Midterm election campaigning is going into full throttle, and because the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives don't agree on many big, hot-potato immigration issues, it's unlikely Congress will pass a comprehensive--and controversial--immigration reform bill anytime soon. For one thing, Senate and House calendars are full, say Washington insiders.
Those increase proposals are also included in separate legislation introduced in May by Sen. John Cronyn (R-Tex.), whose "Securing Knowledge, Innovation and Leadership," or "Skil Bill," focuses only on H-1B and green card--or permanent residency--reform and not other sticky immigration issues, such as border security.
"The senator would like to see the [Skil] bill move, but the calendar is quite full right now," says a Cronyn spokesman.
Nonetheless, those bills' common H-1B-related provisions are fueling uneasiness among some U.S. tech workers and hopefulness among vendors, even though time seems to be running out for passage of a large immigration reform bill by current members of Congress.
"Sometimes we think these things are dead, and then someone slips something through at 5 p.m. on a Friday," says Kim Berry, president of the Programmers Guild, an American IT worker advocacy group that opposes raising the H-1B cap. "I'm worried they'll stick these provisions onto another bill without a hearing," he says.
Indeed, it's still possible that Congress will pass provisions as part of another bill or as separate legislation to raise the H-1B cap during a lame duck session before new members are sworn in next January, depending on the outcome of the elections, says Microsoft Director of Federal Government Affairs Jack Krumholtz.
"There's still a window of opportunity Congress will pass H-1B and green card reform post-election," says Krumholtz. Microsoft and other tech vendors will continue "to push for high-skill relief" by lobbying for increases in the annual cap of H-1B visas and green cards, which allow foreign workers to work permanently in the United States.
At Microsoft, "We have a couple thousand open technology positions that we're not able to fill," including development positions, says Krumholtz. "It's getting harder and harder to find people," he says. "There's increasing pressure to look for other avenues," including doing work outside the United States if talent can't be found here, he says.
And despite recent layoffs in the tech industry--including Intel's announcement this week that it's eliminating 10,500 jobs--the specific talent Microsoft is looking for is "apples and oranges" compared to jobs being shed, Krumholtz says. "The jobs we're looking to fill are not just IT engineers," although Microsoft might call them that or "developers" internally, he says. Microsoft is seeking "top computer scientists" with advanced degrees and the "latest training and skill sets," he says.
Each year, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services begin accepting petitions on April 1 for H-1B visas issued in the next fiscal year. For the last couple of years, the United States had received enough petitions for the annual allotment of 65,000 H-1B visas months before the new fiscal year began. For fiscal 2007 beginning Oct. 1, the United States hit its H-1B visa cap in late May 2006, about two months after the government began accepting requests for the petitions on April 1.
Open Government: A San Francisco Treat
San Francisco took Obama's pledge of open and transparent government seriously, and launched datasf.org -- its attempt to give the city's data back to its citizens. Developers and users have embraced it, and the city's mayor is already looking ahead....

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