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Illegal immigrants might get stimulus
jobs, experts say
By William M. Welch
LOS ANGELES — Tens of thousands of jobs created by the
economic stimulus law could end up filled by illegal
immigrants, particularly in big states such as California
where undocumented workers are heavily represented in
construction, experts on both sides of the issue say.
Studies by two conservative think tanks estimate
immigrants in the United States illegally could take
300,000 construction jobs, or 15% of the 2 million jobs
that new taxpayer-financed projects are predicted to
create.
They fault Congress for failing to require that employers
certify legal immigration status of workers before hiring
by using a Department of Homeland Security program called
E-Verify. The program allows employers to check the
validity of Social Security numbers provided by new
hires. It is available to employers on a voluntary basis.
"They could have deterred this, but they chose not to,"
said Steven Camarota, director of research for the Center
for Immigration Studies.
He said a federal requirement that employers use E-Verify
would have reduced, if not eliminated, the hiring of
immigrants in this country illegally.
An advocacy group for immigrants, illegal and legal, did
not disagree with the 300,000 estimate. Camarota says the
estimate is based on data from the U.S. Census Bureau's
Current Population Survey and other independent findings
that 15% of all construction workers in the USA are
either illegal immigrants or lack the status of legal
immigrant authorized to work.
But Jorge-Mario Cabrera, director of education for the
Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles,
said it is impossible to predict with certainty because
it is unknown how many jobless immigrant construction
workers may leave the U.S., frustrated by the economic
recession, before the new spending produces jobs.
He questioned the Center for Immigration Studies'
motives.
"Those are fear tactics. … 'The immigrants are here to
take your job,' " Cabrera said. "I think that we really
should be focusing on economic progress for all."
The center is a Washington policy organization that, its
website says, "seeks fewer immigrants but a warmer
welcome for those admitted." Cabrera says his group
believes unauthorized immigrants working in this country
contribute to the economy.
A similar hiring estimate was produced in a report in
February by the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think
tank. Senior research fellow Robert Rector wrote,
"Without specific mechanisms to ensure that workers are
U.S. citizens or legal immigrants authorized to work, it
is likely that 15% of these workers, or 300,000, would be
illegal immigrants."
The version of the stimulus bill passed by the House of
Representatives included a provision requiring employers
to check immigration status with the E-Verify system
before hiring. The Senate did not include such a
provision, and it was not in the version sent to
President Obama. The Obama administration has delayed
until at least May 21 a Bush administration executive
order requiring federal contractors to use the E-Verify
system in hiring. It had been scheduled to take effect in
January. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce filed suit seeking
to block the requirement, joined by the Associated
Builders and Contractors and other business
organizations.
The business groups and immigrant advocacy groups argue
that the E-Verify database is riddled with errors that
could result in millions of workers being wrongly
identified as not authorized for work. They say requiring
its use before hiring would impose a cost burden on
employers and open them to lawsuits.
Camarota said illegal immigrants working in construction
are concentrated in California, Arizona and Texas along
the border with Mexico, as well as Florida, Illinois, New
York, New Jersey, North Carolina and Georgia.
Original at: http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/employment/2009-03-08-immigrant-jobs_N.htm
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