|
November 01, 2005
Employer Sanctions Collapse Even Further in 2004
Last year I
reported the Bush Administration’s
extraordinary abandonment of the effort to punish
employers for using illegal aliens.
Worksite arrests had fallen by a factor of some 97
percent since 1997.
Another year’s data is now in, and the
Bush Administration’s response has been remarkable:
worksite arrests have fallen by a further
two-thirds.
It’s hard to avoid the conclusion that the Bush
Administration just plain doesn’t intend to
enforce the law against illegal immigration.
But, although it may be hard to remember now, the
primary purpose of the 1986 Immigration Reform
and Control Act was to end illegal immigration. IRCA
imposed fines of up to $10,000 for every illegal alien
hired by
U.S. employers. It stipulated that repeat offenders
could be jailed. These tough measures reflected the
belief that
employer sanctions were the only way to stem the
tide of illegals.
That was the plan. Rarely can the gap between policy
and
performance have been greater.
Today, the INS/Homeland Security’s employer-sanctions
program has
all but disappeared. Here are the key indicators:
[Table 1.]
Worksite arrests of illegal
alien workers:
Even in cases where
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has
evidence implicating employers, the agency tends to back
off if the employer pleads ignorance or fights the fine.
That’s why of the 3,064 workforce investigations closed
last year, fines were imposed in just 3 (three!)
of them – one out of one thousand. . By contrast, fines
were imposed in about 11 percent of closed
investigations in 1997.
Notices of intent to fine
employers:
The low priority accorded to workplace enforcement is
clearly evident in the skewed allocation of ICE
investigative personnel.
In fiscal year 2004 ICE dedicated about 90 full-time
equivalent agents to worksite enforcement, and 2,430 to
“all other” investigative areas. Between fiscal
1999 and 2004 the percent of agent work-years spent on
workforce enforcement declined from about 9 percent to 4
percent.
So what do ICE agents do? Since 9/11 INS and then
ICE have apparently focused their cadre of worksite
investigators primarily on identifying and removing
illegal aliens from
critical infrastructure sites such as
airports and
nuclear power plants.
That makes some sense: illegals employed at
such sites are easily blackmailed by terrorists. But
why not hire more agents?
Moreover, indifference to non-security related
workplace enforcement was evident well before 9/11. As
seen in the table, worksite arrests
peaked in the late Clinton years.
Ironically, the
displacement of U.S.-born workers in the wake of the
recent hurricanes has
further reduced the probability of worksite
enforcement. In September DHS
announced that for at least 45 days it will not
punish employers who hire
Hurricane Katrina victims who cannot prove that they
are legally in the country.
Ironically, almost half (17 of 37) of Republican
lawmakers polled by the
National Journal in July
listed immigration as the issue most on the minds of
their constituents.
Maybe they need to take a trip down
Pennsylvania Avenue.
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis. |