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Maryland Tech Companies Tap Visa Program to Meet Workforce Needs, Despite Challenges

Tech industry advocates say those are no simple hires, requiring thousands of dollars in legal fees and at least six months of lead time, with no certain payoff as companies nationwide share 85,000 visas allotted in a lottery each April.

Merkle Inc. builds more than 1,000 complex computer models each year for marketing clients who want to know more about their customers' behaviors and preferences, and that requires skilled manpower the company's recruiters struggle to find.

The Columbia marketing company hires 300 people domestically each year for positions with titles such as business system analyst and solution architect, but to meet its demands, it also must look overseas to places like China. A "minimal" recruiting effort there produces thousands of qualified applicants that Jim Foley, Merkle's chief people officer, said are less plentiful in the United States.

Merkle is among dozens of companies and institutions in Maryland that rely on a controversial visa program to bring skilled workers to U.S. soil — others include Millennial Media, Ciena Corp., Micros Systems, Laureate Education and Sourcefire, according to government data. Maryland companies, universities and research institutions are sponsoring nearly 12,000 foreign workers through what is known as the H-1B visa program.

But tech industry advocates say those are no simple hires, requiring thousands of dollars in legal fees and at least six months of lead time, with no certain payoff as companies nationwide share 85,000 visas allotted in a lottery each April. They say reforms are needed to align the immigration system with an increasingly global labor market — reforms similar to those that freed academics from the visa cap, though not from a burdensome application process.

Still, critics argue the program undercuts U.S. wages and only helps to encourage companies to shift labor offshore.

"The whole thing is so unrealistic and does not comport with reality and the real practical world of technology, which is so volatile and moves at lightning fast speed," said Sheela Murthy, an immigration attorney and president of the Murthy Law Firm in Baltimore. "I think it comes from an inherent distrust that we couldn't possibly [lack Americans] to do those jobs."

The visas argument could be in the background of larger discussions about border security and how to handle a surge of immigrant children entering the country. President Barack Obama said last month he would pursue executive action on immigration reform.

According to data provided to The Baltimore Sun through a Freedom of Information Act request, slightly more than half of the visas went to Tata Consultancy Services, India's largest IT services company that has an office in Rockville. Tata officials did not respond to requests for an interview.

After that, the largest numbers went to educational and research institutions such as the University of Maryland and the National Institutes of Health.

The rest are divided among many well-known tech and corporate names across the region, mostly for work in systems analysis — half a dozen at city firms Millennial Media and Videology, about two dozen at Laureate and Micros, 40 at Merkle and 100 at TEKsystems, an IT staffing and services firm in Hanover.

None of those companies, besides Merkle, agreed to make officials available for interviews about the visa program.

But Merkle's Foley and others said the visas are vital for meeting workforce needs, and thus demand for products and services.

Systems analysts and other high-tech jobs require bachelor's or master's degrees. While efforts are continuing to boost college enrollment in science and technology fields, it can take workers years to gain the proper qualifications for some jobs.

On April 1 every year, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services offers up H-1B visas for positions to begin no earlier than the start of the federal fiscal year Oct. 1. Although it can be tricky for many companies to plan so specifically more than six months in advance, the demand is nonetheless crushing — the agency received 172,500 applications for the visa allotment this April 1, meaning slightly less than half of the applications were approved in a lottery to winnow the list.

"It was basically a coin flip this year," said Justin Storch, manager of agency liaison for the Council for Global Immigration, a Virginia-based advocate for employment-based immigration issues. "That causes a lot of problems as far as predictability within a work force."

There are plenty of hurdles before that point. Companies are required to advertise open positions to ensure they can't be filled by American citizens. And the government fees to file visa petitions can reach as much as $5,000 per visa, and that's not counting the $2,000 to $3,000 in legal fees for lawyers to prepare applications, Murthy said.

"It's an investment for sure," said Ann Nickels, a spokeswoman for MedStar Health, which is sponsoring nearly five dozen visa recipients, mostly physicians and surgeons. "It's a long-term proposition."

The process requires planning at least six months in advance, if not further, and any changing details — such as the worker's responsibility or exact work location — can restart the process. The visas last for three years and can be extended another three years.

"You don't undertake H-1B sponsorship lightly," said Amy Ramirez, director of international scholar and student services at the University of Maryland, Baltimore. "It's a time-consuming process."

Officials at both that university and the Johns Hopkins University have offices devoted to the intense application processes for H-1B visas as well as other types, such as the J-1, used for foreign workers in programs that promote cultural exchange. At Hopkins, 19 people work in a unit dedicated to immigration-related issues, with four of them dedicated to H-1B processing and another two to three spending some time on the visas, said Jennifer Kerilla, director of international services at Hopkins.

While higher education institutions, nonprofits and research institutions face the same red tape, a federal law passed in 2000 exempts them from the cap that sends tech companies into a rush each April. Academics said that has helped research pursuits prosper where they once were constrained, given that the communities for nuanced fields can be spread around the world.

"There are lots of people who come from outside the country who both can grow their careers and also contribute significantly to scientific innovation," said Dr. Antony Rosen, vice dean for research and a professor of medicine at Hopkins. "That's been a significant fuel of the United States' ability to do science."

Tech companies say that's an advantage they are missing. Merkle filed 17 petitions for H-1B visas in April, and 11 were approved in the lottery. The visa hurdles have pushed the company not just to recruit from overseas, but to open facilities in China. Foley said that is for the access to the labor force — not for cheaper labor, as many might think.

"For us, that visa cap is very, very frustrating. Our search and our selection process is really robust and time consuming; it involves a lot of people, and it's expensive flying candidates in," Foley said. "When any of those candidates who require an H-1B are not selected in that lottery, it's a huge loss for us."

But some question the use of the visas, suggesting they give companies access to less expensive labor and even offer an avenue to eventually moving the work overseas.

While federal law requires the Department of Labor to ensure H-1B visa recipients are paid the prevailing wage for a given position, companies can in many cases hire foreign workers for cheaper, said Norm Matloff, a professor of computer science at the University of California, Davis. That can happen if they hire a foreign worker with specialized skills but only have to pay them an average wage, or hiring younger foreign workers instead of older Americans who would command higher wages, he said.

Others, like Ron Hira, an associate professor of public policy at Rochester Institute of Technology public, say the visa program is used to shift labor offshore. Workers on H-1B visas can learn the ropes in the United States before returning to their home countries and working from there, he said in testimony to a U.S. Senate committee last year.

"The majority of the H-1B program is now being used to hire cheap indentured workers," he said. "The bulk of demand for H-1B visas is driven by the desire for lower cost workers, not by a race for specialized talent or a shortage of American talent."

Countering that notion, companies like Merkle say welcoming more high-tech foreign workers into the country would help the U.S. economy.

"What employers are trying to do is employ and retain in the country very talented people with skills that are in demand who earn formidable salaries and income and pay the associated taxes," Foley said. "I wonder why we make that difficult."

©2014 The Baltimore Sun