
As the summer tourism season comes to a close in Ocean City, Maryland, many businesses fear they may soon lose much of their seasonal workforce if the Trump administration cancels the J-1 visa program.
The White House may be considering reducing the J-1 visa exchange visitor program, which brings in more than 100,000 students from foreign countries to the U.S. each summer, often to work in tourist destinations like Ocean City, according to a recent report in the Wall Street Journal.
President Trump is considering reducing the J-1 program as part of his โBuy American and Hire Americanโ executive order he issued in April, which calls for a review of U.S. immigration rules to make sure that the interests of American workers are protected, according to the Wall Street Journal report.
The Grand Hotel and Spa employs over 100 J-1 students each summer. Photo by Chris Miller, Capital News Service
Hotel couldnโt function
โWe wouldnโt be able to function and would probably have to shut down at least half of the hotel,โ if the J-1 program is cut, said Greg Dominguez, front office manager at the Grand Hotel and Spa. The hotel employs about 100 J-1 students each summer.
The hotel would struggle, Dominguez said, because the J-1 students take on so many different roles. The students are front office clerks, housekeepers, maintenance workers, servers and cooks.
J-1 visa holders make up a large portion of the nearly 12,000 seasonal positions needed each summer in Marylandโs largest resort town.
โHere at Ocean City, we typically see about 4,000 workers that come over,โ said Melanie Pursel, executive director of the Greater Ocean City Maryland Chamber of Commerce. โThey come to Ocean City usually around May or June and work for about three months.โ
Pursel said itโs a misperception that the J-1 program is taking American jobs. โThese students are coming here to work, to experience the U.S. and then go back to their home countries. Theyโre not taking American jobs.โ
Whether the J-1 program will share the same fate as DACA โ the Deferred Action for Children Arrivals that is ending in six months โ is still up in the air, one work exchange advocacy group said last week.
โWe donโt have any more information yet,โ said Ranit Schmelzer, communications consultant for the Alliance for International Exchange.
Struggling to hire Americans
Many young Americans simply donโt want to work for only three months, said Brooks Trimper, operations manager at Trimperโs Rides, an amusement park on the boardwalk that employs about 130 J-1 students each summer.
โIโm offering great, fun jobs for three months and I canโt really get a lot of people that want to take those jobs.โ
He said that most Americans are searching for year-round work.
For others, simply commuting to Ocean City each day to work can be a problem. Young kids in nearby cities might want to work but lack transportation, Jones said.
Local business owners agree that without the international students, Ocean City would struggle to operate.
โIโm not sure we will survive if the J-1 visa program is gone,โ said Trimper. Trimperโs employees have to be at least 18 to operate the rides, so that excludes many high school students; meanwhile many U.S. college students go back to school in mid-August.
But itโs not just the Ocean City businesses that would suffer.
A cultural exchange program, too
โItโs more than just a work program,โ said Pursel, โitโs really a cultural exchange program and these students really give a lot to the guest experience as well.โ She said that the guests enjoy learning from the students and hearing about their home countries.
The J-1 students also learn what itโs like to live and work in America.
Ana Pirnea, 24, from Romania, works as a ride operator at Trimperโs and this is her second year as a J-1 student. She worked in Myrtle Beach, S.C., last summer. She said that the students are not mainly here for the money. โThey are here just to feel the American experience,โ she said and โto have fun.โ
โEurope is just Europe. You want to know something else,โ said Pirnea. โYou want to get to know people. You want to see the world.โ
She said she was inspired to come to America as a J-1 student after one of her friends spent the summer in Atlanta and told her how amazing the experience was.
Robert Stoica, 23, from Romania, is also a ride operator at Trimperโs and he sees the J-1 program as a โwin-winโ for both the students and the businesses: โItโs one of our only chances to visit the U.S. and to experience the U.S. lifestyleโ and the J-1 students help the businesses. The students also get to improve their English, said Stoica.
This is Stoicaโs second year as a ride operator at Trimperโs. He said the program has helped him mature because he is so far away from home. โIโm 8,000 miles from home,โ he said. โIf something happens I cannot call my mother, โMama something happened, I need help.โ No, I have to deal with it.โ
A month to tour the U.S.
One of the biggest perks for many J-1 students is that after their three months of work, they get a month to tour the country before going back to their home countries.
Stoica explored much of the East Coast last year and said he plans to explore the West Coast this year.
Kristi Dencheva, 21, from Bulgaria, works at both The Dough Roller and Dippinโ Dots ice cream. She arrived in Ocean City in late May and will finish in early October. In August, she got to visit Niagara Falls. โIt was my biggest dream,โ she said.
Though the students are around for only three months, the businessesโand the community as a wholeโtreat them quite well, said Pursel.
โThe businesses treat all of their employees like family,โ said Pursel. โThis is a very small town at heart here in Ocean City.โ
Marie-Noelle Sayan, owner of the King Charles hotel, often takes her J-1 students to Walt Disney World at the end of the season, said Susan Jones, executive director of the Ocean City Hotel-Motel-Restaurant Association.
Nikola Stefancinova, 24, from Slovakia, works the front desk at the Grand Hotel and Spa. She said that the hotel often organizes lunches for the students. There is also an employee of the month at the hotel, awarded exclusively to J-1 studentsโStefancinova received a $50 credit card for winning last month. โWith the Americans we work with, we are treated as equals,โ she said.
A local Presbyterian church offers free meals to J-1 students every Monday and a free surfing school each Wednesday. โI appreciate what the church does,โ said Stefancinova.
Her landlords have also been quite generous, she said. โThey take great care of us,โ she said. โThey cook for us and take us to Walmart.โ
There is even an Irish Outreach Center that helps those students with housing and any other issues. There are about 300 Irish students in Ocean City, said Rick Fairbend, who, along with his wife, Pat, opened the center earlier this year. The centerโs Facebook page says that โIf you need bedding, towels, pots and pans, tea pots plus other items stop in. Or if you just need a shoulder to lean on we are here for you.โ
Ultimately, the students return to their home countries with fond memories and stories. โThey give America good press,โ said Trimper. โWe need that right now.โ

more hype to make me scared and worry…stop it. Trump and the Immigratoin Dept are not changing legal visas if businesses can prove they need them. But, paying a low wage such that the worker can’t afford rent or food,,,well, that has to change, and then they will have all the legal American workers they need. I see it here at the ski resorts. Its like slavery. But at least they are building affordable housing and also contributing to rentals for their workers. OC needs to do that too. Phillips Seafood did just that decades ago..not sure about now.