Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
International

University Of California Lays Off IT Workers, Jobs Head To India

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 Mar, 2017 12:28 PM
    The University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) has laid off 49 information technology (IT) employees and outsourced their work to a company based in India, ending a year-long process that has brought the public university under fire.
     
    The university announced the plan last July as a way to save $30 million over five years. The University of California system, which includes healthcare and research-focused UCSF, has been struggling to raise revenue and cut expenses.
     
     
    Globalisation and outsourcing have become hot-button political issues in the United States, as more employers cut costs by farming out work to low-cost workers in far-flung parts of the world.
     
    President Donald Trump campaigned on promises to restore lost US jobs and to penalise companies that move factories overseas.
     
     
    This was the University of California's first outsourcing, said a spokeswoman who added that the layoffs were necessary due to rising costs of technology.
     
    In addition to the 49 staff layoffs, another 48 positions that were vacant or filled by contractors were eliminated.
     
    California Senator Dianne Feinstein last year said the university had a responsibility to keep jobs in the United States and pledged to seek reforms to stop domestic jobs being outsourced.
     
    Kurt Ho, 58, a laid off systems administrator, carried a box of his personal items with an American flag draped over it, and said the university's decision will hurt service for a medical staff that relies on a smoothly running and secure computer network.
     
     
    "It's a downgrading of services and a slap in the face for the customers," said Ho, who has worked in IT in the Bay Area for 25 years. He said he plans to look for a job but worries that outsourcing of IT services is a growing trend.
     
    Last year, UCSF entered into a $50-million contract over five years with India-based HCL Technologies Ltd to do the work.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Nikki Haley Doing An 'Awfully Good Job': Donald Trump

    Nikki Haley Doing An 'Awfully Good Job': Donald Trump
    Haley is the first Indian American to hold the Cabinet-level position and served as the 116th governor of South Carolina from January 2011 to January 2017. 

    Nikki Haley Doing An 'Awfully Good Job': Donald Trump

    'Islamophobic' Saudi Arabia Deports 40,000 Muslim Pakistanis, Citing Terrorism Concerns

    'Islamophobic' Saudi Arabia Deports 40,000 Muslim Pakistanis, Citing Terrorism Concerns
    Thousands of foreign national workers allegedly expelled from country over visa violations and security concerns, as protests over unpaid wages continue 

    'Islamophobic' Saudi Arabia Deports 40,000 Muslim Pakistanis, Citing Terrorism Concerns

    Turkish Airlines Flight To Toronto Evacuated After Suspicious Note Seen In Bathroom

    Turkish Airlines Flight To Toronto Evacuated After Suspicious Note Seen In Bathroom
    A Turkish Airlines plane in Istanbul was evacuated Saturday after a suspicious note was discovered in one of its bathrooms.

    Turkish Airlines Flight To Toronto Evacuated After Suspicious Note Seen In Bathroom

    Indian-Origin Lawyer Banned For Harassing Ex-Girlfriend In UK

    Indian-Origin Lawyer Banned For Harassing Ex-Girlfriend In UK
    An Indian-origin barrister in the UK who was convicted of harassing his ex-girlfriend last year has been disbarred from practising law.

    Indian-Origin Lawyer Banned For Harassing Ex-Girlfriend In UK

    Indian-Origin Chancellor Rejects Chinese Students' Call Not To Invite Dalai Lama

    A US university headed by an Indian-origin academician has rejected call by Chinese students to withdraw invitation to exiled Tibetan leader the Dalai Lama but assured them that his speech would have nothing to with politics.

    Indian-Origin Chancellor Rejects Chinese Students' Call Not To Invite Dalai Lama

    US Republican Senator Orrin Hatch Seeks Reforms In H-1B Visa System

    US Republican Senator Orrin Hatch Seeks Reforms In H-1B Visa System
    A top US Senator has sought reform in H-1B visas system to bring in highly qualified workers from other countries to fill the huge shortage of IT professionals in the US.

    US Republican Senator Orrin Hatch Seeks Reforms In H-1B Visa System