Canada attempts to entice H-1B workers from US
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When in 2007 Microsoft announced that it would open a software development office in Vancouver, the company made its motives clear: The Canada office was intended to retain highly skilled workers
Under the H-1B system
For Canada’s new program, up to 10 000 H-1B holders can obtain a visa to work in Canada for three years without needing sponsorship from an employer. Also unlike in the US, visa holders’ spouses and family members are allowed to enter the country to study or work. And there’s a clear route toward permanent residence and eventual citizenship.
“Canada saw the frustration of people with the US system and said, ‘We like skilled, intelligent people who will pay taxes,’ ” says Ravi Jain, a Toronto-based immigration lawyer and founder of the firm Jain Immigration Law. “If we can cherry-pick the best talent, why wouldn’t we?” The new program reached capacity
High-tech companies in the US and around the world should be watching the progress of the new program closely, says Joanne Padrón Carney, chief government relations officer at the American Association for the Advancement of Science. “The Canadian H-1B policy demonstrates that high-tech workers are unafraid to ‘vote’ with their feet and go where they feel they have the best prospects for employment and standard of living,” she says.
Richard Herman, a Cleveland-based immigration lawyer and researcher, says that in recent years he has noticed a significant uptick in H-1B workers—mostly in STEM, largely concentrated on the West Coast, and primarily Indian nationals—asking for help after losing a job. Clients have told him that if they had known how hard the path would be, they might not have come to the US at all.
Some H-1B visa holders can access a path to permanent US residency, but many face delays. Spouses encounter challenges in receiving a visa to join their partners and risk losing that visa if the partner is laid off. “These policies make the US less appealing, which Canada took advantage of when creating their own policy,” says Carney.
Software engineer Anushka Gupta moved from India to the US in 2017 to pursue her love of augmented reality and now works at Microsoft in Seattle. Though she would have been eligible for the Canadian program, she says she didn’t learn about it until it had filled up. Gupta says that recent layoffs in big tech have hit temporary workers the hardest, and having Canada as a nearby option would help those who are not able to quickly find a new job. “You could be close to your friends and family in the US while pursuing your career dreams,” she says.
Though they have yet to benefit from the program, the leaders of several science and technology companies in Canada say they see the effort as a potential boon.
Quantum computing company Xanadu
Michel Laberge, chief science officer of General Fusion
Employees at the quantum computing company Xanadu work in their Toronto office.
Xanadu
It remains to be seen how the program will play out, whether more visas will be granted, and what the ramifications will be on both sides of the border. It’s now been several months since the program filled up, and neither Xanadu nor General Fusion has interacted with the visa recipients—in large part because the government has failed to provide an administrative route for connecting applicants with potential employers.
Sergio Karas, who practices corporate immigration law in Toronto and works with companies in STEM fields, suspects that H-1B holders will view the program as an insurance option: Once they’ve obtained a Canadian visa, they can then find a way to return to the US. “That’s simply because the money and possibilities for advancement are greater there,” he says. Ensuring that visa recipients come to Canada promptly and tracking whether they find STEM jobs and stay will be paramount to the program’s success, he adds.
Herman, the Cleveland-based lawyer, is more optimistic. He points to Toronto as an example of a city that embraced immigration as a way of jump-starting economic growth, in stark contrast to his hometown. In the US, immigrants are twice as likely to start a business and to have a patent as people born in the country. Even before Canada launched its targeted program, Herman encouraged his clients to consider relocating to the US’s northern neighbor. “I’m delighted to see Canada doing this program,” he says. “It keeps talent within North America, which helps everyone.”