There are roughly a million qualified immigrant workers waiting to get visas to work in the United States.

About 80,000 green cards will go to waste if Congress doesn’t act soon trib.al/yeaVAIa
The Biden administration has acknowledged that in the last fiscal year, the U.S. failed to issue green cards to legal immigrant workers.

The shortfall adds to a backlog of more than 1 million people waiting to receive employment-based visas trib.al/yeaVAIa
Congress should ensure those green cards are used. The Biden administration should also create a streamlined approval process for immigrants.

This means, among other things, upgrading technology to allow applicants to file paperwork online trib.al/yeaVAIa
The closure of immigration offices during Covid, along with restrictions imposed by the Trump administration, caused the number of family-preference green cards to plunge in 2020.

Then, 122,000 additional employment-based green cards became available trib.al/yeaVAIa
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services was unprepared to handle the surge in demand for green cards.

Despite a late push by the Biden administration, the agency fell well short of awarding the full quota by the Sept. 30 deadline trib.al/yeaVAIa
Even when the system runs as intended, hundreds of thousands of skilled and legally employed workers are left in limbo.

On average, highly educated immigrants who’ve qualified for green cards can expect to wait 16 years before actually receiving them trib.al/yeaVAIa
🇮🇳Many immigrants from India who’ve been approved for permanent residence in the U.S. won’t ever get a card because of limits on the number issued to any single country trib.al/yeaVAIa
Legislation introduced by two Republicans, Senator Thom Tillis and Representative Mariannette Miller-Meeks, would authorize the government to “recapture” the expired visas and roll them into next year trib.al/yeaVAIa
The bill has so far failed to gain backing from congressional Democrats, who are seeking to include broader immigration reforms in their $3.5 trillion spending package trib.al/yeaVAIa
Eliminating the visa backlog will eventually require lifting the arbitrary cap on the number of cards issued each year. Broader immigration reform is needed too.

An easy first step is to deliver the cards the government is already authorized to award trib.al/yeaVAIa

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More from @bopinion

14 Oct
☕ Starbucks is marking its 50th anniversary.

If you think that number must be off by a couple of decades, you’re not alone.

The chain only made its way into most of our lives in the 1990s. Its success was a slow brew, requiring several recipe changes trib.al/gq9fyqV
The original Starbucks wasn’t a café.

It sold gourmet beans and equipment so customers could make their own coffee.

In 1981, a sales rep visited to see why four small stores in Seattle were selling more of a simple drip setup than all of Macy’s trib.al/jW0jdDX Image
The sales rep's name was Howard Schultz.

Starbucks could go national, he told the owners, with “dozens of stores, maybe even hundreds,” and become a brand-name “synonymous with great coffee.” He wanted to bring ubiquitous cafés to the U.S. trib.al/jW0jdDX Image
Read 9 tweets
14 Oct
The U.S. economy grew at an annualized pace of 0.6% from the duration (so far) of the Covid-19 pandemic.

That masks some pretty big regional divergences, though trib.al/FivrEZS
Four of the five worst-performing states, with real GDP shrinking at an annual pace of 2.5% or more, have economies dependent on fossil fuels.

The prices of fossil fuels collapsed early in the pandemic trib.al/Z7i82eT Image
Overall, the U.S. economy’s center of gravity shifted westward during Covid:

The Northeast’s economy is smaller
The Great Lakes region barely grew
The Southeast modestly outpaced the national average trib.al/Z7i82eT Image
Read 12 tweets
10 Oct
The world of logistics and manufacturing is in a state of disarray.

A record number of ships are stuck outside Los Angeles and Long Beach, California. Shortages of everything from vessels to truck drivers abound trib.al/arL9DMJ
With freight rates soaring, the ocean-shipping industry is beginning to look like a cartel.

The days of quick, cheap deliveries will soon become a distant memory trib.al/Ar6qsj7
The cost of shipping a 40-foot box on the Shanghai-to-Los Angeles route is so much higher than going the opposite direction that companies are willing to send containers back empty trib.al/Ar6qsj7
Read 11 tweets
8 Oct
If you have attended a conference or public event recently, you may have noticed: The wealthier attendees are not usually wearing masks, but the poorer servers and staff almost always are trib.al/GwLdlrA
Even if the attendees are wearing masks at the beginning, the masks come off once they start wining and dining — and they usually don’t go back on.

Isn’t this a sign that mask-wearing is no longer so essential? trib.al/GwLdlrA Image
It sends a mixed message: If you want to be comfortable eating and drinking with your peers, it’s OK to take off your mask.

But it’s not OK if you want to be comfortable:

🍲Serving food
🍽️Carrying heavy trays
🍰Describing the dessert menu
trib.al/GwLdlrA Image
Read 9 tweets
5 Oct
Vertical farming, a system for growing food without soil or sun, is going mainstream.

It will be a crucial part of our adaptation to climate change trib.al/S9kQS86
AeroFarms is poised to be the first vertical-farming startup to be listed on the NASDAQ in the next month.

Its products — leafy greens grown in a former steel mill in downtown Newark, New Jersey — are sold in chains in and around New York City trib.al/5T4wysg
If the prospect of factory-grown veggies doesn't excite you, it should.

The market is forecast to grow to $15.7 billion by 2025, from $4.4 billion in 2019 trib.al/5T4wysg
Read 13 tweets
4 Oct
💉 Vaccine mandates work.

Despite people protesting they would rather be unemployed than vaccinated, the vast majority of people subject to mandates are quietly getting shots instead of quitting trib.al/83xUCov
Just ask New York Governor Kathy Hochul, whose state gave roughly 600,000 health care workers until this past Monday to get a Covid-19 jab or lose their jobs.

They have chosen to stay trib.al/PcDzswR
Hochul enforced Covid-19 vaccine mandates and set up a command center to monitor hospital staff shortages.

She allowed retired health care workers, out-of-state medical professionals and others to provide care. So far, none have been needed trib.al/PcDzswR
Read 8 tweets

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