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Harrop: Not all smiles on immigration reform

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The Senate plan would redesign the immigration program to favor workers with needed skills. Makes great sense – but even at the top of the skill chart, we still have a domestic workforce to protect.

Educated workers have been displaced by immigrants coming through the H-1B visa program for foreign tech workers. Ron Hira, a professor at the Rochester Institute of Technology, complained to Computerworld that the Senate plan “greatly expands a deeply flawed guest worker program that takes away job opportunities from American workers and undercuts their wages.”

Yes, let’s admit more immigrants with advanced science and math degrees, but not lose sight of this: Draining the world’s educated class as an alternative to creating one on our own soil is lazy and disrespects the American people.

The above are questions more than complaints. The senators have done a generally good job of pairing an effective system for enforcing the laws with an amnesty for illegal immigrants. Some may recoil at the notion of another amnesty or any amnesty, but most might go along if they believe it’s the last one.

The time has rarely been riper for comprehensive immigration reform. Obama should back off trying to rush the parade to citizenship. The election is over. In the meantime, let’s fill in the blanks on those so-called labor shortages. American workers belong at the table, too.

• Froma Harrop is a member of the Providence (R.I.) Journal editorial board.

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