DW Gibson, Tribune News Service
There is an irony about our southern border. It’s a flashpoint for the country right now — strung with razor wire, overwhelmed by migrants, feeding feverish emotion — and better border management is urgently needed. But while the border is where immigration challenges confront us, it is not the place where solutions will be found.
If we want to reduce the stress on the border and bring down our shared political temperature, we need to take a more expansive look at our immigration policies. Building more worker visa programmes is a good place to start. It’s no secret that our country’s gobsmacking backlog of more than 2 million asylum cases is driven, in large part, by migrants fleeing poverty. Yes, some are fleeing poverty and violence, but many are directly fleeing poverty. Their asylum applications, by and large, will be denied because economic desperation, no matter how severe, is not one of the few legally recognised criteria for asylum. Still, these migrants enter the years-long adjudication process because there are no other options for them.
Many Americans think “economic” migrants should “get in line and wait their turn,” but this admonition fails to recognise that, other than the asylum morass, there is generally no line for those fleeing poverty to wait in. The US offers approximately 140,000 employment-based visas each year, in a labour market that is short somewhere around 3 million workers — and many of the workers are needed for types of labour that have few or no visas available. By creating more guest worker programmes we would not only thin the crowds at the border, but also help the country meet some glaring economic needs. There are already bipartisan road maps for such programmes.
Take, for instance, the proposed Border Security, Economic Opportunity, and Immigration Modernization Act of 2013, which included the creation of a W visa to allow entry for low-skilled temporary workers seeking jobs that do not require a college degree. This would have met so many of our country’s needs when it comes to critical industries like construction, landscaping and food services — pieces of the economy for which we already rely so heavily on unauthorised workers, as much as we hate to admit it.
The 2013 legislation did not become law — despite support from 68 senators — but there are similar bipartisan proposals on the table now, even in our explosive political environment. Rep. Lloyd Smucker, R-Pa., and Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, introduced a bill called the Essential Workers for Economic Advancement Act last spring, which would establish a new visa category, H-2V, for filling jobs that have remained open for a required amount of time and are located in regions where the unemployment rate is below 8%.
The “essential worker” approach would work to the benefit of migrants and a range of American industries, as laid out in “Immigration Reform: A Path Forward,” a recent white paper from Cornell Law School’s Immigration Law and Policy Program. One of several suggestions made there is to start with health care.
The government already allows some non-US resident health care professionals who have been trained in the US to stay in the country to work, if there is a facility seeking to hire them. The Conrad-30 Waiver Programme — “30” refers to a cap for each state on how many individuals can receive the waiver each year — used to be called the Conrad-20 programme, but demand required a jump to 30, and still it’s not providing enough health care workers in states such as North Dakota, the home of former Republican Sen. Kent Conrad, who originally proposed the programme. Our need for more health care professionals — particularly in rural, Republican-leaning regions — is so vast that it becomes difficult to understand why we insist that foreign health care professionals who are trained in the US leave the country after graduation. The Conrad-30 success surely points the way forward. Why not let states decide how many foreign workers they need and give each participating state an allocation of work visas or waivers to issue in industries with labor shortages?
In 2019, Utah Republican Rep. John Curtis introduced a bill that would create a pilot programme for states to customise their worker visa allocations based on local economic needs. States that choose to participate could determine, within limits, the duration of the visas and the skill sets of the recipients. Visa holders would be required to apply regularly for renewal.
Such a state-based visa programme would be an opportunity for the “laboratories of democracy” to flex their muscles, address specific labour shortages and reduce stress on the nation’s southern border. As Curtis said in one interview, a state-tailored programme is smart small government. “It’s a million times easier to hold the governor accountable than your Congressman, right?,” he said. “It gives people on the ground more control over their destiny.”
Perhaps most importantly, implementation of these and other viable visa proposals do not require any legislative confrontation with the question of permanent residency. They put forward temporary visas only, and each programme comes with caps on how many visas can be administered and requirements for regular renewal. Permanent residency, if pursued by anyone holding such a visa, would have to be gained through other immigration channels.
Of course, strict oversight would be necessary to ensure employers carry out the due diligence required by any of these programmes, first offering available positions to American workers and being held accountable for any exploitation of foreign workers. When we build dynamic worker visa programmes, a swathe of individuals who would otherwise show up at our southern border asking for asylum are instead welcomed into a state or industry that needs and wants them. Migrants get the opportunity they sought, our country makes progress on labour shortages, the southern border gets much needed relief, and our fractious immigration debate has a chance to cool a bit.