IRCA’s Requirements:
The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA)
requires every employer to complete and retain
Form I-9 for all new employees and current employees hired on or after November
6, 1986, who will perform work for pay or other compensation, says Tsai, who is
Of Counsel in the Salt Lake City office of Holland & Hart LLP.
The purpose of the Form I-9 is twofold:
• Verify the
identity of each person hired.
• Verify his
or her authorization to work in the United States.
The form is from the U.S. citizenship and Immigrations
Services (USCIS), which is part of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
Enforcement of the rules is by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE),
which is the investigative arm of the DHS.
Completing I-9 Forms:
First of all, says Tsai, be sure that you are using the
revised form that has been mandatory since May 7, 2013.
• Section 1 is completed by the
employee no later than the first day of employment. (A translator may assist.)
• Section 2 is completed by the
employer no later than the third day after employment begins. If this doesn’t
happen, the employee cannot continue to work.
• Section 3
is completed if the employee’s authorization expires.
Retention of Form
I-9s:
You must keep Form
I-9 for 3 years after the date of hire or 1 year after the employee terminates,
whichever is later.
You must be able to produce the forms within 3 days of an
official request for production.
Forms may be kept in individual personnel files, but it is
probably best to keep all the I-9 forms together in one file. ICE recommends
separate files. Tsai recommends that employers keep I-9s in two binders, one in
alpha order for current active employees, and one for former employees by date
of termination.
Forms may be kept
electronically if the employer has a system that:
• Controls
integrity and accuracy;
• Prevents
and detects modifications;
• Tracks
access;
• Has a
retrieval system that includes indexing and searching; and
• Has the
ability to reproduce legible and readable hard copies.
Note that some of this can be tricky with pdf documents,
Tsai, warns.
After insuring that the electronic copy accurately
reproduces the original, you may shred the original. If it does not, retain the
original, says Tsai.
Some vendors offer websites that will maintain your I-9
forms. That can be helpful as these sites generally won’t let you submit
incomplete forms, and they will send notifications reminding you of the 3-day
deadline, for example.
The DHS conducts 2 to 3 thousand audits annually, says Tsai,
and about one-third of the audits result in fines, ranging from $30 to
$100,000. The biggest threat is a determination that you knowingly hired an
ineligible employee.
In tomorrow’s Advisor, the nine most common Form I-9
mistakes, plus an introduction to the all-things-HR-in-one-place website,
HR.BLR.com®.
Source: HR
Daily Adviser
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