The Anatomy of Public Corruption

Showing posts with label nomoreh1b. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nomoreh1b. Show all posts

Obit:The First Dead Banker just after 9/11

The First Dead Banker? 


jumbo text

OVERSEAS JOB-SHIFTS COULD HIT BAY AREA - BERKELEY ECONOMISTS SAY REGION AT RISK AS FIRM'S TURN TO OUTSOURCING ABROAD

October 30, 2003 | Contra Costa Times (Walnut Creek, CA)
Author: ELLEN LEE, TIMES STAFF WRITER | Page: c01 | Section: Business
610 Words | Readability: Lexile: 1480, grade level(s): >12


They range from computer programmers to clerks who input data, from medical transcriptionists to paralegals, and are not concentrated solely in the high-tech market, said Ashok Deo Bardhan and Cynthia Kroll, economists at UC Berkeley's Fisher Center for Real Estate and Urban Economics.

"The bottom line is, if there is a job that can be done equally well, equally efficiently, at a much lower cost in a different part of the world, then that job is at risk in today's globalizing world," Bardhan said.

The report also said that many of the jobs that were lost during the downturn will not return.

During the dot-com frenzy, businesses that had difficulty finding high-tech savvy workers turned to outsourcing, or contracting jobs to workers outside of the company. Many of the contracted workers were based outside the United States, in places such as Canada, Ireland, Russia, China and India, where the wages of educated workers are fractions of those of their U.S. counterparts.

When the economy went south, businesses continued to outsource, and more and more joined their ranks, saying that it allows them to cut costs and offer cheaper and better services to consumers.

That hasn't been good news for U.S. employees in telecommunications, accounting, telephone call centers, data processing and other sectors that are more easily outsourced than others. In the past two years, employment in those sectors fell 15.5 percent in the United States and 21 percent in California, totaling more than 1 million lost jobs in the United States and 200,000 in California, according to the report.

"About every day I get an e-mail from someone who expects to have their jobs outsourced," said Pete Bennett, a Danville resident and activist against overseas outsourcing.

Certainly not all the lost jobs were moved overseas. Some were simply lost to the distressed economy, Bardhan said. But if the trend continues _ with other countries churning out more and more low-wage, highly-educated workers, with the costs of setting up operations outside the United States staying low, with the costs of doing business in the United States staying high, especially in California _ more than 14 million jobs at an average annual salary of $39,600 could potentially be sent overseas, the report said.

This would especially hurt the San Francisco Bay Area because not only are many of the high-tech companies themselves based here, but also the technology-related positions in other industries such as retail and finance. It could also affect jobs in the suburbs, such as the East Bay, because many businesses have been housing back office and support services in places where commercial real estate is cheaper.

"San Francisco and San Jose are pretty clearly vulnerable," Bardhan said. "The wages are higher here. The proportion of those occupations (well-paid computer and math jobs such as programming) are higher than the national average."

Bardhan said that not all 14 million jobs will eventually be sent away and that the figure represents the maximum number of jobs impacted. Laid-off workers, including here in the East Bay, have been aggressively lobbying businesses and legislators to put a cap on overseas outsourcing. But some workers will ultimately have to settle for lower-paying positions. The Bay Area could also create a new set of jobs, keeping the "cream" of the new development here, the report suggested.

"Silicon Valley could continue being Silicon Valley, with more innovations and new technologies, with new firms and jobs," Barhan said. "That is the optimistic scenario."

Ellen Lee covers technology and telecommunications. She can be reached at 925-952-2614 or elee@cctimes.com.
Share:

Grounds for Revocation of Naturalization

Grounds for Revocation of Naturalization

The Dubious Phone Call and Time Wasting Project
Pete Bennett founder of nomoreh1b.com was once an active grass roots activist took on the Silicon Valley Visa Machine and lost, his family murdered in 2014, his truck exploded in 2004, he suffered kidney failure during a grueling 18 hour hospitalization. 

Some of his greatest set of adversaries was Sun Microsystem, Microsoft, CISCO, HP, Apple Computer, Oracle, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America. 

In 2003 Bank of America Programmer Kevin Flanagan committed suicide on the last day of his employment.  No one knows for sure as he found alone in Concord Campus Garage. 

Bennett by then was appearing on CNN, ABC and other media discussing jobs, H-1b and once held a protest on the Sun Mircrosystems campus.  It was there with a host of protestors covering the event came together.   

I am positive that Vinod Khosla, Larry Ellison, and the CEO of many companies were copiously although they say our hearts go out for Mr. Flanagan's family. 


Just in case you're not familiar with them we've posted or plastered their faces so when you see them on the Golf Course or Flying in their private jets you can understand how truly caring they are.  

The silent murder investigation, the witness murder in the matter of Bennett v. Southern Pacific plus the suicide of the Concord City Attorney Mark Coon have raised many questions.  
The Tragedies 
col-9

Chapter 2 - Grounds for Revocation of Naturalization



In general, a person is subject to revocation of naturalization on the following grounds:

A. Person Procures Naturalization Illegally

A person is subject to revocation of naturalization if he or she procured naturalization illegally. Procuring naturalization illegally simply means that the person was not eligible for naturalization in the first place. Accordingly, any eligibility requirement for naturalization that was not met can form the basis for an action to revoke the naturalization of a person. This includes the requirements of residence, physical presence, lawful admission for permanent residence, good moral character, and attachment to the U.S. Constitution. [1] 
Discovery that a person failed to comply with any of the requirements for naturalization at the time the person became a U.S. citizen renders his or her naturalization illegally procured. This applies even if the person is innocent of any willful deception or misrepresentation. [2] 

B. Concealment of Material Fact or Willful Misrepresentation [3]

1. Concealment of Material Fact or Willful Misrepresentation

A person is subject to revocation of naturalization if there is deliberate deceit on the part of the person in misrepresenting or failing to disclose a material fact or facts on his or her naturalization application and subsequent examination.
In general, a person is subject to revocation of naturalization on this basis if:
  • The naturalized U.S. citizen misrepresented or concealed some fact;
  • The misrepresentation or concealment was willful;
  • The misrepresented or concealed fact or facts were material; and
  • The naturalized U.S. citizen procured citizenship as a result of the misrepresentation or concealment. [4] 
This ground of revocation includes omissions as well as affirmative misrepresentations. The misrepresentations can be oral testimony provided during the naturalization interview or can include information contained on the application submitted by the applicant. The courts determine whether the misrepresented or concealed fact or facts were material. The test for materiality is whether the misrepresentations or concealment had a tendency to affect the decision. It is not necessary that the information, if disclosed, would have precluded naturalization. [5] 

2. Membership or Affiliation with Certain Organizations

A person is subject to revocation of naturalization if the person becomes a member of, or affiliated with, the Communist party, other totalitarian party, or terrorist organization within five years of his or her naturalization. [6] In general, a person who is involved with such organizations cannot establish the naturalization requirements of having an attachment to the Constitution and of being well-disposed to the good order and happiness of the United States. [7] 
The fact that a person becomes involved with such an organization within five years after the date of naturalization is prima facie evidence that he or she concealed or willfully misrepresented material evidence that would have prevented the person’s naturalization.

C. Other than Honorable Discharge before Five Years of Honorable Service after Naturalization

A person is subject to revocation of naturalization if:
  • The person became a U.S. citizen through naturalization on the basis of honorable service in the U.S. armed forces; [8] 
  • The person subsequently separates from the U.S. armed forces under other than honorable conditions; and
  • The other than honorable discharge occurs before the person has served honorably for a period or periods aggregating at least five years. [9] 

Footnotes

Share:

Visa's use provokes opposition by techies / L-1 regarded as threat to workers

Pete Bennett - founder of Nomoreh1b appeared on TV and Media with Mike Emmons.  By 2010 his son was dead, by witnesses in Bennett's long battle with police were dead but then they killed his nephews.



Bennett dealing with potential fracture vertebra 

James Powell former Longs Drugs POS System Manager 


Son of Pete Bennett after Bennett appeared on TV, Radio and Print.  
His father went up against Siemens on Lou Dobbs Outsourcing America.
The Family of Pete Bennett and his relatives relentlessly attacked, murdered and destroyed. 





Roommate of Bennett - father involved in Target POS Rollouts at NCR 


Jared and Heidi Tucker
The American Killed in Barcelona 



Brandon Marshall

One of Five Class Action Litigants
Apple, Oracle, Google
Shot Dead in Santa Clara


Rylan Fuchs 

Grade School Friend of sons of Pete Bennett 


Harve and Kieko Ringheim
Customers of Mainframe Designs Cabinets and Fixture
Brutally Murdered in their Dublin CA home
1986


Pittsburg Police Department
Officer Ray Giacomelli
Fatal Police Shooting of Bernard Bynum
employed at Mainframe Designs Cabinets and Fixtures 

Susan Kennedy, brutally murdered in Concord CA, long time friends of 
Frank and Fredrick Howard 



This is a family member related to my brother, his wife and but also many from Mountain Lakes NJ as basically we're all from New Jersey.

The unknown connection to Pete Bennett former resident of Danville and Alex Bennett (brother) is the stolen trust investigation where Contra Costa District Attorney Mark Peterson, his underlings and the Walnut Creek Police Department repeated actions of blocking police reports lead to the deaths of Bennett once removed relatives.

The other connection is going to upset several former 49ers located in the Bay Area. There is a straight path to Mormons from Alamo 1st leading to stolen legal papers that occurred during December 2004.

Published 4:00 am, Sunday, May 25, 2003


An obscure work visa known as the L-1 has become the center of a bitter controversy in the technology industry.

Much like the H-1B before it -- an equally obscure visa that rose to prominence when American workers complained they were being displaced by its recipients -- the L-1 is catching the ire of tech workers and the eye of government regulators who disagree on whether the visa is being used legally.

In the middle of the spat are Indian firms that undertake tech projects for U.S. companies, including many in the Bay Area, on a contract basis.

The L-1 visa was originally intended for multinational companies that need to transfer key employees to U.S. divisions. But in recent years, outsourcing firms such as Wipro Technologies, Infosys Technologies and Tata Consultancy Services have stepped up their use of the L-1 visa to bring programmers and other professionals from India to work at the offices of U.S. clients.

In the Bay Area, the firms' clients include Hewlett-Packard, Cisco Systems, Visa International, ChevronTexaco and Sun Microsystems.

Some U.S. tech workers, frustrated by growing unemployment, say the L-1, like the H-1B before it, creates unfair competition and eliminates jobs of American workers. In fact, the workers like the L-1 even less than the H-1B because L-1 lacks the abuse-prevention clauses and annual limit that H-1B has.

A bill introduced by a Florida congressman last week seeks to ban the visa's use in outsourcing.
But the outsourcing companies, multimillion-dollar concerns with thousands of employees in the United States and abroad, say their use of the visa is legal and appropriate.

The companies make no secret of their visa use. Wipro and Infosys, both listed on U.S. stock exchanges, disclose the number of L-1 and H-1B visas they get in financial filings.

U.S. worker groups, including the AFL-CIO's Department for Professional Employees and the Seattle technology union WashTech, say outsourcers are using L-1 to get around what they call the minimal worker protections attached to H- 1B visas.

"We think it's the secret stealth visa," said Marcus Courtney, president of WashTech.
L-1s "seem to be sprouting up all over the Bay Area, and they're totally off the radar screen," said Peter Bennett, a former computer programmer who works as a mortgage broker in Danville. Because he runs a Web site protesting the H-1B visa program (www.nomoreh1b.com), Bennett gets 50 to 500 e-mails a day from tech professionals who are out of work or fear losing their jobs. An increasing number of them complain that L-1 workers have shown up in their offices.

Restrictions that apply to H-1B, but not L-1, include an annual limit on the number of visas issued and a requirement that the visa applicant have a bachelor's degree or higher. H-1B visa applicants have to pay a $1,000 fee toward training American workers; L-1 applicants don't.

Visa law also requires workers with H-1Bs to be paid the prevailing wage in the region where they work, although the Department of Labor does not routinely check up on this.

The L-1 visa carries no salary requirements, theoretically allowing a foreign worker to continue drawing the salary he was paid at home while working side-by-side with or replacing Americans earning two or three times as much.

PROGRAMMERS EARN LESS

Outsourcing firms say they pay their L-1 workers wages comparable to what American workers earn. But Tata acknowledges that when it took over a project at Siemens Information and Communication Networks in Lake Mary, Fla., it paid some programmers only $36,000 a year -- below the average local range of $37, 794 to $69,638 for a basic programmer (determined by Department of Labor surveys) and far below the $98,000 that one U.S. programmer there said she was paid.

Tata spokesman Tom Conway said taxes, Social Security and other withholding bring the salaries up to the average range.

After Tata took over the project, Siemens let a dozen employees go, said spokeswoman Paula Davis.
Some of those employees were outraged that they could be replaced by foreigners. It especially stung that they were asked to train Tata's workers before they left, a procedure that Tata calls knowledge transfer.

"This is what they call outsourcing. I call it insourcing. Import foreign workers, mandate your American workers to train them, then lay off your Americans," said Michael Emmons, who left Siemens last fall just before his job there was to end. Emmons had worked as a contract computer programmer for the company for six years, first in San Jose, then in Florida.

Davis said Emmons and other workers were not directly replaced by foreign workers. "We actually outsourced a function. It wasn't replacing this employee with that employee," she said.

What happened in Florida follows the general pattern of how Indian outsourcing firms use L-1 visas: The Indian firms take over a project, such as software maintenance, at low rates for an American client and send in a team of visa holders to learn the company's procedures. As much of the work as possible is then transferred to the company's headquarters in India, where wages are much lower. But some visa holders continue working at the client's office.

INTERPRETATIONS VARY

Whether this is a legal use of the L-1 visa is a matter of interpretation. An official at the Department of Homeland Security, now responsible for immigration, said this kind of use is fraudulent because the L-1 is designated to let workers move from one office to another within a company -- not from a company to a client.

"If an L-1 comes into the United States to work, they're coming to work for their specific company that petitioned for them, not for another company that they're being contracted out to. That would be a fraudulent use of an L-1 visa, " said Christopher Bentley, spokesman for the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services, a division of the Department of Homeland Security that replaced Immigration and Naturalization Services. The bureau is assessing the L-1 and other visa programs for fraud, he said.

The companies say they would never risk using the visas if officials had not assured them it is legal. Wipro immigration attorney Terry Helbush said she is puzzled by Homeland Security's statement. "The L-1 visas are all approved by the consulate or by the INS. In our submissions, we're very clear that . . . some of the employees are on site at the client."

Tata also said it complies with visa law. Infosys declined to comment because it is in a quiet period before a financial transaction.

The way the outsourcers see it, they are complying with the law because their employees are ultimately working for them, whether sitting in a cubicle in Silicon Valley or sitting in one in Bangalore.
Tata and Wipro both strive to differentiate themselves from what they call body shoppers, firms that provide nothing more than inexpensive workers for clients.

Wipro Chief Operating Officer Lakshman Badiga said it is precisely because the company has moved from just bringing in workers to running complex global projects that it has increased its use of L-1 visas.
The State Department says the outsourcers are within the law.

"The fact that someone is on the site of (a client) does not make them ineligible for an L-1 as long as . . . the company they actually work for is truly functioning as their employer in terms of how they're paid and who has the right to fire them," said Stuart Patt, spokesman for the State Department's Consular Affairs Bureau.

ATTORNEYS CAN'T AGREE

Not even immigration attorneys who specialize in procuring work visas can agree.
Memphis immigration lawyer Gregory Siskind said, "It's largely inappropriate for companies to be using the L-1 to bring in workers that are being contracted out to other companies. I would be very surprised if it continues for very much longer without a crackdown."

If using L-1s for outsourcing is legal now, it won't be under legislation introduced last week by Rep. John Mica, R-Fla. Calling L-1 "a back door to cheap labor," Mica said his bill would ban L-1 visa holders from being transferred to client companies.

It's not clear whether the legislation would actually ban Wipro, Tata and others from using the visas just as they have been because the companies say the workers are their employees even when they are doing work for clients.

L-1 visas have been used in relative obscurity since 1970. But during the past two years, an increasing number of the visas are going to workers from a single country: India. Thirty-three percent of the 32,416 L-1 visas issued so far in 2003 went to Indians, up from 20 percent in 2001.

At Wipro and Infosys, L-1 visa use rose considerably during the same time. Wipro, for example, had 624 H-1B employees in 2000 but only 289 L-1 workers. Since then, its L-1 count has soared to 1,157, while the number of H-1B employees has increased to 705.

The limit on that other contentious tech visa, the H-1B, is scheduled to go from 195,000 to 65,000 in the fall unless Congress intervenes. Worker groups are gearing up to fight industry lobbyists to make sure the limit is lowered.

Some say the L-1 visa could make the H-1B limit irrelevant.

"If the H-1B becomes more difficult to get, (companies) will just adapt and go to L-1s," said Ron Hira, a volunteer on workforce policy issues at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers-USA. Hira is also a Columbia University researcher on science and technology policy.
Share:

Pete Bennett speaks on PBS

PBS NEWS HOUR

The Battle for Jobs, Data, Information and Jobs

Pete Bennett with Oracle Spokesman Robert Hoffman

Pete Bennett

Card image

Pete Bennett - software engineer was sued by an outsourcing firm in 2000 over via a dispute with an outsourcing firm that provided a Russian/Ukrainian H-1b Programmer.  

Things worked out fine as Bennett lost after offices of counsel burned to the ground.  Included were documents needed to litigate SBCGlobal, Albert D. Seeno. 

PBS

June 2007
Evicted 2007

  • Mysterious Loss of Contracts
  • Mysterious Medical
  • Infections
  • Beatings
  • Attempts on his life

The Mormon Connection

Card image

When friends of God came knocking at my door it didn't take long for my truck to explode.

Seeking Constituent Services for over 10 years

Card image

John

 

Quick Facts

June 2007

Evicted 2007

  • Mysterious Loss of Contracts
  • Mysterious Medical
  • Infections
  • Beatings
  • Attempts on his life

They make money from outsourcing - She eats ice cream from a 30,000 Sub Zero 

Card image

The Kings and Queens

Outsourcing advocates  

Homeless dying down the street 

The LesterGarnier.com murder of a San Francisco Police Officer 

Beatings
Attempts on his life

 


Share:

Anchor links for post titles

Popular Posts

Blog Archive

Labels

Recent Posts

Popular Posts

Labels

Recent Posts

Pages

Labels

Blog Archive

Recent Posts