Author Topic: CHIPS Act Uses Taxpayer Money to Hire Foreign Workers  (Read 413 times)

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Online rangerrebew

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CHIPS Act Uses Taxpayer Money to Hire Foreign Workers
« on: September 13, 2023, 05:27:06 pm »
CHIPS Act Uses Taxpayer Money to Hire Foreign Workers
 
PUBLISHED:  Tue, SEP 12th 2023 @ 1:37 pm EDT  by  Jared Culver

The CHIPS Act was hailed as bringing the vitally important semiconductor industry to the United States. Part of the benefit sold to taxpayers footing the bill on this $50 billion+ investment was that it would create jobs for Americans. While that sounds like a good bargain, the industries gaining tax credits and Federal grants have started singing the old “labor shortage” tune. That song never fails to have the same chorus of “needing” to import more foreign labor. The Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), which is constructing a plant in Arizona with up to $15 billion in American taxpayer support, is seeking to import Taiwanese workers because of a supposed labor shortage in Arizona.

Fortunately, Arizona workers are fighting back. From the Arizona Building and Construction Trades Council President:

“But there’s a loophole in the CHIPS Act. The language of the CHIPS Act ensures that these projects will be operated by American workers, but it does not require that the facilities will be built by American workers. Last month, TSMC announced that it is bringing more than 500 Taiwanese construction workers to build the facilities. They are justifying this request by claiming that somehow Arizona workers lack the training, skills and experience needed to build the facility. It’s simply not true.”

Could it be that employers are lying about a labor shortage to import cheaper foreign labor? Arizona workers answer in the affirmative:

https://www.numbersusa.com/blog/chips-act-uses-taxpayer-money-hire-foreign-workers
The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only as are injurious to others. But it does me no injury for my neighbor to say there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.
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Offline Kamaji

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Re: CHIPS Act Uses Taxpayer Money to Hire Foreign Workers
« Reply #1 on: September 13, 2023, 05:34:08 pm »
Uhh, building a semiconductor chip factory that will produce chips with the current single-digit nm transistor spacing takes something more than the yobbos who can sling concrete, weld up steel girders, and hammer in wood 2x4s.

And since the U.S. doesn't currently have a robust home-grown chip fab industry - it was outsourced to Taiwan decades ago - I rather doubt that there are a sufficient number of construction workers in the U.S. who have the skills necessary to do the precise, painstaking work of building a chip fab.

Online mountaineer

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Re: CHIPS Act Uses Taxpayer Money to Hire Foreign Workers
« Reply #2 on: March 09, 2024, 05:34:45 pm »
Quote
DEI killed the CHIPS Act
by Matt Cole and Chris Nicholson, opinion contributors - 03/07/24 7:00 PM ET
THE HILL

DEI — the identity-obsessed dogma that goes by “diversity, equity, and inclusion” — has now trained Google’s new AI to refuse to draw white people. What’s even more alarming is that it’s also infected the supply chain that makes the chips powering everything from AI to missiles, endangering national security.

The Biden administration recently promised it will finally loosen the purse strings on $39 billion of CHIPS Act grants to encourage semiconductor fabrication in the U.S. But less than a week later, Intel announced that it’s putting the brakes on its Columbus factory. The Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) has pushed back production at its second Arizona foundry. The remaining major chipmaker, Samsung, just delayed its first Texas fab.

This is not the way companies typically respond to multi-billion-dollar subsidies. So what explains chipmakers’ apparent ingratitude? In large part, frustration with DEI requirements embedded in the CHIPS Act.

Commentators have noted that CHIPS and Science Act money has been sluggish. What they haven’t noticed is that it’s because the CHIPS Act is so loaded with DEI pork that it can’t move.

The law contains 19 sections aimed at helping minority groups, including one creating a Chief Diversity Officer at the National Science Foundation, and several prioritizing scientific cooperation with what it calls “minority-serving institutions.” A section called “Opportunity and Inclusion” instructs the Department of Commerce to work with minority-owned businesses and make sure chipmakers “increase the participation of economically disadvantaged individuals in the semiconductor workforce.” ...

https://twitter.com/bonchieredstate/status/1766467529151557788
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