Oppose H.R. 2885, the ‘Legal Workforce Act’

Media 09.21.11

Recipient: House Judiciary Committee

Dear House Judiciary Committee Member: 

On behalf of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, we
write to express our strong opposition to H.R. 2885, the “Legal
Workforce Act.” H.R. 2885 offers a false promise of stopping
unauthorized immigration through an expanded Electronic Employment
Verification System (“EEVS”), or E-Verify program. In reality, the bill
will instead harm millions of law-abiding American workers. We urge you
to reject it.

H.R. 2885 will threaten the jobs of millions of U.S. citizens and other
work-authorized individuals, particularly those not born in the U.S. The
current E-Verify system only works about half of the time.[1] That is,
about half of those run through the system are misidentified as legal
when they are not. Many others are flagged as unauthorized when they
are, in fact, authorized to work. Among foreign-born communities, these
error rates are 30 to 50 times higher than for native-born U.S.
citizens. [1]

Once an error has occurred, resolving it is timely and expensive.
Workers often must take unpaid time off to follow up with the
appropriate government agency. Corrections at the Social Security
Administration (SSA) usually take more than ninety days, require
multiple trips to the office, and involve wait times of four hours or
more per trip, according to the American Council on International
Personnel. This is time and money that many workers cannot afford to
lose.

H.R. 2885 encourages profiling of lawful workers, as under-trained
employees may simply assume a worker is undocumented and erroneously
fire or not hire them at all. Even well-intentioned employers will feel
the need to “play it safe” by making prejudgments about workers based on
appearance, accent, name – conduct prohibited by Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act. Further, according to the U.S. General Accountability
Office, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS) is limited
in its ability to target and prevent such misuse of E-Verify and has
little or no authority to impose penalties. Contrary to the assertions
recently made by the Chairman, E-Verify will most definitely harm racial
and ethnic minorities.

H.R. 2885 overburdens the SSA, threatening its core mission of serving
disabled and retired Americans. While USCIS financially administers
E-Verify, SSA manages 90 percent of E-Verify queries, and SSA field offices must resolve any
misclassifications of U.S. citizens. Using SSA databases and employees
to confirm the employment status of every American worker under a
national E-Verify program would cost an estimated $9 billion over the
next 10 years, according to a 2008 Congressional Budget Office report.
In the first year alone, the plan would cost more than $1 billion, or 10
percent of the agency’s administrative budget.  This financial and
administrative burden – particularly without an increase in the agency’s
funding – would divert resources from the already struggling agency. 

Finally, H.R. 2885 is not an effective tool to combat unauthorized
immigration. Eight million unauthorized workers will not leave the U.S.
because of H.R. 2885. Rather, they and their employers will likely
instead ‘move off the books’ into the cash economy. This massive shift
will cause drastic losses to federal, state, and local tax revenues, as
well as to the Social Security trust fund, and will open the floodgates
for employers to mistreat workers with greater impunity. 

Rather than piling this bill on top of an already broken immigration
system, we have long argued that Congress should instead adopt
broad-reaching, comprehensive immigration reform. 

We thus urge you to oppose H.R. 2885. Thank you for your consideration.

Sincerely,

Wade Henderson
President & CEO

Nancy Zirkin
Executive Vice President