Inc.

IMMIGRATION ANXIETY

Despite the political rhetoric, our economy needs foreign workers. You need to know how to protect yours
FLAGGING THE TROUBLE SPOTS There are different types of visas and work authorization for different kinds of workers.

WHEN AN OMINOUS-LOOKING letter from the Department of Homeland Security arrived, Ximena Hartsock felt nervous. The co-founder of Phone2Action, a civic-engagement startup based in Washington, D.C., had helped a few of her 65 employees obtain visas, but now the DHS was retroactively reviewing one worker’s status. The letter—known as a Request for Evidence—demanded additional documents within 90 days. “Don’t worry, we’re handling it,” Hartsock, who emigrated from Chile in 1997, told her employee. “But to see this person’s eyes—it’s tough,” she says. “It’s very close to the anxiety and anguish you feel when someone is very sick.”

For many businesses, 2017 was a year of immigration anxiety. If you employ immigrants, uncertainty is likely taking

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Inc.

Inc.26 min read
How They Stay On Top
Karen Robinovitz & Sara Schiller Stirring Up Hope in Unexpected Places Co-founders of the Sloomoo Institute TWO things helped Karen Robinovitz, 52 (near right), and Sara Schiller, 53, overcome the most devastating periods in their lives: friends and
Inc.2 min read
Family Office
The most stressful part of Pistola founder Grace Na's day isn't what you'd expect for the founder of a denim company with 40 employees and a factory right in Los Angeles. It's placing a lunch order for her head of tech and pattern and her head financ
Inc.3 min readSmall Business & Entrepreneurs
Screen Play
Joe Thomas and his co-founders were two weeks away from running out of money for their software startup when, in 2016, they launched a new product and went all in on prerecorded videos as a workplace communication tool. That product generated thousan

Related Books & Audiobooks