Employment Verification
Challenges Exist in Implementing a Mandatory Electronic Verification System
Gao ID: GAO-07-924T June 7, 2007
The opportunity for employment is one of the most powerful magnets attracting illegal immigration to the United States. The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 established an employment eligibility verification process, but immigration experts state that a more reliable verification system is needed. In 1996, the former U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, now within the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), and the Social Security Administration (SSA) began operating a voluntary pilot program, called the Employment Eligibility Verification (EEV) program, to provide participating employers with a means for electronically verifying employees' work eligibility. Congress is considering various immigration reform proposals, some of which would require all employers to electronically verify the work authorization status of their employees at the time of hire. In this testimony GAO provides observations on the EEV system's capacity, data reliability, ability to detect fraudulent documents and identity theft, and vulnerability to employer fraud as well as challenges to making the program mandatory for all employers. This testimony is based on our previous work regarding the employment eligibility verification process and updated information obtained from DHS and SSA.
A mandatory EEV program would substantially increase the number of employers using the system. As of May 2007, about 17,000 employers have registered to use the current voluntary EEV program, about half of which are active users. If participation in EEV were made mandatory, the approximately 5.9 million employers in the United States may be required to participate. Requiring all employers to use EEV would substantially increase the demands on DHS and SSA resources. DHS estimated that increasing the capacity of EEV could cost it $70 million annually for program management and $300 million to $400 million annually for compliance activities and staff. SSA officials estimated that expansion of the EEV program through this fiscal year would cost $5 million to $6 million and noted that the cost of mandatory EEV would be much higher and driven by increased workload of its field office staff that would be responsible for resolving queries that SSA cannot immediately confirm. DHS and SSA are exploring options to reduce delays in the EEV process. The majority of EEV queries entered by employers--about 92 percent--confirm within seconds that the employee is work authorized. About 7 percent of the queries cannot be immediately confirmed by SSA, and about 1 percent cannot be immediately confirmed by DHS. Resolving these nonconfirmations can take several days, or in a few cases even weeks. DHS and SSA are considering options for improving the system's ability to perform additional automated checks to immediately confirm work authorization, which may be important should EEV be mandatory. EEV may help reduce document fraud, but it cannot yet fully address identity fraud issues, for example, when employees present borrowed or stolen genuine documents. The current EEV program is piloting a photograph screening tool, whereby an employer can more easily identify fraudulent documentation. DHS expects to expand the use of this tool to all participating employers by September 2007. Although mandatory EEV and the associated use of the photograph screening tool offer some remedy, limiting the number of acceptable work authorization documents and making them more secure would help to more fully address identity fraud. The EEV program is vulnerable to employer fraud, such as entering the same identity information to authorize multiple workers. EEV is also vulnerable to employer misuse that adversely affects employees, such as employers limiting work assignments or pay while employees are undergoing the verification process. DHS is establishing a new Compliance and Monitoring program to help reduce employer fraud and misuse by, for example, identifying patterns in employer compliance with program requirements. Information suggesting employers' fraud or misuse of the system could be useful to other DHS components in targeting limited worksite enforcement resources and promoting employer compliance with employment laws.
GAO-07-924T, Employment Verification: Challenges Exist in Implementing a Mandatory Electronic Verification System
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Testimony before the Subcommittee on Social Security, Committee on Ways
and Means, House of Representatives:
United States Government Accountability Office:
GAO:
For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:00 a.m. EDT:
Thursday, June 7, 2007:
Employment Verification:
Challenges Exist in Implementing a Mandatory Electronic Verification
System:
Statement of Richard M. Stana, Director:
Homeland Security and Justice Issues:
GAO-07-924T:
GAO Highlights:
Highlights of GAO-07-924T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on
Social Security, Committee on Ways and Means, House of Representatives
Why GAO Did This Study:
The opportunity for employment is one of the most powerful magnets
attracting illegal immigration to the United States. The Immigration
Reform and Control Act of 1986 established an employment eligibility
verification process, but immigration experts state that a more
reliable verification system is needed. In 1996, the former U.S.
Immigration and Naturalization Service, now within the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS), and the Social Security Administration (SSA)
began operating a voluntary pilot program, called the Employment
Eligibility Verification (EEV) program, to provide participating
employers with a means for electronically verifying employees‘ work
eligibility. Congress is considering various immigration reform
proposals, some of which would require all employers to electronically
verify the work authorization status of their employees at the time of
hire. In this testimony GAO provides observations on the EEV system‘s
capacity, data reliability, ability to detect fraudulent documents and
identity theft, and vulnerability to employer fraud as well as
challenges to making the program mandatory for all employers. This
testimony is based on our previous work regarding the employment
eligibility verification process and updated information obtained from
DHS and SSA.
What GAO Found:
A mandatory EEV program would substantially increase the number of
employers using the system. As of May 2007, about 17,000 employers have
registered to use the current voluntary EEV program, about half of
which are active users. If participation in EEV were made mandatory,
the approximately 5.9 million employers in the United States may be
required to participate. Requiring all employers to use EEV would
substantially increase the demands on DHS and SSA resources. DHS
estimated that increasing the capacity of EEV could cost it $70 million
annually for program management and $300 million to $400 million
annually for compliance activities and staff. SSA officials estimated
that expansion of the EEV program through this fiscal year would cost
$5 million to $6 million and noted that the cost of mandatory EEV would
be much higher and driven by increased workload of its field office
staff that would be responsible for resolving queries that SSA cannot
immediately confirm.
DHS and SSA are exploring options to reduce delays in the EEV process.
The majority of EEV queries entered by employers”about 92
percent”confirm within seconds that the employee is work authorized.
About 7 percent of the queries cannot be immediately confirmed by SSA,
and about 1 percent cannot be immediately confirmed by DHS. Resolving
these nonconfirmations can take several days, or in a few cases even
weeks. DHS and SSA are considering options for improving the system‘s
ability to perform additional automated checks to immediately confirm
work authorization, which may be important should EEV be mandatory.
EEV may help reduce document fraud, but it cannot yet fully address
identity fraud issues, for example, when employees present borrowed or
stolen genuine documents. The current EEV program is piloting a
photograph screening tool, whereby an employer can more easily identify
fraudulent documentation. DHS expects to expand the use of this tool to
all participating employers by September 2007. Although mandatory EEV
and the associated use of the photograph screening tool offer some
remedy, limiting the number of acceptable work authorization documents
and making them more secure would help to more fully address identity
fraud.
The EEV program is vulnerable to employer fraud, such as entering the
same identity information to authorize multiple workers. EEV is also
vulnerable to employer misuse that adversely affects employees, such as
employers limiting work assignments or pay while employees are
undergoing the verification process. DHS is establishing a new
Compliance and Monitoring program to help reduce employer fraud and
misuse by, for example, identifying patterns in employer compliance
with program requirements. Information suggesting employers‘ fraud or
misuse of the system could be useful to other DHS components in
targeting limited worksite enforcement resources and promoting employer
compliance with employment laws.
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-07-924T].
To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on
the link above. For more information, contact Richard M. Stana at (202)
512-8777 or stanar@gao.gov.
[End of section]
Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:
I appreciate the opportunity to be here today to participate in this
hearing on electronic employment verification. As we and others have
reported in the past, the opportunity for employment is one of the most
powerful magnets attracting unauthorized immigrants to the United
States. To help address this issue, in 1986 Congress passed the
Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA),[Footnote 1] which made it
illegal for individuals and entities to knowingly hire, continue to
employ, or recruit or refer for a fee unauthorized workers. The act
established a two-pronged approach for helping to limit the employment
of unauthorized workers: (1) an employment verification process through
which employers verify all newly hired employees' work eligibility and
(2) a sanctions program for fining employers who do not comply with the
act.[Footnote 2]
Following the passage of IRCA, the U.S. Commission on Immigration
Reform and various immigration experts indicated a number of problems
with the implementation of immigration policies and concluded that
deterring illegal immigration requires, among other things, strategies
that focus on disrupting the ability of illegal immigrants to gain
employment through a more reliable employment eligibility verification
process. In particular, the commission report and other studies found
that the single most important step that could be taken to reduce
unlawful migration is the development of a more effective system for
verifying work authorization. In the over 20 years since passage of
IRCA, the employment eligibility verification process has remained
largely unchanged. The House and Senate are considering legislation to
reform immigration laws and strengthen electronic employment
verification. Some of this legislation includes proposals that would
require implementing a mandatory, functional electronic employment
verification program for all employers before other immigration-related
reforms could be initiated. Currently, the U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services (USCIS) administers, and Social Security
Administration (SSA) supports, a voluntary electronic employment
verification program, called the Employment Eligibility Verification
(EEV) program.
My testimony today is an update of our prior work regarding employment
verification and worksite enforcement. Specifically, I will discuss our
observations on the current electronic employment verification program
and challenges to making the program mandatory for all employers.
In preparing this testimony, we reviewed our past work on employment
verification and worksite enforcement efforts.[Footnote 3] We analyzed
updated information provided by U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE), USCIS, and SSA officials on steps they are taking to
address weaknesses identified in our prior work, as well as challenges
their agencies may face if an electronic employment verification
program were made mandatory. We examined regulations, guidance, and
other studies on the employment verification process. We also analyzed
a report on the results of an independent evaluation of the electronic
employment eligibility verification program, then known as the Basic
Pilot program, conducted by the Institute for Survey Research at Temple
University and Westat in June 2004.[Footnote 4] Furthermore, we
received updated data on employer use of the current electronic
employment eligibility verification system. We reviewed these data for
accuracy and completeness and determined that these data were
sufficiently reliable for the purposes of our review. We conducted the
work reflected in this statement from September 2004 through July 2005
and updated this information in May and June 2007 in accordance with
generally accepted government auditing standards.
Summary:
A mandatory EEV would necessitate an increased capacity at both USCIS
and SSA to accommodate the estimated 5.9 million employers in the
United States.[Footnote 5] As of May 2007, about 17,000 employers have
registered for the EEV program, about half of which are active users.
USCIS has estimated that a mandatory EEV could cost USCIS $70 million
annually for program management and $300 million to $400 million
annually for compliance activities and staff, depending on the method
for implementing the program. The costs associated with other
programmatic and system enhancements are currently unknown. SSA is
currently refining its estimates and was not yet able to provide
estimates for the cost of a mandatory EEV. According to SSA officials,
the cost of a mandatory EEV would be driven by the field offices'
increased workload required to resolve queries that SSA cannot
immediately confirm.
USCIS and SSA are exploring options to reduce delays in the EEV
process. According to USCIS, the majority of EEV queries entered by
employers--about 92 percent--confirm within seconds that the employee
is authorized to work. About 7 percent of the queries cannot be
immediately confirmed by SSA, and about 1 percent cannot be immediately
confirmed by USCIS. With regard to the SSA-issued tentative
nonconfirmations,[Footnote 6] USCIS and SSA officials told us that the
majority occur because employees' citizenship or other information,
such as name changes, is not up to date in the SSA database. Resolving
some DHS nonconfirmations can take several days, or in a few cases even
weeks. USCIS and SSA are examining ways to improve the system's ability
to use additional automated checks to immediately confirm work
authorization.
EEV may help reduce document fraud, but it cannot yet fully address
identity fraud issues, for example, when employees present borrowed or
stolen genuine documents. The current EEV program is piloting a
photograph screening tool, whereby an employer can more easily identify
fraudulent documentation. This tool is currently being used by over 70
employers, and USCIS expects to expand the use of the tool to all
participating employers by the end of summer 2007. Although mandatory
EEV and the associated use of the photograph screening tool offer some
remedy, further actions, such as limiting the number of acceptable work
authorization documents and making them more secure, mat be required to
more fully address identity fraud.
EEV is vulnerable to employer fraud that diminishes its effectiveness
and misuse that adversely affects employees. ICE officials stated that
EEV program data could indicate cases in which employers may be
fraudulently using the system and therefore would help the agency
better target its limited worksite enforcement resources toward those
employers. EEV is also vulnerable to employer misuse that adversely
affects employees, such as limiting work assignments or pay while
employees are undergoing the verification process. USCIS is
establishing a new Compliance and Monitoring program to help reduce
employer fraud and misuse by, for example, identifying patterns in
employer compliance with program requirements. Information suggesting
employers' fraud or misuse of the system could be useful to other DHS
components in targeting limited worksite enforcement resources and
promoting employer compliance with employment laws.
Background:
In 1986, IRCA established the employment verification process based on
employers' review of documents presented by employees to prove identity
and work eligibility. On the Form I-9, employees must attest that they
are U.S. citizens, lawfully admitted permanent residents, or aliens
authorized to work in the United States. Employers must then certify
that they have reviewed the documents presented by their employees to
establish identity and work eligibility and that the documents appear
genuine and relate to the individual presenting them. In making their
certifications, employers are expected to judge whether the documents
presented are obviously counterfeit or fraudulent. Employers generally
are deemed in compliance with IRCA if they have followed the Form I-9
process in good faith, including when an unauthorized alien presents
fraudulent documents that appear genuine. Following the passage of IRCA
in 1986, employees could present 29 different documents to establish
their identity and/or work eligibility. In a 1997 interim rule, the
former U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) reduced the
number of acceptable work eligibility documents from 29 to 27.[Footnote
7]
The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act
(IIRIRA)[Footnote 8] of 1996 required the former INS and SSA to operate
three voluntary pilot programs to test electronic means for employers
to verify an employee's eligibility to work, one of which was the Basic
Pilot Program.[Footnote 9] The Basic Pilot Program was designed to test
whether pilot verification procedures could improve the existing
employment verification process by reducing (1) false claims of U.S.
citizenship and document fraud, (2) discrimination against employees,
(3) violations of civil liberties and privacy, and (4) the burden on
employers to verify employees' work eligibility.
In 2007, USCIS renamed the Basic Pilot Program the Employment
Eligibility Verification (EEV) program. EEV provides participating
employers with an electronic method to verify their employees' work
eligibility. Employers may participate voluntarily in EEV, but are
still required to complete Forms I-9 for all newly hired employees in
accordance with IRCA. After completing the forms, these employers query
EEV's automated system by entering employee information provided on the
forms, such as name and Social Security number, into the EEV Web site
within 3 working days of the employees' hire date. The program then
electronically matches that information against information in SSA's
NUMIDENT database and, for noncitizens, DHS databases to determine
whether the employee is eligible to work. EEV electronically notifies
employers whether their employees' work authorization was confirmed.
Those queries that the DHS automated check cannot confirm are referred
to DHS immigration status verifiers, who check employee information
against information in other DHS databases. The EEV process is shown in
figure 1.
Figure 1: Electronic Employment Verification Program Verification
Process:
[See PDF for image]
Source: GAO analysis based on USCIS information.
[End of figure]
In cases when EEV cannot confirm an employee's work authorization
status either through the automatic check or the check by an
immigration status verifier, the system issues the employer a tentative
nonconfirmation of the employee's work authorization status. In this
case, the employers must notify the affected employees of the finding,
and the employees have the right to contest their tentative
nonconfirmations by contacting SSA or USCIS to resolve any inaccuracies
in their records within 8 days. During this time, employers may not
take any adverse actions against those employees, such as limiting
their work assignments or pay. After 10 days, employers are required to
either immediately terminate the employment or notify DHS of the
continued employment of workers who do not successfully contest the
tentative nonconfirmation and those who the pilot program finds are not
work-authorized.
The EEV program is a part of USCIS's Systematic Alien Verification for
Entitlements Program, which provides a variety of verification services
for federal, state, and local government agencies. USCIS estimates that
there are more than 150,000 federal, state, and local agency users that
verify immigration status through the Systematic Alien Verification for
Entitlements Program. SSA also operates various verification services.
Among these are the Employee Verification Service (EVS) and the Web-
based SSN Verification Service (SSNVS), which can be used to provide
verification that employees' names and Social Security numbers match
SSA's records. These services, designed to ensure accurate employer
wage reporting, are offered free of charge. Employer use is voluntary,
and the services are not widely used.
Mandatory EEV Would Require an Increase in Capacity at USCIS and SSA:
Mandatory electronic employment verification would substantially
increase the number of employers using the EEV system, which would
place greater demands on USCIS and SSA resources. As of May 2007, about
17,000 employers have registered to use the program, 8,863 of which
were active users,[Footnote 10] and USCIS has estimated that employer
registration is expected to greatly increase by the end of fiscal year
2007. If participation in the EEV program were made mandatory, the
program may have to accommodate all of the estimated 5.9 million
employers in the United States. USCIS officials estimate that to meet a
December 2008 implementation date, this could require about of 30,000
employers to register with the system per day. The mandatory use EEV
can affect the capacity of the system because of the increased number
of employer queries.
USCIS has estimated that a mandatory EEV could cost USCIS $70 million
annually for program management and $300 million to $400 million
annually for compliance activities and staff. The costs associated with
other programmatic and system enhancements are currently unknown.
According to USCIS, cost estimates will rise if the number of queries
rises, although officials noted that the estimates may depend on the
method for implementing a mandatory program. SSA officials told us they
have estimated that expansion of the EEV program to levels predicted by
the end of fiscal year 2007 would cost $5 to $6 million, but SSA was
not yet able to provide us estimates for the cost of a mandatory EEV.
According to SSA officials, the cost of a mandatory EEV would be driven
by the increased workload of its field office staff due to resolving
SSA tentative nonconfirmations.[Footnote 11]
A mandatory EEV would require an increase in the number of USCIS and
SSA staff to operate the program. For example, USCIS had 13
headquarters staff members in 2005 to run the program and 38
immigration status verifiers available for secondary
verification.[Footnote 12] USCIS plans to increase staff levels to 255
to manage a mandatory program, which includes increasing the number of
immigration status verifiers who conduct secondary
verifications.[Footnote 13] USCIS officials expressed concern about the
difficulty in hiring these staff due to lengthy hiring processes, which
may include government background checks. In addition, according to SSA
officials, a mandatory EEV program would require additional staff at
SSA field offices to accommodate an increase in the number of
individuals visiting SSA field offices to resolve tentative
nonconfirmations. According to SSA officials, the number of new staff
required would depend on both the legislative requirements for
implementing mandatory EEV and the effectiveness of efforts USCIS has
under way to decrease the need for individuals to visit SSA field
offices. For this reason, SSA officials told us they have not yet
estimated how many additional staff they would need for a mandatory
EEV.
USCIS and SSA Are Exploring Options to Reduce Delays in the EEV
Process:
In prior work, we reported that secondary verifications lengthen the
time needed to complete the employment verification process. The
majority of EEV queries entered by employers--about 92 percent--confirm
within seconds that the employee is authorized to work. About 7 percent
of the queries are not confirmed by the initial automated check and
result in SSA-issued tentative nonconfirmations, while about 1 percent
result in DHS-issued tentative nonconfirmations. With regard to the SSA-
issued tentative nonconfirmations, USCIS and SSA officials told us that
the majority occur because employees' citizenship status or other
information, such as name changes, is not up to date in the SSA
database. SSA does not update records unless an individual requests the
update in person and submits the required evidence to support the
change in its records. USCIS officials stated that, for example, when
aliens become naturalized citizens, their citizenship status is often
not updated in the SSA database. In addition, individuals who have
changed their names for various reasons, such as marriage, without
notifying SSA in person may also be issued an SSA tentative
nonconfirmation. According to SSA officials, although SSA instructs
individuals to report any changes in name, citizenship, or immigration
status, many do not do so. When these individuals' information is
queried through EEV, a tentative nonconfirmation would be issued,
requiring them to go to an SSA field office to show proof of the change
and to correct their records in SSA's database.
USCIS and SSA are exploring some options to improve the efficiency of
the verification process. For example, USCIS is exploring ways to
automatically check for naturalized citizens' work authorization using
DHS databases before the EEV system issues a tentative nonconfirmation.
Furthermore, USCIS is planning to provide naturalized citizens with the
option, on a voluntary basis, to provide their Alien Number or
Naturalization Certification Number so that employers can query that
information through the EEV system before referring the employees to
SSA to resolve tentative nonconfirmations.[Footnote 14] SSA is also
coordinating with USCIS to develop an automated secondary verification
capability, which may reduce the need for employers to take additional
steps after the employee resolves the SSA tentative
nonconfirmation.[Footnote 15] USCIS and SSA officials told us that the
agencies are planning to provide SSA field office staff with access to
the EEV system so that field office staff can resolve the SSA tentative
nonconfirmation directly in the system at the time the employee's
record is updated at the field office. According to SSA officials, the
automated secondary verification capability is tentatively scheduled to
be implemented by October 2007. While these steps may help improve the
efficiency of the verification process, including eliminating some SSA
tentative nonconfirmations, they will not entirely eliminate the need
for some individuals to visit SSA field offices to update records when
individuals' status or other information changes.
USCIS and SSA officials noted that because the current EEV program is
voluntary, the percentage of individuals who are referred to SSA field
offices to resolve tentative nonconfirmations may not accurately
indicate the number of individuals who would be required to do so under
a mandatory program. SSA and USCIS officials expressed concern about
the effect on SSA field offices' workload of the number of individuals
who would be required to physically visit a field office if EEV were
made mandatory.
EEV May Help Reduce Employee Document Fraud, but Cannot Yet Fully
Address Identity Fraud Issues:
In our prior work, we reported that EEV enhances the ability of
participating employers to reliably verify their employees' work
eligibility and assists participating employers with identification of
false documents used to obtain employment.[Footnote 16] If newly hired
employees present false information, EEV would not confirm the
employees' work eligibility because their information, such as a false
name or social security number, would not match SSA and DHS database
information. However, the current EEV program is limited in its ability
to help employers detect identity fraud, such as cases in which an
individual presents borrowed or stolen genuine documents.
USCIS has taken steps to reduce fraud associated with the use of
documents containing valid information on which another photograph has
been substituted for the document's original photograph. In March 2007,
USCIS began piloting a photograph screening tool as an addition to the
current EEV system. According to USCIS officials, the photograph
screening tool is intended to allow an employer to verify the
authenticity of a Lawful Permanent Resident card (green card) or
Employment Authorization Document that contain photographs of the
document holder by comparing individuals' photographs on the documents
presented during the I-9 process to those maintained in DHS databases.
As of May 2007, about 70 employers have been participating during the
pilot phase of the photograph screening tool, and EEV has processed
about 400 queries through the tool. USCIS expects to expand the program
to all employers participating in EEV by the end of summer 2007.
The use of the photograph screening tool is currently limited because
newly hired citizens and noncitizens presenting forms of documentation
other than green cards or Employment Authorization Documents to verify
work eligibility are not subject to the tool. Expansion of the pilot
photograph screening tool would require incorporating other forms of
documentation with related databases. In addition, efforts to expand
the tool are still in the initial planning stages. For example,
according to USCIS officials, USCIS and the Department of State have
begun exploring ways to include visa and U.S. passport documents in the
tool, but these agencies have not yet reached agreement regarding the
use of these documents. USCIS is also exploring a possible pilot
program with state Departments of Motor Vehicles.
In prior work we reported that although not specifically or
comprehensively quantifiable, the prevalence of identify fraud seemed
to be increasing, a development that may affect employers' ability to
reliably verify employment eligibility in a mandatory EEV program. The
large number and variety of acceptable work authorization documents--27
under the current employment verification process--along with inherent
vulnerabilities to counterfeiting of some of these documents, may
complicate efforts to address identity fraud. Although mandatory EEV
and the associated use of the photograph screening tool offers some
remedy, further actions, such as reducing the number of acceptable work
eligibility documents and making them more secure, may be required to
more fully address identity fraud.
While Most Employers Complied with EEV Procedures, the Program Is
Vulnerable to Employer Fraud That Diminishes Its Effectiveness and
Misuse That Adversely Affects Employees:
EEV is vulnerable to acts of employer fraud, such as entering the same
identity information to authorize multiple workers. Although ICE has no
direct role in monitoring employer use of EEV and does not have direct
access to program information, which is maintained by USCIS, ICE
officials told us that program data could indicate cases in which
employers may be fraudulently using the system and therefore would help
the agency better target its limited worksite enforcement resources
toward those employers. ICE officials noted that, in a few cases, they
have requested and received EEV data from USCIS on specific employers
who participate in the program and are under ICE investigation. USCIS
is planning to use its newly created Compliance and Monitoring program
to refer information on employers who may be fraudulently using the EEV
system, although USCIS and ICE are still determining what information
is appropriate to share.
Employees queried through EEV may be adversely affected if employers
violate program obligations designed to protect the employees, by
taking actions such as limiting work assignments or pay while employees
are undergoing the verification process. The 2004 Temple University
Institute for Survey Research and Westat evaluation of EEV concluded
that the majority of employers surveyed appeared to be in compliance
with EEV procedures. However, the evaluation and our prior review found
evidence of some noncompliance with these procedures. In 2005, we
reported that EEV provided a variety of reports that could help USCIS
determine whether employers followed program requirements, but that
USCIS lacked sufficient staff to do so. Since then, USCIS has added
staff to its verification office and created a Compliance and
Monitoring program to review employers' use of the EEV system. However,
while USCIS has hired directors for these functions, the program is not
yet fully staffed. According to USCIS officials, USCIS is still in the
process of determining how this program will carry out compliance and
monitoring functions, but its activities may include sampling employer
usage data for evidence of noncompliant practices, such as identifying
employers who do not appear to refer employees contesting tentative
nonconfirmations to SSA or USCIS. USCIS estimates that the Compliance
and Monitoring program will be sufficiently staffed to begin
identifying employer noncompliance by late summer 2007.
USCIS's newly created Compliance and Monitoring program could help ICE
better target its worksite enforcement efforts by indicating cases of
employers' egregious misuse of the system. Currently, there is no
formal mechanism for sharing compliance data between USCIS and ICE. ICE
officials noted that proactive reduction of illegal employment through
the use of functional, mandatory EEV may help reduce the need for and
better focus worksite enforcement efforts. Moreover, these officials
told us that mandatory use of an automated system like EEV could limit
the ability of employers who knowingly hired unauthorized workers to
claim that the workers presented false documents to obtain employment,
which could assist ICE agents in proving employer violations of IRCA.
Concluding Observations:
Although efforts to reduce the employment of unauthorized workers in
the United States necessitate a strong employment eligibility
verification process and a credible worksite enforcement program and
other immigration reforms may be dependent on it, a number of
challenges face its successful implementation. The EEV program shows
promise for enhancing the employment verification process and reducing
document fraud if implemented on a much larger scale, and USCIS and SSA
have undertaken a number of steps to address many of the weaknesses we
identified in the EEV program. USCIS has also spent the last several
years planning for an expanded or mandatory program, and has made
progress in several areas, but it is unclear at this time the extent to
which USCIC's efforts will be successful under mandatory EEV. It is
clear, however, that a mandatory EEV system will require a substantial
investment in staff and other resources, at least in the near term, in
both agencies. There are also issues, such as identity fraud and
intentional misuse, that will remain a challenge to the system.
Implementing an EEV system to ensure that all individuals working in
this country are doing so legally and that undue burdens are not placed
on employers or employees will not be an easy task within the timelines
suggested in reform proposals.
This concludes my prepared statement. I would be pleased to answer any
questions you and the subcommittee members may have.
GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgements:
For further information about this testimony, please contact Richard
Stana at 202-512-8777.
Other key contributors to this statement were Blake Ainsworth, Frances
Cook, Michelle Cooper, Rebecca Gambler, Kathryn Godfrey, Lara Laufer,
Shawn Mongin, Justin L. Monroe, John Vocino, Robert E. White, and Paul
Wright.
FOOTNOTES
[1] Pub. L. No. 99-603, 8 U.S.C. § 1324a.
[2] IRCA provided for sanctions against employers who do not follow the
employment verification (Form I-9) process. Employers who fail to
properly complete, retain, or present for inspection a Form I-9 may
face civil or administrative fines ranging from $110 to $1,100 for each
employee for whom the form was not properly completed, retained, or
presented. Employers who knowingly hire or continue to employ
unauthorized aliens may be fined from $275 to $11,000 for each
employee, depending on whether the violation is a first or subsequent
offense. Employers who engage in a pattern or practice of knowingly
hiring or continuing to employ unauthorized aliens are subject to
criminal penalties consisting of fines up to $3,000 per unauthorized
employee and up to 6 months' imprisonment for the entire pattern or
practice.
[3] GAO, Immigration Enforcement: Weaknesses Hinder Employment
Verification and Worksite Enforcement Efforts, GAO-05-813 (Washington,
D.C.: Aug. 31, 2005).
[4] Institute for Survey Research and Westat, Findings of the Basic
Pilot Program Evaluation (Washington, D.C.: June 2004).
[5] In 2004, the most recent year for which data are available, there
were approximately 5.9 million firms in the United States. A firm is a
business organization consisting of one or more domestic establishments
in the same state and industry that were specified under common
ownership or control. Under EEV, one employer may have multiple
worksites that use the system. For example, a hotel chain could have
multiple individual hotels using EEV. This hotel chain would represent
one employer using the pilot program.
[6] In general, in cases when the EEV system cannot confirm an
employee's work authorization status through the initial automatic
check, the system issues the employer either an SSA or a DHS tentative
nonconfirmation of the employee's work authorization status, which
requires the employee to resolve any data inaccuracies if he or she is
able or chooses to do so.
[7] Eight of these documents establish both identity and employment
eligibility (e.g., U.S. passport or permanent resident card); 12
documents establish identity only (e.g., driver's license); and 7
documents establish employment eligibility only (e.g., Social Security
card).
[8] U.S.C. 1324a(b). IIRIRA was enacted within a larger piece of
legislation, the Omnibus Consolidated Appropriations Act, 1997, Pub. L.
No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009.
[9] The other two pilot programs mandated by IIRIRA--the Citizen
Attestation Verification Pilot Program and the Machine-Readable
Document Pilot Program--were discontinued in 2003 due to technical
difficulties and unintended consequences identified in evaluations of
the programs. See Institute for Survey Research and Westat, Findings of
the Citizen Attestation Verification Pilot Program Evaluation
(Washington, D.C.: April 2003) and Institute for Survey Research and
Westat, Findings of the Machine-Readable Document Pilot Program
Evaluation (Washington, D.C.: May 2003).
[10] Active users are those employers who have run at least one query
in fiscal year 2007.
[11] In general, in cases when the EEV system cannot confirm an
employee's work authorization status through the initial automatic
check, the system issues the employer a tentative nonconfirmation of
the employee's work authorization status.
[12] Thirty-eight immigration status verifiers were available for
completing secondary verifications. According to USCIS, at any one time
about 3 to 5 immigration status verifiers work to resolve tentative
nonconfirmations. The other immigration status verifiers work on other
verification programs, such as the Systematic Alien Verification for
Entitlements Program.
[13] USCIS officials noted that this does not include staff for
monitoring and compliance functions.
[14] According to USCIS, providing these data to employers would be
voluntary to help ensure that naturalized citizens are not subject to
discrimination.
[15] Currently, once an individual resolves the reason for the SSA
tentative nonconfirmation, the employer must then re-query the EEV
system in order to finalize the verification.
[16] GAO-05-813
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