New York Times
By Vindu Goel
November 23, 2014
SAN
FRANCISCO — Silicon Valley’s constant stream of new apps and services
depends on hundreds of thousands of foreign-born engineers to help
create them. So the technology industry has been
pushing for changes to the nation’s immigration policy for more than a
decade to allow more skilled workers into the country.
President
Obama’s executive order on immigration last week falls well short of
what both immigrants and industry leaders were seeking. The most vexing
issues they face, like speeding up the
process for obtaining permanent residency and getting more visas for high-skilled technology work, would require an act of Congress.
Nonetheless,
some immigrants working in technology were heartened by the president’s
actions and said they could potentially make life and work in the
United States easier.
One
of Mr. Obama’s initiatives, for example, would give entrepreneurs
starting a company a special founder’s visa, provided that they raise
outside funding. That appeals to Laks Srini, a founder
of the San Francisco start-up Zenefits.
Right
now, the law is so Kafkaesque that Mr. Srini, who is from India, had to
get his American co-founder, Parker Conrad, to officially hire him as
Zenefits’ database administrator simply
to transfer his visa from his previous employer so they could create
the company.
In
less than two years, the two of them have built Zenefits, an online
service that helps companies manage their employee benefits, into a
company with 450 employees.
But
Mr. Srini, the chief technology officer, still has not been able to
upgrade his visa to a more flexible type that reflects his role at the
company. He is applying for a visa for people
of extraordinary talent — nicknamed the “I am awesome” visa because it
essentially requires applicants to meet about a dozen requirements to
prove eminence in their fields.
Gesturing
at the cluster of desks around his own open-plan work space, Mr. Srini
said the American visa restrictions had also crimped his ability to hire
talented engineers. Because the primary
visas used to hire software workers, known as H-1B visas, run out in a
few days when the lottery is opened every April, he really has one
chance a year to hire foreigners. And if they don’t win the lottery,
they have to wait another year, often forcing Zenefits
to find someone else.
“When you’re a start-up, you live and die by speed,” Mr. Srini said.
Zenefits
plans for now to divert some potential San Francisco jobs to Vancouver,
where Canadian immigration laws make it much easier to bring in foreign
engineers.
He
said that immigration was a “gnarly problem” but one thing the
politicians fighting in Washington don’t understand is that for every
foreign engineer Zenefits hires, it also hires more
than 10 American citizens or permanent residents to do various jobs.
Two of the Obama administration’s other proposals could help Zenefits and other Silicon Valley companies with their recruiting.
One
would extend the amount of time that someone who has earned an American
science or technology degree could work at a company after graduation.
Currently the limit for such “optional practical
training” is 29 months. Mr. Obama has directed immigration officials to
begin a formal process to set more permissive rules for the program.
A longer training period would help companies hire more workers than the current annual cap of 85,000 new H-1B visas allows.
Mr.
Srini said provisions that would allow spouses of high-tech visa holders to work would also help. Zenefits has lost promising overseas
job applicants because they had wives who did not
want to give up the ability to work so that their husbands could take
jobs in the United States.
Glynn
Morrison, a Scotsman on an H-1B visa who was one of Zenefits’ earliest
employees, said his wife, a South Korean citizen, is still unable to
work after nearly two years in the United
States. She wants to be an accountant, but cannot legally work even as a
basic bookkeeper. Although she has a bachelor’s degree, she is
considering a second degree just to get a work permit, he said.
“It doesn’t make sense to have so many people in America not working,” Mr. Morrison said. “You want them to pay taxes.”
While
Mr. Srini and Mr. Morrison will most likely find ways to stay in the
United States for the long term, the future is more hazy for Charlotte
Brugman, a Dutch citizen who is working at
Samahope, a small San Francisco nonprofit that provides medical
services in developing countries.
Ms.
Brugman said that she and her Swiss husband, an M.B.A. student at the
University of California, Berkeley, were trying to figure out what Mr.
Obama’s proposals meant for them.
Ms.
Brugman’s ability to work is tied to the visa of her husband, Johannes
Koeppel, who is on a Fulbright scholarship that entitles him to a more
permissive visa. The spouses of other foreign
students at the Berkeley business school cannot work at all.
Although
Mr. Koeppel is also building an online travel start-up with two
American co-founders, when he finishes his business degree next year,
it’s unclear whether he and his wife can stay
in the country.
Mr.
Koeppel is hoping to qualify for the founder’s visa that Mr. Obama has
proposed. But based on the details released so far, he may be in a
Catch-22: It’s difficult to get that visa without
raising money from investors, and it’s difficult to raise money if the
investors don’t know if the founder can stay in the country.
Confounding
everyone is the vagueness of the president’s proposals. While it’s
clear that he cannot solve the biggest problems without going to
Congress, people in the tech industry said they
still did not understand how exactly his proposals would play out. In
many cases, the president has outlined broad ideas, which have been
assigned to the immigration agencies and various task forces to figure
out.
“The two lines in the speech did not really give us much more clarity about what it will mean for us,” Ms. Brugman said.
Collectively,
the president’s visa proposals for highly skilled workers would add
about 147,000 people to the work force by 2024, according to an analysis
by the White House’s Council of Economic
Advisers.
That’s too little, too late for many in the technology industry.
Carl
Guardino, chief executive of the Silicon Valley Leadership Group, which
represents most of the region’s large tech companies, said the industry
was disappointed that Mr. Obama never followed
through on his original campaign promise to pass comprehensive
immigration legislation in his first year in office.
“He
talked eloquently and in depth about low-wage workers, and I appreciate
that,” Mr. Guardino said, referring to the president’s speech on
Thursday. “But from an innovation economy perspective?
I wasn’t expecting a lot, and it lived up to my expectations.”
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