首页
登录
职称英语
By some estimates, there are as many as 12 million illegal immigrants in the
By some estimates, there are as many as 12 million illegal immigrants in the
游客
2023-12-07
32
管理
问题
By some estimates, there are as many as 12 million illegal immigrants in the United States, toiling in farm fields, restaurant kitchens and construction sites. They’re in the country illegally, but the employers who hire them are also breaking the law. But the presence of illegal workers on a home renovation crew, and the contractor’s insistence on payment in cash don’t dissuade【1】______ clients. 【1】______
Plenty of employers even pay taxes and【2】______ on illegal workers. 【2】______
Many workers carry fake Social Security and green cards, and when they’re hired,
employers【3】______ those fake numbers with the federal government. 【3】______
There is a way the employer can tell if those numbers are fake. As Chris Bentley of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services explains, all it takes is a toll free phone call, which "allows them to. in a matter of seconds, take the information and【4】______ it against 450 million social security administration files, 【4】______
and an additional 65 million Department of Homeland Security files."
But few employers make the call.
The program is【5】______ 【5】______
Companies can’t be held responsible for failing to spot【6】______ documents. 【6】______
And although federal law【7】______ employing illegal workers, 【7】______
it is rarely enforced. Some agents oversee a huge district that includes most of Southern California and parts of Nevada. They deal with port security, airport security, money laundering, narcotics, financial fraud, and organized crime, as well as trade in counterfeit goods, state secrets, and human beings.【8】______ out illegal workers is just not a major concern, 【8】______
unless you’re talking about a work site with national security implications, like Los Angeles International Airport or a nuclear plant.
That situation【9】______ those 【9】______
who feel that American citizens are losing out to a black market system that lowers wages and cuts into the【10】______ base. 【10】______ [br] 【10】
By some estimates, there are as many as 12 million illegal immigrants in the United States, toiling in farm fields, restaurant kitchens and construction sites. They’re in the country illegally, but the employers who hire them are also breaking the law. But the presence of illegal workers on a home renovation crew, and the contractor’s insistence on payment in cash don’t dissuade potential clients. As one contractor points out, "When you go into a restaurant, do you ask if everybody is legal in the kitchen? No! You know, people don’t do that. When you go to get your car fixed, no. So nobody does it in construction, either."
That said, the contractor-who prefers not to use his name-figures he pays his workers better than the average for illegal labor. "I try to give people a living wage," he says, "so nobody makes less than $10 an hour. We’re not out to abuse anybody, which a lot of people are. They want to pick somebody up and just work them for $4 an hour."
Whatever the wages, operating on a cash-only basis saves contractors like him on payroll, taxes and insurance. Still plenty of employers do pay taxes and insurance on illegal workers.
Many workers carry fake Social Security and green cards, and when they’re hired, employers file those fake numbers with the federal government. There is a way the employer can tell if those numbers are fake. As Chris Bentley of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services explains, all it takes is a toll free phone call, which "allows them to, in a matter of seconds, take the information and verify it against 450 million social security administration files, and an additional 65 million Department of Homeland Security files."
But few employers make the call. The program is voluntary and only 4,400 employers are signed up nationwide. Companies can’t be held responsible for failing to spot forged documents. And although federal law prohibits employing illegal workers, it is rarely enforced, according to Kevin Jeffrey of Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Los Angeles. "We can fine employers," he says, but points out "it has been an issue where a lot of those fines are settled for pennies on the dollar, and if you got a multi-million dollar business, what’s a $10,000 fine?"
He says there’s a larger issue for American society to decide: "do we really want employers to go to jail for doing this or do we want to just do what we’ ye been doing mad winking at them and, you know, kind of letting it go by the board?"
For example, Mr. Jeffrey says, his 400 agents oversee a huge district that includes most of Southern California and parts of Nevada. They deal with port security, airport security, money laundering, narcotics, financial fraud, and organized crime, as well as trade in counterfeit goods, state secrets, and human beings. Weeding out illegal workers, he says, is just not a major concern, unless you’re talking about a work site with national security implications, like Los Angeles International Airport or a nuclear plant. "To be perfectly honest, people who are working at Rigoberto’s Taco Shop, they’re way back on the back burner. With the limited people and all these responsibilities that we have, we just can’t be everything for everybody."
That situation exasperates those who feel that American citizens are losing out to a black market system that lowers wages and cuts into the tax base. Joseph Turner heads Save Our State, a Southern California group opposed to illegal immigration. In his view, "When you have other people who are undercutting or gaming the system and doing things that are illegal, and where there’s no prosecution or enforcement of those laws against these people who are cheating the system, it forces many people who would like to play by the rules to in fact break the rules, because otherwise, they would be out of business, or starve."
Like it or not, though, that’s the reality employers face, especially in California, and states with large illegal immigrant populations.
选项
答案
tax
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3252930.html
相关试题推荐
Robotscouldfillthejobsof3.5millionpeopleinJapanby2025,athinkta
TheimmigrantscomingtoBritainaremainlyfrom______.A、EuropeB、TheUnitedSta
The______areimmigrantsfromLatinAmericawhichwasoncealargecolonyofth
ThefirstimmigrantsinAmericanhistorycamefromA、EnglandandtheNetherlands.
OnChristmasday,millionsofBritonswillgatheraroundthetelevisiontow
Advertiserswillhaveaudienceofnearly145million【M1】______peoplef
Advertiserswillhaveaudienceofnearly145million【M1】______peoplef
Advertiserswillhaveaudienceofnearly145million【M1】______peoplef
Advertiserswillhaveaudienceofnearly145million【M1】______peoplef
Advertiserswillhaveaudienceofnearly145million【M1】______peoplef
随机试题
AfriendgaveGeorgeaparrotwhichhadabigvocabulary,butmostofthewo
中国人认为人生来就得辛勤劳动。中国式的管理方式鼓励员工之间的合作,也鼓励普通员工和管理人员之间的合作,使员工有一种参与感和成就感的喜悦,使他们对自己的工
劳动者在进行劳动力流动决策时遵循的一个最基本的原则是( )。A.流动的成本和收
首次病程记录是指患者入院后由_______或_______书写的第一次病程记录。
下列关于材料一中“没收他们多余的农具与好的田地,分给他们坏的”做法评述正确的足(
柱和墩结构物在进行超声检测时,一般不采用()。A.斜测法 B.直角测法 C.
暂态地电压局部放电检测仪器宜具备放电类型识别功能,判断绝缘()等放电类型沿面放电
各种运输方式内外部的各个方面的构成和联系,就是( )。 A.运输系统
(2017年真题)根据《中共中央关于全面深化改革若干重大问题的决定》,下列类别的
乙脑病毒感染人体的主要临床类型或表现是A.隐性或轻症感染 B.中枢神经系统症状
最新回复
(
0
)