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Features: Issues & Trends — November/December 2006

Security SNAFU

Military jobsite security requirements are often inconsistent and confusing

By Mary Buckner Powers

Sundt Construction is participating in a pilot program to verify workers'
status at its military family housing projects and operational facilities across the U.S. Sundt has build about 13,000 housing units for all branches of the military. This project is at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Tucson.
photo ©Liam Frederick

In September, 120 undocumented workers building houses at Buckley Air Force Base in Colorado were arrested. In July, 48 illegal laborers and carpenters were arrested at Seymour Johnson Air Force base in North Carolina. The same month, another 58 illegal construction workers were arrested trying to enter Fort Bragg, N.C. In May, 29 foreign nationals from a drywall contractor were arrested at Camp Pendleton in California.

The arrests are part of a recent crackdown on "critical infrastructure sites" by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, a division of the Dept. of Homeland Security. "Protecting the integrity of military facilities and other critical infrastructure sites is a crucial component of our immigration enforcement strategy," says Assistant Secretary Julie Myers. Jobsite immigration sweeps are tighter and more prevalent on government projects, and the arrests illustrate the difficulties of working in a new world order and the increased pressure to improve national security.

Procedures to get through the gates at military bases changed dramatically after Sept. 11, 2001, says Patrick Burns, vice president and general manager of Minneapolis-based M.A. Mortenson's federal contracting group. Every worker has to have a badge. Before Sept. 11, only the driver of a truck full of workers needed identification.

Every base has its own rules for entry. The commander at Hawaii's Ford Island wants to be safe while not slowing down construction. Contractors must have ID badges issued through the Navy contracting officer. Fluor Corp. is renovating a historic theater at Ford Island into a conference center.
photo courtesy of fluor corp.

The difficulty in getting workers onto a military site is not always related to their immigration status. Bases often concentrate more on identifying people with criminal histories, but the number of illegal workers is a serious problem in many southwestern states, including Arizona.

That is why Tempe-based Sundt Construction Inc. is participating in a pilot program to verify that its employees can work in the U.S., says Wayne Oliver, Sundt's compliance director. Verification is the main issue most contractors face. "We in construction are not trained to recognize improper documents," he says.

Under the pilot program, a prospective employee fills out an I-9 form, which Sundt verifies with the immigration service. "We usually get a response within hours," Oliver says. "Either a worker is confirmed or designated as nonconforming."

Problems that can cause the query to come back as nonconforming range from a typographical error to improper documents. The worker is given a certain number of days to resolve the issue. The verification program has given Sundt a leg up on the illegal immigrant issue, Oliver says.

Different Rules

Many military bases rely on contractors to verify the immigration status of workers. Each base sets its degree of security and establishes its own rules and procedures. Some bases require little documentation, and others require workers to have a security clearance. Contractors must follow each installation's rules. "We are working on three bases in Norfolk, Va., and all three have different requirements," says Robert Leonard, director of operations for M.A. Mortenson's federal contracting group.

Sundt Construction is the design-build contractor for military single-family housing units and duplexes at the U.S. Air Force Academy outside Colorado Springs.    photo ©Liam Frederick

The requirements usually are dictated by what the base commanders are trying to protect, Leonard says. One base may require workers to attend a two-hour orientation that includes a safety video and a background check. Others want a Social Security number and birthplace.

Workers might easily go on a base to cut grass and paint buildings, but they need special clearances to be behind restricted areas, Leonard says. Mortenson establishes a protocol for each installation based on the rules it has been told to follow.

As a rule, contractors are responsible for background checks on their workers, but the military handles the more intensive security checks. Still, it can add significant costs to military projects, hurt participation by some companies and limit competition, Leonard says. "It affects the subs," he adds. "Those who are busy with work that's less of a hassle are reluctant to bid military jobs unless it's something great and worth the effort." That often leaves general contractors with subs that are less sophisticated or not experienced enough to handle the added rules, he says.

Day labor is also a problem, with some contractors claiming they can't get as much as 90% of their work force onto a military construction job. Day laborers "require a lot of effort for approval and security," says Leonard. Companies often must work through a group of laborers until they get to the ones they're willing to keep and who want to work more than just a day or two, he says.

Preplanning for Access

Napa, Calif.-based Nova Group Inc., which often works on high-security sites such as nuclear submarine bases, faces an even greater challenge to get its workers cleared. "We're always behind a fence, and we're often behind two," says Carole Bionda, Nova's vice president and general counsel.

Requirements vary from site to site, but, normally, Nova Group's workers must have a security clearance. Only workers who are U.S. citizens can receive that clearance, which is specified in the contract. "The work takes preplanning. Subs can't just bring in a crew," Bionda adds. "We often begin preparing our employees while preparing our response to a request for proposals."

Companies try to protect themselves when pursuing security clearances, says Jay Fuss, senior manager of human resources for Fluor Corp., Irving, Texas. Background investigations often will pick up past felony convictions, driving-under-the-influence arrests, tax liens, bankruptcies and drug abuse. "We don't go forward with those applications," Fuss says.

Accountability: A Wake-up Call for Contractors

The Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency is serious about cracking down on illegal workers at critical federal sites, including military bases, but ICE agents know that most employers have been duped with fraudulent documents, says Dean Boyd, ICE press secretary. "When we find illegal workers, we want to know who actually hired them," Boyd says. "Often, contractors point to the subcontractors. We have to dig deep to find the culprit." But in order for the hiring of undocumented workers to be a violation of federal law, the agency must prove that the employer "knowingly" hired them, Boyd says. "Frankly, we often find the contractor wanted to do the right thing, but the worker had sophisticated fraudulent documents or a stolen Social Security card."

ICE will bring criminal charges against contractors who knew they were hiring illegals. "We're doing that a lot more," Boyd says. "The number of criminal arrests has skyrocketed." It is important for employers to think twice about who they are hiring because the punishment that goes with conviction is tough, says Boyd. Harboring illegal workers carries up to a 10-year prison sentence, and forfeiture of property also is more common now. "We're starting to see employers losing their houses and luxury cars," Boyd says. "It's a wake-up call."

While employers who hire illegal workers can undercut the competition by paying low wages and avoiding Social Security taxes, it is the danger posed by the infiltration of critical sites that prompted the agency to focus on protecting government bases and critical infrastructure, Boyd says. "We have limited resources," he explains. "We'll go after illegal workers at an Air Force base with a bomber wing or an Army base with a special operations command before we will a local diner or a landscape company." ICE is working with military authorities to crack down on workers who possess fraudulent documents. "It's a huge problem," Boyd says. The agency also is working with employers through an industry partnership established in July after receiving a flood of requests on how to avoid hiring illegal aliens. The goal is to help employers build a legal work force through education and training.

"Employers are not trained or obligated to be document detectives," says ICE Assistant Secretary Julie Myers. Employers can join the initiative, Mutual Agreement Between Government and Employers, or IMAGE, which requires them to use a pilot verification program administered by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. Employers are given access to federal databases through the Internet that they use to check the eligibility of new hires. As part of the program, ICE trains employers on fraudulent document detection. Companies must agree to a Form I-9 audit to participate.

A list of best practices and the details of the IMAGE program can be found at: www.ice.gov/partners/opaimage/index.htm

 

Combat Complications

U.S. contractors in Iraq must have identification badges that include DNA information and dental records to identify them if they are killed. They also must have weapons training by the U.S. military before going to Iraq.

Contractors who work in combat zones receive military identification cards that contain dental X-rays and DNA information so workers can be identified if they are killed. The U.S. military goes through a full determination using dental records and DNA to identify a body even if there are other easier forms of identification available, says Jay Fuss, senior manager for human resources at Fluor Corp., Irving, Texas.

Contractors headed to a combat zone in Iraq have to go through a week of training at Fort Benning, Ga. If they are going to Afghanistan, their training is at Tyndall Air Force Base, Fla. They are issued flak jackets there and taught about weapons, although they are not allowed to use them, Fuss says. Security "constantly goes back and forth," he adds. "We can get hurt if the contract has certain specs, and we use historical information."

On overseas jobs, identification cards are issued through the contracting officers. The level of access given to contractors and their employees depends upon the specific contract they are attached to, says Joe Herrity, director of corporate security for Washington Group International. The company hires a number of third-country nationals for its work in Iraq. "The records for doing background checks are nearly impossible to get," Herrity says.

Companies working in Iraq face a special challenge when hiring Iraqi workers. Even if records are available, they can't look too hard for them, or it will give away the identity of the worker. "That will get them killed," Herrity says. "So will wearing their ID badge home," he notes.

 

 

 
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