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Thursday, March 2, 2017
University of California's San Francisco campus, 79 IT employees lost their jobs this week, some of them after explaining to their replacements at Indian outsourcing firm HCL how to do their jobs.
Americans fired so immigrants can be hired. At a UC Campus, no less.
At the
University of California's San Francisco campus, 79 IT employees lost
their jobs this week, some of them after explaining to their
replacements at Indian outsourcing firm HCL how to do their jobs.
In a statement
sent yesterday, UPTE-CWA says the layoffs could spread, since the HCL
contract can be utilized by any of the 10 campuses in the University of
California system, the nation's largest public university. "US taxes
should be used to create jobs in the US, not in other countries," said
Kurt Ho, a systems administrator who was quoted in the union's press
release. Ho was required to train his replacement as a condition of
getting his severance pay.
In its
statement on the matter, UCSF says that it was pushed to hire outside
contractors due to "increased demand for information technology and
escalating costs for these services." The university says it will save
more than $30 million by hiring HCL, after seeing IT costs nearly triple
between 2011 and 2016, "driven by the introduction of the electronic
medical record and increased digital connectivity."
The university
says 49 UCSF employees were laid off, and it will eliminate another 48
jobs that are currently vacant or filled by contractors. "UCSF will not
replace UCSF IT employees with H-1B visa holders, nor will HCL," the
university wrote in a statement e-mailed to Ars.
Of the 49 laid-off UCSF employees, 34 have either secured other employment or are retiring, the university said.
The
university's decision to hire HCL has been controversial for months and
has drawn fire from politicians. Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.), who has
submitted a bill meant to curb abuses of the H-1B program, sent a letter to
UC President Janet Napolitano in November asking her to reverse its
plan to outsource IT staff. Senator Diane Feinstein (D-Calif.) sent a similar letter,
reminding Napolitano that the UC system gets about $8.5 billion in
federal support. House Minority Leader Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.),
whose district encompasses most of San Francisco including UCSF, also
asked the UC president to reverse herself later in the month.
That led to some changes in UCSF's plan. According to a January story in the Los Angeles Times,
the university told Feinstein's office that of the 27 HCL employees
assigned to UCSF during the transition, eight had H-1B visas. The
university assured her office that all the H-1B visa holders were moved
elsewhere and won't be working at UCSF after all.
Ho, who earns about $100,000, told the LA Times that he spent two days training his replacement in a process that UCSF called "knowledge transfer."
"He told me he would go back to India and train his team and would be sending me e-mails with questions," Ho said.
Audrey
Hatten-Milholin, who earned $127,000 at her job, says other replacements
were around for two weeks. "What was shocking is that the system is so
complex there’s no way you can learn it in two weeks," she said.
Thirteen of the workers are considering filing a lawsuit, saying the way they were fired amounts to discrimination, Computerworld reported.
There have been reports that the Trump Administration is considering changes to the H-1B visa program,
and there are at least two bills pending in Congress asking for reforms
to the H-1B system, which is meant to allow for hiring of high-skilled
employees from abroad. No movement has happened on those proposals yet,
however.