Court Blocks Government From Implementing Flawed Social Security No Match Rule
Wednesday, October 10, 2007
Court Blocks Government From Implementing
Flawed Social Security No Match Rule
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 10,
2007
CONTACT: Lauren Mendoza, AFL-CIO,
(202) 637-5212; lmendoza@aflcio.org
Maria
Archuleta, ACLU, (212) 519-7808 or 549-2666;
media@aclu.org
Stella Richardson, ACLU-NC,
(415) 621-2493;
srichardson@aclunc.org
Marielena Hincapié,
NILC, (415) 845-3403;
hincapie@nilc.org
SAN FRANCISCO - A
federal judge issued a preliminary order
stopping the government from enforcing a new
rule that could have used social security
records for immigration enforcement, ensuring
that U.S. citizens and legal residents will not
lose their jobs because of errors in the Social
Security Administration (SSA) database. The
order prevents any implementation -- until the
court makes a final ruling after trial -- of a
new Department of Homeland Security (DHS) rule
punishing employers if they do not take action
after receiving social security "no match"
letters.
U.S. District Court Judge
Charles R. Breyer found: "[the government's
proposal to disseminate no-match letters
affecting more than eight million workers will,
under the mandated time line, result in the
termination of lawfully employed
workers.]"
"This is a significant step
towards overturning this unlawful rule, which
would give employers an even stronger way to
keep workers from freely forming unions," said
John Sweeney, President of the AFL-CIO. "More
than 70% of SSA discrepancies refer to U.S.
citizens, and as Judge Breyer found, the
mailing of the new 'no match' letters would
result in irreparable harm to innocent workers
and employers."
Today's preliminary
injunction comes as a result of a lawsuit filed
in August by the American Federation of Labor
and Congress of Industrial Organizations
(AFL-CIO), the American Civil Liberties Union,
the National Immigration Law Center (NILC) and
the Central Labor Council of Alameda County
along with other local labor movements. In the
lawsuit, the groups charge that the misguided
rule violates the law and workers' rights,
imposes burdensome obligations on employers,
and will cause discrimination against workers
who are perceived to be immigrants.
The
district court had temporarily halted the DHS
rule shortly after the lawsuit was filed and
blocked the government from sending notices of
the new regulation to approximately 140,000
employers across the country. Several other
labor and business groups joined in the lawsuit
to challenge the rule. The new ruling extends
that prohibition indefinitely until the court
issues a final decision in the case after
trial.
For years the SSA has sent "no
match" letters to employers if the name and
social security information reported by a
worker on a W-2 form does not match up with the
information contained in SSA databases. The "no
match" letters were never considered reason to
believe that an employee did not have
permission to work in the U.S, and currently
employers who receive "no match" letters are
not required to take any action. In fact, there
are many innocent reasons for such
discrepancies such as clerical mistakes, name
changes due to marriage and divorce, and the
use of multiple surnames that are common in
many parts of the world.
"The judge saw
the need to fully examine the wisdom of placing
employees' jobs in jeopardy because of the mess
in our social security database, which is rife
with errors," said Scott Kronland of Altshuler
Berzon LLP, who argued at today's hearing.
Under the new DHS rule, employers
receiving "no match" letters might be required
to fire employees whose SSA discrepancies are
not resolved within 90 days after the "no
match" letter is received. If the employer does
not respond to a "no match" letter, DHS may
conclude that the employer had "constructive
knowledge" that an employee was not authorized
to work in the U.S. and prosecute the employer
accordingly.
"The Bush Admin showed a
callous disregard for legal workers and
citizens by adopting a rule that punishes
innocent workers and employers under the guise
of so-called immigration enforcement. The court
exposed the new rule's fatal flaw rule by
recognizing that no-match letters are based on
error-filled SSA records and that the
Administration's about-face on the use of these
records was improper. Instead of punishing
citizens and legal workers the Administration
should dedicate itself to enforcing the
workplace wage and safety rights of all
workers," said Lucas Guttentag, Director of the
ACLU's Immigrants' Rights Project and one of
the lawyers in the case.
"We are
pleased that the judge saw the need to stop
this rule that would lead to increased
exploitation and discrimination of workers,"
added Marielena Hincapié, Staff Attorney and
Director of Programs at NILC. "Although DHS
wants to use the no match letters as an
immigration enforcement tool, the DHS
regulation would do little to decrease
undocumented immigration. Instead, it will fuel
the growth of off-the-books hiring by employers
who would prefer to skip W-2 forms and instead
pay employees with cash and as a result,
sidestep basic workers' protections. The no
match letters will simply serve to undermine
all workers' labor rights."
Today's
order was handed down in the United States
District Court for the Northern District of
California.
In addition to the AFL-CIO,
which is represented by the law firm of
Altshuler Berzon LLP, other parties bringing
the lawsuit include the Central Labor Council
of Alameda County, represented by the ACLU, the
ACLU of Northern California, and NILC, as well
as the San Francisco Labor Council and the San
Francisco Building and Construction Trades
Council, represented by Weinberg, Roger and
Rosenfeld.
In addition to Guttentag,
Kronland, and Hincapié, lawyers on the case
include Stephen Berzon, Jonathan Weissglass,
Linda Lye and Danielle Leonard of Altshuler
Berzon LLP; Jonathan Hiatt, James Coppess and
Ana Avendaño of the AFL-CIO; Jennifer Chang,
Mónica M. Ramírez, and Omar Jadwat of the
ACLU Immigrants' Rights Project; Alan Schlosser
and Julia Mass of the ACLU of Northern
California; Linton Joaquin and Monica Guizar of
NILC; and David Rosenfeld and Manjari Chawla of
Weinberg, Roger and Rosenfeld.
The
complaint and other information about the
lawsuit can be found at:
www.aclu.org/nomatch.
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