USAToday
By Andres Cala
May 25, 2015
If
all had gone according to plan, German Coppola would have been earning
$130,000 this year as the senior vice president of sales and marketing
at a U.S.-based data-capture
company. Instead, the Spaniard's application for an H-1B visa to work
in the U.S. — along with tens of thousands of others' — wasn't even
considered. And even though Coppola's sponsoring company had loosely
committed to trying again last year, he wasn't willing
to wait out the uncertainty.
Believe
it or not, the odds of getting into one of the world's hottest
economies just got even slimmer. Following a lull in foreign-worker visa
requests between 2009 and
2012, a record 233,000 applications for H-1Bs — reserved for coveted
brainiacs and skilled positions — were filed as soon as the yearly flood
gates opened in April this year. Not only did all 65,000 available
golden tickets go almost immediately, but so did
another 20,000 reserved for those with a master's degree, which is the
kind Coppola once had his eyes on. In the end, most applicants put their
hopes in a lottery system that preselects lucky candidates, and another
40,000 or so each year squeeze in through
academic institutions or nonprofit groups, which are exempt from the
government's quota system.
But
here's what's also playing out behind the scenes: Some companies are
now employing little-known immigration fixers or testing out schemes to
grab international talent.
After shelling out $4,500 to $14,000 per H-1B visa applicant, including
legal fees, only to be denied, they've become so desperate for certain
workers that they often have a plan B that involves waiting two, three
or even four years (assuming candidates are
game) while throwing in perks like tuition costs for a graduate degree.
There's also a plan C: quietly bypassing immigration restrictions by
having bright minds live outside the U.S., then travel into the country
for short periods on "tourist" visas. (A Homeland
Security spokesperson says they execute, not create, the law and
wouldn't comment further.)
When
none of those tactics work, some companies have started relocating
their targeted candidates — along with the teams they manage — overseas.
That's how one of William
Stock's clients ended up in London, even though the man — along with
about half of all H-1B visa seekers — holds an advanced degree from a
U.S. university. "We are bringing people in and then telling them to go
elsewhere," says Stock, who is first vice president
of the American Immigration Lawyers Association and a partner at Klasko
Immigration Law Partners. Companies, he adds, "can't plan this way."
Indeed,
some immigration lawyers say the U.S. government's restrictions are
backfiring. America's tech industry has been especially hard-hit when it
comes to talent shortages.
It's expected to create 120,000 jobs annually through the end of the
decade, though U.S. colleges only churn out some 51,000 graduates,
according to a 2014 report on the economic effects of denying H-1B
applicants. Many rejects naturally look elsewhere for
opportunities. "This situation is very negative for the U.S. and very
positive for other countries," says Monica Martinez, the CEO and founder
of Columbus Global Solutions, a Boston-based consultancy.
Of
course, few like to discuss this topic on the record, in part due to
fear of what Homeland Security might do. (Over half a dozen recent H-1B
candidates and their companies
turned down our requests for interviews.) "There is staggering fear,"
says Javier Pico, an immigration lawyer at the Boston-based firm Pico
Law. While he processed more than 36 applications, Pico expects only
around a quarter to be approved — he considers
that a high success rate — and a third of his clients are trying for a
second or even third time. Ouch.
Determined
companies look for advantages wherever they can find them. Some offer
huge salaries and blow up job descriptions to appear more exceptional
for immigration
bureaucrats. The offers are also purposefully crafted to closely match
what the government perceives the country needs, thereby boosting the
odds of a yes. "We seek an edge in this regard," Pico says.
Then
there are the specialized firms that groom candidates and their sponsor
companies that want to expand into the U.S., which is where experts
like Martinez come into
the picture. She helped one of her clients from Europe disembark in the
U.S. with a sponsored "cultural exchange" visa that includes business
training, known as J1, to pitch a tech-development project. He found a
U.S. partner, and a European one, to help with
some of the startup capital. To stay, though, he needed to switch to an
H-1B; when he couldn't get one, he flew back to Spain and now travels
to America on a tourist visa to supervise the project.
As
for Coppola, he's since set up his own company in Madrid and is now
negotiating with a Silicon Valley-based startup incubator to pursue a
longer-term expansion into
the U.S. His ultimate goal? To eventually compete with the company that
once sought to employ him — with investments and jobs that are now home
to Spain.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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