In April, 2014, it emerged that Southern California Edison, a utility with about 14,000 employees at the time, was planning another round of layoffs. Most of them would be in its Information Technology Department, which had 1,800 employees and 1,500 contract workers. SCE admitted to the plan but told the LA Times that it hadnt finalized the number. State Senator Alex Padilla then told the paper that as many as 500 employees and 500 contractors would be let go.
Laying off workers and outsourcing some functions was part of its ongoing efforts to act as cost effectively and prudently as possible in operations for its customers. These efforts at the IT department would enable an increase in quality, speed and capabilities while lowering costs, SCE explained. By better leveraging the knowledge, skills and expertise of industry vendors, SCE will adopt a proven business strategy commonly and successfully used by other top U.S. companies.
Namely laying off American employees and bringing in cheaper H1-B visa holders from India.
IT workers in the process of getting axed often sign severance agreements that contain non- disparagement and confidentiality clauses that bar them from discussing the situation in public. Plus there are fears that if they discussed the situation publicly, they might be blacklisted and not find another job. But now some of these affected SCE employees have talked to Computerworld.
SCE confirmed having hired Infosys, in Bangalore, and Tata Consultancy Services in Mumbai, two of the largest users of H-1B visas, to provide the H1-B workers.
They are bringing in people with a couple of years experience to replace us, and then we have to train them, one longtime IT worker told Computerworld. Its demoralizing, and in a way I kind of felt betrayed by the company.
The H-1B program was supposed to be for projects and jobs that American workers could not fill, another worker said. But were doing our job. Its not like they are bringing in these guys for new positions that nobody can fill, he said. Not one of these jobs being filled by India was a job that an Edison employee wasnt already performing.
Some of the affected SCE employees have been training their replacements either at the office when the Indian workers are already here or via Web sessions with people in India. And these Indian tech workers didnt have the skill levels of the American people theyd be replacing, the sources told Computerworld.
Ron Hira, a public policy professor at Howard University, and a researcher on offshore outsourcing, called it one more case, in a long line of them, of injustice where American workers are being replaced by H-1Bs:
Adding to the injustice, American workers are being forced to do knowledge transfer, an ugly euphemism for being forced to train their foreign replacements. Americans should be outraged that most of our politicians have sat idly by while outsourcing firms have hijacked the guest worker programs.
The majority of the H-1B program is now being used to replace Americans and facilitate the offshoring of high wage jobs.
On the surface, it shouldnt be this way. To obtain H-1B approval from the Department of Labor, the company has to attest to a whole laundry list of things (PDF), including: Working Conditions: The employer attests that H-1B, H-1B1 or E-3 foreign workers in the named occupation will not adversely affect the working conditions of workers similarly employed.
The SCE case is clearly one where the hiring of the H-1B is adversely affecting the wages and working conditions of American workers, Hira said. There isnt a clearer cut case of adverse impacts the American worker is losing his job to an H-1B.
There are other issues as well, Computerworld notes: H1-B workers are mostly under 35 years of age, according to government data, and the SCE workers interviewed said many older workers were being laid off.
This has been happening in all kinds of tech companies and IT departments, and it has been happening for years, though it has largely been kept quiet by restrictive severance agreements. Another element in the great mystery of why wages in the US have been losing ground.
What has sort of kept a lid on it is the limited number of H1-B visas given out each year, though companies have been clamoring for more. Just how much corporate demand is there?
US Citizenship and Immigration Services opened the lottery for H1-B visas for fiscal year 2015 on April 1, 2014. On April 7, it reported that it had already reached the statutory cap of 65,000 visa petitions for the general category and 20,000 under the advanced degree exemption. But tech companies have been lobbying in Washington to get this raised. Because the Holy Grail in business is cheaper labor. And bringing in cheaper labor puts downward pressure on wages for everyone else.
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