High-Tech
Immigrants: Foreign graduate students at U.C. Berkeley reflect on how
immigration reform could make it easier for highly skilled workers like them to
stay in the U.S.
SAN FRANCISCO — Sanket Sant, a citizen of India, came to the
United States at age 21, earning a master’s degree in engineering, followed by
a doctorate and then landing a well-paying job at a company making
semiconductor equipment.
“I know this country better than my own country, and I still
feel like an outsider,” said Mr. Sant, 35, who received his Ph.D. from the
University of Texas in 2006, and has been waiting for federal officials to
approve his green card application for six years. “That’s the thing that
bothers me.”
That is also the predicament of tens of thousands of workers
here in the heart of the tech industry who were born overseas and educated in
the United States. Though not living in poverty or in the shadows, as are
migrant workers who are here illegally, they are nevertheless in a bureaucratic
limbo while they wait in a long line for a green card.
Now, though, Congress is poised to end their uncertainty.
The Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday approved a broad
overhaul of the nation’s immigration laws on a bipartisan vote, and sent the
measure to the full Senate. The bill would make it much easier for science,
math and engineering graduates of American universities to become permanent
residents.
Crucially, it would also lift the limits on how many
immigrants are allowed in from each country, which has meant that citizens of
populous countries like India end up waiting far longer than others.
The provisions to ease the green card process enjoy
bipartisan support, reflecting a stark reality: Nearly half of all engineering
graduate students at American universities are from abroad.
Technology companies, like Facebook and Microsoft, want to
hire many more of them, which is why they have lobbied to make it quicker for
them to get permanent residency. So has the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers, a group that campaigns for American workers.
Still, not everyone is a fan. Mark Krikorian, executive
director of the Center for Immigration Studies, a Washington-based research and
advocacy group, who has testified against the legislation, said easy, unlimited
access to green cards for math and science graduates could encourage the
emergence of “visa mills,” or schools established just to sell access to the
United States. Also, he said: “American young people with bachelor’s degrees
see these occupations distorted by large-scale admissions of foreign workers.
That then changes their own decision making about what to do in the future.”
The green card provisions have been obscured by the louder,
more polarizing fight between industry and labor over foreign guest worker
visas, known as H-1Bs. But they stand to have a far greater impact on the men
and women who drive this industry.
Mr. Sant, like many of his friends, was drawn to the United
States for higher education. In 2010, the most recent year for which data is
available from the National Science Foundation, a government agency, 45 percent
of master’s and doctoral students in engineering were from abroad, up from 35
percent in 1990 and 24 percent in 1980, according to the agency.
At some universities, the share of foreign students is even
higher. At Carnegie Mellon University, which has one of the most prestigious
engineering schools in the world, 62 percent of engineering graduate students
came from abroad, and at the Rochester Institute of Technology, 56 percent.
This year, at the University of Southern California, the
figure is 68 percent, according to university officials.
Among those who come to study in this country, about one in
three end up staying on temporary work visas, mainly through the H-1B program.
An analysis by the Brookings Institution concluded that in 2010, 30 percent of
those who were working on H-1B visas were former students at American
universities. Their wait for permanent residency can be frustratingly long,
depending on their homeland.
According to data from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services, more than 150,000 of them have filed for green cards since 2010;
nearly a third of them are from India, the largest single block.
Kartik Shah, 29, was among them. A native of Mumbai, he went
to the University of Southern California, in Los Angeles, for a master’s degree
in electrical engineering. He graduated in 2007 and swiftly landed a job as a
software engineer at Cisco’s headquarters in San Jose, just south of here.
The company
soon filed a green card application on his behalf, which it says it does for
the vast majority of its H-1B workers. The government cleared his application,
essentially ruling that his skills were needed. Then, it told him to
wait.
By SOMINI SENGUPTA
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