A strong supporter of the H-2B visa program (and other guest worker programs) has emerged as a key player in the immigration debate. Freshman Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) has been a major ally for the club industry on the H-2B visa issue during his short time in the Senate.
Tillis placed significant pressure on the Department of Homeland Security to speed up the approval of H-2B applications earlier this year. His home state needs temporary, foreign workers for many industries, including seafood and hospitality.
Prior to becoming a senator, he served as Speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives where he was extremely supportive of easing the process for small employers to secure seasonal, temporary workers. Because of that, NCA’s ClubPAC supported his election effort in 2014.
Tillis has proposed a bill, the Succeed Act, for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA or so-called Dreamers) issue, too. Tillis’ bill is important because it includes provisions dealing with temporary foreign workers. By tying the high-profile DACA issue with the seasonal worker issue, the H-2B visa program may be on the radar for more of our elected officials, laying the groundwork for pro-club H-2B reform to be proposed and eventually passed. For the private club industry, this could be the only bill that can attract real attention and make it to the finish line.
The strongest Dreamer supporter in the Senate is Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), who was surprised and encouraged by Tillis’ bill. Durbin has not signed on to the Succeed Act, but the two senators are in discussions and are working through issues.
The Succeed Act could be a vehicle that brings together Democrats and Republicans as they sift through the DACA problem. Our industry may still be able to get a win if H-2B visas can be addressed as a small part of the overall bill.
This bill will be tough to move forward as both Chambers remain heavily divided on how to handle illegal immigration. Of course, the only way to pass anything on the Dreamers (or any other issue relating to immigration) is by finding that sweet spot for both sides. With the Tillis bill, we might be getting closer.