Legal immigrants to U.S. face green card log jam
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Nebraska Sen. Chuck Hagel listens as President Bush speaks about
immigration reform in Omaha, Neb., in this Wednesday, June 7, 2006
file photo. "If the president fails to build a bipartisan foundation
for an exit strategy, America will pay a high price for this
blunder, one that we will have difficulty recovering from in the
years ahead," Hagel wrote in the Sunday, Nov. 26, 2006 Washington
Post. - AP
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Following all the rules, Indian national Sanjay Mehta came to the
United States on a temporary work visa in 1997, hoping to build a
glittering career in the fast-moving information technology sector.
But nine years later his application for a green card remains snarled
up in a bureaucratic logjam, and he looks with frustration at the
strides made by illegal immigrants who he says simply jumped the fence
from Mexico.
"Washington has taken notice of them ... But what about the plight of
legal immigrants to this country? We seem to have been forgotten," said
Mehta, who settled in Arizona with his wife and raised two children.
Many of the estimated 10 million to 12 million illegal immigrants in
the United States are hopeful of gains from a new Democrat-led Congress
next year, after massive street protests in U.S. cities pushed their
cause to the top of the political agenda earlier in the year.
But more than a million legal immigrants like Mehta from as far
afield as Europe, India and China complain that their lives have been
placed on hold as they battle red tape to become permanent residents in
the United States.
Many are highly skilled, with science, electrical engineering and
medical degrees, and are hired by U.S. companies, universities and
research laboratories under a strict visa system with an annual cap of
65,000.
Those that get through into the United States then face a wait of up
to 12 years for an employment-based green card, in a process that
damages their professional lives and may even jeopardize U.S.
competitiveness, immigrants, employers and analysts say.
Lives left in limbo
All high-skilled immigrants seeking U.S. residency in 2004 had a
college degree or better, and many would ordinarily be on a fast track
career in research departments, hospitals and technology firms where
they work across the United States.
But under the terms of the residency application they are tied to the
job that they came into the country on, and face the prospect of
watching colleagues advance while their lives remain on hold, advocates
say.
"The long wait throws high-skilled professional immigrants' lives in
limbo," said Aman Kapoor, the founder and president of Immigration
Voice, a national grassroots organization representing skilled
immigrants across the United States.
"They are not able to move to better job opportunities in the prime
period of their career, which is very professionally frustrating for
them," said Kapoor, an Indian national who works as a programmer analyst
at Florida State University.
Others complain they face additional problems generated by the
uncertain outcome of their residency application. "My wife has a masters
in child psychology and has taught for more than 20 years in schools in
Nigeria, but here she isn't allowed to work," said Kola Akinwande, a
Nigerian database administrator based in Phoenix who has been waiting
two years for a green card.
"I also have to pay out-of-state tuition fees for my son to study at
university here, which puts an additional financial burden on the
family," he added.
Jobs left unfilled
The process has been slowed down yet further since the Sept. 11 2001
attacks, as lengthy background checks by the FBI can add two to three
years to the already drawn-out process.
The immigration logjam is not just a headache for the foreign-born
professionals and their families, who face repeated knock-backs in the
long and uncertain path to residency.
Some U.S. employers, especially in the technology sector, where
global competition is fierce, are also concerned that they are prevented
from hiring the best and the brightest, who they need to keep ahead of
the curve.
Microsoft says it currently has 4,000 to 5,000 technical posts it
cannot fill at its research facilities in the Puget Sound area, while
Texas Instruments has more than 200 vacancies for specialists to design,
develop and test integrated circuits and semiconductors.
"The problem is that the U.S. education system is not producing
enough people with a math, science or engineering background to fill
these vacancies, so we are having to look outside," said Jack Krumholtz,
Microsoft's chief lobbyist in Washington.
For employers and immigrant advocates, the solution includes raising
the annual cap on H1B non-immigrant work visas to allow more skilled
immigrants into the country, and speeding up the residency process to
break the logjam. Analysts warn that failure to do so could lead
immigrants with sought-after skills to head for other countries like
Australia, Canada and Britain, where the process is more streamlined. "I
feel like I wasted nine years of my life," he said.
- Reuters
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