Demand is hot in the Twin Cities and across the country for workers from overseas with computer, engineering and other science skills, according to a report released Wednesday by the Brookings Institution.
The Twin Cities ranked 16th out of 106 metro areas, as measured by the number of "H-1B visa" requests submitted by local employers from 2010 to 2011.
The H-1B is a temporary work visa issued by the federal government that allows foreign nationals with special knowledge or skills to immigrate legally to the United States for three years at a time. The Brookings report takes a ground-level view of how the much-debated H-1B visa program is playing out in the U.S. economy by studying which cities have the highest demand.
By far, most of the 4,199 requests made by Twin Cities employers went to fill jobs in computer-related fields, the study found. Engineers, health practitioners, financial specialists and business operation specialists rounded out the top jobs filled by overseas talent.
"One of the surprises is that this is a program used very widely across the country," said Jill Wilson, senior research analyst with Brookings and one of the study's authors. And demand from employers continues to exceed the supply of visas available, she said.
Rochester, Minn., stands out as a high user of the H-1B program.
More than 70 percent of requests made for the special visas to bring over skilled immigrants to Rochester came from research or academic institutions -- the largest share of any U.S. metro area, the study found.