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USCIS Announces Enhancements to E-Verify Program - May 12, 2008
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced today
improvements to the E-Verify employment authorization program that will reduce
an already low mismatch rate, while also streamlining and increasing the
effectiveness of the overall program.
Today's announcement comprises the first two phases of an overall three-part
enhancement for E- Verify aimed at decreasing the mismatch rate for naturalized
citizens.
“Less than one percent of all work-authorized employees receive a tentative
nonconfirmation through E-Verify," said USCIS Acting Director Jonathan Scharfen.
"While this is a very small percentage, we believe every employee who is
authorized to work in the United States should be instantly authorized by the
program. We're confident that the enhancements we're launching today will help
us achieve that goal."
Starting today, the E-Verify system will include naturalization data, which
will help instantly confirm the citizenship status of naturalized U.S. citizens
hired by E-Verify employers. Naturalized citizens who have not yet updated their
records with the Social Security Administration (SSA) are the largest category
of work-authorized persons who initially face an SSA mismatch in E-Verify.
Additionally, a naturalized citizen who receives a citizenship mismatch with SSA
can call USCIS directly to resolve the issue (in addition to the option of
resolving the mismatch in person at any SSA field office.)
E-Verify also will now include real time arrival data from the Integrated
Border Inspection System. This additional data source will reduce the number of
immigration status related mismatches for newly arriving workers who have
entered the country legally.
USCIS also plans to initiate citizenship status records information sharing
with SSA to further help prevent tentative nonconfirmations from occurring. This
effort will improve the efficiency of E-Verify by providing to SSA with the most
accurate and timely citizenship status information. E-Verify also plans to check
against Department of State passport records in the near future to even further
reduce mismatches.
More than 64,000 employers participate in E-Verify with approximately 1,000
new enrollments weekly. The Web-based system allows participating employers to
electronically verify the employment eligibility of newly-hired employees.
E-Verify evolved from the Basic Pilot/Employment Eligibility Verification
Program originally developed in 1997 and made available to employers as a
Web-based system in 2004. USCIS operates the program in partnership with SSA.
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