Menifee (California) Club Pushing for Immigration Checks


10:00 PM PST on Saturday, March 13, 2010

By JULISSA McKINNON
The Press-Enterprise


A Menifee club called "Conservative Activists" is trying to convince several cities to start penalizing businesses that hire illegal immigrants.

The group recently asked city councils in Menifee and Riverside to make it mandatory for businesses to use E-Verify, a computer program used through the Department of Homeland Security and Social Security Administration to identify illegal immigrant workers based on information from a workers' Employment Verification Eligibility form.

Mayor Wallace Edgerton said the Menifee City Council will soon consider requiring businesses in the city to use the E-Verify program. Ted Wegener, who heads the group, proposed to the Menifee council that the businesses which don't comply should be denied business licenses or fined. Businesses that are repeat offenders could also face the city revoking their business license, Wegener said.

A recent report put forth by the Department of Homeland Security stated that 54 percent of illegal immigrants passed through E-Verify were still cleared to work because they are using false identities, including stolen or borrowed social security numbers.

However, Wegener said he believes doing something about illegal immigrants is better than nothing, especially given Riverside County's dismal 15 percent unemployment rate.

"We want to see Americans take the jobs that the illegals take. I have neighbors and friends here who are unemployed who want to work," Wegener said, adding that they're willing to do any type of work.

"We're going to go wherever we think there's a conservative council that has a chance of doing it," said Wegener. He added that his group has plans to ask city leaders in Lake Elsinore, Hemet and Murrieta to adopt the E-Verify program. The city of Lancaster started requiring businesses to use the E-Verify program in December after Wegener's group made their appeal, Wegener said.

His motivation for going to local governments is that he believes the federal and state agencies aren't doing enough to curb illegal immigration from Mexico into the United States.

"Enforcement on the federal level is feeble and on the state level there's not the political will to do it," Wegener said.

Reach Julissa McKinnon at 951-375-3730 or jmckinnon@PE.com


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