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View Full Version : Nat'l ID E-Verify Bill: 6 Dangerous Provis it Includes & 5 Worker Protections it Excludes




muzzled dogg
07-31-2013, 05:19 PM
how come no one is talking about this?




The House of Representatives has passed out of committee a bill (H.R. 1772) to mandate E-Verify electronic employment verification for all employers. This bill differs from the E-Verify proposal in the Senate immigration bill, so here’s the breakdown of what it’s in it:


1) Huge fines for employers: The bill cranks up the civil and criminal penalties both for employers who hire “unauthorized” workers and those who fail paperwork or technical requirements, such as E-Verify checks within a 3 day window or correct form filing. For technical errors, the bill increases fines tenfold—increasing the minimum fine to $1,000 per mistake and up to $25,000 per mistake (p. 50). Given the fact that this law can already cost employers up to $1 million for systematic “technical deficiencies,” the new law could result in tens of million in fines for some businesses. At the same time, the bill creates prison sentences for those who refuse to use E-Verify of up to a decade—hard time for a nonviolent offense.

2) Punishments for those employers never even hired illegal immigrants: The House bill would create federal criminal and civil penalties for employers for failing to make E-Verify checks. As in South Carolina where E-Verify is mandatory for many employers, employers would be fined for, as the South Carolina government puts it, “failure to E-Verify a new hire,” not for actually hiring unauthorized immigrants (p. 15). Like the Senate, House Judiciary rejected a proposal made in the Senate by Sen. Jim Risch (R-Idaho) to exempt from penalties employers who never actually hired an unauthorized immigrant, but merely missed an E-Verify check.

3) Americans’ new jobs can be delayed until cleared by E-Verify: This bill also permits employers to make job offers “conditioned on final verification” (p. 20). This means for the 180,000 legal workers who would be initially not confirmed for a job each year (under DHS’s 2012 error rate) could have their jobs delayed weeks or months, losing wages as they attempt to sort out the error at DHS or the Social Security Administration. A four week delay would cost the average U.S. worker $3,200 in lost wages. Many U.S. workers in states that mandate E-Verify use already have their applications thrown in the trash after receiving an initial nonconfirmation—this bill authorizes such behavior.

4) Very aggressive rollout. This bill would mandate E-Verify be used by all U.S. employers within 2 years—this is twice as fast as the Senate immigration bill (S. 744). Such an aggressive rollout imperils U.S. employers because it gives DHS very little time to sort out unforeseeable (and foreseeable) problems that will surely rise. Moreover, it starts its rollout for employers with over 10,000 employees in less than 6 months (p. 21), giving almost no time for regulations to be written and reviewed by lawyers. This is one reason why the legal issues that will cause employers trouble is already causing attorneys to salivate.

5) New forms and technical requirements: House Judiciary Committee Republicans claim that it “repeals the I-9 system” and replaces it with a “completely electronic check.” It does no such thing. It continues the same type of paperwork requirement under the current system (p. 2) and paperwork retention requirement (p. 9). Employers must also record initial nonconfirmation, final nonconfirmation, and confirmation codes on the form correctly or face penalties. It does all this while at the same time increasing fines.

6) Ability for DHS to shut down your right to work if you attempt to work multiple jobs: The House bill would allow the DHS Secretary the authority to “block from use” any Social Security number it deems subject to “unusual multiple use.” This means if someone already held a job and applied for multiple new jobs, DHS could prevent you from working without trial or review “unless the individual using such number is able to establish, through secure and fair additional security procedures, that the individual is the legitimate holder of the number” (p. 58). “No Fly List” meet “No Work List.”




1) No limitation on how the system can be used: The House bill opens the door for E-Verify’s national ID system to be used almost anywhere to demonstrate identity. Once the system is in place and every American is part of it, it will be very easy for a federal or state agency to determine to use the system as a form of identification to get into buildings, to apply for a home loan, to rent an apartment, to purchase a gun, or to access health care. As the system expands, E-Verify will create not just a digital profile on everyone, but a digital history of their movements and their life.

2) No limit on errors for legal workers: Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) and Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) teamed up on the Senate Judiciary committee to propose an amendment to the Senate immigration bill to make penalties under E-Verify not mandatory for small employers unless DHS kept the error rate low for small employers. Senate Democrats replaced it with a version that halved the penalties for small employers in any year in which DHS failed to keep the error rate for legal workers at or below its currently-reported rate. The House bill, on the other hand, has no requirement or incentives for DHS to keep the error rate low.

3) No requirement to notify Americans when E-Verify is used to identify them or grant them access to their case history: Unlike the Senate bill, the House bill does not obligate the government to tell individuals when their name has been checked by E-Verify, nor does it grant them access to their E-Verify case history, also unlike the Senate bill. The Senate provisions were designed to protect Americans from unauthorized use of the system—their conspicuous absence should worry Americans who care about their privacy.

4) No administrative appeals process for U.S. workers: Unlike the Senate bill, the House bill contains no opportunity to appeal a wrongful final nonconfirmation (FNC)—despite the fact that according to the federal government, nearly 6 percent of FNCs go to legal workers. In other words, the bill virtually guarantees that 37,000 legal workers will lose their jobs under this system.

5) No administrative remedies: The House bill only allows remedies for individuals who are “dismissed from a job” as a result of an E-Verify error (p. 40). Since employers can extend job offers conditional on final confirmation, this means that in all likelihood, many, if not most, workers will receive no compensation for delays in being hired due to initial nonconfirmations or even from being rejected due to erroneous final nonconfirmations.

http://www.openmarket.org/2013/07/31/house-national-id-e-verify-bill-5-worker-protections-it-excludes-and-6-dangerous-provisions-it-includes/

kahless
07-31-2013, 06:21 PM
Between the federal required new hires reporting and e-verify, we already have a defacto national ID for tracking.

Born and raised here but I fail e-verify on the first attempt. If I come across an uncooperative employer that will not try it a second time with different questions, I will be unable to work when the new rules go into effect.

My last employer told me I would have to get it fixed but luckily they tried it again which asked a different set of questions and I passed.

Noob
08-01-2013, 06:19 AM
No National ID Petition

http://chooseliberty.org/nationalidcardsb.aspx?pid=0414a

otherone
08-01-2013, 07:06 AM
...the noose tightens.