The Iowa Version
In Iowa, efforts to implement some degree of participation in E-Verify have come and gone over the years. The latest measure introduced in February requires that all Iowa employers use E-Verify to validate new hires and prevents those who do not from receiving any economic development incentive from the government. The bill also creates state penalties for knowingly employing directly or through contract an “unauthorized alien.” Violation of this or related federal law could result in the suspension or revocation of all state business licensure. The bill was reported out of committee on March 6. Business groups who testified at the hearing were mostly neutral or undecided on the issue, though some expressed concerns about inaccuracies in the system.
The Pro Argument
Sen. Garrett, the bill’s sponsor, made several claims about why his bill is necessary to protect against unfair competition in an op-ed piece for the Des Moines Register:
- Many of the 20% of Iowan businesses that already participate in E-Verify said it was easy to use, quick and accurate.
- Those businesses receive few negative responses from the program because undocumented workers don’t even apply to businesses that use it.
- The claims of inaccurate responses arise from a 2010 study that is outdated and do not represent the current state of the system.
- Because there is “no realistic chance” that the federal government will implement mandatory use, it is up to the states to pressure Congress to pass the uniform law and deter illegal immigrants from “slipping into the country.”
- A November Zogby poll stated that 74% of voters support a mandatory E-Verify.
The Anti Side
Mark Stringer of the Iowa American Civil Liberties Union made the counter arguments in a guest column for the Courier. He claimed that E-Verify is no solution for the country or the state:
- E-Verify has “serious errors,” incorrectly identifying 1% as ineligible to work. With 800,000 new Iowan hires each year, 8,000 people would fall into this category. It is a nightmare to try to correct these errors and can cause months of lost wages for innocent workers.
- It is a threat to privacy, making the personal data and photos of 1.6 million Iowans vulnerable to improper government use and hackers.
- The US Government Accountability Office estimates that 54% of undocumented workers make it through the system because E-Verify doesn’t catch falsified information.
- E-Verify is expensive, and mandatory nationwide use would increase the budget deficit more than $30 billion.
- Iowa needs immigrants and workers.
Democratic Sen. Rob Hogg adds that immigration policy should be left with the federal government, and this bill would put too high a burden on county attorneys to enforce.
We will see what the Iowa Legislature decides to do with this proposal, but the overall debate is guaranteed to carry on. If DHS succeeds in its efforts to mandate E-Verify throughout the US, these state provisions will be rendered moot. Regardless, immigration policy promises to remain a focus of attention for some time to come.