The University of Missouri sparked national controversy after posting eight Labor Condition Applications signaling intent to hire H-1B visa workers, including a Strategic Communications Associate position paying approximately $64,000 per year.
Chris Brunet highlighted the posting on social media. “Missouri University (@Mizzou) just posted a notice of intent to hire an H-1B Strategic Communications Associate Salary: $64,000 Nobody in America was qualified for this job.”
US Tech Workers amplified the criticism. “This is part of the job description for the H-1B position that @Mizzou posted online. The claim that H-1B visas are only for highly specialized talent that no qualified American can fill is clearly a lie.”
The job duties listed in the posting are far from exotic — creating social media posts for LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube; writing newsletters; reviewing analytics; making short videos; and serving as a liaison to campus communications staff. The position requires only a bachelor’s degree or equivalent experience plus two years of work.
The H-1B visa program was designed to allow employers to hire foreign workers only in “specialty occupations,” defined as jobs requiring the theoretical and practical application of highly specialized knowledge. Critics argue a generic social media and newsletter role plainly does not meet that standard.
Federal law does not require most employers to first demonstrate they attempted to hire Americans before filing an H-1B petition. That requirement only applies to employers designated as “H-1B dependent” or those previously found to have violated the rules. Universities are entirely exempt from the annual H-1B cap of 65,000 visas, allowing institutions like Mizzou to file petitions year-round in unlimited numbers.
The Mizzou posting drew immediate political and federal attention. Missouri State Sen. Rick Brattin called them “outrageous,” writing: “Public universities getting American tax dollars should hire qualified Americans, not shop around for H-1B visa workers.”
Jesus Osete, the Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division, publicly linked to the department’s Immigrant and Employee Rights Section complaint portal, writing “We want to hear from you.” The move signaled federal interest without formally announcing an investigation.
Mizzou spokesperson Christopher Ave told ABC17News the university is “reviewing the matter.”
The Mizzou case demonstrates exactly why the H-1B program needs to be abolished entirely, not merely reformed. Public universities funded by American taxpayers should be hiring American workers, full stop. Eliminating the H-1B visa would be a good first step toward a broader immigration policy that puts the interests of American workers ahead of corporations and institutions seeking cheaper foreign labor.
