After the U.S.
Government Accountability Office (GAO) and its own inspector
general faulted the U.S. Department of State for failing to oversee
summer work and training exchanges for foreigners, the State
Department plans to cut back a program it can't seem to manage. At
issue is the Exchange Visitor Program, authorized by the 1961
Fulbright-Hays Act (PL 87-256) and now administered by the State
Department's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA). It
brings approximately 275,000 students, scholars, trainees, and
interns to the United States annually.
Thousands of employers also participate in the Summer Work Travel
and the Trainee programs. Employers include corporations,
architectural firms, hotels, restaurants, development
organizations, airlines, investment and financial services
entities, and manufacturing companies.
Most of these exchanges are privately funded, but the State
Department is charged with ensuring that visitors who come to
experience American culture and learn the ways of U.S. industry are
not turned into low wage workers or unpaid help, or abused in any
other way.
What's Wrong
According to the GAO, the State Department ensures compliance with
program regulations mainly by reviewing annual reports provided by
sponsors. State officials rarely visit sponsors to observe program
activities or verify data that they provide. In the past four
years, State officials have visited only eight of its 206 Summer
Work Travel and/or Trainee sponsors. Moreover, sponsors themselves
are responsible for notifying State of any serious problems.
The GAO uncovered trainee applicants who said they were going to
the United States to work as kitchen help and waiters-hardly an
experience likely to win hearts and minds. Their sponsor claimed
another organization was responsible for their selection and
placement. In another case, the Department double-checked a
sponsor's Web site and discovered that it was a topless bar.
State says staffing caps and scarce travel funds limit intensive
sponsor monitoring. The Office of Exchange Coordination and
Designation has only five program officers who serve as contacts
and are responsible for the day-to-day management of 13 exchange
programs.
Unstated in the GAO and inspector general reviews is that Congress
typically underfunds the State Department. Instead of keeping
lawmakers informed of its needs, however, the Department's
Legislative Affairs Bureau spends most of its time filtering
communication between its offices and the Capitol-to keep hapless
State employees from saying something to Hill staffers that might
endanger the status quo.
The Response
Rather than devise ways in which it could oversee the Summer Work
Travel and the Trainee program better, the ECA proposed new rules
to reduce its own load by cutting the number of international
students and young professionals coming to the United States as
interns or trainees.
New regulations would ban internships for undergraduate students
and force U.S. sponsors to conduct expensive screening interviews
overseas. Interns would have to achieve the same language aptitude
score required for a college degree program, instead of
communicative competence. Repeat or serial training programs would
be eliminated.
All of these factors would restrict access to a program that
provides flexible opportunities for substantive, positive
experiences in the U.S. and would deprive American firms both the
chance to showcase American techniques and values and opportunities
to identify talent from around the world.
The Alliance for International Educational and Cultural Exchange,
an organization devoted to promoting overseas exchanges, complains
that the ECA response would counter Bush administration goals to
strengthen U.S. public diplomacy programs. The U.S. public
diplomacy mission fell into disarray when the U.S. Information
Agency was merged into the State Department in 1999. Shortly
thereafter, foreign exchanges reached a ten-year numerical
low.
A Better Fix
To its credit, the State Department notified U.S. sponsors of its
rule proposals and offered a 60-day comment period during April and
May. That period closed June 6, 2006. According to the Department,
numerous sponsors complained loudly about restricting foreign
undergraduate internships in the United States.
Like the J.
William Fulbright Foreign Scholarships and other exchange programs,
the Summer Work Travel Program should be guided by a comprehensive
strategy that will strengthen person-to-person relations with
individual visitors from foreign nations. As part of such a
strategy, State's ECA bureau should receive personnel and funds to
exercise adequate oversight, while trainees and interns must have a
dedicated complaint system to voice concerns when sponsors depart
the parameters envisioned by the program.
Both Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Under Secretary for
Public Diplomacy Karen Hughes should make it clear to senior
Department career managers that improving the quality and content
of exchanges is part of the Bush administration's plan to
revitalize State's weak public diplomacy function. Furthermore,
strengthening public diplomacy is essential to winning the global
war on terror.
Conclusion
The State Department's senior careerists are right to propose
changes that would eliminate waste, fraud, and abuse in the
exchange visitor program. However, cutting it back because it
doesn't fit State's core mission of traditional diplomacy or simply
to relieve an administrative headache may not be in the country's
best interest. Perhaps the Department's political leadership and
Congress need to weigh in more heavily in this decision.
Stephen Johnson is Senior Policy Analyst in the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies, and James Jay Carafano, Ph.D., is Senior Research Fellow for Defense and Homeland Security in the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies, at The Heritage Foundation.