Sen. Ran Paul (R-KY) has introduced a
bill, the
BELIEVE Act, that greatly improves the US employment-based visa
system.
Sen. Rand Paul’s act expands
employment-based immigration visas, provides additional visas for Schedule A
shortage occupations, ends per-country caps on employment-based immigration
green cards, and allow spouses and children of temporary workers to legally
work. All while still providing all the
same protections for American workers in an economy where nearly every
qualified American worker currently has a job.
As the Cato
Institute says, the
The BELIEVE Act would do more to move the United
States toward a merit-based system than any other legislation introduced this
congress. No legislation since the 2013 immigration reform bill that passed the
Senate would increase skilled immigration more than this bill. A fourfold
increase in employment-based permanent immigration would bring the United
States more in line with the Canadian system.
Importantly, the BELIEVE Act considers
the needs of US healthcare patients. It
provides additional visas for nurses and physical therapists, which will help
all Americans, especially in rural communities where the nursing shortage is
most dire.
For
instance, Chattanooga
area healthcare facilities and hospitals just announced that they cannot
find nurses, despite Chattanooga area schools producing 500 nurses per year and
despite more than 6,500 registered nurses living in the county. CHI Memorial is now offering $20,000 sign-on
bonuses to new nurses. These shortages
are rampant throughout the US.
Sen. Paul should be commended for
producing legislation that serves all interests needs, except those who want to
restrict immigration into the US.
Musillo Unkenholt strongly supports this bill. If you are a healthcare facility or hospital
who is willing to help support this bill, please contact Chris.
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