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Immigration bill includes worker screening

By Suzanne Gamboa, Associated Press Writer

Immigration Checking Workers

Di Ann Sanchez, Vice President of Human Resources at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport sits behind her desk in her office in Irving, Texas, Friday, May 25, 2007. Sanchez, sees a big bottleneck on the horizon when the airport has to make sure its 1,700 employees are legal workers, even those employed for decades. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

The nation’s employers say a major problem with system overload is on the way if Congress forces them to prove, electronically, that all their workers are legal. Currently, 16,727 employers check employees through a system previously known as Basic Pilot and now called the Electronic Employer Verification System. They have checked 1.77 million employees, according to Citizenship and Immigration Services, an agency within the Homeland Security Department.
Current immigration law leaves it to employers to verify that they are hiring legal workers. But that law, passed in 1986, has not been enforced strictly. Immigration legislation pending in the Senate would require that Social Security numbers, identification and other information supplied by all U.S. workers be run through the electronic system. If the proposal becomes law, employers would have to check all new hires within 18 months of its enactment, and check all other employees within three years.

That could mean millions more employers logging on to a system that, right now, is still under development. “I just don’t think this is a realistic approach,” said Susan R. Meisinger, president of the Society for Human Resource Management, a suburban Washington-based association of human resources professionals. To get to all new hires in a year, she said, the Homeland Security Department would have to sign up 20,000 employers a day. There are an estimated 7 million to 8 million employers and 140 million employees in the U.S., business and labor officials say. Under the Senate proposal, employers who have illegal workers on the payroll could face fines from $5,000 per worker to up to $75,000 and six months in jail per worker.

Screening proponents say the requirement is needed because too many employers are hiring illegal immigrants, whether knowingly or unwittingly. The worker check system can’t verify the accuracy of all information submitted to an employer, including drivers licenses and state identification cards obtained with stolen or borrowed birth certificates. That was a problem for the pork and beef processor Swift & Co., which had been using the system for 10 years when its six plants were raided by Immigration and Customs Enforcement last year. More than 1,200 immigrant workers were arrested; Swift itself wasn’t charged.

Di Ann Sanchez, vice president of human resources at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, anticipates a bottleneck when the airport has to ensure its 1,800 employees are legal — even those employed for decades. “If you’ve got all these employers hitting that system, is the system reliable to do it and not come back with a false negative or be so overloaded that it won’t allow employers to hire as quickly as we need to?” Sanchez said.

Posted 7 months, 1 week ago at 3:13 pm.

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The Divided States Of America

By Eamon Javers, Business Week

States and municipalities are responding in wildly different ways to undocumented workers. Gustavo Torres is a popular guy these days. As he walks into the storefront worker center he runs, the Hispanic men and women who fill the waiting room wave and call out “buenos días.” Torres’ nonprofit has been hired by Montgomery County, Md., to provide employment services to these immigrants, about 60% of whom are in the country illegally.

The county pays Torres’ group, casa of Maryland Inc., about $700,000 a year to provide hiring halls, English language classes, and legal help in employment disputes. What’s more, the county doesn’t care what the federal government thinks of its welcoming attitude. “The local government says they are not going to cooperate with [U.S.] Immigration & Customs Enforcement,” says Torres.

It’s a different world just three hours away in Hazelton, Pa. The local government there is trying to push through ordinances meant to drive illegal immigrants out of town and punish employers who hire them. “Illegal immigration is destroying the quality of life,” says Hazelton Mayor Louis J. Barletta.

This stark contrast is repeated again and again across the country, confounding businesses with local rules designed to deal with an undocumented population estimated at 12 million nationwide. The federal government’s often haphazard enforcement of immigration laws and the absence of a comprehensive immigration policy only adds to the confusion. “This is like a Bermuda Triangle,” says Di Ann Sanchez, vice-president of human resources at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport in Texas.

Posted 7 months, 1 week ago at 3:00 pm.

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