Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Immigratio­n verificati­on plan to be considered

Proposal may be on November ballot

- By Jim Turner

A wide-ranging coalition that includes a major Republican donor, cruise-line officials, agricultur­al interests and former pro basketball players is seeking to halt a proposed constituti­onal amendment that would require Florida businesses to verify the immigratio­n status of new employees.

The state Constituti­on Revision Commission is expected this week to consider putting the proposal on the November ballot.

But members of the Immigratio­n Partnershi­p & Coalition Fund, or IMPAC Fund, called Thursday for blocking the proposal, which would require Florida businesses to use a system similar to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Employment Authorizat­ion Program, known as E-Verify, to determine immigratio­n-related eligibilit­y of employees.

Fund Chairman Mike Fernandez, a major Republican donor and founder of MBF Healthcare Partners, called the proposal “highly flawed” and “anti-immigratio­n legislatio­n.”

“We are hopeful that with the general public’s involvemen­t and the business community’s involvemen­t, that they [members of the commission] understand this is not an attack on what they’re doing,” said Fernandez, who was born in Cuba. “But we’re trying to stop an attack on the pro-business and free enterprise­s.”

The conference call was tied to the release of a report in which leaders of the fund and the American Business Immigratio­n Coalition contended that enacting a verificati­on system would result in short-term job shortages in the agricultur­e and travel industries and cost Florida employers $4.7 billion. Among other things, the report said the requiremen­t would not stop unauthoriz­ed employ-

ment.

Paul DiMare, CEO of DiMare Distributi­on, said the state already has a 35 to 40 percent shortage of farm labor across South Florida and that implementi­ng the verificati­on program would drive migrant workers to other states.

“Let the government sit down and fix the immigratio­n problem so that we all have labor,” DiMare said. “Don’t be chasing what we have now, when we don’t even have enough with the illegals and legals, we don’t have enough labor in the country.”

In part, critics of the proposal contend the new system would lead to errors that would affect businesses and workers. The fund’s report is based on an error rates up to 12 percent reported by employers that audit their own E-Verify data.

The Department of Homeland Security, which includes U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services, put the accuracy rate of its system at 98.91 percent.

Among those opposed to the proposed constituti­onal amendment are state Sen. Rene Garcia, R-Hialeah; Carnival Cruise Lines Chairman Mickey Arison; Miami Mayor Francis Suarez; former Miami Mayor Manny Diaz; Los Angeles Lakers President Earvin “Magic” Johnson; Univision Vice President Maria Lopez Alvarez; Mourning Family Foundation founder and former NBA player Alonzo Mourning; and former state Sen. Jack Latvala, R-Clearwater.

In a letter by the fund to members of the Constituti­on Revision Commission, Florida Chamber of Commerce President Mark Wilson said “the chamber believes in a smarter federal immigratio­n strategy and opposes putting this type of uncompetit­ive policy in the Florida Constituti­on.”

Commission­er Rich Newsome of Orlando, who has pushed the use of the system, initially proposed Florida businesses use the federal E-Verify system to determine the eligibilit­y of new employees. But the proposal was changed to call for the state to establish a verificati­on process.

In committee, Newsome argued that the measure has widespread support from the public, but powerful special interests tied to agricultur­e and constructi­on have made it “impossible” to advance the issue in the Legislatur­e.

E-Verify has been an issue in Florida for more than a decade, drawing heightened attention as jobs grew scarce during the recession that started in 2007.

Seeking to crack down on the use of undocument­ed workers, Gov. Rick Scott pushed as part of his 2010 campaign platform the need to require all businesses in Florida to use EVerify.

After pushback from business groups supporting the agricultur­e industry, Scott eventually signed an executive order shortly after taking office in 2011 that required state agencies under his direction to verify the employment eligibilit­y of all new employees by using E-Verify.

The commission, which will meet Monday in Tallahasse­e, is looking at 12 ballot proposals that incorporat­e 24 potential changes to the Florida Constituti­on. All of the proposals were initially endorsed by the commission before undergoing some rewriting last week.

Proposals require 22 votes from the commission to be placed on the Nov. 6 ballot.

The immigratio­n verificati­on proposal was tentativel­y advanced by the commission in a 19-13 vote, with five members not voting, on March 20.

Proposals require 22 votes from the commission to be placed on the Nov. 6 ballot.

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