http://timesunion.com

Illegal, and in the open
Politicians preach immigration reform, but little is done to discourage immigrant hiring violations.


By JACQUES BILLEAUD, Associated Press
First published: Sunday, December 18, 2005

Phoenix -- Politicians setting out to repair America's immigration system in the coming year will face a problem that's viewed as being a low priority for the government yet is blamed for encouraging border crossings: employers who break the law by hiring illegal immigrants.

Many lawmakers and immigration analysts give the government poor marks in cracking down on hiring illegal immigrants, who account for an estimated 4 percent to 8 percent of all people working in the United States.

They say the government conducts a relatively small number of employer investigations, provides inadequate resources for such inquiries and has written deeply flawed rules for employers to follow.

That will have to change, say advocates for an immigration overhaul, if Congress approves a guest-worker program as part of the proposed immigration updates it will consider sometime in the next few months.

Otherwise, employers who follow the rules would face higher labor costs for legal foreign workers, while unscrupulous businesses would benefit from the lower wages accepted by illegal immigrants, said Angela Kelley, deputy director of the pro-immigrant National Immigration Forum.

The business community has said it wants a clear and legitimate process to follow in hiring, but that the government's rules now place unreasonable burdens on employers, such as making them scrutinize records presented by new employees to show employment eligibility at a time when forgeries abound.

Their expertise is in running construction companies or farms or restaurants or hotels, not in figuring out whether a Social Security card is authentic, employers say.

"You can tell an obvious fake, but most of them -- if they come in fake -- you can't tell," said John Plescia, president of a roofing company in Phoenix. "You absolutely can't tell."

Outside a day labor center in north Phoenix, David Vargas, a neatly dressed former technical support worker from the Mexican border city of Ciudad Juarez, said he has never been turned down for not having the right papers in his two years working construction jobs in this country.

It's unclear whether Vargas, who said he doesn't lie when employers ask about his status as an illegal immigrant, presents employers with documents.

"When I get a job, they only ask if I have them. They don't ask to see them," said Vargas, who lost his job at a plastics factory in Ciudad Juarez where he repaired production equipment until Mexico experienced an economic downturn. "They don't want to know if you have papers."

The father of three earns $350 to $700 a week in the United States, compared with $120 in Mexico.

Over the last several years, the government's efforts to confront illegal hirings have been "a relatively low priority," according to a report released in August by the Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, whose responsibilities include combating illegal hirings, disputes that conclusion, saying it does plenty of employer investigations.

But it does acknowledge that its priorities shifted after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks. Work sites with implications for national security -- nuclear plants, military bases, airports, chemical plants -- take first priority. Next, agents target flagrant violators, in hopes the example will deter others.

Over the last 23 months, authorities have clamped down on immigration violations at military bases, airports and other sensitive work places in San Diego and Imperial counties in California, examining employment records at 780 companies and arresting more than 300 illegal immigrants.

None of the companies has been charged with a crime because they claimed they didn't know they were hiring illegal workers, completed necessary employment documents, inspected records presented by workers and cooperated with investigators, authorities said.

The government opened 511 work-site investigations last year, a modest increase from the previous year but well below the 3,844 cases in 1999. Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman Dean Boyd said last year's figure represents only full-fledged investigations, while the 1999 total also includes spot checks of employers.

The number of notices of intent to fine companies dropped from 417 in fiscal 1999 to three in 2004, the report said. The average amount of fines was unavailable.

Fines aren't much of a deterrent because lawyers negotiate them down to amounts that employers regard as the price of doing business, Boyd said.

Today, the government prefers to seek monetary penalties by taking companies to court in civil cases, which provide better assurances of payment than administrative fines negotiated outside of court, authorities said.

Since taking this approach, the largest financial penalty in a civil immigration settlement came earlier this year when Wal-Mart agreed to pay $11 million to settle allegations that its cleaning contractors hired illegal immigrants. (Raids conducted in connection with that case in 2003 spanned 21 states and 60 stores -- including four in the Capital Region in Rotterdam, Glenville, Amsterdam and Ticonderoga.)

Boyd said criminal investigations also are an effective deterrent to illegal hirings.

But Daniel Griswold, director of the Center for Trade Policy Studies at The Cato Institute, said the government "made a fair effort of enforcing what at the end of the day is an unenforceable law." Cato is a libertarian research foundation in Washington, D.C.

The business community says the government allows too many records to be accepted from new employees, increasing the chances of getting fake documents. In addition, anti-discrimination laws limit the way businesses can question prospective employees.

The law also requires that federal authorities prove that a business knew it was employing illegal immigrants, not merely that it hired people who were later revealed to be illegal.

Arizona Republican Sen. Jon Kyl, who has proposed an overhaul of the country's immigration laws, said the only deterrent against illegal hirings today is the Border Patrol catching immigrants before they get to jobs in the nation's interior.

"There has been a complicity among the businesses and the government and other public officials, and everybody is a little bit to blame in all of this," Kyl said.