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The survey found:
E-Verify is easy to use and customers are overwhelmingly positive when describing their experience with the program.
Almost all E-Verify employers believe that E-Verify is effective (92 percent) and perceive it to be highly accurate (89 percent).
Overall, 97 percent of E-Verify employers agree that the system is user friendly.
Almost all E-Verify employers agree that the mandatory tutorial adequately prepared them to use E-Verify (93 percent).
Almost all E-Verify employers (97 percent) reported using the program for all new hires.
E-Verify |
E-Verify is not a program undocumented workers like much, because the program provides rapid verification of worker status. Some employers also oppose the service because they want a source of cheap labor and they want to avoid federal employment taxes.
Substantial work is done by undocumented people. This includes on farms and ranches, in construction, landscaping and other low paying jobs. Some work is done in the technical field to make computers and dot.com companies able to offer inexpensive Internet and technical services. There is also a large demand for unskilled workers in the health care industry, which helps reduce the costs of citizen health care.
The United Farm Workers Union put out a national invitation on a national talk show in which undocumented immigrants offered to give up their jobs in the fields for any citizen who is willing to do the hard work. Four people applied for the program, at least one being a celebrity trying to make hay out of the event. The only serious candidate quit before the first day was over, because the working conditions were to harsh for him.
E-Verify is probably a good idea even for undocumented people. With comprehensive immigration reform, undocumented workers could come onto the radar and employers would be forced to pay reasonable wages and collect and pay employment taxes. Consumers benefit as well because some ranchers are unable to obtain necessary workers and their produce rots in the ground, driving up the costs of fruits and vegetables to the consumer.
Comprehensive Immigration Reform was passed in the United States Senate, thanks to effort on the part of Senator Bennet from Colorado. Bennet forged a hard hitting immigration bill that would have helped roughly 60% of the immigrants in the country. Bennet was able to enlist the cooperation of conservative Republicans and together they worked out a deal that secures the border and keeps families united. The program left out people who need to be identified the most, people with criminal records.
From both a liberal and conservative approach, giving immigrants with criminal records one last chance in exchange for registration protects the nation by registering all people within America's borders, and allows people who traditionally have limited access to legal protection one last chance to get it right.
However, in the U.S. House of Representatives, the House leadership, under John Boehnner, is saying no to all immigrants. Republicans hope the lobby supporting immigration reform will rebel against Democratic leaders in the next election because reform has been stalled by Republicans in the House. Republicans have not figured out that the primarily Latino voting base knows that Republicans are manipulating their family members for political gain.
The U.S. Citizen and Immigration Services, USCIS, is doing it's part to help secure the nation and to insure employers are treating workers fairly, and employers pay taxes through the E-Verify program. The U.S. House of Representatives under conservative leadership has failed to do it's part and is playing politics with America's food and labor supply, with no regard for people who break their backs to insure produce arrives at the tables of citizens.