Thousands
of legal U.S. immigrants are stuck choosing between living here with their
spouses or staying behind and pursuing their careers.
Many American women are still told they have to choose between
love and career. But for many immigrants, that outdated dilemma is legally
enforced.
“I am here legally but I don’t have the right to work or even
open an independent bank account,” Rashi Bhatnagar, an accomplished journalist
from India, told me recently.
Every year, the United States gives 85,000 H1-B visas
to highly skilled foreign workers, such as engineers and information
technologists. The workers don’t travel alone. They often bring their spouses
and children in tow on H-4 visas.
These visas give holders, most of whom are women, the right to
live legally in the United States. But they come with serious caveats.
Most significantly, they deny their holders the right to a
social security number and legal employment. This places women in extremely
vulnerable positions.
Bhatnagar admits that she knew about the restrictions before she
migrated to the United States. Yet the alternative — staying behind to pursue
her career away from her husband — simply wasn’t an option for her. So she
moved to the United States and placed her career on hold.
Even so, the new mother says she’s one of the lucky ones. She’s
happily married, and her husband encourages her to pursue her hobbies and
interests.
Many others face harsher circumstances. Through a blog and Facebook page she
runs called “H-4 Visa, a Curse,” Bhatnagar has discovered thousands of
immigrant women who suffer from severe depression, domestic abuse, or feelings
of lost identity.
“I was a researcher in a renowned government research institute
in India,” recalled Harpreer Kaur,
a former molecular biologist from India, in one post. “But in the U.S. I became
a house maker… I have to ask my husband for every small thing.”
“All my talent is getting wasted because of my visa status,”
laments Chethana Manjunath, who — in India — was a doctor who specialized in
internal medicine and clinical pathology. “I am losing my self-confidence.”
As the stories from Bhatnagar’s blog attest, many of these women
are highly educated but can’t contribute to the U.S. economy through paid work.
And that’s a huge loss.
If women like Manjunath could work, for example, one study
estimated that they could each add an additional 9.4 jobs,
$773,655 in total wages and benefits, and $45,665 in local and state tax
revenue per year.
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H-4 visas also make women more vulnerable to domestic abuse.
One woman, for instance, revealed that if she accused her
husband of domestic abuse, she risked losing her children and her right to
reside legally in the United States. Her fear has kept her silent for years.
Scores of other women share her story.
In November, President Barack Obama finally addressed this issue
through his executive action on
immigration.
Though better known for granting undocumented residents a
reprieve from deportation, the order also included a provision that grants the
right to work legally in
the United States to spouses of H1-B
workers — if they’ve already applied for their green cards.
This will immediately affect an estimated 100,000 H-4
visa holders and an estimated 30,000 more
each year from now.
Bhatnagar is quick to point out that this isn’t enough.
“There are many children who are also here on H-4 visas,” she
says. “But if they turn 21 before their parents receive their green cards, they
will be forced to return to India. There are also thousands of women on H-4
visas who are not yet eligible to apply for their green cards. Congress needs
to address their needs too.”
Congress should take these stories into account. Allowing these
women to work and be economically independent isn’t just good economic policy —
it’s a moral imperative.
Diana Anahi
Torres is the New Mexico Fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies in
Washington, DC. IPS-dc.org.
Distributed via OtherWords.org.