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United Kingdom Businesses The Almighty Buck Technology

UK Tech Visas Quadruple After Applications Soar (telegraph.co.uk) 83

James Timcomb, writing for The Telegraph: Technology industry demands for special measures to let companies hire foreign workers after Brexit have been boosted by a surge in demand for technology visas. Tech City UK, the government organisation that processes applications for the dedicated "Tier 1 Exceptional Talent" visa, said successful applications had more than quadrupled in the last 12 months, with 260 endorsed in the last fiscal year. It follows fears in the British tech community that access to skilled computer coders would be hit by restrictions to freedom of movement when the UK leaves the EU. David Cameron introduced the tech visa scheme in 2014 in a bid to make London the technology capital of Europe and rival Silicon Valley as a destination for start-ups, and amid fears of a shortage of skilled coders in the UK. The "Tech Nation" visa scheme allows Tech City UK to endorse applications from non-EU workers, and lets successful applicants stay in the country for five years, after which they can apply to settle. Just a handful of visas were granted in its first few months, due to what were seen as onerous requirements, and the rules were relaxed in 2015. Applications have soared since then, and rose again after the Brexit vote.
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UK Tech Visas Quadruple After Applications Soar

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  • by plopez ( 54068 ) on Monday May 29, 2017 @01:07PM (#54506089) Journal

    I read the article but it didn't say if it would bind a worker to a specific employer, which is just indentured servitude. If the workers are free to switch jobs and free to collective bargain then I would generally agree with it. As long as it did not become the sort of dysfunctional H1B indentured servitude we have in the US.

    Does anyone have more details or pointer to more details?

    • You can:
      - work - for an employer, as a director of a company or be self-employed
      - change jobs without telling the Home Office
      - do voluntary work
      - travel abroad and return to the UK
      - bring family members with you

      You can’t:

      - get public funds
      - work as a doctor or dentist in training
      - work as a professional sportsperson or sports coach

      https://www.gov.uk/tier-1-exce... [www.gov.uk]

      The foreign national is the sole applicant and the holder of the visa, its not restricted to a single employer and the employer has no say i

      • There is a reason that level of visa has the word "exceptional" in its title, though. You don't get one of those if you worked at Google for a couple of years. You get one of those if you're Sergey Brin or Larry Page.

        • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

          I can wiggle my ears, does that count as exceptional? Maybe these are now being treated like participation trophies.

          • Well, there's always interpretation in these things, but this is a Tier 1 visa, essentially the top level. To put this story in perspective, it made the news because they issued more than their normal quota of 200 of these for applicants from across the entire world within an entire year.

            There are some slightly vague criteria for tech visas, including some adjustments depending on things like whether someone is planning to bring key tech skills to the main northern cities. However, for comparison, this is p

      • by plopez ( 54068 )

        Thank you this was the information I was looking for.

    • I read the article but it didn't say if it would bind a worker to a specific employer, which is just indentured servitude. If the workers are free to switch jobs and free to collective bargain then I would generally agree with it. As long as it did not become the sort of dysfunctional H1B indentured servitude we have in the US.

      Does anyone have more details or pointer to more details?

      This visa is only meant for founders and key employees of start up businesses.

      • This visa is only meant for founders and key employees of start up businesses.

        What it is meant for . . . and what it is actually used for . . . may turn out to be two entirely different animals.

        But Brexit fears give anything remotely related to Brexit additional leverage:

        "My company needs to hire these cheap foreign IT replacements . . . otherwise, my company will not survive Brexit, and you will lose the election next year over the economic fallout!"

        "Plus . . . the UK workers that we let go will be free to pursue jobs that require even higher skill levels! This will make the U

        • by Cederic ( 9623 )

          Well, at 260 per year this clearly isn't the way the thousands of Indian contractors are getting into the country.

          I supported Brexit and immigration was a factor in that. Nonetheless I'm very comfortable with this visa letting in so small a number of genuinely skilled people, even though they're actually competing with me for jobs.

      • by quarrel ( 194077 )

        This visa is only meant for founders and key employees of start up businesses.

        This just isn't true.

        They're seeking almost all high-tech style engineering, engineering management & product management skills. Do you have good cloud experience? Good sysadmin experience? Good product management experience? Written some device drivers? Written serious fuckin' code? Done random marketing fluff? .. along with many other skills .. ie, have you worked in a high tech environment of late? If so, then you probably tick a lot of the boxes.

        Source: I have one of these visas.

        --Q

  • Yet Slashdot didn't feature one story about Dr. Who. So much for news for nerds.

    http://io9.gizmodo.com/doctor-who-just-pulled-off-a-barnstorming-cliffhanger-1795631931 [gizmodo.com]

    • by Anonymous Coward

      You're right, we need more stories of how you're not fat, "girls" want to have sex with you, and dozens of unrelated meandering irrelevant personal anecdotes.

    • Not all nerds give a shit about Dr Who.

      It's been downhill since Tom Baker hung up the scarf. and the second loop of the scarf. And the third loop.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Their idea of becoming a "technology hub" is similarly sound and impressive.

  • Clearly happening just because all the offshoring companies who's staff all have degrees from Indian "universities" that are clearly no more than certificate printing shops can't get US H1Bs anymore, so now the poor old UK is next in line to suffer a giant plague of cheap, inherently buggy and totally unsupportable code.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday May 29, 2017 @03:36PM (#54506851)
    Sorry guys, looks like you just adopted US style work visas. In a few years tops you'll be forced out of your jobs...
  • We don't have any skills shortage. All this is about is hiring cheap labour and sweating them for hours.
  • Anybody from the EU never bothered applying for any visa, because it wasn't needed. I'm not even sure if you could get any visa. But everyone who won't have permanent residence in 2019 and for some reason wants to help keep this shit heap of a country afloat (and we all know the Brits can't do it, they rather claim benefits than work), will have to apply for some kind of visa.

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