No-Match Scratched By Obama Administration

Today, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano announced the department will be proposing a new regulation rescinding the Social Security Administration No-Match Rule – a regulation issued by the Bush administration in August 2007 and enjoined by a U.S. District Court since it was introduced. The rule was intended to address an employer’s obligations in response to receipt of a social security number mismatch notice from the Social Security Administration (SSA).

The rule stated that receipt of a SSA no-match letter could be used as evidence that the employer has constructive knowledge that an employee lacks work authorization. The No-Match Rule also made clear that an employer who did not follow the guidelines would be susceptible to an I-9 violation and possible fines in the event of a workplace audit or raid.

“This rule would have been devastating to the California and Arizona fresh fruit, vegetable, and tree-nut industries and would have caused massive layoffs of employment-authorized workers and U.S. citizens, while dragging the economy deeper into recession,” said Tom Nassif, president and CEO of Western Growers. “I want to thank Secretary Napolitano for showing great leadership and quickly rescinding such a bad policy. The No-Match Rule wrongly presumed that if a worker has been named in a ‘no-match’ letter, then the worker is ineligible to work in the U.S. The reality is that the SSA database is not, and was never intended to be, an immigration database and does not contain real-time data on individuals’ immigration status or work authorization. We need an effective guestworker program and true immigration reform, such as the AgJOBS legislation, and we urge Congress to move this bill to the president’s desk this year.”

Source: Western Growers press release

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