Lets see if anyone salutes.
1) Remove the numbers on H1-B visas. All acceptable applications are approved.
2) Remove the rules on hunting for an American first.
3) The replacement rules:
A) All H1-B visa applications go on a government server for a minimum of 3 months before a visa is granted. The listing includes the desired skills, the pay rate and the anonymized resume of the prospective applicant. The listing must include where the prospective hire will actually be working, reasonable detail is required (say, the project they will be working on), simply a big company name is not enough.
B) Anyone with permission to work may apply for the job from that website. No black holes, the company is required to reply to all applications and that reply must include a reason to reject the application. (They can still use resume-reading software or the like but it must indicate the reason for rejection, no generic answers allowed. If the rejection is automated they are allowed to revise their application if they believe the automated system made a mistake.) After the 3 month clock is up the company must still deal with any pending applications before the visa is granted. An automated system that would reject the resume of the prospective hire is automatically deemed to be unfair.
C) If the H1-B is hired anyone unfairly rejected may bring suit, such a rejection carries statutory damages of 1 year's wages + costs.
D) If you find and apply for your own job on the system and a H1-B is hired you get a rebuttable presumption that the rejection was unfair and 10 years wages rather than 1.
E) No employment contract or severance offer can deprive you of your rights in this.
F) The nation should operate on one-party recording laws. You're free to record an interview without the interviewer knowing. (Useful for exposing the bogus interviews that are common.)
This makes a much simpler application process for companies that legitimately can't find Americans but makes it exceedingly dangerous for those who deliberately pass them over.
1) Remove the numbers on H1-B visas. All acceptable applications are approved.
2) Remove the rules on hunting for an American first.
3) The replacement rules:
A) All H1-B visa applications go on a government server for a minimum of 3 months before a visa is granted. The listing includes the desired skills, the pay rate and the anonymized resume of the prospective applicant. The listing must include where the prospective hire will actually be working, reasonable detail is required (say, the project they will be working on), simply a big company name is not enough.
B) Anyone with permission to work may apply for the job from that website. No black holes, the company is required to reply to all applications and that reply must include a reason to reject the application. (They can still use resume-reading software or the like but it must indicate the reason for rejection, no generic answers allowed. If the rejection is automated they are allowed to revise their application if they believe the automated system made a mistake.) After the 3 month clock is up the company must still deal with any pending applications before the visa is granted. An automated system that would reject the resume of the prospective hire is automatically deemed to be unfair.
C) If the H1-B is hired anyone unfairly rejected may bring suit, such a rejection carries statutory damages of 1 year's wages + costs.
D) If you find and apply for your own job on the system and a H1-B is hired you get a rebuttable presumption that the rejection was unfair and 10 years wages rather than 1.
E) No employment contract or severance offer can deprive you of your rights in this.
F) The nation should operate on one-party recording laws. You're free to record an interview without the interviewer knowing. (Useful for exposing the bogus interviews that are common.)
This makes a much simpler application process for companies that legitimately can't find Americans but makes it exceedingly dangerous for those who deliberately pass them over.