Why are we bring workers in under guest worker H1B visa when unemployment is so high?
http://www.zazona.com/
This also kind makes you wonder...................
Sun Microsystems' LCAs
Guy Santiglia was laid off from Sun Microsystems along with aproximately 4000 other Sun employees in November of 2001. He knew that Sun employed a large number of H-1B visa holders at that time and he thought that H-1B visas were issued to fill a shortage of qualified American workers. Therefore, he thought that the H-1B visa holders at Sun would have been hit hard by the lay offs because H-1B visas were supposedly issued only to fill a temporary shortage of workers which no longer existed in 2001.
Guy noticed that many H-1B employees retained their jobs while American citizens got laid off instead. He began to ask other former Sun employees if there was any pattern of retaining H-1B visa holders over American Citizens at Sun. Sun employees from around the country noticed that very few or none of the H-1B workers were laid off in their particular work groups. Guy began to wonder if it was possible that Sun discriminated against American workers in their employment practices.
Guy decided to notify the United States Department of Justice, to see if they thought any laws were violated by Sun. Since then the Department of Justice has received feedback from other former Sun employees who are also wondering why so few of the H-1B visa holders got laid off while so many American Citizens lost their jobs. The Department of Justice is currently investigating this matter.
Guy used a little known provision in the law called the Public Access, Retention of Records that allows any citizen to view the LCAs that companies are required to keep on file whenever they hire H-1Bs.
Guy requested that these records be posted at this site to take some load off his web server. Feel free to visit his Sunclassaction site to find out more about what he is doing. "Layoffs at Sun prompt inquiry over work visas" is a more detailed story about how this data is being used as evidence.
Report discrimination against American workers to the Office of Special Counsel at the Deptartment of Justice.
This data below is from the United States Department of Labor and formatted here to show only data gathered from Sun Microsystems' applications for visas for foreign workers. These numbers may not represent the actual number of foreign workers that Sun hired in these years. The real number could be higher or lower. Perhaps only Sun and the INS know the actual numbers of foreign workers that were hired. Click on the links to see more detailed data about those Labor Condition Applications.
The job titles that you will see in the tables below are often generic titles (Member of Technical Staff) which may not represent the exact Job title of the positions to be filled.
May 15, 1998 - Aug 6, 2001 Permanent resident applications: 437 Permanent Visas
1999 H-1B visa Labor Condition Applications: 751 H-1B visas
2000 H-1B visa Labor Condition Applications: 1870 H-1B visas
2001 H-1B visa Labor Condition Applications: 5179 H-1B visas
06/28/2002http://www.zazona.com/LCA-Data/SunLCA.html