51 Members of Congress join Rep. Brian Bilbray in Opposing Obama's E-Verify Postponement
Representative Brian Bilbray (R-Calif.) has sent a letter, along with 51 other Members of the House, criticizing Pres. Barack Obama and his Administration's decision to postpone a 2008 executive order requiring the mandatory use of E-Verify for government contractors. It was the fourth time the order was delayed - the third by the Obama Administration.
Here is a copy of the letter with a list of its cosigners...
Dear President Obama and Secretary Napolitano:
As Members of the House of Representatives, we appeal to you on behalf of American taxpayers. We oppose the Administration's decision to delay, for a third time, the requirement that federal contractors use E-Verify to confirm that new hires are eligible to work in the United States legally.
On June 6, 2008, former President George Bush amended Executive Order 12989 and directed all federal departments and agencies to require certain contractors use E-Verify, a free Internet-based system that allows enrolled employers to confirm the legal status of new hires within seconds. Operated jointly by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) and Social Security Administration (SSA), E-Verify electronically matches information found on the Employment Eligibility Verification Form (Form I-9) against government databases. Over 122,000 U.S. employers currently use the E-Verify system, many voluntarily, with approximately 1,000 new employers signing up each week.
The E-Verify program enjoys a success rate of 99.6%, meaning that 99.6% of those legal workers checked by the program are verified without receiving a tentative non-confirmation (TNC) or having to take any type of corrective action. Testifying last June, Rep. Heath Shuler said, "E-Verify is handling at least one in eight new hires already. Based on recent load testing, the system has the capacity to handle 240 million queries a year -that's four times the number of people in the United States who are usually hired in a given year." The E-Verify program is reliable, easy to use and, most importantly, expedient.
For a fourth time this year, the effective date of the E-Verify requirement for federal government contractors has been delayed. The reported reason for the delay is in order to give the Administration additional time to review the regulation, which was originally scheduled to be implemented on January 15, 2009 after the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) designated E-Verify as the employment eligibility verification system for federal contractors. E-Verify was originally established under the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-208). The Administration has had plenty of time to review this rule. We find it unacceptable that the rule has been put on hold since Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano has stated publically that she supports E-Verify and wants to see it extended beyond the Sept. 30 expiration date.
Employers who break the law by hiring illegal immigrants create unfair competition in the labor market and depress wages for all workers. According to estimates from the Pew Hispanic Center, roughly 7.7 million illegal immigrants were employed in the United States in 2008. These are all jobs that currently unemployed United States workers-both citizens and legal immigrants-could and should have a chance to fill, especially if U.S. taxpayers are paying the bill for federal government contracts. Requiring federal contractors to use E-Verify is a good government practice that should not be delayed. Taxpayer dollars should not be used to employ illegal immigrants and E-Verify is the only way we can make sure we are protecting taxpayer dollars.
Sincerely,
Brian Bilbray
Member of Congress
Marsha Blackburn
Member of Congress
John Duncan
Member of Congress
Jack Kingston
Member of Congress
Sam Graves
Member of Congress
Heath Shuler
Member of Congress
Kenny Marchant
Member of Congress
Dean Heller
Member of Congress
Rodney Alexander
Member of Congress
John Boozeman
Member of Congress
Lamar Smith
Member of Congress
Pete Hoekstra
Member of Congress
Ed Royce
Member of Congress
Michael McCaul
Member of Congress
Dana Rohrbacher
Member of Congress
Trent Franks
Member of Congress
Walter B. Jones
Member of Congress
Louie Gohmert
Member of Congress
Ed Whitfield
Member of Congress
Roscoe Bartlett
Member of Congress
Howard Coble
Member of Congress
Elton Gallegly
Member of Congress
Pete Olson
Member of Congress
Todd Akin
Member of Congress
Jeff Miller
Member of Congress
Doug Lamborn
Member of Congress
Dan Burton
Member of Congress
John Campbell
Member of Congress
Virginia Foxx
Member of Congress
Phil Gingrey
Member of Congress
Steve King
Member of Congress
Peter Roskam
Member of Congress
Shelley Moore Capito
Member of Congress
John Culberson
Member of Congress
Ted Poe
Member of Congress
Patrick McHenry
Member of Congress
John Fleming
Member of Congress
Roy Blunt
Member of Congress
Ginny Brown-Waite
Member of Congress
Jason Chaffetz
Member of Congress
Paul Broun
Member of Congress
Adrian Smith
Member of Congress
Peter King
Member of Congress
Sue Myrick
Member of Congress
Ken Calvert
Member of Congress
Gary Miller
Member of Congress
J. Gresham Barrett
Member of Congress
Duncan Hunter
Member of Congress
Gene Taylor
Member of Congress
Mike Coffman
Member of Congress
Mike Simpson
Member of Congress
There are faxes on your Action Buffet for both Pres. Obama and DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano, blasting them for their decision to further delay the executive order and replace it with a new, leaner version.