96-15265. Privacy Act of 1974; Report of New Routine Use  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 117 (Monday, June 17, 1996)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 30653-30655]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-15265]
    
    
    
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    SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
    
    
    Privacy Act of 1974; Report of New Routine Use
    
    AGENCY: Social Security Administration.
    
    ACTION: New routine use.
    
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    SUMMARY: In accordance with the Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a(e) (4) and 
    (11)), we are issuing public notice of our intent to establish a new 
    routine use of information maintained in the Privacy Act system of 
    records entitled Master Files of Social Security Number (SSN) Holders 
    and SSN Applications, SSA/OSR, 09-60-0058. (For convenience, we will 
    refer to the system as the Enumeration System.) The proposed routine 
    use provides for disclosure of SSN and citizenship information to 
    employers in connection with a pilot program to verify the employment 
    authorization of newly-hired employees.
        We invite public comments on this publication.
    
    DATES: We filed a report of an altered systems of records--new routine 
    use with the Chairman, Committee on Government Reform and Oversight of 
    the House of Representatives, the Chairman, Committee on Governmental 
    Affairs of the Senate, and the Administrator, Office of Information and 
    Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget on June 4, 1996. 
    The routine use will become effective as proposed, without further 
    notice on July 29, 1996, unless we receive comments on or before that 
    date that would result in a contrary determination.
    
    ADDRESSES: Interested individuals may comment on this publication by 
    writing to the SSA Privacy Officer, Social Security Administration, 
    Room 3-A-6 Operations Building, 6401 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, 
    Maryland 21235. Comments may be faxed to (410) 966-0869 or sent to 
    internet address willie.j.polk@ssa.gov. All comments received will be 
    available for public inspection at that address.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Willie J. Polk, Chief, 
    Confidentiality and Disclosure Branch, Office of Disclosure Policy, 
    Social Security Administration, 3-D-1 Operations Building, 6401 
    Security Boulevard, Baltimore, Maryland 21235, telephone 410-965-1753.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    A. Discussion of Proposed Routine Use
    
        On February 7, 1995, President Clinton announced that SSA, in 
    partnership with the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), will 
    conduct a pilot project to verify SSNs and employment authorization for 
    newly-hired employees.
        To work in the United States (U.S.), a person must be a U.S. 
    citizen or an alien lawfully admitted to the country and authorized to 
    work. Employers are currently required to view documents from all 
    newly-hired employees to verify their identities and their 
    authorization to work in the U.S. That process has been cumbersome for 
    employers and is generally viewed as ineffective at identifying 
    unauthorized workers. It has also been found to provide an opportunity 
    for discrimination against people who look or sound foreign.
        The Commission on Immigration Reform (also known as the Jordan 
    Commission) released an interim report to the Congress in September 
    1994 that proposed a computer registry based on SSA and INS data that 
    employers could check to determine if a newly-hired employee is 
    authorized to work. The Commission recommended that the President 
    immediately pilot the registry in the five States with the highest 
    levels of illegal immigration and several less affected States. SSA and 
    INS estimate it would take at least 5 years after the enactment of 
    legislation to set up the joint computer registry proposed by the 
    Jordan Commission. The President has authorized SSA and INS to develop 
    pilot projects to test the effectiveness of some of the concepts 
    embodied in the computer registry proposal, and to test the technical 
    feasibility of matching data from the two agencies' databases.
        The focus of the current pilot project would involve a two-step 
    process using existing SSA and INS data bases. Current plans call for 
    selected volunteer employers to provide SSA with a newly-hired 
    employee's SSN, name and date of birth. SSA would match that 
    information against the Enumeration System data base. If the 
    identifying information furnished by the employer does not match the 
    data in the Enumeration System, SSA would so inform the employer. If 
    there is a match, SSA would also check for citizenship/alien status 
    coding. If the Enumeration System indicates that the employee is a U.S. 
    citizen, SSA's response would
    
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    convey this information and no further inquiries would be necessary. If 
    the Enumeration System indicates that the employee was an alien at the 
    time he or she last applied for a social security card, SSA would 
    advise the employer to check with INS to determine whether the employee 
    is authorized to work.
        To comply with the Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a) when disclosing 
    information to the employers participating in the pilot, we are 
    proposing to establish the following routine use:
    
        In connection with a pilot program, conducted with the 
    Immigration and Naturalization Service under 8 U.S.C. 1324a(d)(4) to 
    test methods of verifying that individuals are authorized to work in 
    the United States, the Social Security Administration will inform an 
    employer participating in such pilot program that the identifying 
    data (Social Security number, name and date of birth) furnished by 
    an employer concerning a particular employee match, or do not match, 
    the data maintained in this system of records, and when there is 
    such a match, that information in this system of records indicates 
    that the employee is, or is not, a citizen of the United States.
    
    B. Compatibility of Proposed Routine Use
    
        We are proposing the routine use discussed above in accordance with 
    the Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a(a)(7), (b)(3), and (e) (4) and (11)) and 
    our disclosure regulation (20 CFR part 401). The Privacy Act permits us 
    to disclose information about individuals without their consents for a 
    routine use, i.e., where the information will be used for a purpose 
    that is compatible with the purpose for which we collected the 
    information. The disclosures that will be made under the proposed 
    routine use meet the compatibility requirements in the Privacy Act and 
    the regulation as discussed below.
        Under 8 U.S.C. 1324a(a)(1), the Immigration and Nationality Act 
    provides that it is unlawful for a person or other entity to hire, or 
    to recruit or refer for a fee, for employment in the U.S. an individual 
    without verifying that the individual is authorized to work in the U.S. 
    Among the documents that can be used to verify the individual's 
    authorization to work in the U.S., as discussed in 8 U.S.C. 
    1324a(b)(1), is the SSN card ``(other than such a card which specifies 
    on the face that the issuance of the card does not authorize employment 
    in the United States).'' Thus, the SSN and SSN card have a major role 
    in the current process for verification of an employee's authorization 
    to work in the U.S. Further, 8 U.S.C. 1324a(d) allows the President to 
    consider the suitability of existing Federal identification systems for 
    use in determining employment authorization and to undertake 
    demonstration projects, such as the pilot project described above, that 
    test the usefulness of such systems for improving employment 
    verification. SSA's Enumeration System is such a Federal identification 
    system. This statutory authority has been invoked with respect to the 
    pilot project described above. Consequently, with respect to the pilot 
    project, 8 U.S.C. 1324a(d) establishes employment authorization 
    verification as one of the purposes for which SSA collects and 
    maintains information in its Enumeration System. Use of that 
    information by employers participating in that pilot project to verify 
    authorization to work in the U.S. clearly serves that purpose.
        In addition, sections 205(c)(2) and 208(a)(7) and (8) of the Social 
    Security Act (the Act) also support a finding of compatibility. Under 
    section 205(c)(2)(A) of the Act, SSA is required to establish and 
    maintain records of the amounts of wages paid to individuals and of the 
    periods in which such wages were paid. In performing these duties, SSA 
    is required by section 205(c)(2)(B)(i)(I) of the Act to arrange for the 
    issuance of SSNs to certain groups, including aliens lawfully admitted 
    to the U.S. for permanent residence or under other authority to work in 
    the U.S. Section 205(c)(2)(B)(ii) of the Act provides that SSA must 
    require all applicants for SSNs to furnish evidence to establish the 
    age, citizenship, or alien status, and true identity of such 
    applicants, and to determine which (if any) SSN has previously been 
    assigned to such individual. This provision was enacted to address, 
    among other things, concerns about use of SSNs by aliens entering the 
    U.S. illegally and work in the U.S. by aliens who are not authorized to 
    do so. Further, section 208(a)(7)(B) and (a)(8) of the Act provides 
    that any individual who, with intent to deceive for any purpose, 
    falsely represents that a particular SSN was assigned to him or her 
    when it was not so assigned, or uses the SSN of any person in violation 
    of the laws of the U.S., is guilty of a felony.
        Some of the statutorily authorized purposes for which SSA collects 
    and uses information maintained in the Enumeration System are: (1) To 
    keep accurate records of earnings as required by section 205(c)(2)(A) 
    of the Act; (2) to detect instances in which an individual uses an SSN 
    that has not been assigned to him or her; (3) to prevent the issuance 
    of an SSN to an individual who has not furnished evidence that he or 
    she is lawfully admitted to the U.S.; and (4) to deter and detect work 
    in the U.S. that is not authorized by law.
        The services we would provide to employers under the pilot project 
    would assist them in reporting accurate wages to SSA and would help 
    prevent and deter individuals from engaging in criminal activity 
    described in section 208(a)(7) and (8) of the Act and unauthorized work 
    in the U.S. Thus, the services that SSA would render to employers who 
    would participate in the proposed pilot would serve some of the same 
    purposes for which SSA collects and maintains the SSN and citizenship/
    alien status information in the Enumeration System.
        In furnishing the services described above to employers who 
    participate in the employment authorization pilot, SSA would perform 
    functions for which it is responsible under Federal law, 8 U.S.C. 
    1324a(d). This activity would be necessary to carry out a Social 
    Security program, as defined in 20 CFR 401.110, and would be consistent 
    with SSA's disclosure regulation, 20 CFR 401.310. The regulation (20 
    CFR 401.310) provides, in part, that we will disclose information under 
    a routine use ``where necessary to carry out Social Security 
    programs.'' For purposes of that regulation, ``Social Security 
    program'' is defined as ``any program or provision of law which SSA is 
    responsible for administering * * *'' 20 CFR 401.110.
    
    C. Effect of the Proposal on Individual Rights
    
        The pilot is designed to assist employers in identifying employees 
    who are not authorized to work in the U.S. When operating the pilot, 
    SSA and INS will apply appropriate measures to ensure that the privacy 
    rights of employees whose SSNs are verified under the pilot are 
    protected to the full extent of the Privacy Act and all other 
    applicable laws. SSA and INS will negotiate a written agreement with 
    each participating employer that delineates the employer's 
    responsibilities and states the safeguards the employer must apply to 
    protect the privacy of information received from SSA and/or INS. 
    Individuals will have the opportunity to reconcile any discrepancies 
    between the information they furnish to their employers and the records 
    of SSA before their employers can take any adverse action based on 
    those discrepancies. Because employers participating in the pilot must 
    confirm that all new hires are authorized to work, these disclosures 
    should serve to lessen the incidence of discrimination against people 
    who look or sound foreign. Also, we will keep a detailed
    
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    audit trail record of all disclosures made under the pilot. For these 
    reasons, we do not anticipate that the disclosures will have any 
    unwarranted adverse effect on the rights of individuals.
    
        Dated: June 4, 1996.
    Shirley S. Chater,
    Commissioner of Social Security.
    [FR Doc. 96-15265 Filed 6-14-96; 8:45 am]
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