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Ski industry lobbying for more immigration


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By Megan Michelson, Powder
 
Urh Vodopivec is a 24-year-old ski instructor and student from Slovenia. He’s been traveling to Tahoe the last two summers to work seasonal jobs at restaurants. He’s one of about 300,000 people, many of whom are college students, visiting the U.S. each year on J-1 visas, which are designed as cultural exchange work permits for short-term foreign visitors.

“I would love to come back in the winter to teach skiing,” says Vodopivec. “But right now, it’s too hard to get a visa.”

Ski towns rely heavily on these visas to fill seasonal jobs—an estimated 7,000 to 8,000 J-1 workers are employed at ski resorts nationwide each winter, according to the National Ski Areas Associations. Yet tightening governmental restrictions on foreign visas may make it harder for ski resorts and other ski town employers to continue hiring these short-term international employees.

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Comments (2)
  1. Irish Wahini says - Posted: September 25, 2017

    Importing labor to work American jobs should only be allowed if employers prove they cannot hire American workers. Americans are already upset that American companies farm out our work to other countries, and giving America’s jobs away in our own country simply exacerbates this problem. The “cultural exchange” should be foreigners visiting American Ski Resorts and meeting American workers.

  2. don't give up says - Posted: September 25, 2017

    American young folks just don’t want to work. Don’t know why. So many businesses in town are begging for unskilled entry level part time employees and semi-skilled adults. Is it laziness or welfare or whatever that discourages these able body from working?