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This Week in Jobs: Let the sun shine on your career with these 27 tech opportunities
This Week in Jobs: Let the sun shine on your career with these 27 tech opportunities

Technical.ly

time22-04-2025

  • Business
  • Technical.ly

This Week in Jobs: Let the sun shine on your career with these 27 tech opportunities

Happy Earth Day! The very first Earth Day celebration happened April 22, 1970. One of the biggest events that year was in Fairmount Park in Philadelphia. More than 20,000 people gathered at what was described as part environmental teach-in, part hippie music festival. 'Their dream for the Age of Aquarius was to 'let the sun shine in, let the sun shine in,'' CBS News correspondent David Culhane reported at the time. In 2025, much like in 1970, Earth Day events are happening in the midst of regular nationwide protests. Earth Day events are traditionally not protests, however — they're awareness events with a call to action. This year, the official theme is 'Our Power, Our Planet,' with a call to unite around a goal to triple clean electricity by 2030. In honor of Earth Day, you'll find some tech jobs below that are helping to do good for the planet. The News Climate tech company Crux announced $50 million in Series B investment — and no fear of the current administration's climate policies. Everything you need to know about HB-1 work visas. In Philly, startup investments continue to fall, as policy uncertainty triggers 'paralysis.' But in Pittsburgh, while the number of individual venture capital deals are down, its AI and robotics startups saw the largest quarterly funding total in Q1 in over a decade. Insiders and activists warn that DOGE's control of personal data is helping the government target people for deportation. Client Spotlight Originally established in 2004, self-storage company CubeSmart has driven innovation and has seen continuous growth year over year. With an aim to make CubeSmart an extension of customers' homes by creating a consistent, stress-free and seamless omnichannel experience, the org's goal is to deliver simple solutions, tailored to every customer's needs. Learn more and explore opportunities to join the CubeSmart team. The Jobs Greater Philly Solar services company King Energy is looking for a Software Engineer for Solar & Storage Cloud Integration and a Project Development Engineer, Solar & Battery Storage Clean energy company Bloom Energy needs a Perpay is hiring a Site Merchandising Manager and Senior Software Engineer, Fullstack. Global law firm Morgan Lewis is hiring a Data Architect. Capital One has an open position for a Director of Software Engineering in small business bank tech. DC + Baltimore Greentech startup ETCH is seeking an Electromechanical Engineer and a Field Engineer. Renewable energy firm Sol Systems has a listing for a Senior PV Engineer. The World Wildlife Fund needs a Lead Azure Data Specialis t and a Cybersecurity Specialist. Clean energy company Zeno Power is hiring a Technical Project Manager. The nonprofit AARP is looking for two level II Engineers for their Mail Relay and Membership Apps teams. Pittsburgh Aquaculture tech company Aquabyte is hiring a Computer Vision Engineer. Montrose Environmental Group is seeking an Electronic Engineering Technician. Wesinghouse needs an Environmental Engineer. Sustainable architecture firm HDR is looking for a GIS Analyst. Grey Swan AI wants a new Operations Manager. The End Till next time, shine on!

What to know about golden visas, Trump's controversial immigration program
What to know about golden visas, Trump's controversial immigration program

Yahoo

time03-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

What to know about golden visas, Trump's controversial immigration program

President Donald Trump created a stir last week when he announced a new plan to combat the national debt: Selling aspiring Americans a pathway to citizenship for $5 million. 'You have a green card. This is a gold card,' Trump said during an Oval Office news conference. 'We're going to be putting a price on that card of about $5 million and that's going to give you green card privileges, plus it's going to be a route to citizenship. And wealthy people will be coming into our country by buying this card.' Billionaire Mark Cuban endorsed Trump's plan as a replacement for the HB-1 visa program. 'If you ain't gonna hire American, pay taxpayers for the right,' he wrote on X. While Trump's plan has several logistical and legal issues — namely that it would be outside the scope of his powers as president and that it likely lacks sufficient distinction from the already existing EB-5 visa — such immigration policies are not uncommon on a global scale. Nearly half of all countries have laws in place to allow some form of residency or citizenship by investment. Nearly 60 have active programs, including nations as disparate as Malta, Cambodia, and Dominica. Travel documents obtained through these programs are colloquially referred to as 'golden visas.' In the last decade, the popularity of these visa programs have exploded across the globe. 'From our perspective, the demand at the moment is huge,' Dominic Jones, the managing director of Greener Pastures New Zealand, which assists people in obtaining the New Zealand Active Investor Plus visa, told Quartz. 'It's unprecedented and we're blown away by the interest.' Though golden visas are popular across the world, particularly for financially successful families and individuals from emerging economies, Americans have outstripped many other countries in pursuit of citizenship or residency by investment in recent years. Between 2019 and 2024, Henley & Partners, a firm dedicated to assisting the wealthy obtain golden visas, reported a 1,000% increase in its American client base. Dominic Volek, the firm's group head of private clients, told Quartz that more Americans have sought out his firm for assistance obtaining residency or citizenship by investment than the next four countries combined. At the same time, however, golden visas are often highly controversial in the countries that already have these programs. Many critics argue that the programs amount to selling passports and say they're frequently used for money laundering. Here's everything you need to know about golden visas and residency by investment. There are two reasons why golden visas earned their shiny nickname. The first, and perhaps more obvious reason, is the price tag attached. Depending on the desired country of residence, people seeking visas need to invest in the country through purchasing property, putting money into the economy, or making outright contributions to the government. The other reason these visas are golden, however, is their flexibility. 'There's very little physical presence required to maintain the right to reside [in the desired country],' Volek told Quartz. 'You can live there if you want, but you don't have to. It's a good backup plan, depending on your outlook on the geopolitical challenges of your home country.' While limited residency requirements are a perk for those seeking golden visas, they're also the cause of significant controversy. Malta, for example, is considered the gold standard of golden visas: Henley & Partners consistently ranks the country's golden visa program as the best in the world. But the ease of accessing Maltese residency and citizenship after spending extremely limited periods of time inside the country has come under fire from other European Union member states. In 2020, the European Commission opened infringement procedures against Malta and Cyprus for 'selling' EU citizenship. 'The Commission considers that the granting of EU citizenship for pre-determined payments or investments without any genuine link with the Member States concerned, undermines the essence of EU citizenship,' it said. A 2021 joint investigation by the Daphne Caruana Galizia Foundation, The Guardian, Dossier Centre and five independent Maltese media organizations used leaked Henley & Partners documents to reveal that wealthy individuals from countries including China, Russia, and Saudi Arabia planned to spend an average of just 16 days in Malta before obtaining Maltese passports. In response to the investigation, Henley & Partners issued a statement in 2021 saying it was 'proud of the service that it has provided to Malta and its people.' 'We are fully aware of the potential inherent risks in handling client applications for residence and citizenship and have invested significant time and capital in recent years to create a governance structure that is committed to the highest of standards,' the statement continued. 'Ultimately, it is the responsibility of the countries involved to investigate and vet applicants.' Like all immigrants and expatriates, the people seeking golden visas are motivated by a variety of factors. 'It's rising geopolitical uncertainty, retrenching of globalization, and risk mitigation,' Jones explained. 'In the same way high network individuals mitigate risk in their own investments by having a portfolio, having a second residency or citizenship option is something they are increasingly looking into.' People seeking New Zealand's golden visa, he said, are often motivated by a desire to reside in such a famously beautiful and laid back country. But New Zealand is an outlier: In many cases, when people seek golden visas, they have little intention of ever residing full time in the country. For those from emerging economies, in Africa or southeast Asia, gaining a golden visa is often a strategy to travel with fewer restrictions, Volek said. If their home country's passport is comparatively weak, a golden visa can ensure that they travel internationally with ease. Malta and Austria are considered a desirable country for those seeking golden visas because, as members of the EU, their visas open up access to travel, work, and study across Europe. Even for Americans, who have an especially strong passport, the allure of EU residency is still highly desirable. It allows for even more visa-free travel and the right to live, study, and work across Europe. 'Most of the clients are interested in having an insurance policy in place,' said Volek. 'That's been a big shift over the last few years. Security is no longer just a concern for emerging markets.' While the individuals obtaining golden visas benefit through a long-term sense of security, the governments offering the visas receive something more tangible and immediate: a massive influx of cash. The exact mechanism for investment varies from country to country. It 'very much depends on what the country is trying to achieve,' said Volek. In New Zealand, for example, individuals are required to invest between $2.9 million and $5.8 million. Investment options include philanthropy, managed funds, or property development. 'This is a really positive tool for New Zealand,' said Jones. 'We have a low population. We have pretty shallow capital pools. For us to attract both financial and human capital is really, really valuable for our country.' Conversely, in Malta, golden visa recipients make a non-refundable contribution to the Maltese government. 'The government realized they have something that is attractive to successful, wealthy people,' said Volek. 'So they set up a program where investors contribute to a Maltese sovereign fund. There's no financial return to [investors]. [Their] money is gone. But Malta then uses that for projects in the country. They build bridges, they build roads, they have bursary programs for local students.' There is reason to believe, however, that the economic benefits of golden visas programs are overstated. In 2024, Australia scrapped its golden visa program, with government officials arguing that the program was 'delivering poor economic outcomes.' 'It has been obvious for years that this visa is not delivering what our country and economy needs,' Australian Minister for Home Affairs Clare O'Neil said in a statement last year after the country ended the program. Over the years, investigations from the government, watchdog groups, and journalists revealed the program was vulnerable to exploitation — especially from wealthy criminals using their investment in Australia as a money-laundering scheme. The United Kingdom also recently canceled its golden visa program. Following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, there was widespread concern that wealthy Russians were abusing the system. In the aftermath of the rollback, members of both Labour, Conservative, and Liberal Democrat parties criticized the program for enabling international criminals. 'Golden visas were a shocking loophole for dirty money to make its way into our economy, and for oligarchs to buy their way into this country,' Labour Member of Parliament Margaret Hodge said last year, according to the Guardian. Hodge, who chaired a parliamentary anti-corruption committee, continued, 'we need full transparency on who benefited from it and what went wrong.' 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