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Republicans Widen Immigration Checks
WASHINGTON (By Nicole Gaouette, LATimes)
June 10, 2008 — The Republican administration,
in an aggressive new effort to keep
undocumented immigrants out of the
workforce, on Monday ordered all
companies doing business with the
federal government to begin ensuring
their employees can legally work in the
U.S.
The order will require thousands of
firms to use a government system called
E-Verify to check workers' Social
Security numbers. The system has been
voluntary for private firms but
mandatory for government agencies.
The policy, which initially applies to
new hires, eventually could affect
millions of federal contract workers
nationwide whose jobs range from serving
cafeteria food to launching NASA
spacecraft. The step is one of several
the administration planned after
Congress failed last year to pass an
overhaul of immigration laws.
"The federal government should lead by
example and not by exhortation," said
Homeland Security Secretary Michael
Chertoff, who has encouraged firms to
use E-Verify.
Groups advocating immigration
restrictions have embraced E-Verify as a
way to weed out undocumented workers.
But it has been criticized by business
groups and immigrant advocates because
errors in the Social Security database
can lead to red-flagging legal
residents.
And with the rapid expansion of federal
contracting under President Bush, some
critics questioned whether the order
would be workable.
"I just don't know how the
administration is going to enforce
this," said Paul C. Light, a New York
University professor and federal
contracting expert who said such
outsourcing had grown by 70% under Bush.
"It's a very large number and very
difficult to track. Who is responsible
for making sure the
sub-sub-sub-contractor is using
E-Verify?"
E-Verify is already a success, Chertoff
said, predicting that the executive
order would affect "hundreds of
thousands, if not millions, of workers."
Chertoff made the announcement during an
appearance with Commerce Secretary
Carlos M. Gutierrez in which they touted
administration progress in enforcing
immigration laws and beefing up border
security. They also urged Congress to
pass an immigration overhaul including
guest worker programs, enforcement, and
some accommodation for undocumented
immigrants currently in the United
States.
"We cannot neglect our economic
security, and that is exactly what we're
doing by neglecting comprehensive
immigration reform," said Gutierrez, who
worked with Chertoff and a bipartisan
group of lawmakers on the 2007
legislation.
E-Verify is now used by more than 69,000
companies, with about 1,000 firms
signing up weekly for the free
Internet-based system.
Many companies have enrolled because of
stepped-up federal immigration raids. In
industries that traditionally rely on
immigrant labor, such as meatpacking,
companies understand that not using
E-Verify can prompt immigration
officials to take a closer look.
Chertoff said E-Verify cleared 99.5% of
qualified employees automatically. But
in 2006 the Social Security inspector
general found discrepancies in 17.8
million records for citizens and legal
immigrants that would create a
"significant workload" to correct.
Lawmakers and other critics warned that
forcing the more than 200,000 federal
contractors to join E-Verify could
overwhelm the Social Security
Administration and create havoc for
legal workers.
"As the administration requires more
employers and workers to move into
E-Verify, it should at the same time
ensure that the system does not impinge
upon U.S. citizens' fundamental right to
earn a living," said Rep. Zoe Lofgren
(D-San Jose), head of the House
subcommittee on immigration.
Firms doing business with the government
risk losing their contracts if they
break federal rules. Some business
executives worry the new requirement
could add expenses.
"There's concern about increased costs
and delays in hiring brought about by
inaccuracies in the database," said Neal
J. Couture, executive director of the
National Contract Managers Assn.
Timothy D. Sparapani of the American
Civil Liberties Union argued that
E-Verify was "not real immigration
enforcement" because the system could
not detect applicants who used documents
stolen from legal workers. He predicted
the system would prompt more identity
theft by undocumented immigrants.
"American workers' identities are
essentially going to become a black
market commodity," Sparapani said.
Still, many were pleased by Monday's
action. "With today's announcement by
Secretary Chertoff, we are diminishing
the ability of undocumented immigrants
to find employment in the United
States," said Rep. Brian P. Bilbray
(R-Carlsbad).
Added Dan Stein of the Federation for
American Immigration Reform, which
advocates restricting all immigration:
"It's an excellent idea, long overdue."
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