com_op_2000
DVC Member since '93; One Hour from WDW
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2010
- Messages
- 5,103
H1B visas are a big part of the bi-partisan immigration bill that passed the Senate and was blocked in the House. If immigration reform passes in the future you'll see a whole lot more H1B visas. Facebook is DYING for more foreign workers.
(I'm trying to find a way to word this so it won't violate the rules against discussing politics, so I think I just have to leave it as statements of fact with no editorializing)
This lawsuit has nothing to do with racism or party politics. Facebook may be dying for more foreign workers but Disney apparently wasn't. If the displaced workers' stories are accurate, this was a case of a large corporation conspiring with a labor contracting firm to submit fraudulent visa application forms to the US govt. That would be a very serious offense ... no matter what party you belong to ... if you tried that without having a ton of lawyers on staff and few congresspeople (of both parties) in your pocket ...
... if you tried that without having a ton of lawyers on staff and few congresspeople (of both parties) in your pocket ...
Given that they laid off american workers to do this I agree it was an awful thing to do... however at the same time I understand the need for H1B Visa's.
My one department, not my whole company, or even the entire location in my small city just my one department of systems engineers has 20 open positions right now. These range from first year engineers to 10+ years of experience jobs. The pay is really quite good, especially for the area we live in. The company as a whole is desperate for more people in other locations too as they are offering huge referral bonuses to employees to bring in qualified workers.
However we can't find qualified people either in the area or that are willing to move to this area (which is pretty rural and admittedly has quite a few downfalls, but isn't all bad). Now my company cannot take H1B Visas, the work requires US citizenship by law however I can see why other companies turn to that if they are having the same type of staffing issues that we are.
That may be true, but since we are a government contractor if they raise the salary too much to stop this location from having lower rates then most competitors the location will lose the work. So there is a balance to that. As I said the pay is actually really good especially for the area (I started just out of college making 62K and have gone up quite a bit in the 7 years I have been here).Your company has just not yet raised the salary enough to entice people to work there. There is a salary and benefit package that would fill these positions but the company has not yet offered it. Or maybe they just can't afford it. What area are you located? Don't need to know the exact town.
That may be true, but since we are a government contractor if they raise the salary too much to stop this location from having lower rates then most competitors the location will lose the work. So there is a balance to that. As I said the pay is actually really good especially for the area (I started just out of college making 62K and have gone up quite a bit in the 7 years I have been here).
Located in western Massachusetts. Two of the main issues with getting people in the area (as we have hired people who moved and then left in less then a year because they hated the area, some without even having other jobs) are
1) that there is no night life to speak of and not much to do in the area that isn't involving the arts, which many engineers aren't as interested in
2) we are really the only engineering company in the area (there are some in Connecticut and Albany but both are a long commute). Well technically there is one other but it is moving in a few months. I can understand the concern with this one, if the area wasn't where I grew up I may not have wanted to move here since I know that if something happens to this company I am going to be forced to move.
To give you the idea of the cost of living compared to a city, my 3 bed, 1.5 bath house with a nice back yard in a very safe area cost 120K.
Your company has just not yet raised the salary enough to entice people to work there. There is a salary and benefit package that would fill these positions but the company has not yet offered it. Or maybe they just can't afford it. What area are you located? Don't need to know the exact town.
100% agreement. The company has also probably not put a priority on recruiting and advertising to fill the positions (efforts which need to be made on top of just offering salary and benefits). And your company also has the option to bring in slightly unqualified folks who are really bright but maybe not perfectly skilled-up yet for the work and train them, as companies have done forever, either by paying for degrees they need, apprenticing them to the skilled workers, or offering internal training or a combo of all 3.
100% agreement. The company has also probably not put a priority on recruiting and advertising to fill the positions (efforts which need to be made on top of just offering salary and benefits). And your company also has the option to bring in slightly unqualified folks who are really bright but maybe not perfectly skilled-up yet for the work and train them, as companies have done forever, either by paying for degrees they need, apprenticing them to the skilled workers, or offering internal training or a combo of all 3.
If they are a government contractor then those aren't actually very good options.
- The people you bid have to meet the skills qualifications in the RFP
- Offering more money makes you uncompetitive because in the current contracting environment price trumps everything. Even then bids that aren't LPTA (Lowest Priced Technically Acceptable) officially, sort of are anyway.
- If you already have the award you have to perform in accordance with the contract. So if it's FFP then you've got a lump sum to work with, CPIF and your fee goes down if you exceed target costs, even CPFF these days usualy has a level of effort clause attached to it.