WASHINGTON (By Spencer S. Hsu, Washington Post) September 4, 2007 — A
federal judge yesterday barred the Bush administration from launching a
crackdown Tuesday on U.S. employers who hire illegal immigrants while she
considers a lawsuit by the AFL-CIO that charges that the plan will harm
citizens and other legal workers.
The ruling, issued by U.S. District Judge
Maxine M. Chesney in San Francisco, prohibits the Department of Homeland
Security from starting to mail notices to 140,000 employers about suspect
Social Security numbers. The "no- match" letters warn of penalties employers
face by having discrepancies in their paperwork.
The order was a victory for the labor
federation and the American Civil Liberties Union, which filed suit alleging
that DHS is overstepping its authority to enforce immigration laws and is
misusing a Social Security Administration database. They allege that the
letters are an effort to pressure businesses to fire workers whose documents
are flagged and could expose countless immigrant workers -- including
law-abiding citizens and legal residents -- to job discrimination.
Chesney granted the request for a temporary
restraining order against the government, saying the court needs "breathing
room" before issuing a decision on the DHS plan. She set a hearing for Oct.
1.
The ruling dealt at least a temporary
political setback to President Bush, who announced the workplace initiative
Aug. 9 as the centerpiece of a renewed enforcement push. The White House
acted after its drive for a broad immigration overhaul failed in Congress
this summer.
"We're disappointed by the delay and expect
to prevail once the court has the benefit of full briefing and argument,"
DHS spokeswoman Laura Keehner said, adding that the department will continue
other enforcement actions.
There are errors in the Social Security
records of an estimated 12.7 million native-born U.S. citizens, 250,000
foreign-born citizens and 4.8 million legal immigrants, potentially creating
a paralyzing bureaucratic nightmare for workers and Social Security offices
if their records are dragged into the sweep, union representatives said.
In recent years, the Social Security
Administration has found that up to 10 percent of workers have suspect
numbers, whether because of fraud, innocent typographical errors, confusion
over name changes, multiple surnames or other reasons. Under the DHS
proposal, starting Sept. 14 employers would have 90 days to resolve
questions concerning such employees' identities or to fire them. If they do
not comply, businesses face the possibility of fines and even criminal
penalties for knowingly violating federal law that bars employing illegal
workers.
Leading U.S. business groups say the
letters will trigger extensive workplace disruptions and plant and company
closings this winter across the agriculture, meatpacking, construction,
lodging, hospitality and service sectors. They have asked the Bush
administration for a 180-day delay and for answers to 80 questions about how
businesses can comply with immigration laws as well as anti-discrimination
statutes.