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DAP Forums > DREAM Act > The News Room

Driver's data may be used to check workers' status

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#1
05-26-2011, 09:59 PM
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dtrt09
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By SUZANNE GAMBOA, Associated Press Suzanne Gamboa, Associated Press – 2 hrs 50 mins ago

WASHINGTON – The Obama administration is about to add more personal information to E-Verify, an immigration enforcement tool that is vulnerable to fake, stolen or borrowed documents.

The administration has said that it will add driver's license data from the state of Mississippi to E-Verify as early as June 8. The agency will test whether using the data can help E-Verify better identify people working illegally in the U.S. E-Verify checks workers' information against Social Security and immigration records. E-Verify was not designed to check whether a document with valid information belongs to the person who presented it.
Citizenship and Immigration Services, part of the Department of Homeland Security, has tried to make up for E-Verify's shortcomings by adding photos from U.S. passports, green cards given to legal permanent residents and work permits. But those only cover some workers.

About 80 percent of workers present driver's licenses to establish their identity when filling out paperwork at new jobs, including papers — known as I-9 forms_ asking whether they are citizens or permitted to work in the U.S., said Bill Wright, a spokesman for Citizenship and Immigration Services, which oversees E-Verify.

"This initiative is a major step forward in allowing (Citizenship and Immigration Services) to more effectively combat identity theft and protect against fraud in the employment verification process," Wright said. Only data such as birth dates and driver's license numbers will be shared by Mississippi, not photos.

Other states will be watching the Mississippi experiment to see how it affects Americans' privacy. No other states have agreed to share data yet, although some others were asked.

Citizenship and Immigration Services proposed using the driver's license data in a May 9 Federal Register notice. The public can comment on the proposal through June 8.
The addition of driver's license data raises concerns with the American Civil Liberties Union, which has been a leading opponent of E-Verify, created in 1996 but little used until after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

"You are creating an enormous database filled with information on what would be, if it's mandatory, information on every American worker. That's a honey pot for identity thieves," said Chris Calabrese, an attorney with the ACLU in Washington.

He noted a recent Minnesota case in which names, birth dates, Social Security numbers and other information were not kept secure by a company the state hired to check employers' new workers through E-Verify.

The Federal Trade Commission announced earlier this month it had reached a settlement with Lookout Services Inc., the Minnesota contractor, on charges of failing to safeguard the sensitive information. The FTC said because of the lax security, an employee of one of Lookout's customers was able to get access to sensitive information in the company's database, including Social Security numbers of about 37,000 people. Lookout did not admit wrongdoing.

Jon Kalahar, a spokesman for Mississippi's Department of Public Safety, said employers won't have access to information they don't already have. They will punch in driver's license numbers and other information to the E-Verify online site and the site will access the Mississippi driver's license information and confirm whether there is a match. Kalahar said Citizenship and Immigration Services assured his agency that the license information will be kept safe during the six month experiment.

The use of E-Verify could figure prominently in any immigration debate in Congress this session.

Republican Rep. Lamar Smith, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, cheered a Supreme Court ruling on Thursday sustaining Arizona's state law requiring businesses to use E-Verify. The 2007 law was signed by then-Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano, now the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. Mississippi law requires employers in that state to use E-Verify.

Smith said he would soon introduce a bill expanding E-Verify and making its use mandatory for businesses. Many companies have been expecting the change in law to come in this session of Congress and have been meeting with Smith and his staff to discuss their concerns. E-Verify will help "turn off the jobs magnet that encourages illegal immigration," Smith said Thursday
.

The Obama administration has made cracking down on employers who hire noncitizens without work permits a key part of its immigration enforcement policy.

More than 200,000 of the estimated 7 million employers in the U.S are using E-Verify. Most use it voluntarily, although federal contractors and some businesses are required to do so.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110526/...ation_e_verify
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#2
05-26-2011, 10:08 PM
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we have to go through hell to get to heaven good luck to mi jente in Mississippi.
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#3
05-26-2011, 10:37 PM
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LifeDreamer
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There are a lot of immigrants in Mississippi of all places. I feel for them people because they really stand out there... I've been to the state like 5 times..
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#4
05-26-2011, 11:38 PM
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Quote:
The Obama administration is about to add more personal information to E-Verify
Nice job, Mr. President
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#5
05-27-2011, 12:49 AM
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Oh sh**. May God bless my undocumented brothers and sisters in Mississippi.

To all those who claim that Obama is too busy to deal with immigration reform . . . Mhzzzzzz he does have time to make our lives a living hell. Ironic Ironic.
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#6
05-27-2011, 01:01 AM
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dtrt09
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They asked other states to participate, but they declined. I tried to research into which such states were originally asked to provide the data, but couldn't find anything. If they asked any on the West Coast, they must have been high to think that they would participate. These very states are the ones at the forefront battle against Secure Communities .

Ah, Secure Communities, our tax dollars at work and another "push" in the quest for immigration reforms from our caring Democratic administration.

I find it odd that this hasn't broken thru in the Spanish-language media...
Last edited by dtrt09; 05-27-2011 at 01:05 AM..
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#7
05-27-2011, 02:14 AM
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Its not mandatory until its passed.
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#8
05-27-2011, 11:33 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DA User View Post
Its not mandatory until its passed.
"Other states will be watching the Mississippi experiment to see how it affects Americans' privacy. No other states have agreed to share data yet, although some others were asked"

What does it matter that it isn't mandatory when Mississipi does it voluntarily????????? Really, think DA User, volunteering information avoids all the legal pitfalls of turning it into a law because technically you can stop at any time. Think of it as a reverse Secure Communities plot; just in terms of states enabling the the federal government; rather than the federal government enabling the states.
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#9
05-27-2011, 02:45 PM
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Juan92
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they won't persuade CA or NY lol
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#10
05-29-2011, 03:15 PM
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castillo85
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Texas is up on this big time we have no democrats nearly at all. They are making anti immigrant laws pass left and right. My state Texas does have the largest amount of undocumented it will hurt. I could be wrong but I think we passed Cali this year.
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