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J- D. HAYWORTH


October 19,1998
Dear (to engineer that wrote
letter):
Thank you for contacting me to
express your opposition to H.R. 3736, the Workforce Improvement
and Protection Act of 1998. 1 supported H.R. 3736 when it passed
the House of Representatives on September 24, 1998 by a vote of
288 to 133, and I would like to explain why.
As
you may know, HR- 3736 would amend the Immigration and Nationality
Act by increasing the access of U.S. firms
and institutions of higher education to skilled personnel and
by expanding educational and training opportunities for American
students and workers. Current
law allows 65,000 highly skilled workers into the U.S. each year
to work in the ever-expanding information technology industry.
This industry, which started with a handful of companies a few
decades ago, now employs more than four million people. The
hardware and software industries account for one-third of our real
economic growth. This exponential growth means that there is a
high skilled labor shortage that threatens the competitiveness of
American companies in this new Information Age economy. That is why
a coalition of America's leading businesses strongly supports
increasing the amount of highly skilled workers allowed in our
country to work each year.
Some
may question the need to allow foreigners into our country to
work, but these individuals contribute to the economy and pay
taxes to the federal government. Furthermore, if American
companies cannot find home-grown talent, and if they cannot bring
workers to this country, a large number are likely to move key
operations overseas, sending those and related jobs currently held
by Americans with them. While companies may need to have some
operations abroad, we should not keep in place unnecessary
restrictions that artificially drive employees to send more
operations out of the country.
H.R.
3736 would amend current law to increase the number of highly
skilled workers admitted into the U.S. through 2002. Over the next
five years, the total rises from 65,000 to 95,000 in 1999, 105,000
in 2000, and 115,000 in 2001 and 2002. In 2003 the amount of
highly skilled workers admitted would drop back to the current law
level of 65,000. This legislation was included in the Omnibus
Appropriations bill that Congress passed and the President signed
into law.
In
another letter, you expressed your support for reducing legal
immigration. There are several proposals
that would reduce legal immigration, but Congress did not consider
them before the amendment. If I should have the opportunity to
vote on reducing legal immigration in the future, I will certainly
keep your support in mind. Thanks again for contacting me with
your concerns. I hope to hear from you soon.
JD
Hayworth

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