DHS Initiates Review of Student Work Programs Following Senator's Concerns

DHS Initiates Review of Student Work Programs Following Senator's Concerns.webp

Washington, March 4 – A leading Republican senator raised concerns about alleged abuse of employment-based visa programs, including the H-1B system and Optional Practical Training (OPT), prompting the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to confirm that it is reviewing the student work program.

During a Senate Judiciary Committee oversight hearing, Senator Eric Schmitt argued that the H-1B visa program was increasingly being misused in ways that could disadvantage American workers.

“For those listening, the H-1B program was marketed as a program to bring in the best and brightest for jobs that we don’t have people for,” Schmitt said.

“What’s happening is this abuse, is that American citizens are being displaced by cheaper, more obedient foreign labor.”

Schmitt also criticized the Optional Practical Training program, which allows foreign students studying in the United States to work after completing their education.

He said the program had effectively become “visa mills for universities, taking away opportunities for American students because they don’t have to pay taxes on the foreign labor for at least a year if you have this visa for OPT.”

According to the senator, the program has seen widespread misuse.

“The abuse has been pretty rampant,” Schmitt said.

Schmitt told the committee that he had written to the Department of Homeland Security about both programs and asked the agency to review the scope and duration of OPT.

Responding during the hearing, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem confirmed that the department had begun such a review.

“Yes, we are. We’re continuing to do that review now, and it will be completed here in 2026,” Noem said.

Schmitt asked whether the department would commit to completing the reevaluation within the year.

“Yes, we are. We’re continuing to do that review now, and it will be completed here in 2026,” Noem replied.

The exchange came during a wide-ranging hearing focused primarily on immigration enforcement, border security, and oversight of the Department of Homeland Security.

Lawmakers questioned Noem on several aspects of immigration policy, including deportations, detention practices, and national security concerns.

The discussion on H-1B visas and the OPT program was one of the few portions of the hearing that addressed legal immigration pathways rather than enforcement actions against undocumented migrants.

The Department of Homeland Security oversees immigration compliance and visa programs through agencies including Immigration and Customs Enforcement and US Citizenship and Immigration Services.
 
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border security department of homeland security eric schmitt foreign labor h-1b visa program immigration compliance immigration enforcement immigration policy kristi noem optional practical training (opt) senate judiciary committee student work programs us citizenship and immigration services visa mills visa programs
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