Filed at 5:34 p.m. ET
WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Clinton predicted Saturday that
Congress will increase the number of visas for foreign high-tech
workers before the end of the current session and indicated he would
sign the legislation.
Speaking to reporters from India, origin of many of the so-called
H1B visitors, Clinton said a major question remaining is how many more
than the current 115,000 a year will be allowed in.
H1B visas allow skilled workers to enter the United States for
specified periods to do specific jobs for which employers say American
workers are unavailable. The technology industry says the need is as
high as 300,000 a year. Labor unions object to the concept, contending
that the high-tech industry recruits overseas mainly to hire a less
expensive work force than Americans.
``The number of H1B visas will be increased in this Congress, I
believe. I'll be quite surprised if it isn't,'' Clinton said.
``There's no question that we're going to increase the visas.''
The next Congress begins in January.
A long-pending Senate bill would increase the number of visas for
each of the next three years to 200,000 a year. Otherwise, the 115,000
falls to 107,500 in the fiscal year starting Oct. 1 and 65,000 a year
after that.
The bill ran into problems this year when Clinton said in May that
any visa increase had to be linked to changes in immigration policies
mainly involving Hispanics. Republican leaders insist the two
questions have nothing to do with each other and should be considered
separately.
Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss., the Senate Majority leader, acted Friday
to bring a long-pending visa bill to a vote as early as Tuesday.
In his comments Saturday, Clinton did not mention the Hispanic
question or any other links.
``The issue is how much will it be increased by and can we use the
occasion of increasing the quotas to get some more funds from the
companies that are hiring people for the training of our own people,''
the president said. He said they ``could also do these jobs -- the
people who are already here -- if they had training.''
Lott's spokesman, John Czwartacki, welcomed the president's
comments, although he said a lot of time has been wasted on the
bill.
``We've been trying to take it out for months now, but the
Democrats in Congress have been inventing all kinds of reasons why it
couldn't come out. The real reason was their labor friends didn't like
it,'' Czwartacki said.
``If the president is signaling his support for us, we welcome that
and view that as a positive development, albeit at the 11th
hour.''
The bill is S. 2045.
On the Net: Legislation available: http://thomas.loc.gov
National Association of Manufacturers:
http://www.nam.org