One reason is employers that receive federal grants (as opposed to contracts) don’t have to participate in E-Verify. (Heads up, Homeland Security Secretary Kelly!)
The Departments of Health and Human Services, Education, and Labor are major grant-making machines. Homeland Security and the Justice Department are too. The loophole exempting grantees from E-Verify needs to be corrected fast.
Secondly, state and local governments can choose to use E-Verify as part of their normal hiring practices, or they can opt out. That’s a lot of employees, especially when one considers the size of many state universities. For example, the University of Iowa does not participate in E-Verify, unless its employee is engaged in federal contract work.
Third, some employers view the system as too complicated.
Ten years ago that might have been a good excuse, but not today.
I’ve shopped at New York City fashion studio sales, where the salesperson takes my credit card, swipes it on a wee gizmo attached to her tablet, and voilà, the sale is complete. If a retail sale can be done with a tablet and a gizmo, what’s so hard about the electronic E-Verify system?