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Pfizer Donated to Senators Who Supported H-1B Visa Expansion

By Jim Edwards | Dec 15, 2008

2852187854_8d9115cd54.jpgPfizer donated tens of thousands of dollars to Sens. Chris Dodd and Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, and those senators supported an expansion of the H-1B visa program that allows foreign workers to be  brought to the US to do technical jobs, according to New London’s The Day. Coincidentally, Pfizer has had a policy since 2005 of using outside contractors staffed heavily with H-1B visa holders to replace their U.S. employee staff.

In some cases, ex workers say, they had to train their replacements before being laid off. (BNET readers first learned about the issue here.) Both senators denied they helped Pfizer outsource its IT workers by hiring contracted H-1B holders. Lieberman’s press secretary said:

The program was never intended to help firms outsource their operations by training foreign workers here at home.

The Day’s sources say that IT workers on Pfizer’s campuses in Groton and New London have been transformed over the last three years from being all-American to largely foreign.

Pfizer itself has stated in a letter to Senator Dodd (pictured) and Rep. Joe Courtney that it has only 60 H-1B holders as employees.

That’s not the point, critics say, as Pfizer’s use of contractors means the H-1B’s are actually employees of the contractor, not Pfizer.  Pfizer hired Infosys Technologies and Satyam Computer Services as its IT vendors in 2005 as  part of a program to slash costs. The company even has a policy, called “Procedure 117,” about how contracted workers are to be treated. UPDATE — AstraZeneca just signed its own deal with InfoSys.

Here are the dollar breakdowns for Pfizer’s gifts to Connecticut pols:

  • Dodd: $28,000 from Pfizer in the past seven years, plus $2,300 from the U.S. India PAC.
  • Lieberman: $14,000 from Pfizer.
  • Courtney: $11,500 from Pfizer.

You can read more background here and here.

Image by Flickr user David Berkowitz, CC

Jim Edwards, a former managing editor of Adweek, has covered drug marketing at Brandweek for four years, and is a former Knight-Bagehot fellow at Columbia University's business and journalism schools. Follow him on Twitter or send him an email.

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  •  
    1

    jake_leone

    12/15/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Pfizer Donated to Senators Who Supported H-1B Visa Expansion

    "The program was never intended to help firms outsource their operations by training foreign workers here at home."

    Yet that is exactly how the h-1b program is being used. It is being used primarily by foreign contracting IT firms, in order to complete the circulation of foreign workers into this country for training, and then to move whole departments overseas.

    So if this was not the intent, why don't Lieberman, Dodd, and Courtney, start to work on truly reforming this program so that it protects U.S. jobs, instead of destroying U.S. jobs?

  •  
    2

    dmconroy

    12/16/08 | Report as spam

    Labor Contractors Grew from H-1b Employer Program

    Without this American law, offshore labor contractors will wither quickly. They will be forced to consider local talent for their US job openings. Let's make this happen - now.

    The American public must be sprung from the H-1b trap -- that American's can't cut it in science and technology.

    DOL's Strategic Plan, Fiscal Years 2006-2011 state: "...H-1B workers may be hired even when a qualified U.S. worker wants the job, and a U.S. worker can be displaced from the job in favor of the foreign worker."

    This is not about foreign workers! This is law was designed by American lobbyists, supported by American companies, passed by an American Congress. Only the American public can fix this.

    No nation can remain strong when employers can explicitly discriminate against local talent for local job openings.

    Donna Conroy
    www.brightfuturejobs.com

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