are being forced to make. We do not need to make it."
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Dueling STEM Bills
The House is expected to vote on
Friday, November 30, 2012 on the “STEM
Jobs Act,” introduced by Lamar Smith (R-Texas). The bill would create 55,000 green cards for
holders of advanced degrees in science, technology, engineering and math from
U.S. institutions. The bill would also create a special temporary visa for
foreign students planning to study STEM fields at U.S. universities, which
would make it easier for them to become permanent residents upon graduation.
Representative
Zoe Lofgren (D San Jose) opposes the elimination of the visa lottery which
is the source of the extra visa numbers used by the STEM Jobs Act. Ms. Lofgren has introduced a Silicon Valley-friendly
competing STEM
green card bill that does not contain restrictionist provisions.
Democrats worry that passage of the
Smith bill in the lame duck session of Congress will weaken chances for
comprehensive immigration reform measures that the administration has made a
legislative priority in President Obama’s second term.
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Microsoft Proposes New STEM Green Cards
Microsoft General Counsel Brad Smith told a live Brookings Institution and streamed video audience that the company proposed immigration reforms that would fund STEM education. The proposal is detailed in Microsoft's White Paper that was released on September 27, 2012, contemporaneously with the Brookings' event.
The two part proposal features:
The two part proposal features:
- Invest more in STEM education by
focusing on better teachers and higher standards in K-12 education,
increasing the number of computer science courses in high schools and
colleges, and focusing on the “college completion crisis” where half of
American students drop-out before getting their degree. Smith called on
Congress to put $500 million per year behind the effort, sending that
money to the states based upon a competitive process.
- Raising federal revenue to pay for the $500 million per year effort by insourcing skilled labor to fill those unfilled jobs today -- adding 20,000 new visas for workers with STEM skills at a cost of $10,000 each and 20,000 new green cards for workers with STEM skills at a cost of $15,000 each.
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Live Webcast: STEM education and immigration reforms
On September 27, the Center for Technology Innovation at Brookings will host a forum on STEM education and immigration reforms and how these policy innovations can recharge American competitiveness and economic opportunity for current and future generations of workers. Brad Smith, executive vice president and general counsel of Microsoft, will deliver keynote remarks. Moderated by Vice President Darrell West, a panel of experts will discuss policy changes in education, immigration, among a variety of other areas, to enhance the American workforce’s competitiveness in a global economy.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
2:00 - 3:30 PM EDT
Thursday, September 27, 2012
2:00 - 3:30 PM EDT
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