E-Verify Would Cost $40 Billion, CBO Says (4/8/2008)
Employer verification boondoggle will rob taxpayers of
hard-earned benefits
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON – The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released the estimated
cost to implement H.R. 4088, the Secure America through Verification and
Enforcement (SAVE) Act of 2007, and found that the proposed legislation would
cost taxpayers more than $40 billion over 10 years. H.R. 4088, introduced by
Representatives Heath Shuler (D-NC) and Tom Tancredo (R-CO), would implement a
national employer verification system and mandate it for all new hires. It is
currently under consideration for a "discharge petition" that would allow the
bill to bypass the traditional committee markup process and instead go directly
to the House floor.
"E-Verify is bad policy for both employers and employees, and now we discover
it would also be bad for taxpayers and senior citizens, costing more than $40
billion in lost tax and Social Security revenue," said Tim Sparapani, senior
legislative counsel for the ACLU. "With less than 1% of employers participating
in the optional verify program currently in place, it has already faced
staggering bureaucratic problems. Halting the expansion of such a system should
be a no-brainer politically for any member of Congress hoping to keep their job.
Retiring members voting for the bill would do well to remember they, too, could
face ridiculous hiring delays of an E-Verified workforce. The CBO’s estimate
should signal to House members that the Shuler-Tancredo E-Verify bill is the
wrong approach to immigration policy." Sparapani continued, "E-Verify should be
scrapped."
The CBO estimate, released last week at the request of House Judiciary
Committee Chairman John Conyers (D-MI), concluded that implementing the SAVE Act
would have an impact well beyond the active workforce. The legislation would
result in employers and workers who now pay taxes choosing to go "off the
books," decreasing both tax and Social Security receipts by $17 billion and $22
billion respectively, over ten years. The ripple effect of such decreases could
result in cuts in Social Security benefits and other federal programs.
The CBO estimate can be viewed at: www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/91xx/doc9100/hr4088ltr.pdf
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