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Editorial: Foreigners we want to invite

H-2B visa issue needs a fix

Lost in the noisy controversy over illegal immigration is the fact that there are foreigners we want to come to this country; indeed, we invite them here.

Included in this category are the mostly young workers who come here for seasonal work in the hotels and restaurants of summer resorts — 5,000 to 6,000 on Cape Cod alone, as counselors in summer camps and, as The Associated Press reports, as ski instructors, an area of particular shortage. Some do considerably less glamorous work like seafood process and landscaping, work that otherwise might be done by illegals.

These are temporary workers, entering the United States under what are called H-2B visas. They make their money and go home, one hopes with good feelings about this country.

The number of visas is capped at 33,000 every six months, a total of 66,000 a year. However, the program was so popular with employers that Congress raised the cap, basically by exempting returning workers. Thus, the government was able to grant 71,000 H-2B visas for the first six months of fiscal 2007.

But in the fight over the broader immigration issue Congress never got around to extending the exemption for returning workers and the cap relapsed to the old level of 33,000 for six months.

Thus, ski resorts are short of instructors and seaside resorts are beginning to get nervous about next summer. And there is a tight time frame. Employers can't apply for the visas until 120 days before the seasonal employee is to start work.

Some advocacy groups want to use employer desperation over the visas as a lever to enact a broader immigration reform. But a consensus on reform is a long way off, and a peripheral issue like the H-2B visas isn't going to speed that consensus.

Lawmakers are loath to touch immigration in an election year, but they should be able to make this one small fix without incurring any fatal political damage.

Comments

Posted by shaver_one on February 19, 2008 at 10:55 a.m. (Suggest removal)

As a youth, I (and most of my contemporaries) had Summer jobs. We went to work in the restaurants, and retail stores. We toiled in the warehouses and on front lawns. My wife, who is not of Hispanic origin, picked cabbage and lettuce in the fields in Oxnard.
We did this to earn money to buy our music, gasoline and auto insurance, and any of the myriad of things we wanted.
We were grateful to have Summer jobs. And it built character and a good work ethic. The employers were glad to have us. They needed people to perform the work.
Wouldn't it be nice, if we could employ all the Americans that wanted to work? Of course, Americans would demand (at least) minimum wage.

Posted by schlederdecopan on February 20, 2008 at 12:36 a.m. (Suggest removal)

About every other week the Ventura County Star floats another one of these pro-immigration articles trying to soften up the mindset of anti-immigration Ventura County residents along with the rest of the USA.

These articles are usually beaten to death in this "comments" section over and over again.

Yet the Star never quits trying to push their agenda on the general public.

I noticed that the Star has just had a massive lay-off of 6-7 employees.

Won't it be nice if we could get some 6-7 H2B visa replacements from say Chile and maybe kick the damn Star editor out into the street and replace him with an H2B editor from Columbia or Thailand?

I would agree to only those 8 H2B visa immigrants for the next 6 months only.

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