I-9/ICE | Deputy Director Speaks to House Immigration Subcommittee
Sunday, January 30th, 2011Last week the House subcommittee on immigration policy and enforcement held their first hearing on “ICE Worksite Enforcement – Up to the Job?” The major agenda item was whether or not Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) was adequately enforcing worksite immigration laws. The Republican members called upon ;their usual sources to diminish the Obama administration’s enforcement efforts, even though Deputy Director of ICE, Kumar Kibble stated quite clearly that ICE has achieved record numbers of investigations, audits, fines, and deportations by citing the below statistics. Frankly, after listening to the majority members, one can’t help but wonder if any amount of enforcement would be sufficient to meet their expectations.
Under the Obama administration, ICE has moved away from raids, and stepped up the pace of auditing businesses who may be suspect to employing undocumented workers. However, the emphasis today is more on employers who hire immigrants and not just arresting undocumented immigrants who are working in the factories, the hotels, restaurants and construction businesses. The vehicle being used to police the workforce is the auditing of I-9 forms, levying fines and utilizing employer verification tools such as E-Verify and the Ice Mutual Agreement Between the Government and Employers Program.
The Deputy Director cited the following statistics as evidence of the success of ICE’s worksite enforcement: for FY 2010:
- A record 2,746 worksite enforcement investigations, more than doubling the 1,191 cases initiated in FY 2008.
- ICE criminally arrested 196 employers for worksite related violation, surpassing the previous high of 135 in FY 2008.
- ICE also issued a record 2,196 notices of inspection to employers, surpassing the prior year’s record of 1,444 and more than quadrupling the 503 inspections in 2008.
- ICE issued 237 final orders – documents requiring employers to cease violation the law and directing them to pay fines – totaling $6,956,026, compared to the 18 issued for $675,209 in FY 2008.
- The total of $6,956,026 last year represents the most final orders issued since the creation of ICE in 2003.
- In addition worksite investigations resulted in a record $36,611,320 in judicial fines, forfeitures, and restitutions.
- Finally ice brought a new level of integrity to the contracting process by debarring a record 97 businesses and 49 individuals preventing unscrupulous companies from engaging in future business with the government.
The glaring facts that came out of the hearing are that no matter whether it’s worksite raids or company audits with deportations of undocumented aliens, the current state of how foreign born workers are processed into the country is no longer working. The conversation that we all should be having is the comprehensive reform of how workers are brought into the USA. We can only hope that the GOP and the Democrats can have civil and reasonable debate that results in meaningful change. Let’s see what happens.