*1040 FINDINGS OF FACT, CONCLUSIONS OF LAW, AND ORDER
Plaintiffs present a facial challenge to the validity of the Legal Arizona Workers Act (“the Act”), A.R.S. §§ 23-211 to 23-214 (Supp.2007), enacted July 2, 2007, and effective January 1, 2008. 2007 Ariz. Sess. Laws, Ch. 279. The Act provides the Superior Court of Arizona with the power to suspend or revoke the business licenses of employers who intentionally or knowingly employ unauthorized aliens. By agreement of the parties, the two cases were consolidated and accelerated for trial on January 16, 2008, on stipulated facts and written evidence. This order states findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a).
I. Background
A. Procedural History and Related Proceedings
These consolidated actions are refilings, with some changes in parties, of consolidated actions dismissed December 7, 2007, for lack of jurisdiction under Article III of
*1041
the United States Constitution.
Arizona Contractors Ass’n v. Napolitano (Arizona Contractors I),
The parties then stipulated to hold a consolidated preliminary injunction hearing and trial on the merits in this case on January 16, 2008. (Doc. # 135.) At that hearing, the County Attorney Defendants acknowledged that it would take them weeks or months to investigate complaints and initiate any proceedings under the Act. They avowed that they would carry out their duties without intentional delay, but that they could and would bring no proceedings before March. The Joint Statement of Stipulated Facts includes all of the evidence from Arizona Contractors I with extensive additions.
The Plaintiffs are the same as in Arizona Contractors I, with the addition of Plaintiff Valle Del Sol, Inc., a non-profit corporation that employs many workers in Arizona and holds various business licenses. Plaintiffs have dropped the Governor as a defendant and have added the County Attorneys and the Arizona Registrar of Contractors. In light of the rulings in Arizona Contractors I, the Defendants have stipulated not to contest Plaintiffs’ standing before this court, but have reserved the right to raise the issue on appeal. (Doc. # 96, 106.) The actions will be dismissed as against the Attorney General for lack of justiciable case or controversy for the reasons stated in Arizona Contractors I, which the court does not understand the Attorney General to be abandoning.
B. State and Federal Sanctions for Employing Unauthorized Workers
The court’s December 7, 2007 order in
Arizona Contractors I
explained the implicated statutes and made findings of fact, most of which apply equally to this case.
The federal government first created sanctions for employers of unauthorized aliens in the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (“IRCA”), Pub.L. No. 99-603, 100 Stat. 3359 (employer sanctions provisions codified at 8 U.S.C. § 1324a to 1324c (2000)). States at that time had authority to enact and enforce sanctions against employers of unauthorized aliens.
See De Canas v. Bica,
IRCA expanded those state efforts to the national level. Congress also declared that IRCA “preempts] any State or local law imposing civil or criminal sanctions (other than through licensing or similar *1042 laws) upon those who employ, or recruit or refer for a fee for employment, unauthorized aliens.” 8 U.S.C. § 1324a(h)(2). Under federal enforcement of IRCA, an administrative law judge adjudicates whether an employer knowingly employed an unauthorized alien, and the decision is subject to judicial review. Congress also created an employment eligibility verification system based on Form 1-9, which requires employees to swear that they have authorization to work and requires employers to examine specific identification documents for facial validity. § 1324a(b).
Congress realized that the 1-9 system was imperfect. In IRCA’s text, it authorized evaluation and change of the employment verification system:
The President shall provide for the monitoring and evaluation of the degree to which the employment verification system ... provides a secure system to determine employment eligibility in the United States and shall examine the suitability of existing Federal and State identification systems for use for this purpose.
To the extent that the system established under subsection (b) is found not to be a secure system to determine employment eligibility in the United States, the President shall ... implement such changes ... as may be necessary to establish a secure system to determine employment eligibility in the United States.
§ 1324a(d). Congress later passed the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (“IIRIRA”), Pub.L. No. 104-208, § § 401-405,110 Stat. 3009, 3009-655 to 3009-665 (note following 8 U.S.C. § 1324a (2000)), which directed the Attorney General to conduct three pilot programs to improve the employment verification system. In a section entitled “Voluntary Election to Participate in a Pilot Program,” IIRIRA specified that “any person or other entity that conducts any hiring (or recruitment or referral) in a State in which a pilot program is operating may elect to participate in that pilot program ... the Attorney General may not require any person or other entity to participate in a pilot program.” § 402,
One of the systems created by IIRIRA was formerly known as the Basic Pilot. The Basic Pilot Program Extension and Expansion Act of 2003 (“Expansion Act”), Pub.L. No. 108-156, 117 Stat. 1944 (note following 8 U.S.C. § 1324a (Supp.IV. 2000)), amended IIRIRA to make the Basic Pilot available to employers in all fifty states, extend its authorization until November, 2008, and place the Secretary of Homeland Security in charge of the program. The Basic Pilot is now known as the Web Basic Pilot or E-Verify. This primarily internet-based system reports the work authorization status of a new hire to an employer by checking records at the Social Security Administration (SSA) and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). When the system provides a tentative nonconfirmation, the employee has an opportunity to contact SSA or US-CIS, using instructions provided by the employer, to clear up his records. If the employee is successful, the E-Verify databases are updated. If the employee fails to contest the nonconfirmation or is unsuccessful in doing so, E-Verify issues a final nonconfirmation to the employer, who must then terminate the employee or face a presumption that it violated IRCA. (Facts, Doc. # 148, Ex. 7, E-Verify Memorandum of Understanding, Art. II § C ¶ 9, Art. Ill; Doc. # 152, Ex. 52, Findings of the Web Basic Pilot Evaluation 11-15, Sept. 2007.)
In the December 7, 2007 order dismissing Arizona Contractors I, the court made *1043 findings of fact regarding employers’ costs to set-up and operate E-Verify. With the benefit of the most recent survey data on E-Verify published in September 2007, the court now finds that the cost to employers is considerably less than previously determined. The average cost to set-up E-Verify is $125, with 85% of employers spending $100 or less. The average annual operation cost is $728, with 75% of employers spending $100 or less annually. (Facts, Doc. #152, Ex. 52 at 104.) Though this is considerably less than the modest expenses the court found in Arizona Contractors I, such costs of compliance are still sufficient to provide Plaintiffs with standing.
Because E-Verify remains voluntary at the national level, the 1-9 process is still the main employment verification process used by employers. However, the 1-9 system has been thoroughly defeated by document and identity fraud, allowing upwards of eleven million unauthorized workers to gain employment in the United States labor force, with the number increasing at about a half a million a year. (Facts, Doc. # 149, Ex. 15 at 1-3.)
The Act, A.R.S. §§ 23-211 to 23-214, is a conscious attempt to address this problem at the State level by imposing sanctions by “licensing and similar laws” upon those who employ unauthorized aliens, as expressly permitted by IRCA. Under the Act, county attorneys may bring suit in the Superior Court of Arizona against employers for intentionally or knowingly employing unauthorized aliens. An employer found liable faces possible suspension or revocation of its business licenses, and it can be ordered to file quarterly reports of new hires and to file an affidavit that it has terminated all unauthorized aliens. A.R.S. § 23-212(F).
The Act adopts IRCA’s definition of “unauthorized alien,” A.R.S. § 23-211(8), which means an alien who is not “lawfully admitted for permanent residence, or ... authorized to be so employed by [IRCA] or by the Attorney General,” 8 U.S.C. § 1324a(h)(3). The Act also relies on the federal determination of a person’s immigration status and employment authorization. According to federal law, “[njotwith-standing any other provision of Federal, State, or local law,” federal, state, and local government entities may request from USCIS (formerly the INS) “information regarding the immigration status, lawful or unlawful, of any individual.” 8 U.S.C. § 1373(a) and (b) (2000) (enacted by IIRIRA § 642, 110' Stat. at 3009-707). USCIS has an áffirmative obligation to provide “verification or status information” requested by state and local entities “for any purpose authorized by law.” § 1373(c).
In responding to § 1373 requests, US-CIS accesses the Verification Information System, which is the same database that it uses to process E-Verify requests. Privacy Act: Verification Information System Records Notice, 72 Fed.Reg. 17,569 (Apr. 9, 2007). DHS reports that routine uses of the database are to provide information to “Federal, State, tribal, and local government agencies seeking to verify or determine the citizenship or immigration status of any individual within the jurisdiction of the DHS as authorized or required by law” and to “to enable [such] agencies to make decisions concerning: (1) Determination of eligibility for a Federal, State, or local public benefit; (2) issuance of a license or grant; or (3) government-issued credential.” Id. at 17,571-72. USCIS also uses this system to respond to state requests to verify the citizenship and immigration status of individuals seeking government benefits under the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE) program. Id. at 17,569.
The Act utilizes § 1373 to obtain a person’s immigration and work authorization *1044 status. First, it states that when the attorney general and county attorneys investigate complaints, they “shall not attempt to independently make a final determination on whether an alien is authorized to work in the United States.” Rather, they must use § 1373 to verify the alien’s “immigration status or work authorization status” with USCIS. A.R.S. § 23-212CB). Second, when the county attorney brings a case, the Superior Court proceeds as follows:
On determining whether an employee is an unauthorized alien, the court shall consider only the federal government’s determination pursuant to 8 United States Code section 1373(c). The federal government’s determination creates a rebuttable presumption of the employee’s lawful status. The court may take judicial notice of the federal government’s determination and may request the federal government to provide automated or testimonial verification pursuant to 8 United States Code section 1373(c).
A.R.S. § 23-212(H). In a separate section, the Act also requires that after December 31, 2007, “every employer, after hiring an employee, shall verify the employment eligibility of the employee through the basic pilot program.” A.R.S. § 23-214.
C. Burden in a Facial Challenge
Plaintiffs “face a heavy burden in seeking to have [the Act] invalidated as facially unconstitutional.”
Rust v. Sullivan,
II. Federal Preemption Standards
“[U]nder our federal system, the States possess sovereignty concurrent with that of the Federal Government, subject only to limitations imposed by the Supremacy Clause [of the United States Constitution].”
Tafflin v. Levitt,
*1045
Federal preemption can be either “explicitly stated in [a] statute’s language or implicitly contained in its structure and purpose.”
Gade v. Nat’l Solid Wastes Mgmt. Ass’n,
Where Congress has enacted federal law on a given subject, but evinces no express or implied intention to preempt the field, states retain the power to regulate in the area concurrently with the federal government. Any regulation enacted by the states must not, however, conflict with federal law. A state law conflicts with federal law “where compliance with both federal and state regulations is a physical impossibility, or where state law stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.”
Id.
(citing
Hines v. Davidowitz,
III. The Immigration Reform and Control Act Expressly Authorizes, Rather Than Preempts, the Licensing Sanctions in the Act
When Congress enacted IRCA, it expressly preempted some state powers and expressly preserved other state powers. The task at hand is to “identify the domain expressly preempted” by IRCA’s language and give fair meaning to its savings clause for state employment sanctions through licensing and similar laws.
Air Conditioning & Refrigeration Inst. v. Energy Res. Conservation & Dev. Comm’n,
A. The Plain Language of 8 U.S.C. § 1324a(h)(2) Authorizes State Licensing Sanctions
Section 1324a(h)(2) of Title 8, U.S.C., provides:
The provisions of this section [8 U.S.C. § 1324a] preempt any State or local law imposing civil or criminal sanctions (other than through licensing and similar laws) upon those who employ, or recruit or refer for a fee for employment, unauthorized aliens.
(Emphasis added.) By this section, states may not impose “civil or criminal sanctions” upon employers of unauthorized aliens, “other than through licensing and similar laws.” Therefore, if the Act consti *1046 tutes a licensing or similar law, it is expressly authorized by IRCA’s savings clause.
The Act authorizes state courts to suspend or revoke the business licenses of employers who knowingly or intentionally employ unauthorized aliens. A.R.S. § 23-212(A) and (F). By the terms of the Act, “license” means any state or local “authorization that is required by law and that is issued ... for the purposes of operating a business in this state.” § 23-211(7)(a). It includes articles of incorporation, a certificate of partnership, a foreign corporation registration, and a transaction privilege (sales) tax license, but not a professional license. § 23-211(7)(b) and (c). The Act’s definition of license does not depart from common sense or traditional understandings of what is a license. A license is a “permission, usually revocable, to commit some act that would otherwise be unlawful.” Blaok’s Law DictionaRy 938 (8th ed.2004). The Act is a “licensing law” because it sets out criteria and a process to suspend or revoke a permission to do business in the state. It therefore falls within the plain meaning of IRCA’s savings clause.
Plaintiffs argue that Congress intended a narrow construction of licensing laws, concerned only with a person’s fitness to receive a license. This construction ignores that licenses are revokable, so states must have the power to create revocation criteria and procedures. Plaintiffs would also have the Act invalidated because its definition of license reaches some legal instruments that allegedly do not supply permission to do business in the state. Even if this were the case, the Act is not facially invalid if its definition sometimes exceeds the savings clause for “licensing laws.” Plaintiffs are free to raise this defense if and when the State applies its law to revoke a legal instrument that falls outside of the definition of “license.”
B. The Licensing Sanction Authorization is Not Conditioned on Completed Federal Proceedings Against the Violator; the Legislative History Does Not So State and Could Not Defeat the Statutory Language if it Did
Plaintiffs contend that the § 1324a(h)(2) authorization of state licensing sanctions allows sanctions only on employers who already have been found liable in completed federal proceedings under IRCA. Plaintiffs base their argument on a sentence in the House Judiciary Committee Report on IRCA. H.R.Rep. No. 99-682(1), at 58 (1986), reprinted in 1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5649, 5662. The legislative history does not substantiate Plaintiffs’ interpretation, but even if it did, it could not change or add words to the statute.
The language of the statute that Congress approved, not language from the House Report concerning the statute, controls.
Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Allapattah Servs., Inc.,
In any event, the legislative history, and the House Report in particular, do not compel the meaning Plaintiffs urge. After the De Canas decision, Congressional bills calling for federal employer sanctions began to contain preemption clauses for the first time. See, e.g., S. 2252, 95th Cong. § 5 (1976); H.R. 9531, 95th Cong. § 5 (1976). None passed. In following sessions of Congress, bills were introduced that included preemption clauses similar to those of the 95th Congress. See S. 1765, 97th Cong. (1981); H.R. 4832, 97th Cong. (1981); S. 2222, 97th Cong. (1982); H.R. 5872, 97th Cong. (1982); S. 529, 98th Cong. (1983); H.R. 1510, 98th Cong. (1983). Again, none passed.
However, in the 99th Congress, S. 1200 and H.R. 3810 contained preemption clauses that for the first time included the exception “other than through licensing and similar laws.” Unlike the earlier bills, S. 1200 was enacted and became the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986. The Senate Judiciary Committee Report on S. 1200, dated August 25, 1985, did not comment on the express authorization of state licensing and similar laws, and the Senate passed the bill on September 19, 1985. See S.Rep. No. 99-132 (1985). One of four House Committee Reports on H.R. 3810, however, the House Judiciary Committee Report dated July 16, 1986, did comment on the licensing exception to preemption:
The penalties contained in this legislation are intended to specifically preempt any state or local laws providing civil fines and/or criminal sanctions on the hiring, recruitment or referral of undocumented aliens.
They are not intended to preempt or prevent lawful state or local processes concerning the suspension, revocation or refusal to reissue a license to any person who has been found to have violated the sanctions provisions in this legislation. Further, the Committee does not intend to preempt licensing or “fitness to do business laws,” such as state farm labor contractor laws or forestry laws, which specifically require such licensee or contractor to refrain from hiring, recruiting or referring undocumented aliens.
H.R.Rep. No. 99-682(1), at 58 (1986), reprinted in 1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5649, 5662 (“House Report”). The conference committee report said nothing about preemption. See H. Conf. Rep. No. 99-1000 (1986), reprinted in 1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5840. Therefore, whatever the meaning of the House Judiciary Committee Report’s comment, it was not before the Senate when it approved the bill.
The text of the House Report also does not support Plaintiffs’ argument. Their interpretation overlooks the first quoted sentence, which paraphrases the bill as preempting only state “civil fines” and “criminal sanctions.” The Arizona Act imposes no fines or criminal sanctions. Plaintiffs rely on the second quoted sentence, which no doubt correctly states that state licensing processes are not preempted as to “any person who has been found to have violated the sanctions provisions of this legislation.” But Plaintiffs go further and assert that the example given in that sentence exhausts the entire meaning of the licensing sanction authorization. The passage does not so state, and the very next sentence gives further examples of permitted licensing and fitness to do business laws that are not tied to completed federal proceedings. One need look only *1048 to the sentence after the one Plaintiffs rely upon to see that the House Report does not bear the meaning they would give it.
Finally, if the House Report did mean what Plaintiffs contend, such an attempt to override the plain language of the statute would be precisely the kind of excess that the modern view of legislative history ille-gitimates. The Members or their staff must write amendments into the bill, not into the Report.
C. The Structure and Purpose of IRCA Do Not Support Plaintiffs’ Restrictive Interpretation of the Savings Clause
Congress expressly preempted some state powers and expressly affirmed other state powers when it passed IRCA. “[A]n express definition of the pre-emptive reach of a statute ‘implies’ — -i.e., supports a reasonable inference — that Congress did not intend to pre-empt other matters.”
Freightliner Corp. v. Myrick,
Unlike interstate transportation, foreign affairs, and even immigration, employment of unauthorized aliens is neither intrinsically nor historically an exclusive concern of the federal government such “that the federal system will be assumed to preclude enforcement of state laws on the same subject.”
Rice v. Santa Fe Elevator Corp.,
The Court also found no implied field preemption because “States possess broad authority under their police powers to regulate the employment relationship and protect workers within the State.”
[State attempts] to prohibit the knowing employment by ... employers of persons not entitled to lawful residence in the United States, let alone to work here, [are] certainly within the mainstream of such police power regulation. Employment of illegal aliens in times o f high unemployment deprives citizens and legally admitted aliens of jobs; ac *1049 ceptance by illegal aliens of jobs on substandard terms as to wages and working conditions can seriously depress wage scales and working conditions of citizens and legally admitted aliens; and employment of illegal aliens under such conditions can diminish the effectiveness of labor unions. These local problems are particularly acute ... in light of the significant influx into [a border state] of illegal aliens from neighboring Mexico.
Id.
at 356-57,
Although the State has no direct interest in controlling entry into this country, that interest being one reserved by the Constitution to the Federal Government, unchecked unlawful migration might impair the State’s economy generally, or the State’s ability to provide some important service. Despite the exclusive federal control of this Nation’s borders, we cannot conclude that the States are without any power to deter the influx of persons entering the United States against federal law, and whose numbers might have a discernible impact on traditional state concerns.
Id.
at 228 n. 23,
1. IRCA Does Not Clearly Evidence Congressional Intent to Prevent States From Independently Revoking the Business Licenses of Those Who Knowingly Employ Unauthorized Aliens
Plaintiffs argue that in IRCA, passed after De Canas, Congress carefully balanced competing policy interests surrounding employer sanctions, including the tension among enforcement, the risk of increased discrimination, and employer burdens. They say that Congress could not have intended to permit the State to revoke a business’s license, a sanction they say is disproportionate to the direct federal sanctions. They would restrict the states’ power of licensing sanctions to the narrowest of limits — so narrow that it would lack deterrence and not be worth the cost of enforcement to the State. Plaintiffs cite no case holding that Congress impliedly so cabined the states’ residual police powers in this area of great and pervasive local import.
Plaintiffs do point to the Supreme Court’s statement in
Hoffman Plastic Compounds, Inc. v. N.L.R.B.
— a case that did not involve federal preemption-that IRCA is a “comprehensive scheme prohibiting the employment of illegal aliens in the United States,” through which the federal government “ ‘forcefully’ made combating the employment of illegal aliens central to ‘the policy of immigration law.’ ”
Plaintiffs also argue that courts should “decline to give broad effect to saving clauses where doing so would upset the careful regulatory scheme established by federal law.”
Locke,
Locke
concerned Washington State rules that imposed “tanker design, equipment, reporting, and operating requirements” aimed at preventing oil spills by interstate carriers.
It construed the savings clause to “re-speet[] the established federal-state balance in matters of maritime commerce between the subjects as to which the States retain concurrent powers and those over which the federal authority displaces state control.”
Id.
at 107,
When Congress enacted employer sanctions in IRCA, it acted “within the mainstream of [state] police power regulation.”
De Canas,
*1051
In enacting IRCA, Congress was distinctly aware of the localized impacts of unauthorized immigration. It included provisions to reimburse states for the costs of incarcerating illegal aliens, IRCA § 501,
If the authorized state and federal sanctions are disproportional in severity, that is because Congress recognized the disproportional harm to core state and federal responsibilities from unauthorized alien labor. The pervasive adverse effects of such employment fall directly on the states.
De Canas,
Thus, Congress expressly reserved to the states the police power described in De Canas to act upon the business licenses of those who knowingly employ unauthorized aliens. At the time of De Canas, and therefore also today, that power included the power to revoke such a license. Preservation of that state power was itself part of Congress’ careful balancing of policy objectives. The structure and purpose of IRCA do not clearly evidence an intent to prevent the states from independently revoking the business licenses of those who knowingly employ unauthorized aliens.
2. The Act Does Not Impermissibly Regulate in the Field of Immigration
Plaintiffs argue that the Act intrudes into the federal government’s plenary power over the field of immigration.
See Hines,
The Act adopts the federal government’s substantive classification of aliens, which appears in IRCA’s definition of “unauthorized alien.” 8 U.S.C. 1324a(h)(3); A.R.S.
*1052
§ 23-211(8). Under that definition, all aliens who are not permanent residents or authorized to work by IRCA’s legalization and temporary worker provisions already have been classified as “unauthorized aliens.” The Act’s E-Verify requirement simply designates the procedure for verifying the existing classification of a person. E-Verify and 1-9 are
“employment
verification systemfs]” that Congress created to operate within the context of employer sanctions laws. 8 U.S.C. § 1324a(b) (emphasis added); IIRIRA § 401(a),
The sanctions provisions of A.R.S. § 23-212 also regulate only licensing and employment. According to that section, State enforcement officials and State courts must request and rely exclusively on the federal determination of “immigration status or work authorization status” provided by USCIS under 8 U.S.C. § 1373. A.R.S. § 23-212(B), (H). Plaintiffs are mistaken that the only way to verify whether an alien is unauthorized is through a federal deportation hearing. Rather, the federal government allows the states to verify a person’s immigration status in relation to work authorization using § 1373.
See
Privacy Act: Verification Information System Records Notice, 72 Fed. Reg. 17,569, 17,571-72 (Apr. 9, 2007) (describing USCIS’s use of the same database to process immigration status requests from state agencies and E-Verify). The Act therefore validly “adopt[s] federal standards in imposing ... sanctions against state employers.”
De Canas,
IV. The Act Does Not Conflict With the Purposes and Objectives of Congress
As noted above, conflict preemption exists when “compliance with both State and federal law is impossible, or when the state law ‘stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.’ ”
Gade,
That is why the Court has emphasized that conflict preemption arises only when the federal and state laws “actually conflict.”
English,
A. The Act’s Licensing Sanctions Procedures Do Not Conflict With the Purposes and Objectives of Congress
The licensing sanctions provisions of § 23-212 carefully track the federal employer sanctions law. The Act does not make employers conform to a stricter standard of conduct than federal law. Both the Act and IRCA prohibit employers from “knowingly” employing an unauthorized alien. Compare A.R.S. § 23-212(A) with 8 U.S.C. § 1324a(a)(l)(A). The Act also sanctions employers who “intentionally” employ unauthorized aliens, but “intentional” is at least as strict a standard as “knowing.” Also like IRCA, the Act’s restrictions apply only with respect to those persons who have an “employment relationship” with an employer, so it does not include casual hires. Compare A.R.S. § 23-211(3) with 8 U.S.C. § 1324a(a). Nor would it include domestic workers because a business license is not needed to hire those persons.
Just like the federal law, the Act contains procedures for weeding out frivolous complaints and provides enforcement officers with discretion.
Compare
A.R. S. § 23-212(C)
with
8 U.S.C. § 1324a(e). It does not change the degree of inspection that employers must perform on 1-9 documents, but rather accords employers who have “complied in good faith” with the 1-9 system with the same “affirmative defense” that is provided by federal law.
*1054
Compare
A.R.S. § 23-212(J)
with
8 U.S.C. § 1324a(a)(3).
3
Also like IRCA, the Act accords employers who verify a new hire’s employment eligibility through E-Verify with a “rebuttable presumption” of non-liability.
Compare
A.R.S. § 23-212(1)
with
IIRIRA § 402(b),
The Act’s adjudicatory procedures do not conflict with federal law merely because a State Superior Court judge and a federal administrative law judge could disagree about the evidence. That possibility arises in every instance of parallel state and federal adjudication. Furthermore, the Act precludes liability for employers whose employees are authorized to work in the United States according to the federal government. The Act requires State investigators to request a federal determination of a person’s immigration status. When USCIS determines that an employee is authorized to work, State investigators and courts must accept that determination and the employer cannot be liable. A.R.S. §§ 23-211(8), 23-212QB), (H).
See League of United Latin Am. Citizens v. Wilson,
Plaintiffs argue that because the Act does not contain an explicit prohibition on discrimination, it conflicts with federal law. Arizonans are protected by the prohibitions against discrimination in IRCA, other federal laws, and Arizona law. See 8 U.S.C. § 1324b (prohibiting discrimination “against any individual ... with respect to the hiring ... or the discharging of the individual from employment”); 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2 (prohibiting discrimination based on “race, color, religion, sex, or national origin”); A.R.S. § 41-1463(B) (prohibiting employment discrimination based on “race, color, religion, sex, age, disability or national origin”). The State did not have to duplicate these laws by inserting an independent discrimination provision into the Act. It provided that the Act “shall not be construed to require an employer to take any action that the employer believes in good faith would violate federal or state law.” A.R.S. § 23-213. There is no actual conflict with the federal goal of discouraging discrimination because the Act prohibits discrimination through deference to State and federal protections.
Plaintiffs also contend that the Act’s threat of license revocation upsets the bal- *1055 anee that Congress struck between deterring employment of unauthorized aliens and minimizing discrimination. This false dichotomy amounts to an assertion that the Act defeats Congress’ objectives because it achieves better deterrence than IRCA. Congress did not intend that the price of avoiding discrimination would be ineffective deterrence. Instead, it made discrimination illegal, imposed its own sanctions, and affirmed states’ power to impose licensing sanctions.
Plaintiffs rely upon two foreign relations cases to argue that a slight shift in the mix of enforcement and discrimination creates a conflict. In
Crosby v. National Foreign Trade Council,
the Supreme Court held that states could not upset “the federal decision about the right degree of pressure to employ” and “undermine[ ] the congressional calibration of force” by “penalizing individuals and conduct that Congress ... explicitly exempted or excluded from [trade] sanctions,” especially “when the President exercises his discretionary authority to impose sanctions under the federal Act.”
Unlike the state laws in
Crosby
and
Garamendi,
the Act does not authorize sanctioning employers for acts that Congress has exempted or excluded from sanction. The sanctioned activity under IRCA and the Act is exactly the same. Furthermore,
Crosby
and
Garamendi
dealt with foreign relations, where the federal interest is dominant and therefore “any concurrent state power that may exist ... is restricted to the narrowest of limits.”
Hines,
B. The Act’s Requirement that Employers Use E-Verify Does Not Conflict With the Purposes and Objectives of Congress
Because use of E-Verify is voluntary under federal law, Plaintiffs assert that the State’s E-Verify requirement in § 23-214 is preempted. “To discern Congress’ intent we examine the explicit statutory language and the structure and purpose of the statute.”
Gade,
Congress wishes E-Verify to be used and revised through experimentation. In IRCA, it authorized the President to implement changes to the 1-9 system “to establish a secure system to determine employment eligibility.” 8 U.S.C. § 1324a(d)(l). Congress’ objective is to create a system that will reliably determine employment eligibility, will be counterfeit-resistant, and will protect privacy rights. § 1324a(d)(2). The system also needs to “have reasonable safeguards against the system’s resulting in unlawful discriminatory practices.” IIRIRA § 404(d)(4),
The Act’s E-Verify requirement does not misuse federal resources for an unintended purpose.
See Garrett v. City of Escondido,
The E-Verify requirement does not overburden employers with financial and administrative costs. The overwhelming majority of E-Verify users pay very little in setup and operational costs and find the system easier to use than 1-9 alone. Plaintiffs have no evidence that Congress intended to protect employers from state laws that impose such incremental costs. Furthermore, unlike the regulation in
Geier v. American Honda Motor Co.,
Federal policy encourages the utmost use of E-Verify. The Act effectively increases employer use of the system with no evidence of surpassing logistical limits, and it does so in the context of a licensing sanction law that is within the police power of the states as expressly recognized by IRCA. That Congress has not yet approved a bill mandating use of E-Verify within the federal employer sanctions process evinces Congressional intent regarding national — not state level — use of E-Verify. The Act’s requirement that Arizona employers use E-Verify therefore does not actually conflict with Congress’ objectives.
V. The Act Provides Employers With Procedural Due Process
Under both the federal and State constitutions, procedural due process requires that a party have an opportunity to be heard “at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.”
Mathews v. Eldridge,
Plaintiffs contend that the Act on its face violates procedural due process of law by denying employers any fair ascertainment of an essential element of liability. Again, the Act provides the following concerning Superior Court proceedings:
On determining whether an employee is an unauthorized alien, the court shall consider only the federal government’s determination pursuant to 8 United States Code section 1373(c). The federal government’s determination creates a rebuttable presumption of the employee’s lawful status. The court may take judicial notice of the federal government’s determination and may request the federal government to provide automated or testimonial verification pursuant to 8 United States Code section 1373(c).
A.R.S. § 23-212(H). This subsection requires interpretation. On the one hand, the Superior Court “shall consider only” the federal government’s determination “whether an employee is an unauthorized alien.” But on the other hand, that determination only creates “a rebuttable presumption,” meaning that other evidence may be considered. The Superior Court itself may request “automated or testimonial verification” from the federal government.
The parties offer different interpretations of this subsection. Plaintiffs say that the federal determination of the employee’s authorization status is conclusive, and thus denies employers any chance to present evidence that the employee is authorized. They give no effect to the second sentence, which subjects the federal determination to rebuttal evidence. Defendants’ interpretation gives some effect to both sentences. They interpret the provi *1058 sion to preclude the State from enforcing the Act unless it has received federal verification that the employee is unauthorized, but to allow the Superior Court to consider all evidence on questions of liability. Under either interpretation, an employer can present evidence of the employee’s immigration status or work authorization to prove he lacked knowledge or intent to employ an unauthorized alien.
This court need not resolve which interpretation of the statute is correct. For Plaintiffs to prevail in this facial challenge, they must show there is no procedurally adequate application of the statute. They have not done that, as each of the offered meanings of § 23-212(H) entails minimally fair procedure, or better.
A. Defendants’ Interpretation Meets Due Process
Defendants’ interpretation of § 23-212(H) easily meets due process requirements. No employer may be sanctioned without a full evidentiary hearing in the Superior Court of Arizona. A.R.S. § 23-212(E); Ariz. R. Civ. P. 65.2. The State has the burden to prove that the employer knowingly or intentionally employed an unauthorized alien. The Superior Court has full evidence-taking, fact-finding, and discretionary authority on all issues of liability; it simply cannot find an employee unauthorized absent a federal determination to that effect under 8 U.S.C. § 1373(c).
Under Defendants’ interpretation, subsection (H) parallels subsection (B), which prohibits enforcing officers from “independently making a final determination on whether an alien is authorized to work in the United States” apart from the government’s § 1373(c) response. Subsections (B) and (H) harmonize the Act with federal law and may be meant to protect workers from being the direct subject of investigation and enforcement. But where the employer’s liability is at issue, the § 1373(c) determination creates only a rebuttable presumption — -meaning that the employer may present any evidence to rebut the presumption that the employee is unauthorized or prove that it lacked knowledge of the employee’s unauthorized status. Because the State cannot conclude that the employee is unauthorized without the federal determination, additional evidence of the employee’s status can only exonerate the employer from liability.
This interpretation provides the employer with a meaningful hearing on the subject of liability and avoids the constitutional issues posed by Plaintiffs.
See Mejak v. Granville,
B. Plaintiffs Have Not Shown That Their Interpretation Fails Due Process
Even if the government’s § 1373(c) response that the employee is unauthorized is conclusive upon the Superior Court, as Plaintiffs contend, employers still have doubly fair and adequate procedure embedded in the federal determination itself. That fair procedure is found in the E-Verify process, which Arizona employers must use, and again in the § 1373(c) response that the county attorney and the Superior Court may request from the government.
*1059
1. The E-Verify process itself is fair, prompt, interactive, and adequate. It provides opportunity for the employee to be heard. After an initial report to the employer that the employee is not authorized to work, USCIS must make available a “secondary verification process to confirm the validity of information provided.” IIRI-RA § 404(c),
With employers on notice that they must avail themselves of this prior adequate procedure, due process does not require a second procedure (though § 23-212(H) does give them a second procedure under 8 U.S.C. § 1373(c)). Due process of law does not prevent legislation from requiring recourse to prior adequate proceedings, the result of which may not be questioned in a later proceeding, such as an enforcement proceeding.
Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. U.S. EPA,
Of course, the procedural adequacy of E-Verify could count as a substitute for original Superior Court evidence and fact-finding concerning the employee’s unauthorized status only if the employer was on notice to use E-Verify when hiring the worker. That is not the case for workers who were hired before E-Verify became mandatory in Arizona on January 1, 2008. There is debate over whether the Act permits enforcement proceedings concerning employees hired before January 1, 2008. Though at least some county attorneys say the Act does apply to previous hires, no county attorney has expressed any intention of enforcing with respect to previous hires. (Trial Tr. 109.) The cost-of-compliance injury upon which the court has found standing against the county attorneys would not apply to enforcement for previous hires since the Act does not purport to require E-Verify confirmation for them. In any event, the court need not decide whether the Act permits enforcement for old hires, which would have to await an actual case with those facts. It is enough that the statute is capable of some constitutional application to defeat this facial challenge.
2. Employers who have not confirmed under E-Verify have one or two more chances for secondary verification of the employee’s status, thus affording adequate procedure to the employer. The first may occur when the State submits its request under § 1373(c). Second, the Superior Court may “request the federal government to provide automated or testimonial *1060 verification pursuant to [§ 1373],” A.R.S. § 23-212(H), which is another chance to submit evidence of the employee’s work authorization and have the government act upon it. Under federal law, USCIS has an affirmative duty to respond to such verification requests. 8 U.S.C. § 1373(c).
USCIS has not clearly defined many of the procedures that it follows when responding to state § 1373(c) inquiries. It might perform secondary verifications of employee documentation at the behest of State investigators and the Superior Court. The number of such requests will be insignificant compared to the number of E-Verify requests, so the agency easily could do so. Arguable legal authority also exists for secondary checks through § 1373 requests. IIRIRA §§ 403(a)(4), 404(c), 642, 110 Stat. 3009-660, 661, 663, 707 (requiring the federal government to “provid[e] the requested verification or status information” to the states in the same statute that created E-Verify and mandated a secondary verification process) (emphasis added). If USCIS performs secondary verification of employee documentation, then its § 1373(c) process will be the same as the E-Verify process.
Neither the federal government nor the flexible principles of due process explained in
Mathews,
The Act provides employers opportunities to be heard through the federal processes themselves. They may be heard indirectly through their employees’ dialog with the government in E-Verify, and directly by presenting evidence of an employee’s immigration status, perhaps to the county attorney and certainly to the Superior Court. Both can pass it on to the federal government for secondary review of work authorization and a further determination under § 1373(c). Plaintiffs’ evidence does not prove that USCIS will refuse to consider such evidence and conduct secondary review of the employee’s work authorization. Therefore, even if the government’s § 1373(c) response is conclusive upon the Superior Court, Plaintiffs fall short of showing that the § 1373(c) process itself will lack adequacy and fairness. That is enough to defeat this facial challenge.
The facial constitutionality of this process is not defeated by hypothetical situations that may result in no secondary verification taking place. Such abstraction is not the business of a facial challenge. Plaintiffs may raise those as-applied challenges if and when such procedural failures occur.
C. The Superior Court Process Is Fair and Adequate
Plaintiffs’ other procedural due process challenges have no merit. The other Superior Court processes are subject to all the procedural protections of the Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure. Since the Superior Court has full evidence-taking, fact-finding, and discretionary authority on these issues, with the burden of proof on the State, there can be no due process right to participate in the enforcing officer’s investigation and preparation of his case (though civil enforcement proceedings are rarely brought without first contacting the defendant).
Nowhere in the Act does it say that county attorneys must prosecute all non-frivolous cases, or ones motivated by discrimination. Plaintiffs’ other procedural *1061 fears are improbable. If they ever arose in a real case, they could be decided, but there are no real facts here and the Act is not deficient on its face.
VI. Other Contentions
The Business Group Plaintiffs’ complaint (Doc. # 1) also alleges that the Act violates the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution, the separation of powers doctrine of the Arizona Constitution, and the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. They have stipulated to withdraw the separation of powers and Fourth Amendment claims. (Doc. # 134).
With respect to the Commerce Clause argument, the Act does not regulate employees completely outside of the State. The Act defines “employee” as “[a]ny person who performs employment services for an employer” who is licensed to do business in the State. A.R.S. § 23-211(3). However, enforcement actions must be filed “against the employer by the county attorney in the county where the unauthorized alien is employed.” § 23-212(D) (emphasis added). This precludes the extra-territorial application upon which the Business Group Plaintiffs ground their Commerce Clause argument. It also precludes conflict with the laws of another state where an employee works.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the Clerk enter judgment dismissing these actions as against Defendant Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard without prejudice for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, there being no justiciable case or controversy against him.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED as to all other Defendants that the Clerk enter judgment against Plaintiffs and in favor of those Defendants and that Plaintiffs take nothing. The Clerk shall terminate this action.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the motions for preliminary injunction (Doc. # 4 in No. CV 07-2496 and Doc. # 3 in No. CV 07-2518) are denied.
INDEX
I. Background..............................................................1040
A. Procedural History and Related Proceedings.............................1040
B. State and Federal Sanctions for Employing Unauthorized Workers..........1041
C. Burden in a Facial Challenge...........................................1044
II. Federal Preemption Standards .............................................1044
III. The Immigration Reform and Control Act Expressly Authorizes, Rather Than Preempts, the Licensing Sanctions in the Act...............................1045
A. The Plain Language of 8 U.S.C. § 1324a(h)(2) Authorizes State Licensing Sanctions..........................................................1045
B. The Licensing Sanction Authorization is Not Conditioned on Completed Federal Proceedings Against the Violator; the Legislative History Does Not So State and Could Not Defeat the Statutory Language if it Did..............................................................1046
C. The Structure and Purpose of IRCA Do Not Support Plaintiffs’ Restrictive Interpretation of the Savings Clause ........................1048
1. IRCA Does Not Clearly Evidence Congressional Intent to Prevent States From Independently Revoking the Business Licenses of Those Who Knowingly Employ Unauthorized Aliens.................1049
2. The Act Does Not Impermissibly Regulate in the Field of Immigration....................................................1051
IV. The Act Does Not Conflict With the Purposes and Objectives of Congress----1052
*1062 A. The Act’s Licensing Sanctions Procedures Do Not Conflict With the Purposes and Objectives of Congress..................................1053
B. Thé Act’s Requirement that Employers Use E-Verify Does Not Conflict With the Purposes and Objectives of Congress..........................1055
V. The Act Provides Employers With Procedural Due Process.....................1057
A. Defendants’ Interpretation Meets Due Process............................1058
B. Plaintiffs Have Not Shown That Their Interpretation Fails Due Process____1058
C. The Superior Court Process Is Fair and Adequate ........................1060
VI. Other Contentions ........................................................1061
Notes
. If the E-Verify requirement of A.R.S. § 23-214 were invalid, it would be severed and the remainder of the Act upheld. 2007 Ariz. Sess. Laws, Ch. 279, Sec. 5 ("If any provision of this act or its application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions of this act that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this act are severable.”).
. The Supreme Court has observed that its "pre-emption categories are not 'rigidly distinct' " but that the pre-emptive label chosen can
“carry with it substantive implications for the scope of pre-emption." Gade,
. The Act’s replication of the federal affirmative defense of 1-9 compliance is not prohibited by 8 U.S.C. § 1324a(b)(4) and (5). These provisions protect persons’ privacy rights from employer misuse, and ensure that the government cannot expand use of the 1-9 Form to prosecutions other than for employment of unauthorized aliens. Arizona’s replication of the federal affirmative defense respects those policies. Subpara-graph (4) restricts employers from using copies of identification documents presented by new hires for any purpose other than "complying with the requirements of this subsection.” The subsection creates IRCA’s employment verification system. The Act allows employers to use 1-9 documentation to prove their compliance with the federal employment verification system and then accords employers a rebuttable presumption of innocence. Subparagraph (5) restricts 1-9 Forms from being used "for purposes other than for enforcement of [IRCA].” IRCA expressly includes state permission to impose sanctions on employers of unauthorized aliens through “licensing and similar laws.” 8 U.S.C. 1324a(h)(2). State use of 1-9 Forms to enforce employer licensing sanctions is therefore incorporated into subparagraph (5) by section (h)(2).
. The federal government may terminate an employer's use of E-Verify. There is no reason to think that the government would exclude users except for their own misconduct. Even if a user were terminated or E-Verify ceased to exist, the remainder of the Act could be validly implemented and would survive.
