TVA rescinds decision to outsource technology jobs

President Donald Trump in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Aug. 5, 2020. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, Pool)

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Just days after President Donald Trump fired the chairman of the Tennessee Valley Authority and criticized the agency for hiring foreign workers, the federally owned energy corporation announced it was rescinding a decision to lay off its in-house technology workers.

The authority had been planning on replacing those workers with contractors who rely heavily on foreign workers under the H1-B visa program for highly skilled workers. Yet on Monday, Trump fired TVA chairman Skip Thompson on Monday and threatened to remove other board members if they continued to hire foreign labor.

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By Thursday, interim TVA Board Chair John Ryder and TVA President and CEO Jeff Lyash met with White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and White House Counsel Pat Cipollone to discuss the preservation of U.S. jobs.

“We had a positive meeting with the White House and wholeheartedly agree with the Administration’s direction on jobs,” Ryder said in a statement. “We expressed that our IT restructuring process was faulty and that we have changed direction so that we can ensure American jobs are protected.”

TVA had previously announced it would outsource 20% of its technology jobs to companies based in foreign countries. TVA’s action would have caused more than 200 highly skilled American tech workers in Tennessee to lose their jobs to foreign workers hired on temporary work visas, according to the White House.

However, under a newly signed executive order, Trump has since required all federal agencies to complete an internal audit to prove they are not replacing qualified American workers with people from other countries

TVA officials said in a news release that it would review the “full scope” of its contract companies to ensure compliance with Trump’s new order.

The TVA was created in 1933 to provide flood control, electricity generation, fertilizer manufacturing and economic development to the Tennessee Valley, a region that was hard hit by the Great Depression. The region covers most of Tennessee and parts of Alabama, Mississippi and Kentucky as well as Georgia, North Carolina and Virginia.