Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Wayne Mayo and Fat Heimuller Race too Close to call

Uncertain outcome as Heimuller tops Mayo, but denied 50%

Fat Heimuller was on a taxpayer trip to Alaska election night. Mayo is the candidate we should stand behind, as he is the citizen who tried to get the county to require everfiy and stop hiring illegal hispanics. 
The County hires illegals to do landscaping and roofing, thanks to Ramos Landscaping Ser vice( illegal aliens) and Mark Comfort Construction, to mention just a few.

November runoff will be required if results hold

by: SPOTLIGHT FILE PHOTO - Henry Heimuller
by: SPOTLIGHT FILE PHOTO - Henry Heimuller
Columbia County Commissioner Henry Heimuller posted a narrow lead over his only official challenger, Scappoose contractor
Columbia County Corruption aptly described
Wayne Mayo, in unofficial results from the Tuesday, May 20, primary election.
But even with no one in the race to play spoiler, Heimuller appears to have failed to capture a majority of all votes cast in the race, with 0.86 percent of voters — 92 in all — writing in another name instead of voting for Heimuller or Mayo, the unofficial results postedat 3:39 a.m. Wednesday on the Columbia County Elections Department website indicate.
Heimuller was 0.14 percent of the vote shy of 50 percent in the unofficial final tally, and just 0.58 percentage points ahead of Mayo — 49.9 percent to 49.3 percent, rounded to one decimal place.
Heimuller appears to be just 15 votes shy of an outright majority if the write-in votes are considered valid.
“Neither one of the candidates received 50 percent, so it would go to a runoff in November if it was certified today,” said Columbia County Elections Supervisor Pam Benham on Wednesday, adding, “I have more ballots to count. It could change.”
Ballots that could be added into the total include those from voters whose signatures were challenged, but who confirm the authenticity of their vote with the Elections Department by Tuesday, June 3, and those cast in other counties, Benham said.
The election results are scheduled to be certified by June 9. Until then, they are unofficial and subject to change. A candidate could request a recount, although the unofficial margin between Heimuller and Mayo is larger than the 0.2 percentage point margin for which a recount is required.
by: SPOTLIGHT FILE PHOTO - Wayne Mayo
by: SPOTLIGHT FILE PHOTO - Wayne Mayo
Mayo said Wednesday he was “gratified” by the turnout in the race.
“Shows you the value of every single vote, doesn’t it?” Mayo asked rhetorically.
Mayo said he is ready to fight all the way to November if the results hold.
“The race goes on,” he said.
Heimuller, who was on a county-paid visit to Anchorage, Alaska, for a conference Wednesday, did not return a call for comment before the Spotlight’s press deadline.
Photographs visible on Heimuller’s public Facebook page showed him celebrating his apparent victory with supporters on Election Night. Heimuller slipped below the 50 percent threshold in late returns Wednesday morning.
Some 10,711 votes were cast in the race, marking 38.3 percent turnout in the commissioner election. Overall voter turnout in the primary election was recorded by the Columbia County Elections Department at 43.8 percent.
Heimuller was first elected in 2010 with a plurality of the vote in the general election, before Columbia County switched to a nonpartisan system of electing county commissioners.
In that November election, Heimuller — the Democratic nominee — beat out Republican Terry Luttrell and independent Mayo with 45.7 percent of the vote in total.
Editor's note: This story has been updated.

Thursday, May 15, 2014

St Helens Police Hire Mexican Cop to Protect illegal aliens

St Helens Police now have a Mexican Cop to deal with the invasion of illegal mexicans
 We can forget about the St Helens Police calling ICE for much of anything ,because they now a mexican cop, which means they stand with Mexico and all the Corporations that want Amnesty for illegal aliens. 
 They had to hire a mexican because we have so many illegal aliens crawling around here thanks to all the slumlords who rent to them and to people like Mark Comfort who hire them.
Same as the police departments all over the United States.

 I saw the new cop talking to one of the Gangster looking Mexicans who work at the Mexican run place on highway 30 next to Chevron, and under the Comfort Construction Sign( Mark Comfort has his illegal alien mexican crew, allegedly of course.)

 By my standards, the Mexican looked like he just got out of prison in California and was very scary looking, but for the Race Everything. 
 Mexicans always back each other because they can't be racist or bigoted, just White People who speak English.
 The cop and the mexican taco maker were brothers, laughing and slapping each other on the back.



 Guess there won't be any everify used at that restaurant, nor can we count on  the police to hold the line in this county.
 Its the same everywhere in the county, all brochures are in Mexican and have mexicans on the cover and are to help Mexicans get free medical or legal aid or WIC. Taxpayer run businesses promote mexicans with our tax dollars and they wonder why we vote against them.

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Elect Wayne Mayo - Stop ILlegals From Taking Jobs

  1. Despite Downturn, Backlash, Illegal Immigrants Staying Put

    From TIME:

    Thursday, Apr. 09, 2009
    Despite Downturn, and Backlash, Illegal Immigrants Are Staying Put
    By Nathan Thornburgh / St. Helens

    Margarito has a decision to make: After more than a decade of living and working illegally in the U.S., is it time to go back home to Mexico? He and his wife lost their jobs recently (he from a pallet factory, she from Burger King, both for having invalid Social Security numbers). He has been looking for other work, but his search is greatly complicated by measure 5-190, a ballot initiative enthusiastically approved by his neighbors and former colleagues that will, if it survives a court challenge, impose a $10,000 fine on anyone in the county who gives Margarito — or any other undocumented worker — a new job.

    If Margarito, 39 (who, like the other illegal immigrants in this story, requested that only his first name be used), leaves the U.S., it will qualify as a self-deportation, which has long been a grail of the Galahads who wish to protect America's borders. What could be simpler, after all, than watching the 12 million to 20 million illegal immigrants — too many to forcibly remove from the country — simply leave on their own?

    To help nudge undocumented workers out the door, states, towns and counties have been busily legislating against them. In Georgia, both houses passed a bill that would make the written driver's license test English-only. Farmers Branch, Texas, continues to fight for the right to require that all renters in town show proof of citizenship. In 2008, statehouses passed more than 200 laws relating to immigration, the majority of them looking to clamp down on illegal immigrants or their employers. And there are plenty of signs that as joblessness grows, so too could populist outrage against undocumented workers and their families. Think of Fox News host Glenn Beck and his suppurating monologues about dark forces allied against real Americans and you can get a sense of the escalated tensions facing illegal immigrants. (See pictures of the fence between the U.S. and Mexico.)

    As a candidate, Barack Obama campaigned on a moderate mix of increased border security and a path to legality for long-term residents, but the economic crisis has pushed immigration reform off the White House agenda. At the end of March, Vice President Joe Biden told a summit of Latin American leaders that "it's difficult to tell a constituency while unemployment is rising, they're losing their jobs and their homes, that what we should do is in fact legalize [undocumented workers] and stop all deportation." Congress is similarly disinclined to tackle the controversies of reform this year, so the near future of illegal immigration will ride on millions of decisions like the one facing Margarito.

    There's just one problem: illegal immigrants aren't going, at least not yet. Their ties to their home countries have grown too tenuous; their investment in their off-label version of the American Dream is too great. Tougher border enforcement makes leaving a more final and difficult decision. They don't go home because they know they probably won't get to return. This has Americans in St. Helens, Ore., and elsewhere facing a set of decisions of their own: How hard should they press the case against illegal immigrants? And will putting more pressure on the undocumented end up damaging the community in the process?

    Payroll City

    St. Helens, a town of about 12,00, lies along a riverfront rust belt that extends northwest from Portland as the Columbia River leads to the Pacific Ocean. From the downtown shoreline, where the historic courthouse stands near the chain-link fence surrounding an aging lumberyard, one can watch freighters laden with Chinese goods heading east to Portland and then watch them returning with little or no American merchandise out to the open ocean. (See pictures of the high-seas border patrol.)

    It's just one sign that long before there was an immigration crisis in St. Helens, there was a globalization crisis. "This is a timber town that never came out of the recession in the 1980s," says Marcy Westerling, a longtime resident and pro-immigrant activist. Blessed by an abundance of Douglas fir and hemlock, the town once hummed with pulp plants, stud mills and palletmakers. A few decades ago, though, the mighty Columbia began delivering logs from Canada, then ready-made office paper from Asia. The financial swoon of 2008 was just a final insult to what remained of the town's manufacturing base. Most of the major employers have closed in the past six months or drastically cut hours and staff. The town, whose motto in the good times was "The Payroll City," is on the brink of economic ruin or, perhaps worse, of becoming a bedroom community for Portland, with no economic life of its own.

    See pictures of the U.S. border patrol tracking illegal immigrants.

    Watch a TIME video on border-crossing adventure tourism.

    Local contractor Wayne Mayo, 54, has watched this long slump up close. Like many other people in St. Helens, he used to work in the timber industry, as a lumber broker. But his more recent turn, as a general contractor, brought him face-to-face with an economic force he felt he could influence: illegal immigration. Although St. Helens has a relatively small Hispanic community — some legal, some illegal — the town is just 30 miles (about 50 km) from major population centers like Portland and Beaverton, close enough that out-of-town contractors with crews of underpaid, underdocumented construction workers began bidding on jobs around town eight years ago, says Mayo. Local contractors had a stark choice: either go out of business or stop paying their workers enough to support their families. (See pictures of three generations of immigrant workers.)

    Mayo is a former lay minister whose brand of genial grievance would make him a perfect AM-radio host. He had long been a presence in the local Op-Ed pages, campaigning vigorously against everything from a porn store near the high school to an unsafe highway pass. He started speaking out on illegal immigration, hectoring elected officials and writing a stream of e-mails to local newspapers. Eventually he wrote a ballot initiative, a bill to levy fines against employers of illegal immigrants. He was outspent and outorganized by regional activist groups — he raised $430, they raised more than $70,000 — but his proposal still won by 15 percentage points. (A more ostentatious second proposition, to post 4-by-8-ft. [1.2 by 2.4 m] plywood signs at certain job sites declaring them for "Legal Workers Only," failed at the ballot box.) Like many others in the fight against illegal immigration, he sees himself as a reluctant warrior drawn to action by federal timidity. If the government had done its job and enforced laws against illegal immigration, he argues, he wouldn't have had to go through the initiative process. "Just start putting a few folks in jail and the world will change," he says.

    Mayo's bill has won him plenty of enemies among the illegal immigrants I spoke with. None knew him personally, but they spoke of him with equal parts fear and resentment. "That is the man who started this racism," says Margarito's uncle Ramón. "He is the Deceiver."

    But Mayo's supporters are just as impassioned. At a February demonstration against Mayo's law, a passel of counterprotesters, VFW types in trucker caps, spoke reverently about "Pastor Mayo" and the movement he started. Mayo didn't show up for the demonstration because he — shrewdly — didn't want to be seen as endorsing the idea that his opposition to illegal immigration is necessarily an attack on Hispanics in general.

    There are inevitably some racial tensions in St. Helens. Most residents probably don't care to know much more about Mexico than what they can glean from the menu of Muchas Gracias or the two other Mexican restaurants in town. Westerling, whose Rural Organizing Project canvassed St. Helens and surrounding towns as it fought against 5-190, says voters were truly undecided about the measure until the fall, when the worsening economy hardened their opinions. "Immigrants are serving as a great dog for people to kick when they're frustrated," says Westerling. But there is a sincerity to the most ardent activists against illegal immigration in St. Helens, a sense that their town is trapped in the swale of a very bad economic cycle and that the undocumented workers might be making things worse.

    Travis Chamberlain, 30, shares this sincerity. I met him halfway through the protest march, where Columbia Boulevard starts to sag toward the Columbia River. Tall and broad-shouldered, he was leaning against a stone wall, filming the protesters — for Mayo, he said — with a small Taiwanese Aiptek HD camera. After the marchers passed, Chamberlain lit a Marlboro Light and climbed up the embankment to where his wife Kristy, 30, and friend Heather Douglas, 28, were drinking Starbucks coffee drinks near two homemade signs they had hung for the occasion: "Our Country, Our Jobs" and "We Welcome Legal Immigrants."

    See pictures of protests for immigration reform.

    See pictures of migrant workers from the gulf states.

    Travis pointed past the empty cul-de-sac toward a huge, silent box of a building. "That's where I worked," he said, "the plant with no smoke coming out of it." Even without a college degree, he had been making $24 an hour there, at the Boise Cascade paper mill, which was the town's largest employer. And then he was fired, along with most of the other employees, in January. Kristy had been running a home day-care center, but that income vanished when laid-off millworkers started taking care of their kids themselves. Douglas had her own sorry landmark, the ranch house across the street that her family abandoned because they couldn't afford the payments. The three friends couldn't say illegal immigration had visited all this hardship on them, but they felt it was just another threat to their town. That's why they were protesting the march and why they were supporting Mayo. "[Mayo] has been slandered," said Travis. "I'll take the heat from now on if that helps. Let them come to me."

    The Outmigration Myth

    Those who battle illegal immigration make an attractively simple argument: Pressuring illegal immigrants will make them go away, thereby saving jobs for Americans. The enthusiasm for the prospect of a great outmigration is such that pundits and politicians began lining up early to take credit for it. Last summer the Center for Immigration Studies in Washington, which favors tougher enforcement of immigration laws, released a report with the somewhat triumphal title "Homeward Bound." Its authors argued that census data showed that approximately 1.3 million illegal immigrants had left the U.S. from August 2007 to May 2008. At that rate, their number would be halved in five years. Because the drop-off predated the worst of the recession, the report argued, the decline showed that the get-tough policies passed at the end of the Bush Administration were working. Members of Congress like Republican Representative Tom Feeney of Florida were on hand for a press conference with the report's authors. He celebrated the end of "perverse incentives" that had kept illegal immigrants in the U.S. "Obviously," Feeney said, "illegals are getting the message." (Watch TIME's video "Blocking the Border Fence.")

    The celebration was premature. It remains almost impossible to accurately track the population of illegals using data from the census, which doesn't ask people their legal status. Harder still is to tell whether people are leaving the U.S. or simply deciding not to enter in the first place. (Many researchers believe it's the latter.) There's anecdotal evidence that more young workers are staying home in the south than before. Border-patrol arrests are down 24% this year on the U.S.-Mexico border. But for those who are in the U.S., the twin pressures — increased enforcement and a worsening economy — have actually made it harder for them to return home.

    Salvador, 27, emigrated from El Salvador eight months ago and is resolved to stay. He knows that he arrived at perhaps the worst time in the past 20 years, confronting a cauldron of economic and legal risk, but he says those pressures can't compare with what he faces back home: a young wife who hasn't been able to work since experiencing complications during childbirth four years ago and a rural hometown where the global downturn hit with brutal effect almost two years ago.

    One unintended consequence of increased enforcement on the U.S.-Mexico border is that smugglers are charging far more than they used to. Fewer people may be crossing, but those who are already in the U.S. feel more compelled to stay just to pay off their debts. Coyotes charged Salvador $8,500 for his journey; he is paying it off in $150 installments every two weeks (the same amount he sends his family). At that rate, it will take him two more years just to break even on the debt. He doesn't fear detention; he fears failure. "I'm afraid of not making it work here," he says. "It needs to work."

    Communities like St. Helens often have more invested in the newcomers' success than they might imagine. A Pew Hispanic Center survey in November found that the median income for noncitizen Hispanics fell at a rate almost six times as high as that of other workers in 2008. In January 2009, a new report said more than half that group reported being worried that their home will end up in foreclosure. Many illegal immigrants are homeowners, and driving them from their houses would be a Pyrrhic victory for any community fighting blight. Salvador's father-in-law Alejandro, an undocumented immigrant who owns a home in St. Helens, says the Anglos who target him hurt themselves. "I own this house and am making my mortgage payments on time," he says. "But what happens if I lose my job? Then the bank takes my house, and this place becomes the city's problem."

    Demetrios Papademetriou, president of the Washington-based Migration Policy Institute, says an overlooked complexity of the immigration issue is that one worker's leaving doesn't necessarily equal one job free for an American. "For every job that comes into an economy or leaves, there is a part of another job that comes or leaves with it," he says. In other words, if Salvador and his father-in-law leave, it isn't just the bank that would see its revenues go down. So would the Safeway down the street from their house and the Ace store where they buy spark plugs for their car and hardware for their home. These may be slight hits, but businesses are working on rail-thin margins, and even small reductions in revenues could result in the loss of hours or an entire job for someone else — an American worker. It's a reminder that in St. Helens as elsewhere, undocumented workers, whose numbers grew wildly during the boom years, were an integral part of the growing economy. (See pictures of Mexico's drug wars.)

    Papademetriou also argues that undocumented workers will play a role in getting the economy on its feet again. They represent, he says, exactly the kind of workforce that employers will turn to at the first blush of recovery. "If you're going to ramp business up quickly, where are you going to get the workers?" he says. Businesses may have new orders coming in, but they're not going to hire permanent workers until they're sure the recession is over.

    Choosing to Stay

    All this could be putting St. Helens at a competitive disadvantage to other towns in neighboring counties. Because the choice facing Margarito in the absence of a federal plan on immigration, it turns out, isn't St. Helens vs. Mexico but St. Helens vs. Woodburn, a heavily Hispanic town 60 miles (about 100 km) south with businesses that are still hiring (including at least one firm that just relocated from St. Helens).

    Margarito and his wife would not have chosen to go back to Mexico anyway. Margarito's 8-year-old son, one of four U.S.-born children, is autistic. They've tried to find a program in Mexico that would work for him. There was a trip to Puerto Vallarta for dolphin therapy, which yielded little. They went to Morelia — the hometown of Margarito's wife — and found that the public schools would offer him only one hour of special education every three days, compared with 24 hours each week in St. Helens. All of which they could handle in the short term if it meant waiting out the recession in Mexico and returning to the U.S. when jobs were available again.

    But they have no such guarantees. So Margarito and his wife will stay in Oregon, but not in St. Helens. One of the couple's last paid assignments in the town was a typical task for people who have been made unemployable by 5-190: a store manager hired them and a friend to clean out the back of the store overnight. "It was disgusting work," says Margarito. At the end of the five-hour job, they were given $60 total, or about $4 an hour for each worker. Margarito cajoled $20 more out of the boss for the three to split, but it's clear to him that he can't raise a family by working in St. Helens anymore.

    Over drinks at El Tapatio, a half-empty restaurant near the highway, Margarito, his wife and uncle talked about the financial crisis — how Wall Street had binged on mortgages while Washington looked the other way. The parallels to immigration were pointed: during the boom years, the U.S. binged on cheap labor while politicians neither legalized workers nor prevented them from sneaking across the border. It was a grossly laissez-faire policy that has left everyone — Americans and immigrants alike — with a postboom hangover.

    As tempting as it is in places like St. Helens to try to send the illegal immigrants packing, it would be a bit like letting AIG or GM collapse: it might feel good and it might be morally justified, but in the long run it would just increase the misery on Main Street. Like it or not, with more than 10 million Margaritos from coast to coast, illegal America is simply too big to fail.

    http://www.time.com/time/magazine/artic ... 04,00.html
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    As tempting as it is in places like St. Helens to try to send the illegal immigrants packing, it would be a bit like letting AIG or GM collapse: it might feel good and it might be morally justified, but in the long run it would just increase the misery on Main Street. Like it or not, with more than 10 million Margaritos from coast to coast, illegal America is simply too big to fail.
    WHAT A LOAD OF BS!!!!!   
    The truth is incontrovertible, malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end; there it is.
    -Sir Winston Chur

Illegal Mexicans Takeover Columiba City Oregon 97051

Not Quite a takeover , but the  first step.
 For those who have no clue as to where Columbia City Oregon is , it is in Columbia County , Oregon , right on the Columbia river, about two miles from St Helens, Oregon,
 It is very tiny and is really just a place for rich Californians to retire to or so it seems.
 It is considered desirable because it has very little diversity with no slum apartment buildings with section 8 renters. There are some dumps and rentals but not enough to make it the diversity dump that St Johns in Portland is or St Helens has become.
 If there was even one slum apartment building such as Forest Park or Gable Park apartments in St Helens, it would be full of Mexicans and Section 8 Blacks from Portland.
 It was once the place I wished to move to in Columbia County to get away from the rif-raf, until I saw the rif-raf was mowing lawns and gangster type blacks were showing up at the park.
There are only about two police officers ,so whats the point and in any case, the police refuse to enforce immigration laws, rarely checking to see if a mexican they pull over is illegal.
 Today , May 4th, 2014,the rental hall  at Columbia City , next door to the police station and city hall, was rented by a huge group of mexicans ,of all indian descent, for some kind of Mexican Party.
Many of the cars were from Washington State, but many mexicans in Oregon went to Washington State to be licensed as it was easy for  illegals to  register their vehicles when Oregon stopped giving licenses to illegals.
 There was loud mexican music, mexican
an anchor babies on top of the trucks, mexicans everywhere.
 If they feel safe enough to rent a hall in the middle of a mostly white affluent area , then they have no fear of being deported. 
It s npo

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Slumlord Blog and Oregon Law Center Goes after Columbia County Slumlords

 Baltimore Slumlord Blog

 Great Idea .
 It Seems that Oregon Law Center has set up office in St Helens to go after the Slumlords of Columbia County Oregon.
 At the top of their list is, Ron Lucas, who amusingly has a a law office in view of the Oregon Law Center.
 It seems that Ron Lucas , who used his good ole boy clout and his father's legal services to intimidate his tenants, is going to finally get knocked down to size.
One thing that is noticeable is the For Rent Signs and for rent banners are no longer visible at McCormick Apts on Old Portland Road.
 It used to be that every month Ron would either evict or harass his tenants out of their apartments and around the 11th the signs would go up yet again..Since the Oregon Law Center has moved here something  has changed, only we won't know much as most of the cases will be settled out of court.
 There are lots of slum lords in Columbia County, where following the law has always been considered optional.
 The Oregon Law Center has a list, so feel free to mail them your complaints about your landlord.
Another question is why are rents so high in this county when the quality of housing is closer to Mexico , then US standards? 
 Not to mention that there really is nothing to do here , the schools are crap, the shopping difficult and now the County Parks cost $5.00 for each visit, not to mention that we now have crude oil being shipped though the county as of 2012.
  If a rental unit has a roof and a bathtub it's considered high end living
. Even the mexicans think they are too good for some of these rentals. I heard of a mexican woman , whose illegal alien  daughter was working as a hairdresser , so she came out to see if she could get a place close to her daughter. She  gave up because in Beaverton she only had to pay $ 500.00 and month and the place had a swimming pool.
 Not only that, the slumlords expect tenants to replace roofs, paint their houses, and provide their own appliances. 
 After all they know someone who works at County and so they can't be touched. 
 The one thing I don't agree with the Oregon Law Center, is their misquded idea that Illegal aliens have a right to Fair Housing and to live in Oregon. 
 It is a felony to rent to an illegal alien and that's a federal law. Every illegal alien who moves into housing in Columbia County, increases the rents and displaces the natives who deserve housing before Mexicans on Food Stamps.


Saturday, April 5, 2014

Off-Shoring Jobs and In-Shoring Workers H-1B temporary professional worker visas

In Columbia County , foreign nationals are hired over Legal Americans all the time. 


Off-Shoring Jobs and In-Shoring Workers

The U.S. Government will begin handing out the second half of the annual 85,000 H-1B temporary professional worker visas this month. These visas are valid for three years and renewable for an additional three years. Most of these visas are for information technology (IT) workers, and most of them are used by foreign-based employment services firms (“body shops”) to rent out these workers to U.S. companies that seek to cut costs by replacing older permanent workers with younger foreigners.
This in-shoring of foreign workers into U.S. jobs by these foreign firms was documented in an April 1 article inComputerworld. Most Americans are familiar with the off-shoring of low wage U.S. jobs to foreign destinations where wage rates are lower, but the in-shoring of foreign skilled workers to take U.S. jobs is less known or understood. That largely is because it attracts less press attention. Understanding the impact of this in-shoring is further complicated by the fact that even more foreigners arrive to do temporary visas on L visas for intra-company transfers. They may stay for up to five years.
The public thinks that these visas are issued when U.S. workers are not available for the job. But that is not true. There is no requirement for seeking or hiring a qualified U.S. worker before hiring an H-1B worker. The foreign workers are often used to replace U.S. workers already on the job. The ability to discriminate against U.S. workers is built into the visa system.
The public should also be aware that the real number of H-1B visas issued is obscured because the cap does not apply to non-profit organizations, K-12, schools, universities, or federal, state and local governments. How many H-1Bs are issued above and beyond the 85,000 cap? The government does not tell us. We also do not know how many H-1B workers there are in the country because the government does not tell us that, either. It may not even know, because the entry-exit system for recording the arrival and departure of foreigners remains incomplete – despite laws requiring that data gap be closed.
Do many of the foreign workers who received H-1B visas fail to depart when their visa expires and become illegal aliens continuing to use the SSN given to them when they receive the visa? 
Iran and India refuse to accept any deported citizens from the US, once they are in , they are here for good.

Once again, the government does not tell us. Foreign students are monitored by the schools that control the visa issuance process so that the government has a reasonable basis for knowing whether they leave when required. It would make more sense for Congress to require a “hire Americans first” provision for the visa and require employers to provide reports on their foreign workers similar to those that are required for foreign students.

Comments

  1. avatarMary Krause says:
    The H-1-B visa professional imports do force educated US citizens out of work. This group also makes overall US unemployment/underemployment figures look much lower than they actually are for US citizens, especially white educated women professionals, in effect discriminating against this group of US citizens in their own country. New State policies/programs also increase the importation of foreign workers, in professions which already are glutted with qualified US educated job and business loan applicants. So these foreign imports worsen, or may actually have created, the student loan crisis–by blocking US-educated, US citizens from making tuition repayment because they are blocked from their anticipated wages and salaries.
  2. avatarRoy Buchanan says:
    Jack you write abut Immigration policy YET you have no idea about the system. WRONG there is a process put in place before hiring an H1-B.
    • avatarLeland says:
      Yeah, and the “process” is that the companies claim they searched high and low to find an American to fill the job.
      And naturally they don’t have to PROVE they did, like in other countries, we have to take them at their word. Like honest Mark Zuckerberg, the guy that was accused of swindling all his original partners in Facebook. It’s all just a big coincidence that it’s far cheaper for them to bring in foreign workers rather than find an American.
  3. I Call It Insourcing
    And its far worse than outsourcing because legal Americans are denied access to the jobs here in America, where they’ve paid taxes.
  4. avatarLeland says:
    Typical. If you read the link, the two top firms for most H1B visas are India based. We have the US government doing their best to see not only Indian workers compete with Americans for jobs, but they allow Indian firms to import their workers here, and those firms use OUR infrastructure to make money at our expense.
    There is also a link to a column by Paul Krugman, who notes there is no “skills gap”. But he can’t quite bring himself to mention that we keep allowing big business to play this card because they want to import cheaper workers, at all levels.

Friday, April 4, 2014

Illegal Alien Drivers LIcenses _Vote NO in November

 This in from NumbersUSA.COM
  there is a lady attorney down at the Columbia County Courthouse  who tole me that Illegals need drivers licenses so they can get to work. 
 Gasp- it's that bad- 
 By the way, K & C landscaping service was robbed a few weeks ago via stolen checks, but the thing is they hire all illegal mexican,. They came over here from Hillsboro to displace the landscaping services offered by legal, english speaking Americans,.
GOOD NEWS IN OREGON
An ongoing battle to repeal Oregon's law that gives illegal aliens driving privileges had a small victory this week. Opponents of the law have been fighting to add a referendum to the ballot to repeal the law, but the law's supporters have fought the effort every step of the way.
This week, the Oregon Supreme Court heard a challenge from the law's supporters to change the title of the ballot referendum to one more supportive of the law. The Court, however, threw out the challenge, allowing the proposed title GOOD NEWS IN OREGON
An ongoing battle to repeal Oregon's law that gives illegal aliens driving privileges had a small victory this week. Opponents of the law have been fighting to add a referendum to the ballot to repeal the law, but the law's supporters have fought the effort every step of the way.
This week, the Oregon Supreme Court heard a challenge from the law's supporters to change the title of the ballot referendum to one more supportive of the law. The Court, however, threw out the challenge, allowing the proposed title "Provides Oregon resident driver card without requiring proof of legal presence in the United States" to stand.
The referendum will appear on the ballot this November.
CHRIS CHMIELENSKI
FRI, APR 4th
The referendum will appear on the ballot this November.
CHRIS CHMIELENSKI
FRI, APR 4th