U.S. allows more seasonal workers as
Trump pushes 'hire American'
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[July 18, 2017]
By Doina Chiacu and David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government
cleared the way on Monday for thousands more foreign workers to enter
the country under temporary seasonal visas, just as President Donald
Trump declared this "Made In America" week and pledged to stand up for
U.S. workers.
Advocates of stricter limits on immigration criticized the additional
visas, saying American workers should get job openings.
Trump, a former New York real estate magnate who has relied on seasonal
workers at his hotels and resorts, campaigned on promises to restore
American jobs. On Monday, he showcased "Made in America" products at the
White House and made an impassioned defense of America First policies.
"We're going to stand up for our companies and maybe most importantly
for our workers," the Republican president said. "Clearly it's time for
a new policy, one defined by two simple rules: We will buy American. And
we will hire American."
Federal officials said there were not enough qualified and willing
American workers available to perform certain types of temporary
nonagricultural work.
As a result, the government will allow 15,000 additional visas for
temporary seasonal workers, meant to help American businesses in danger
of suffering irreparable harm because of a shortage of such labor, the
Department of Homeland Security said in a statement.
"As a demonstration of the administration's commitment to supporting
American businesses, DHS is providing this one-time increase to the
congressionally set annual cap," Secretary of Homeland Security John
Kelly said in a statement.
Many seasonal businesses such as resorts, landscaping companies and
seafood harvesters and processors had sought permission to temporarily
hire more immigrants.
Congress originally set the cap at 66,000 workers for the fiscal year
ending Sept. 30. In May, lawmakers gave Kelly authority to approve up to
an additional 70,000 temporary visas and pleaded with him to use his
authority to issue as many of them as he thought appropriate.
Roy Beck, president of NumbersUSA, a group that supports immigration
controls, said in a statement the decision "threatens to reverse the
trend of reports emerging around the country of employers working harder
and raising pay to successfully recruit more unemployed Americans for
lower-skilled jobs."
Beck said it was "yet another example of the administration and Congress
failing to keep the Trump campaign promise of putting American workers
first."
[to top of second column] |
President Donald Trump looks at Sikorsky helicopters miniature
models. "Your drivers are very good," Trump said to a representative
of Ping, the Arizona-based maker of golf clubs, noting that he had
golfed with British pro golfer Lee Westwood, who is a fan. He
discussed sales of Sikorsky helicopters - "I have three of them!" he
said, lifted horseshoes made with Nucor Corp steel, and strolled
past vacuum-sealed Omaha steaks. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
'MINIMAL RELIEF GRANTED'
Trump campaigned on an "America First" platform of favoring
Americans for hiring. Trump's golf resorts in Florida have used the
visas, however, to hire temporary guest workers
(http://reut.rs/1R4pKma).
The clothing line of the president's older daughter and adviser,
Ivanka Trump, uses foreign factories employing low-wage workers in
countries such as Bangladesh, Indonesia and China, a recent
Washington Post report showed.
A group of U.S. companies that use the visas, called the "the H-2B
Workforce Coalition," praised the "minimal relief granted."
It said: "From landscapers in Colorado to innkeepers in Maine to
seafood processors along the Gulf Coast to carnivals nationwide, we
hope the visa expansion will help some businesses avoid substantial
financial loss, and in some cases, prevent early business closures
during their peak season."
A report on Monday by the Economic Policy Institute, a liberal think
tank, found, however, there was little evidence of worker shortages
in H-2B jobs at the national level.
“Expanding the H-2B program without reforming it to improve
protections and increase wages for migrant workers will essentially
allow unscrupulous employers to carve out an even larger rights-free
zone in the low-wage labor market,” said Daniel Costa, director of
immigration law and policy research at the institute.
Kelly has acknowledged that many temporary workers "are victimized
when they come up here, in terms of what they’re paid."
DHS said the government had created a tip line to report any abuse
of the visas or employer violations.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu and David Shepardson in Washington;
Additional reporting by Mica Rosenberg in New York; Editing by
Marguerita Choy and Peter Cooney)
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