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townhall.com
Terence Jeffrey
March 16, 2005
Every year, the Social Security Administration consigns up to 9 million hopelessly
inaccurate W-2 reports to Social Security limbo.
It is called the Earnings Suspense File (ESF), and it is the final resting
place of W-2s that cannot be matched to a known taxpayer. One company filed
33,448 of these inaccurate W-2s in one year.
But will the government do anything about it? [??????]
House Judiciary Chairman James Sensenbrenner asked the Government Accountability
Office to look at the ESF. This month, GAO released a report (focusing
on 1985-2000) that reveals a telling pattern. [Reports
cost money and are seldom acted on.]
Orphaned W-2s do not emerge randomly from American business.
"Forty-three percent of employers associated with earnings reports in
the ESF are from only five of 83 broad industry categories," GAO reported.
These include "eating and drinking establishments, construction and special
trades, agricultural production-crops, business service organizations and health
service organizations."
At least some of the tendency in these industries to file inaccurate W-2s
is driven by the hiring illegal aliens. Citing a report by SSA's inspector general,
GAO says "SSA's experience is that employers who rely on a workforce consisting
of relatively unskilled and migrant workers are the major source of suspended
earnings."
However, most businesses in these industries are not "egregious"
filers of inaccurate W-2s. "Among these industry categories," says
GAO, "a small portion of employers account for a disproportionate number
of ESF reports."
Between 1985 and 2000, only 8,900 employers filed 1,000 or more W-2s that
ended up in the ESF, but those 8,900 accounted for more than 30 percent of ESF
reports.
Then there is the firm that filed 33,448 inaccurate W-2s in one year.
"(W)e found that employers with a high number of reports in the ESF had
a consistent pattern of misidentifying their workers on their annual earnings
reports to SSA," said GAO. "For example, one employer averaged about
13,300 reports placed in the ESF per year over the period we analyzed, ranging
from a low of 5,971 to a high of 33,448."
When SSA cannot match a W-2 to a worker, it writes to the address on the W-2.
"If the worker does not respond," says GAO, "SSA then sends a
letter to the employer that filed the report soliciting assistance in resolving
the problem."
You would think employers who routinely file large numbers of these W-2s would
figure out they were doing something wrong.
You also would think the Department of Homeland Security, which enforces the
immigration law, might also suspect they were doing something wrong and want
to investigate exactly what it is. [Millions of tax dollars
are being spent - nationally and statewide on Homeland "Security".]
"Employers engaging in a pattern or practice of knowingly hiring or continuing
to employ unauthorized workers can be subject to fines and imprisonment,"
says GAO.
Citing competing demands for Homeland Security resources in a post-9/11
world, GAO says, "At present, it is unlikely that DHS will take enforcement
action against employers and workers who submit inaccurate information to SSA
to conceal unauthorized work activity." [So much
for the "safety"/security of US citizens].
But, says GAO, "it is important that some level of coordination be re-established
to best leverage SSA's data on potential unauthorized work activity and DHS
staff resources to target the most egregious employers."
Daniel Bertoni, a GAO analyst who worked on the report, told me GAO has
the names of the 8,900 companies that filed at least 1,000 inaccurate W-2s
between 1985 and 2000. It also has the name of the company that filed 33,448
in one year.
Would GAO give the names to Homeland Security? "I would have to consult
with attorneys in terms of access to tax information," he said. "If
it were legal to do so, we would share the information to the fullest extent
possible, certainly." [Isn't this one of the major
problems threatening our "security"?]
I asked House Judiciary Chairman James Sensenbrenner if GAO should
give Homeland Security the names. "Yes, I do believe the GAO should provide
the compilation of employers sending deficient W-2s to the DHS," said Sensenbrenner.
"And I believe that the DHS should establish a procedure for investigating
those companies that continue to send bad W-2s year after year."
Should Homeland Security immediately begin to investigate companies that routinely
file large numbers of inaccurate W-2s to see if they are hiring large numbers
of illegal aliens? "Absolutely," said Sensenbrenner. "And the
administration should fund the 800 per year additional immigration internal
enforcement officers authorized by last year's 9/11 Commission bill, and signed
by the president." [Does anyone think for a minute
that the 500+ DC WIMPS will do anything about this? NOT if there is any threat
of losing funding toward future campaign funds to continue their status quo.]
Do Americans have the right to know the name of the company that filed the
33,448 inaccurate W-2s in one year? "Yes," said Sensenbrenner. "I
think the American people should know the name of every company that files more
than 100 inaccurate W-2s every year.
"Every community in America," he said, "has begun to recognize
the hidden cost of employing illegal aliens, from over-crowded emergency rooms
in bankrupt hospitals to schools overcrowded with indigent children who require
special language teachers most school districts can't afford. [These
COSTS are not hidden - they are being reported daily from cities/ health institutions/Social
Service organizations, etc. - but obviously being ignored by DC and its lack
of enforcement at our borders.]
"Sadly," he said, "many of these employers are in communities
which already have high levels of unemployed U.S. citizens."
©2005 Creators Syndicate
Contact Terence Jeffrey
townhall.com
ATG: Emphasis added.
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