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Help For Hiring Legal Immigrants
By Paul M. Weyrich
FreeCongress.org Suppose the government puts in place laws but then
makes it virtually impossible for employers to comply with them.
That is exactly the case when employers are hiring immigrants.
In 1986, Congress enacted, and Ronald Reagan signed into law, the
Immigration Reform and Control Act, which made it illegal for employers
to knowingly hire illegal immigrants. Furthermore, employers are
required to check the identity and the work eligibility of their
new hires.
In reality, all that means is ascertaining if the documents presented
by the new hire appear to be legitimate. Logic would dictate that
an employer
should be able to check the job applicant's documentation before
making a hiring decision; immigration law prevents that. An illegal immigrant can offer a fraudulent or fictionalized
Social Security number and it may be a year before the Social Security
Administration will
contact the employer to notify him that the employee has pulled
a fast one. The sophistication of counterfeiters in producing drivers
licenses, Social
Security cards and alien registration cards makes it very difficult
for employers to know whether the documents presented by a potential
new hire
are genuine.
There are concerns that an employer who displays recalcitrance at
accepting documents that he thinks are false only to be proven wrong
could find
himself facing charges of having been discriminatory based on an
individual's national origin or citizenship status.
The current system, with its slowness and inefficiency, is simply
not conducive to enforcing our country's immigration laws, much
less to helping
employers determine whether their hires are truly legal. If we are really serious about enforcing the immigration
laws we have on the books, then we must provide the means for employers
to quickly determine the
validity of the documents with which they are presented. Next week, the House will be considering whether or
not to expand a pilot program started by the Illegal Immigration
Reform and Immigrant
Responsibility Act of 1996. The voluntary system instituted by that
law allowed employers in six states to quickly check the validity
of Social Security and INS records presented by new hires to assure
they are indeed legal aliens. Most employers have a considerable
wait before learning that the Social Security numbers used by their
employees are fraudulent; usually it will be a year or more before
the Social Security Administration notifies
them. Close to 12,000 worksites in California, Florida, Illinois,
Nebraska, New York, and Texas are participating in the pilot program. The way the pilot program works is simple and reflects
plain common sense. Once a job applicant decides to accept a job offer,
he will need to show his documents to the employer. Then, the employer
has three days to confirm the
information given to him. If the new hire claims citizenship status,
the employer can check his Social Security number. Non-citizens
would have
their INS-issued information and Social Security number checked,
too. The Social Security Administration and INS are expected
to notify the employer quickly -- within three days -- whether the
information is valid. New hires can contest a nonconfirmation. If that process
fails, the employer has the option of either dismissing the applicant
or else proving to the INS why the new hire is eligible. Failure
to prove the employee's legitimate status would open the employer
up to legal sanctions. The information received by the employer from the
government is only eligible for use in confirming the validity of
the documents and not to be used for any other purpose. When INS commissioned a study of the pilot program
in its early years, the study, conducted by Temple University's
Institute for Survey Research, found "an overwhelming majority
of employers participating in the basic pilot program to be an effective
and reliable tool for employment verification." Over eighty
percent of employers found that their participation in the pilot
program provided greater certainty regarding work authorization.
Nearly two-thirds of participating employers agreed that the program
led to a decrease in unauthorized workers applying for jobs. Forty-five percent of employers were more willing
to hire immigrants due to their participation in the pilot program.
Uncontrolled immigration represents an economic problem
for our country as illegal immigrants can command costly services,
draining away tax dollars
paid by citizens and legal immigrants. The very presence of millions
of illegal aliens in our country demonstrates a lack of respect
for our country's laws and to those legal immigrants who have played
by the rules to come here. Furthermore, the influx of illegal immigrants
demonstrates a national security problem too in that our nation
is proven unable to controlour own borders. We all know that illegal aliens come here for jobs,
so the only way to deter them from coming -- and staying -- is to
assure that they do not have
unchecked access to jobs the law prohibits them from having. That
requires exactly this type of verification system. Critics have charged that making this voluntary verification
program more widely accessible will lead to a national ID program.
That's overstated. All that is being checked is the information
from the legally appropriate agencies. There's no mixing and matching
of data. The voluntary verification system was set up to rely on
existing databases, not to create a new one or to link the SSA and
INS databases. Furthermore, the voluntary verification program in
its expanded national form will be up for renewal in five years.
If there is a hint of it leading to the establishment of a national
ID card, then there will be plenty of people on all sides of the
spectrum who will raise a ruckus. Right now, though, voluntary employment
verification is a benefit that should be madeavailable to more employers.
If America is to remain the land of opportunity, our
country must remain open to newcomers from foreign lands who seek
to make honest and meaningful contributions to our society. Indeed,
we would not be as successful a country today if not for the benefits
brought to our country by millions of
immigrants who went on to assimilate, become citizens and to prosper
from the freedom and opportunity that we offer. This system is hardly a cure-all for what ails our
immigration system. But it makes sense and deserves to be made available
on a voluntary basis to
other employers across the nation. Immigration laws are enacted
for good reasons and they must be enforced. If we expect American
employers to abide
by those laws, we need to provide the quickest and most efficient
means to
do so.
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