I tell my corporate clients that in the global marketplace that success requires cross-cultural knowledge and understanding. As my Greek-born parents learned running a business that serviced much of the surrounding Mediterranean, diverse markets require diverse skills.
My company, Osprey , helps service-industry companies use technology and smart practices to seize opportunities for improving productivity. We are exporters of American knowledge and skills and we help companies succeed abroad, while generating revenues back home. In that way, we help both the American economy and the global one. But working in sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East, among other distinct places, requires cultural understanding, language skills and knowledge of different markets. Those qualities are becoming increasingly necessary for American companies who are working to expand and compete internationally. Immigrants are the social capital that can help us collaborate with other countries and succeed in the worldwide market.
America already has an edge – we are a heterogeneous society comprised of immigrants, children of immigrants and grandchildren of immigrants, all of whom have perspectives and cultural knowledge from around the world. Utilizing this competitive advantage and nurturing it through smarter immigration policy is the key to our future as a global power. We must reward foreign-born students who graduate from our excellent universities with green cards so that they can use their talents here and not elsewhere. We have to make it easy for American business leaders and entrepreneurs like myself to hire the immigrants that we need to be successful in a diverse and increasingly international marketplace. And we must enable foreign-born entrepreneurs to start their companies here in the U.S. These are steps that we can take towards immigration reform that is also sound, logical economic policy.
That is why I joined the Partnership for a New American Economy and that is why I chose to build a business that can grow as the marketplace does and benefit the American economy along the way. If we want to continue growing in a globalized economy, we have to keep bringing the most talented people around the world to us.
The world’s cutting edge research is happening right now at US Universities. That’s why I came to do my PhD at the Iowa State University, and continued postdoctoral research at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where I worked to find innovative ways to help the 2.1 million US burn victims in hospital care and the 6.5 million US patients per year who suffer from chronic wounds or slow-healing ulcers. The technology to make artificial skin resistant to infections, that I co-invented while at Wisconsin, has already led the launching of an entirely new company, Imbed Biosciences, Inc, which will use my invention to help countless Americans heal faster, safer, and more painlessly. Our products will reduce the use of antibiotics, minimize dressing changes and nurse time, and lower patient pain, medication costs and length of hospital stays.
But Imbed Biosciences almost never happened because of the incredibly daunting obstacles I faced to find a work visa to stay in America, start a company that would greatly benefit American medicine, and create American jobs- and that was after working with best research scientists in the US for 10 years. The first three lawyers I spoke to about applying for an EB1 Green Card for those with “extraordinary ability” said my chances of success were low and advised against applying. Only when I finally found a lawyer who would take my case, was I fortunate enough to get a green card.
I joined the Partnership after I saw firsthand the drain that our immigration laws can have on our economy and in my industry. My company is the essence of why we need smarter immigration reform. I look to grow my business by adding high-skilled scientists and managers to this company. A smarter immigration system will not only enhance Imbed Biosciences’ ability to develop newer and greater technology in wound management, but will also welcome new innovation and job creation in every field.
I am the Managing Partner of Wildes & Weinberg P.C. (www.wildeslaw.com), a boutique law firm that specializes in U.S. immigration and nationality law. The firm was established in 1960 by my father and partner, Leon Wildes, and our practice expanded steadily as word of its outstanding achievements spread in the international community. Fifty years since its inception, the firm, which now has offices in New York City and Englewood, NJ, continues to serve a growing number of distinguished domestic and international clients and covers all aspects of U.S. immigration law, including employment and investment-based immigration, work permits, permanent residence for qualified individuals, family-based immigration, asylum applications and every category of temporary and permanent visas.
I have had the great pleasure of representing many extraordinary individuals seeking to work and live in the United States and to contribute their share to our great country. Some of the acclaimed individuals for whom my firm has acquired visas include John Lennon, Pele, Paloma Picasso, Sarah Brightman, and Giselle Bundchen, who have brought their extraordinary skills and talents to our shores. Miss Universe winners hail from many countries in the world, but they all want to work or live in America -- and I helped the last four Miss Universe titleholders obtain the necessary visas to do just that.
Such extraordinary individuals help to highlight the value of immigration to America’s sports, music, fashion or art, but immigrants also play a crucial, if less heralded, role in other American industries – from high-tech to hotels, from finance to farming, and those bringing vital educational perspectives to our Universities. Every day, I see how American businesses, culture, and our economy benefit from immigration. And at the same time, I see how America’s broken immigration system stands in the way of our further economic growth. While other countries are competing for talent, America’s antiquated immigration system leaves employers unable to attract and retain the talent and workforce they need to compete in a 21st century global economy.
When I served as Mayor of Englewood, New Jersey, I always led by example, promoting ideas and practices I felt were in the best interests of the city and its residents. In 2009, I took part in an informative tour on U.S. Immigration and Nationality Matters to spread the word on immigration; its positive implications on our country’s economy; and the difficulties that foreign students and working professionals are facing.
I became a member of the Partnership for a New American Economy because I want to aid in further spreading the word on needed immigration reform and express why our country needs to proactively work on attracting and retaining the best immigrants. The time to take action to rebuild our economy is now, and sensible immigration reform is one of the most valuable ways to accomplish that end.
Immigrants hold unparalleled value for the America and the national economy, especially Latino immigrants. For instance, Latinos participate in the entire value chain of our economy. In the food industry, they harvest, package, move, prepare and deliver food to 100 percent of the population through supermarkets and restaurants. Without our Latino immigrants and the skills and services they provide, the food industry might cease to function as we know it, and we might not be able to eat in the manner we’re used to or dominate the export markets for food products. We are valuable members of the workforce in many other high-growth global industries.
As a Cuban immigrant, I was recruited for an innovative job-training program for Latinos supported by IBM, HP and Lockheed Martin at the age of 18. My career in America began at IBM where I progressed to a top-level tech job and entered the tech career force as a member of the small but growing class of Latinos in the field. I want others to follow my path.
This is why I support the Partnership for a New American Economy and initiatives aimed at comprehensive immigration reform. We do a disservice to ourselves by perpetuating harmful stereotypes about immigration. It was the hard-working immigrants of the 19th and 20th centuries who literally built these United States and that spirit of entrepreneurship is alive and well within the thousands of people who legally come to America each year to find the American Dream.
I continued on to take part in many ventures here in America including founding WorldChain, becoming CEO of ZeroVirtual and co-founding ReyLabs, a multi-cultural Cloud App Service which builds Social Mobile Applications (APPS) and hosts a free idea sharing community for small businesses. My associates and I have created may skilled jobs for Americans through these various enterprises. I am now a leader in many job and company creation programs in Silicon Valley.
I joined the Partnership for a New American Economy because I want to work to change the perception of immigrants in America and their level of contribution to the U.S. economy. As one of the tech leaders in the Silicon Valley Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, I fully understand the unlimited potential immigrants have to offer this country. I am currently working with other Latino leaders to educate political leaders in Washington on the value of immigrants and their impact on our economy.
An important and exciting result of our city’s adherence to creative thinking is our Welcome Dayton: Immigrant-Friendly City Initiative. The Welcome Dayton program was slowly and carefully developed over the course of a year, with input from the City’s Human Relations Council, Police, and numerous community organizations. In response, our community has demonstrated spontaneous and overwhelming support.
Our universities, hospitals and tech industries are recruiting to fill highly skilled positions. The Welcome Dayton Initiative is designed to enhance the potential of Dayton as a competitor in the global economy by attracting immigrants who bring new ideas, new perspective, and new talent to our workforce. These foreign entrepreneurs have started businesses, created jobs and rejuvenated underused buildings. It is our intent to continue to foster this sense of drive and entrepreneurism.
I believe that as Dayton moves forward to become a more immigrant-friendly city, our nation should also take action to initiate thoughtful immigration reform in order to further our economic recovery and advancement. Our country needs to take advantage of the highly-skilled workers who want to come to the U.S. to start new businesses and contribute to our economy rather than look elsewhere, further separating us in the race of global competitiveness.
This is why I support the Partnership for a New American Economy and initiatives aimed at comprehensive immigration reform. We do a disservice to ourselves by perpetuating harmful stereotypes about immigration. It was the hard-working immigrants of the 19th and 20th centuries who literally built these United States and that spirit of entrepreneurship is alive and well within the thousands of people who legally come to America each year to find the American Dream.
The semiconductor industry is constantly reinventing itself with technology innovations that create new markets and evolve the features and performance of existing products. Our products touch virtually every aspect of the economy from communication and transportation to medical and consumer electronics.
American-based companies like Freescale have been leaders in the industry, but global competition is fierce for the best talent. The only way we can maintain our lead is to recruit the best and the brightest engineers from around the world.
Our technology zones in Austin and Silicon Valley continue to be magnets for the best minds in the industry; however, our immigration laws raise unnecessary barriers that often push this critical resource to our global competition.
At Freescale, we strive to be on the cutting edge of a dynamic industry that is building the technologies of the future. We cannot afford to handicap our success with an immigration system that does not support that vision.
I joined the Partnership for a New American Economy to help create immigration reform that makes America more attractive in the global marketplace and encourages the world’s best engineers and entrepreneurs to realize their potential with the American dream.
City Pockets is a web service and mobile app which brings all of your social shopping deals and group discounts into one place. You can organize all your deals from Groupon, LivingSocial, OpenTable and other coupon services in one place where you can monitor expiration dates, view deals by location, as well as buy and sell online discounts in a secondary market.
I started CityPockets here in the U.S., but I was born and raised in Malaysia where I started my first business when I was 8 years old and had a second profitable business by the age of 16. After high school, I came to the U.S. for my undergraduate studies in Operations Research and Industrial Engineering at Cornell University and subsequently received a scholarship to finish my Master’s in Engineering Management a few years later. I joined the American workforce, working for a total of 4 years for American corporations before receiving my green card.
I conceived the idea for CityPockets in April 2010 while I was still employed as a Senior Associate Consultant at KPMG. For four months, I would come home from my job every day and work until 3 A.M. on the code for what I called at the time my "passion project." Eventually, I realized it was time to take the dive into entrepreneurship. With the stability of a green card, I was able to quit my job and pursue CityPockets full-time – working hard with my co-founder to develop the right product, build the right team, and attract the necessary investors.
One year later, we have raised more than $750K through investment from venture capital firms and angel investors. As the CEO of a start-up tech company with a growing team, I am always on the hunt for the best talent to support my vision, no matter where they were born.
I joined the Partnership for a New American Economy because I know that immigrants help create jobs and that all Americans benefits when we attract and keep the world’s talent. I was able to start as an aspiring high school graduate in Malaysia and end up as a job-creating entrepreneur in New York City. But in New York – and across the country – I meet other immigrant entrepreneurs, students and engineers who want to stay here and have the drive and talent to start or join the next great company, but simply can’t get the visa they need. The complicated, expensive and time-consuming process that it takes for an employer to hire immigrants deters a small but growing startup like mine to hire immigrants, which I hope to see changed. Smarter immigration laws can ensure America continues to attract the talent, ideas and energy we need to generate new ideas, new companies and new jobs for generations to come.
Recently, CW Biofuels’ team adopted production technology that converts any fat, oil, oilseed product, or grease into a clean, versatile, and high performance diesel fuel. As CW Biofuel’s CEO, I know how much our company’s and our competitor’s success relies on attracting top notch researchers and scientists, regardless of their country of origin.
With its combined promise of economic opportunity and social mobility, the United States has since its inception acted as a magnet for hard-working immigrants. But we cannot grow complacent. Today, renewable energy competitors in China and Western Europe can hire and retain talented workers as American companies face myriad obstacles and an immigration system unsuited for 21st century global economic realities.
I joined The Partnership for a New American Economy because I believe in the power of a smart immigration system to aid our businesses and jump start our ailing economy. As a united front of CEOs and mayors, we can set the record straight: better immigration law is the best economic stimulus that Congress could offer.
Ecolab was born in 1923 when our founder M. J. Osborne created a product that cleaned carpets on the spot, eliminating the need for hotels to shut down while their carpets were being cleaned.
By staying focused on finding solutions to customer needs, Ecolab has grown to become the global leader in cleaning, sanitizing, food safety and infection prevention products and services. We offer more than 28,000 products and services to more than 1 million customers in 160 countries, backed by solid science and proven to maintain the highest standards of cleanliness and hygiene.
Our business model depends on both exceptional products and exceptional customer service. To stay ahead of the competition, we continue to make substantial investments in innovation to improve performance and provide cost savings for our customers. And we continue to invest in hiring and training people who can innovate, lead and deliver outstanding customer service.
At a time when other companies are pulling back, Ecolab is preparing for the future, completing a merger that will increase our revenue from $6 billion last year to $11+ billion next year.
Ecolab will serve industry leaders in the food, hospitality, industrial and energy markets globally. To continue to earn their business, we must be able to hire and keep talented employees with strong science and business backgrounds and good language skills, who are motivated to meet our high standards. We know we need the best talent, the most efficient supply chains and the strongest customer relationships to remain the global leader in these competitive times.
Currently, U.S. immigration laws make it more difficult to bring the best talent to our company and get the right worker in the right place at the right time. That’s why I joined the Partnership for a New American Economy. A smarter immigration system would allow us to find and keep dedicated people who can help us innovate and keep our promise of exceptional customer service—regardless of where our customers operate. America, more than any other nation, has historically attracted immigrants in search of a brighter, safer future. It’s time that we returned to our founding principles by creating an immigration system that works.
By all accounts, Worcester has admirably weathered the storm of economic recession. A diverse swath of industries has helped keep Worcester’s residents employed and our city’s economy on stable footing. These past few years have tested and proven that resilience; we have continued to lead our state and nation in promoting growth and innovation in the healthcare, education, biotechnology and life sciences fields. We have also continued a proud industrial history that has evolved into an innovative high-tech and advanced manufacturing sector that competes with companies from around the globe. As a result, we receive high marks for livability and economic ingenuity, and we continue to grow steadily despite hard times.
Worcester has a long and proud history of embracing generations of immigrants who arrived from all parts of the globe to help build our local economy and create a wonderfully rich community. We have long recognized that our remarkable diversity is one of our greatest strengths. As Mayor, I want my city to be able to continue to seek those immigrants who are ambitious enough to seek enterprise and prosperity.
We’ve done our part to encourage economic growth through sensible economic policies and focused revitalization efforts. But the resources most valuable to our businesses – hard-working and highly-skilled workers– are too often turned away by federal immigration laws that set arbitrary guidelines, rather than ones based on economics and job-growth. We have succeeded as a local government in leveraging all available resources to keep jobs and expand businesses, and we want our federal government to show just as much devotion to that same effort.
I joined the Partnership for a New American Economy because Worcester is a city that can show our government what a robust economy looks like, and it is a city that needs productive immigration laws to continue to pioneer forward.
LORD Corporation began when one patent attorney, Hugh Lord, couldn’t find anyone to manufacture his inventions and instead hired six workers to help him out. Today, we employ more than 2,700 workers and operate as the world’s leading manufacturer of industrial adhesives, coatings, and noise and vibration control devices. Throughout our history, we’ve improved equipment from aircraft instruments to truck suspensions—and today we are literally the mortar of hundreds of manufacturing businesses.
Our company relies on employees that carry forward our tradition of innovation. In our line of work, there are no one-size-fits-all solutions, and to keep pace with other industries we need the best engineers to advance our products and develop new technologies. America has some of the world’s best engineering schools, and they attract the best minds from all around the world to study specialized fields such as material science, electro-mechanical dynamic systems or polymerization. Yet our federal immigration system prevents these graduates from staying and working for companies like LORD Corporation. I’ve joined the Partnership for a New American Economy because I know that a smarter immigration strategy today will help LORD Corporation remain a world leader in innovation for the industries of tomorrow.
MonolithIC 3D Inc., my latest company, has developed a breakthrough technology to enable practical monolithic 3D chips with the potential to extend Moore’s Law for the next two decades with significant benefits in power, speed, density and price. The U.S. Patent Office granted our chip research five patents, and more than thirty are still pending their approval.
Although I decided to start my company in the United States, many brilliant, foreign-born entrepreneurs and scientists do not, deterred by the broken American immigration system. Letting their ideas and the resulting job creation occur overseas is simply bad politics and bad economic policy. I hope my work with the Partnership for a New American Economy will turn around the mistaken conventional wisdom that immigrants take away jobs from Americans. In the eighties, I came to the U.S. on a high skilled worker visa and later created three active companies and tens of direct jobs and many indirect businesses and jobs. Today, the National Foundation for American Policy has found that each high skill H1-B visa creates five additional American jobs.
My story of an immigrant creating a successful high tech company in the United States is but one of many. The United States has a rich history of bright immigrants bringing ideas and a penchant for hard work. It’s time our immigration laws begin to embrace these talented engineers and scientists and leverage the fact that the US is an attractive place that many aspire to immigrate to. The future of our economy is highly dependent on the United States retaining its position as the world’s technology leader. Welcoming talented immigrants is our best way to keep it so.
And that is the key to our prosperity. Park City was founded in the late 1860s by prospectors and quickly became a hub for silver mining, which it remained through the 1970s. Immigrant labor in the mines and services was a key to early success. In 1963, the mining company had the foresight to set into motion a business venture that would become the city’s defining industry and lay the groundwork for the city’s economy in the next century—tourism. Since then, Park City has been known as one of the premier skiing destinations the world over. In fact, at any one point, the number of tourists exceeds the number of permanent residents by more than double, with more than 3 million average visitors every year.
Immigrants play a critical role in the Park City economy, providing a workforce for our superior resorts and multilingual hospitality staff to facilitate the international visitors that come from afar for our yearly Sundance Film Festival; immigrants also played key roles in our hosting of the 2002 Winter Olympic Games.
We cannot remain on the sidelines when the U.S. continues to refuse to change broken immigration policies. In the spirit of the pioneers that founded Park City, we welcome hard-working and entrepreneurial people, and welcome the prosperity they bring with them. Park City stands with the Partnership for a New American Economy and calls on Washington to fix a broken system. Sensible immigration policies that include a realistic path to citizenship will help fuel the American economy and the American Dream for generations to come.
When most folks name cutting-edge technologies, rarely is “synthetic lawn manufacturing” on the tip of their tongue. At NewGrass, we seek to change that. We have surged past our competitors by developing the first eco-friendly, recyclable synthetic grass products on the market. Our market share has grown because we have recognized a global shift toward sustainable product lifecycle development—by introducing eco-friendly design to a product that our customers already seek for its resource-conserving advantages, we aim to become the leading brand in our industry.
Businesses like ours are successful because they adapt to shifts in our global economy, and we want America to have similar economic success. The fastest-developing countries in the world make sure their businesses can recruit the workers they need on a permanent and seasonal basis. So when certain jobs demand a highly specialized skill set or certain industries experience a temporary surge in labor demand, American immigration policies should respond in kind. Unfortunately, they don’t. And because we lack laws that recognize the unavoidable demand for migrant labor, we’ve developed an immigration system rife with undocumented labor and unchecked immigration. Our business and the American economy would benefit by an immigration system that responds to businesses’ labor needs.
I’ve joined the Partnership for a New American Economy because I want our country to capitalize on the realities in the global economy, not hide from them. If I can lead my business to greener pastures by harnessing these shifts, surely Congress can lead our country to a better economic future by doing the same.
Whether you are shopping for jewelry or appliances, electronics or clothes, a car or booking your next vacation spot, O.co (aka Overstock.com) is the online store that millions of consumers turn to for the highest quality goods at low prices. By focusing on providing online shoppers with the best value and a superior customer experience, our business has grown rapidly from a mere 18 employees at our inception in 1999. We would be unable to provide this service, however, without our highly-skilled staff. We now employ more than 1,600 people—from the designers and developers who keep our website functional and user-friendly, to the buyers who ensure that O.co continues to offer high-quality, brand-name merchandise at low prices, to the customer service representatives who keep our customers happy. Our ability to access and hire these talented employees, no matter where they were born, is essential to our success as a business and our ability to continue to create jobs in America.
That is why I support and signed onto the Utah Compact, a declaration of five principles that guide the immigration reform debate in Utah. It is also why I have joined and support the Partnership for a New American Economy, a group that is rightly focusing on the imperative economic need for streamlining our national immigration system. Allowing bright and hard-working people from around the world to come here to work allows companies like ours to prosper and grow, which in turn generates a wealth of new jobs, opportunities and profits here at home.
From sustainable buildings and electric vehicles to smartphones and smarter kitchens, Autodesk customers are changing the way we all live and play, and redefining the way we do business. Working across virtually every industry—from architecture, manufacturing, transportation, and utilities to telecommunications, video games, television, and film—over 10 million professionals in 185 countries use our software to solve some of the world’s most complex problems. Whether it’s a business issue like how to get a car to market faster, or a global challenge, such as harnessing the power of ocean currents, our customers are designing what’s next.
As a leader in 3D design, engineering, and entertainment software, we’re committed to helping people imagine, design, and create a better world. Innovation is at the very heart of that commitment, fueling what we do for our customers, and what our customers do for the rest of the world. Our ability to innovate and in turn enable innovation in others depends on a supply of talented engineers, designers, and digital artists who are passionate about the challenges that drive us.
Many of these talented individuals are foreign-born students who all too often are forced to leave the United States once they graduate from our universities. By sending them home, we ensure that our country will never benefit from the depth of their imagination or realize the fruits of their vision. We not only lose the talent that can create sorely needed jobs, but also the opportunity to witness the creation of something revolutionary.
And we live the American story. Like many immigrant Koreans, upon landing in New York, my parents opened a deli. They worked grueling hours, often seven days a week, but they knew what they were working for and they succeeded. They succeeded because I grew up with opportunities that they could only have dreamed of. I started my first company, DynaMind, in my twenties, developing one of the first database driven websites on the World Wide Web to allow schools to create their own home pages and receive free internet connectivity through the local data telecom company, SNET. By the time I sold the platform and usage rights to SNET and the state of CT, more than 1,800 schools and nearly 400 libraries were connected to the Internet in the mid 1990’s.
Building on DynaMind’s success, I started two technology companies that have employed over 160 employees and deployed more than 700 websites and online applications during the height of the dotcom era, supporting organizations like American Express, Akamai Technologies, BJ’s Wholesale Club, LG Electronics, The US Peace Corp, and The White House. And, in 2001, I was fortunate enough to be honored as a finalist for the Ernst and Young “Entrepreneur of the Year Award” and “Outstanding 50 Asian American in Business Award” in 2005.
I joined the Partnership for a New American Economy because while my story is an immigrant story, it is also an American story. Immigrants like my family come here to work. We come here for a better life. And America is better for it.
I am proud to be an American. I am proud to have built American companies. And I am proud to have created American jobs. Entrepreneurial minds the world over want that same pride. And if we are smarter about our immigration laws, we can give it to them while strengthening our economy for the next generation of Americans.
Cummins is proud of our Indiana heritage. Since our founding in Indiana over 90 years ago, we have grown into a large, global corporation that now does business in 190 countries and stands as one of the largest companies in the state. I joined the Partnership for a New American Economy because our history at Cummins has proven to us again and again that we can only grow and create American jobs if we convince the best minds around the world to come to Indiana. Nearly 30 percent of Cummins' professional work force in Indiana was born outside the United States, including nearly 500 people born in India, more than 100 from China and 70 from Mexico. These workers are job creators, and the vast majority of the jobs they create are filled by Americans.
Cummins competes against the best companies in the world for talent, especially for the large number of engineers we need to design the next-generation products and technologies that will determine our future success. These talented individuals are in high demand and short supply, and can work anywhere in the world. If we want to build the companies and create the jobs of tomorrow, we need to make America an appealing and welcoming place for the brightest minds of today.
As mayor of Salt Lake City, I welcome entrepreneurs of all stripes to create opportunities in Utah's capital city. Nicknamed the Crossroads of the West, Salt Lake City drew thousands of newcomers during the railroad and mining booms of the 1800s; rails were laid, and when the reservoirs of silver and gold ran dry, the work ethic and entrepreneurial spirit of these transplants did not. They settled and used their talents to create new businesses.
This is a quintessential American story. Immigrants have come to the United States for centuries, seeking opportunities and better lives for themselves and their children. We benefit tremendously from their talent and their drive, and we must ensure that our laws adequately consider the powerful economic benefit of uniquely-skilled immigrants who create jobs and new lives on our rich Utah soil.
Today, Salt Lake City's economy thrives in many sectors. Researchers at the University of Utah have developed technology to prevent strokes, use wireless neural transmitters to control prosthetic limbs, and treat wastewater by electrifying microbes. High tech development is not exclusive to laboratories, and the Salt Lake area has also fostered the nascent e-commerce industry. Companies with major web presence such as eBay, Unisys, and Micron have all opened offices here in Utah, and Salt Lake-born web discounter Overstock.com pioneered liquidation e-commerce. American companies and universities benefit from being able to hire the best, including foreigners, who posses invaluable talents and knowhow.
As mayor, I have fostered the greater flow of global ideas and capital through the Salt Lake City Foreign Trade Zone, which forges relationships between Salt Lake City and international companies, reducing trade barriers and increasing sales. But as mayor, I struggle when Utah-trained immigrants are forced to leave the U.S., taking their expertise and entrepreneurship to create companies that compete with American companies. I cannot change federal immigration laws, but I can offer credible testimony. Sensible immigration laws fuel a stronger American economy.
My testimony is not unique, hundreds of other business leaders and mayors have united their voices with the Partnership for a New American Economy to call on Washington to fix our broken immigration system. Simply put, driving away smart and hardworking people endangers our future prosperity.
For Alcoa to a remain America's leader in Aluminum research, innovation, and production, we increasingly rely on our ability to hire, train, and keep a diversified workforce that draws upon talent from this country as well as from abroad.
I joined the Partnership for a New American Economy as I support their strategic vision of comprehensive immigration reform, which will help Alcoa keep its status as America's global leader in the aluminum industry.
Kodak helps consumers, businesses, and creative professionals unleash the power of pictures and printing to enrich their lives. Every day, we work to create a new digital company. We do this by developing the broadest portfolios of technologies, products and services to help consumers, commercial printers and enterprises make, manage and move information and images.
The driving force behind Kodak's innovative products has been the world class talent that we attract from around the globe. The rapid pace by which our business evolves calls for a highly-skilled and specialized workforce. The U.S. represents only five percent of the population of the world and a successful export strategy is fundamental for global American companies. Our company exemplifies the need for strong immigration reform, so that we can continue to recruit talent and provide our workforce with the opportunities to excel in their fields -- without geographical boundaries hindering their ability to innovate here in the United States.
There are so many small towns and cities that are struggling to compete in the new global economy. So many old factories have shut down and young people have to move away to find good jobs. To turn things around, it takes a creative but tried-and-true strategy, that involves tapping into the entrepreneurial spirit of America's immigrant tradition. The federal government's failure to build a consistent policy that allows for the legal entry of hard-working and committed immigrants makes it that much tougher for communities like mine to take advantage of growth opportunities. I joined the Partnership for a New American Economy so that Lewiston and small towns throughout America can revitalize: attract population and create jobs again.
BioEnterprise was formed to grow the bioscience and healthcare companies that will keep America competitive in this key sector of the 21st century global economy. Its funders and partners include Cleveland Clinic, University Hospitals, Case Western Reserve University, Summa Health System, and BioInnovation Institute. In less than a decade, BioEnterprise has assisted over 100 biomedical start-ups in the Cleveland area that have gone on to attract over $1 billion in funding, brought numerous new medical innovations to the marketplace, and created hundreds of knowledge-economy jobs.
Its success depends upon its ability to connect inventors, entrepreneurs, clinicians, and investors, no matter where they come from. I joined the Partnership for a New American Economy to advocate for a smarter immigration system;a system that rolls out the red carpet for the individuals who will keep Americans at work in the coming decades.
For more than 85 years, Caterpillar Inc. has been making sustainable progress possible and driving positive change on every continent. With 2010 sales and revenues of $42.588 billion, Caterpillar is the world's leading manufacturer of construction and mining equipment, diesel and natural gas engines, industrial gas turbines and diesel-electric locomotives. We are also a leading services provider through Caterpillar Financial Services, Caterpillar Remanufacturing Services, Caterpillar Logistics Services and Progress Rail Services.
We are proud of our role in building the world's infrastructure, and we are determined to maintain our position as the global leader. Global competition is getting tougher everyday, and we need policies that enhance our ability to compete on the global stage. We need reasonable immigration laws that allow us to attract and keep the best talent in the United States, working for us, instead of for our competitors. For example, today we have engineers from around the world getting advanced degrees at universities across the United States. Instead of keeping that talent here, developing our diverse workforce and building our innovation focused-economy, too often these people are sent home because getting a green card is difficult and time consuming. I want to help change that and keep the world's best talent right here. And that's one of the reasons I have joined the Partnership for a New American Economy‚to help promote policies that keep the United States competitive.

