October 04, 2004
Quietly, Employer Sanctions Have Been
Abandoned
Obviously the U.S-Mexico border
should be sealed. But
forty percent of aliens here illegally entered the
country legally.
Gaining
control of our borders also means making it
impossible for
illegals to find work in the U.S. This was the
motivation for the
employer sanctions incorporated in the 1986
Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA).
But the effort to penalize
companies for hiring illegals has been quietly
abandoned.
Counterfeit IDs plus the INS’s unwillingness to hold
employers accountable for hiring workers with these
bogus documents led to a resurgence of illegal
immigrants in the workforce after 1986. [FAIR,
Employer Sanctions, January 2004.] More
recently, when the INS subpoenaed employment records of
large employers suspected of
employing illegals, a huge
outcry from the
usual suspects—industry
associations,
Hispanic groups, and
tame politicians—forced the INS to back off. [Donald
L. Barlett and James B. Steele, “Who
Left the Door Open?,” Time,
September 13, 2004.]
The INS/Homeland Security’s
employer-sanctions program has all but disappeared:
[Table 1.]
Even in cases where the DHS has evidence that employers
are violating the law, the agency tends to back off if
the employer pleads
ignorance or fights the fine. That’s why of the
2,194 investigations completed last year, fines were
imposed in only 124 of them—about one out of twenty.
Remember, there are at least 8,700,000 illegal aliens in
the U.S., according to a recent Census Bureau estimate
[Matt Hayes, “INS
Fails to Enforce Employer Sanctions, Fox News,
January 9, 2003] — perhaps many more. They can’t all be
working for the 124 entities fined by the Department of
Homeland Security last year.
Moreover, DHS collected only $2.6 million of $5.3
million in fines it levied on employers of illegal
aliens in 2002. The agency was unable to collect a dime
from nearly a quarter of those employers. It agreed to
drastically reduced settlements with many others.
Apologists might argue that, in the post 9/11 world,
policing the border is more important than enforcing
employer sanctions. Homeland Security spending reflects
this view: funds devoted to
interior enforcement are
less than 3 percent of the amount spent on border
control.
Moreover, most individuals apprehended by Homeland
Security solely for being here illegally are simply sent
back to their home country at U.S. expense.
Heightened border controls alone may actually be making
the illegal alien problem worse before it gets better.
Research suggests, for example, that it is
increasing the time spent in the U.S. by
undocumented aliens.
Seasonal migrants who previously would leave the
U.S. at the end of the
agricultural season and return later are now, in
effect, trapped by the increased border surveillance.
The
illegal alien problem requires a comprehensive answer.
Employer sanctions are part of it—if, that is,
they are enforced.
[Number fans
click here for tables.]
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.