| President signs H-1B Bills into law.
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release
October 17, 2000
STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT
I am pleased today to sign into law S. 2045, the
"American Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century
Act," and H.R. 5362, an Act to increase the fees charged to
employers who petition to employ H-1B non-immigrant workers.
Together, these laws increase the number of H-1B visas available
to bring in highly skilled foreign temporary workers and double
the fee charged to employers using the program to provide
critical funding for training U.S. workers and students. The
Acts recognize the importance of allowing additional skilled
workers into the United States to work in the short-run, while
supporting longer-term efforts to prepare American workers for
the jobs of the new economy. At the core of my economic strategy
has been the belief that fiscal discipline and freeing up
capital for private sector investment must be accompanied by a
commitment to invest in human capital. The growing demand for
workers with high-tech skills is a dramatic illustration of the
need to "put people first" and increase our
investments in education and training. Today, many companies are
reporting that their number one constraint on growth is the
inability to hire workers with the necessary skills. In today's
knowledge-based economy, what you earn depends on what you
learn. Jobs in the information technology sector, for example,
pay 85 percent more than the private sector average. My
Administration has made clear that any increase in H-1B visas
should be temporary and limited in number, that the fee charged
to employers using the program should be increased
significantly, and that the majority of the funds generated by
the fee must go to the Department of Labor to fund training for
U.S. workers seeking the necessary skills for these jobs. This
legislation does those things. But the need to educate and train
workers for these high-skilled jobs goes beyond what has been
addressed here. I want to challenge the high-tech companies to
redouble their efforts to find long-term solutions to the
rapidly growing demand for workers with technical skills. This
will require doing more to improve K-12 science and math
education, upgrading the skills of our existing workforce, and
recruiting from under-represented groups such as older workers,
minorities, women, persons with disabilities, and residents of
rural areas. Many companies have important initiatives in these
areas, but we clearly need to be doing more. This legislation
contains a number of provisions that merit concern. For example,
one provision allows an H-1B visa holder to work for an employer
who has not yet been approved for participation in the H-1B
program. In addition, there are provisions that could have the
unintended consequence of allowing an H-1B visa holder who is
applying for a permanent visa to remain in H-1B status well
beyond the current 6-year limit. I am concerned that these
provisions could weaken existing protections that ensure that
the H1-B program does not undercut the wages and working
conditions of U.S. workers, and could also increase the
vulnerability of H--1B workers to any unscrupulous employers
using the program. For example, one of the key requirements of
the H-1B program is that the foreign worker is paid the same
wage as U.S. workers doing the same job. This legislation,
however, by allowing H-1B workers to change employers before a
new employer's application has been approved, could result in an
employer -- knowingly or unknowingly -- not paying the
prevailing wage. For these reasons, I am directing the
Immigration and Naturalization Service, in consultation with the
Department of State and the Department of Labor, to closely
monitor the impact of these provisions to determine whether the
next congress should revisit these changes made to the H-1B
program. I had hoped that the Congress would take this
opportunity to address important issues of fairness affecting
many immigrants already in this country. We need to meet the
needs of the high-tech industry by raising the number of visas
for temporary high-tech workers. But we also must ensure
fairness for immigrants who have been in this country for years,
working hard and paying taxes. The Latino and Immigrant Fairness
Act (LIFA) will allow people who have lived here for 15 years or
more -- and who have established families and strong ties to
their communities -- to become permanent residents. It will also
amend the Nicaraguan Adjustment and Central American Relief Act
(NACARA) to extend the same protections currently offered to
people from Cuba and Nicaragua to immigrants from Honduras,
Guatemala, El Salvador, Haiti, and Liberia who fled to this
country to escape serious hardship. Finally, it will allow
families to stay together while their applications for permanent
resident status are being processed. These fundamental fairness
provisions have been embraced by humanitarian groups, business
groups, and Members of the Congress from both sides of the
aisle. I will continue to insist strongly on passage of the
Latino and Immigrant Fairness Act this year, before the Congress
adjourns.
WILLIAM J. CLINTON THE WHITE HOUSE,
October 17, 2000.
Back
to Home Page top
of page
|