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Originally published September 20, 2006 at 12:00 AM | Page modified May 14, 2010 at 11:48 AM

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America's Dilemma: Understanding Immigration

Workplace enforcement: Powerful forces fight job-site crackdowns

Every few years, when the nation goes through one of its paroxysms over immigration, there are promises to tighten borders, deal with illegal...

USA Today

Every few years, when the nation goes through one of its paroxysms over immigration, there are promises to tighten borders, deal with illegal immigrants already here and crack down on employers.

Such crackdowns, however, are mostly myth. The law is enforced only in fits and starts.

Enforcement plummeted beginning in the late 1990s. Authorities arrested about 14,000 illegal immigrants at work sites in 1998. Arrests declined by 80 percent the next year — and kept on dropping, to a total of 445 in 2003, according to Congress' nonpartisan Government Accountability Office.

Even if the government wanted to emphasize work-site arrests, it doesn't have the manpower. The Department of Homeland Security has about 325 agents to contend with 7.2 million illegal workers.

But the biggest reason crackdowns don't work is that powerful forces fight them.

Consider Operation Vanguard, a 1998 strategy that focused on Nebraska's meatpacking industry. Authorities compared plant records against Social Security numbers and notified employers of about 4,700 suspect workers. About 3,500 disappeared.

The long-range plan was to repeat the experiment industry by industry and state by state. This, authorities concluded, would persuade employers that it's more economical to hire legal workers, slowing illegal immigration. This would be done without disruptive raids or wholesale deportations.

But unions, immigration advocates, the industry and politicians protested. Plants couldn't find workers. Livestock demand dropped. Nebraska's economy was disrupted. Families were torn apart. Vanguard was gone within a year.

Conclusion? First, the law can be enforced. Second, many people won't like the results.

That is the perpetual dilemma of the immigration debate. People want a meaningful law. They also want services that immigrants provide.

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