Hatch: Immigration reform would create jobs

(Franciso Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Senator Orrin Hatch joins a group of entrepreneurs and tech leaders for an immigration panel discussion to explain why immigration is important to hi-tech industries. The discussion at Proofpoint Inc., in Draper, Utah on Friday, April 25, 2014, is one of a 12 city tour within two weeks in an effort to keep America's tech sector competitive.

Utah Senator joins high-tech officials in saying they need immigrant talent to expand their operations.

Draper Sen. Orrin Hatch joined a group of Utah entrepreneurs Friday to say immigration reform would actually create more jobs for Americans, and not displace them, by bringing in engineers that local high-tech companies need to expand.

Hatch and former Utah Republican Chairman Stan Lockhart said the right-wing of their party should stop blocking Senate-passed reform in the U.S. House by targeting anyone who speaks out for immigration reform.

"Why would we push people that weve educated who have masters degrees, Ph.D.s out of this country when we clearly have need for them, and they clearly want to stay here?" Hatch said.

He especially is pushing a portion of immigration reform to expand H1B visas for highly educated immigrants. Quotas now limit them to 85,000 a year, and applications exceeded that again this year in the first five days forms were accepted.

Bassam Salem, chief business officer of Midvale-based inContact, said, "We are 620 employees, and we have something like 70 or 80 positions open right now that we cannot fill. We are constantly struggling," and Utah high-tech firms end up shifting around employees because they cannot bring in enough new ones.

Amy Rees Anderson, founder of Rees Capital, said she was forced to be creative to seek workers from other companies. "We would take an RV and park in their parking lots during lunch with a sign that said, Now hiring."

Darren Lee is executive vice president of Proofpoint in Draper, which hosted the event.

He said that while Utah high-tech companies compete fiercely, "There is one unifying thing, and that is a deep belief in the need for reform" on immigration to bring in the talent they need.

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Hatch: Immigration reform would create jobs

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