Title: I9 Training
1I-9 Training
- The Catholic University of America
- July 2003
2Presented by
- International Student and Scholar Services
- The Catholic University of America
3The Immigration Reform Control Act of 1986
- Established an employment eligibility
verification system.
- Established anti-discrimination provisions
designed to keep employers from discriminating
against people because of accent, national
origin, a foreign look
4- By statute, it is illegal to hire anyone not
legally authorized to work in the U.S.
- INA 274A(a)(1)
- 8 USC 1324a
5Legal Concepts/Definitions and Immigration Basics
6Hire
- Actual commencement of employment
- 8 CFR 274a.1(c)
7Employee
- An individual who provides services or labor for
wages or other remuneration.
- 8 CFR 274a.1(f)
8Employee, contd
- Note the government draws a distinction between
volunteer positions which are charitable in
nature and unpaid employment in which a worker
would have been hired if not for the unpaid worker
9Employer
- an agent or anyone acting directly or indirectly
in the interest of the person/entity who engages
the services/labor of an employee for wages or
other remuneration. - 8 CFR 274a.1(g)
10Casual Hire
- Sporadic, irregular or intermittent employment
(such as a domestic worker)
- 8 CFR274a.1(f) and (h)
11Independent Contractor
- An individual/entity who carries on independent
business, contracts to do a piece of work
according to his/her own means and methods and is
subject to control only as to results - 8 CFR 274a.1(j)
12Independent Contractor, contd
- Elements Determining Independent Contractor
status
- Who supplies tools/materials?
- Are services available to the public?
- Is work done for other clients?
- Does the individual have the opportunity for
profit or loss as a result of the labor?
13Independent Contractor, contd
- Elements Determining Independent Contractor
status
- Has the individual invested in facilities for
work?
- Who determines the order, sequence and time that
the work is done?
14Constructive Knowledge
- Constructive Knowledge is knowingly hiring or
continuing to employ an unauthorized alien.
- Knowledge is the actual knowledge as well as
knowledge that may be reasonably inferred by
certain conditions
15Legal Concepts/Definitions and Immigration Basics
16Basis for U.S. work authorization
- Birth (born in U.S. or U.S. territory, Native
American, born to US parents abroad)
- Through Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration
Services (BCIS)
- Naturalization
- Refugee or Asylee
- Permanent Resident
- Nonimmigrant granted temporary work permission
17Work permission by Birthright
- Person born in the U.S.
- Person born in Puerto Rico
- Person born in U.S. Virgin Islands
- Person born in Guam
- Person born abroad of U.S. parents
- Person who was found in the U.S. when under the
age of 5
18Employment Incident to Statusfor any Employer 8
C.F.R. 274a.12(a)
- Permanent residents
- Lawful Temporary Resident
- Person admitted as a refugee
- Person paroled into the US as a Refugee
- Individual granted asylum
- Individuals in these statuses may work for any
employer and should all have documents issued by
the Immigration Service as evidence of work
authorization.
19Employment Incident to Statusfor Any Employer 8
C.F.R. 274a.12(a) contd
- Person in K-1
- N-8 or N-9 status holder
- Citizen of Federated States of Micronesia or of
the Marshall Islands
- K-2 status
- Person granted withholding of deportation
- Individuals with these classifications are
automatically allowed to work for their sponsor
because the U.S. government went through some
sort of authorization process prior to granting
them the status.
20Employment Incident to Statusfor Any Employer 8
C.F.R. 274a.12(a) contd
- Individuals in these statuses may work for any
employer and should all have documents issued by
the Immigration Service as evidence of work
authorization.
- Person granted extended voluntary departure
- Person granted Temporary Protected Status
- Person granted Voluntary Departure under Family
Unity program
21Employment Incident to Statusfor Any Employer 8
C.F.R. 274a.12(a) contd
- Person granted Family Unity Benefits
- Alien in V status
- Person in T-1 status
- Individuals in these statuses may work for any
employer and should all have documents issued by
the Immigration Service as evidence of work
authorization.
22Employment Incident to Statusfor Specific
Employer 8 C.F.R. 274a.12(b)
- A-1 or A-2 Foreign government official
- A-3 employee of foreign govt official
- C-2, C-3 foreign govt official in transit
- E-1, E-2 Treaty Trader or investor
- These individuals can only work for their
sponsoring employers. Evidence of their status
and employment eligibility are typically the
foreign passport and the I-94 card.
23Employment Incident to Statusfor Specific
Employer 8 C.F.R. 274a.12(b) contd
- F-1 student on campus or CPT (as authorized on
I-20)
- G-1,G-2, G-3, G-4 rep. of intl organization
- G-5 personal employee of rep. of intl org.
- H-1B, H-2A, H-2B, or H-3, temporary worker or
trainee
- These individuals can only work for their
sponsoring employers. Evidence of their status
and employment eligibility are typically the
foreign passport and the I-94 card.
24Employment Incident to Statusfor Specific
Employer 8 C.F.R. 274a.12(b) contd
- These individuals can only work for their
sponsoring employers. Evidence of their status
and employment eligibility are typically the
foreign passport and the I-94 card.
- I, rep. of information media
- J-1 exchange visitor
- L-1 intra-company transferee
25Employment Incident to Statusfor Specific
Employer 8 C.F.R. 274a.12(b) contd
- O-1 and O-2, alien with extraordinary ability in
the sciences, arts, education, business or
athletics and their support personnel
- P-1, P-2 or P-3 athlete, artist or entertainer
- These individuals can only work for their
sponsoring employers. Evidence of their status
and employment eligibility are typically the
foreign passport and the I-94 card.
26Employment Incident to Statusfor Specific
Employer 8 C.F.R. 274a.12(b) contd
- Q-1 cultural exchange
- R-1, Religious worker
- NATO 1 through 6, military officers of NATO
- NATO 7 personal employee of NATO military
personnel
- TN professional under NAFTA
- These individuals can only work for their
sponsoring employers. Evidence of their status
and employment eligibility are typically the
foreign passport and the I-94 card.
27Nonimmigrants who can apply for work permission
- F-1 (for off campus employment or post completion
practical training)
- J-2
- L-2
- People in the final stages of green card process
applying for Adjustment of Status.
- This individuals must apply for the Employment
Authorization Document AND obtain it prior to
commencing employment.
28Nonimmigrants not allowed to work
- Visitors B-1, B-2, WB or WT
- F-2
- H-4
- O-3
- TD
- Honoraria payments may be permissible from
academic institutions.
29Sidenote Nonimmigrants and Honoraria
- Permissible only for
- B1, B2, WB or WT if activity is academic in
nature, of less than 9 days duration and has not
received more than for honoraria payments in the
last 6 months. No limit on can still reimburse
expenses. Is taxable. - J-1 professors/scholars if authorized by letter
from Responsible Officer or Alternate Responsible
Officer.
30Visa Vs. Immigration Status
31Visa Stamp
32Form I-94
- Form I-94 serves as documentation of legal
entry in the U.S. in a specific status for a
specific period of time.
33Important Parts of the I-94
- Admission Number
- Legal status in which the individual is
admitted.
- Date by which individual must leave. For those
with work permission inherent in status, last day
of authorized employment.
- Employer/university sponsoring status would be
annotated here.
34Form I-20
- SEVIS I.D.
- Name of student
- Name of School
- Financial support
- Special comments
35F-1 Employment Authorizations (usually for off
campus work)
- Dates covered,
- Employer Name and
- Location
36Form DS-2019
- Name.
- SEVIS I.D.
- Worksite/location.
- J-1 Sponsor.
- Financial support.
- If not sponsored by CUA, need letter from J-1
program to confirm work authorization.
37Form I-797
- Approval notice received when someone applies
for a change of nonimmigrant status.
- Petitioners/Applicants Section
- Aliens Evidence of approval
- New I-94 card
38Completing the Form I-9
39Who Must Complete an I-9?
- All employees hired after November 11, 1986.
- Re-hired employees who have not been working for
the University for more than 12 months.
40By When Must the I-9 Be Completed?
- Section 1 is to be completed by the employee at
the time employment begins (Day 1).
- Section 2 must be completed by the employer by
the 3rd day of employment. (By the 1st day of
employment if the individual will work 3 or fewer
days.) - Section 3 must be completed by the expiration
date of the foreign nationals work permission
41Basic Rules
- Employee should always be given the choice of
what documentation to present.
- You cannot ask to see specific immigration
documentation.
- Do not over document stay on one side or the
other of the documentary line dividing List A
documents from List B and C.
42Section 1 of the I-9
43Section 1 problem areas
- Social Security Number Often foreign nationals
have applied for, but do not yet have a social
security number. They should write pending in
the box. The form should be updated once the SSN
is received. Any changes should be initialed and
dated.
44Section 1 problem areas
- The last two of the three boxes.
- A __________ this is the number on the Alien
Registration Card or EAD card
- Alien Authorized to work until __/__/__
- (Alien or Admission ________) expiration
date of work permission and the number either on
the EAD card or on the I-94 card
45Section 1 problem areas
- Make sure the employee signs and dates the form.
If not, employer assumes liability for false
statements in Section 1.
46Section 1 Employer Role
- Employers role in Section 1 is to review it for
completeness.
47Section 2 of the I-9
48Employers role in Section 2
- Establish the identity of the employee
- Verify employment eligibility
49List A Documents on the I-9 (Establish both
Identity work permission)
- U.S. Passport
- Certificate of U.S. Citizenship (Form N-560 or
N-561)
- Certificate of Naturalization (Form N-550 or
N-570)
- Unexpired foreign passport with
- I-551 stamp or
- I-94 card attached indicating unexpired
employment authorization
- Alien Registration Receipt Card with photo (Form
I-151 or I-551)
- Unexpired Temporary Resident Card (I-688)
- Unexpired Employment Authorization Card (I-688A)
- Unexpired Reentry Permit (I-571)
- Unexpired Refugee Travel Document (Form I-571)
- Unexpired Employment Authorization Document (Form
I-688B)
50Foreign Passport
- I-551 stamp
- Temporary evidence of permanent residency status.
Given when awaiting the actual card when just
approved for the green card or when an
application for renewal/replacement is pending. - I-94 card (with I-20 or DS-2019 if I-94 indicates
F-1 or J-1 status)
- I-94 should be annotated with name of sponsoring
employer/school.
- This option cannot be used by L-2 or J-2.
51Revised List A Documents
- U.S. Passport
- Unexpired foreign passport with
- I-551 stamp or
- I-94 card attached indicating unexpired
employment authorization
- Alien Registration Receipt Card with photo
(I-551)
- Unexpired Temporary Resident Card (I-688)
- Unexpired Employment Authorization Card (I-688A)
- Unexpired Employment Authorization Document (Form
I-688B)
52List B Documents on the I-9 (Establish only
Identity)
- Drivers license issued by State or outlying
territory of the U.S.
- Federal/State I.D. card
- School I.D. card
- Voters registration card
- U.S. Military card/draft record
- Military Dependent ID
53List B Documents continued
- Coast Guard Merchant mariner Card
- Native American Tribal Document
- Canadian drivers license
- If under 18
- School record/report card
- Clinic, hospital, doctor record
- Day-care or nursery school record
54List C Documents(Establish employment
authorization only)
- U.S. Social Security card (other than one stating
it is not valid for employment)
- Certification of Birth Abroad issued by the
Department of State (Form FS-545 or Form
DS-1350)
- Original or certified copy of a birth certificate
issued by a state, county, municipal authority or
outlying possession of the United States bearing
an official seal
55List C Documents (contd)
- Native American Tribal Document
- U.S. Citizen I.D. Card (INS Form I-197)
- I.D. card for use of a Resident Citizen of the
United States (INS Form I-179)
- Unexpired employment authorization document
issued by the INS (other than those listed under
List A)
56Reviewing the Documents
- If documents appear to be genuine, you must
accept them, unless you have knowledge to the
contrary.
- However, if you have knowledge that they are not
right, you must explore further.
57Portability Provisions of the H-1B
- H-1B status allows someone who already holds and
H for another employer to port or begin working
for a second employer who has already filed an
H-1B petition with Immigration on behalf of the
employee even before the petition for the new
employer is approved.
58Documentation for H-1 Portability
- No clear regulatory guidance for documentation
- Suggestion
- Indicate H Portability on I-9.
- Attach copy of Receipt Notice issued by BCIS.
59If you are unsure of the documents, you may
contact
- International Student Scholar Services, CUA
- 202-319-5618
- Or (as a last resort)
- Office of Business Liaison, Department of
- Homeland Security
- Hotline 1-800-357-2099
60On-line access to copies of I-9 documents and
guides
- http//www.immigration.gov/graphics/lawsregs/handb
ook/hand_emp.pdf
61Copying supporting documentation
- CUA policy is to copy the documentation presented
and examined during the I-9 process.
- Copies must be made of documents presented by
each employee, not just the foreign ones.
62Reverification
- Must be done by the expiration date of employment
authorization
63Section 3 of the I-9
64Section 3 of the I-9
- Must be completed on or before the expiration
date of the employment authorization indicated in
either Section 1 or Section 2 of the original I-9.
65Section 3
- Employee need only show documentation
establishing continued ability to work identity
documents not needed as employer should already
know him/her. - Employer must record information on document(s)
presented.
- May need to reverify if employee presented
evidence of temporary work permission.
66The 240 Day Rule 8 C.F.R. 274a.12(b)(20)
- A-3
- E-1 or E-2
- G-5
- H-1, H-2A, H-2B, or H-3
- I
- J-1
- L-1
- O-1 or O-2
- P-1, p-2, P3
- R-1
- TN
- Individuals who hold the following nonimmigrant
statuses and who file for an extension of their
status in a timely manner, may continue to work
for their employer for an additional 240 days
from the expiration date of their current status
67Documentation for 240 day rule
- No clear regulatory guidance for documentation
- Suggestion
- Indicate extension pending on I-9.
- Indicate the end of 240-day period as expiration
of work permission to trigger another
reverification.
- Attach copy of Receipt Notice issued by BCIS.
68Retention of I-9s
69Retention
- I-9 must be kept for the later of
- Three years from the date of hire
- Or
- One year after the termination of the employees
employment.
70Rehires
71I-9s for rehires
- You may update a previously completed I-9 for a
rehired former employee by completing Section 3
if
- Rehire occurs within 3 years of the original I-9
completion and
- The employee is eligible to work on the same
basis as when the original I-9 was completed.
-
72I-9s for rehires
- Alternatively, you may choose to complete
sections 1 and 2 of a new I-9
73Penalties for noncompliance
74Civil Penalties for employing unauthorized workers
75Paperwork violations (applies to initial hires
only)
76Executive Order 12989 (Feb. 13, 1996)
- Federal contractors who employ illegal aliens may
be barred from obtaining/bidding for federal
grants and contracts for up to one year.
- Bar can be extended for additional periods of
time in increments of a year.
- 48 CFR 9.406-2(b)(2) and 48 CFR 9.406-4(b)
77Types of Violations
- Technical/Paperwork
- Substantive
78Technical/Paperwork Violations
- Section 1
- No employee maiden name, address or DOB
- No A next to phrase A Lawful Permanent
resident
- No Alien or Admission next to phrase Alien
authorized to work until
- No employee attestation date
- Attestation not completed at time of hire (only
if employee hired after 9/30/96)
- No preparer, name address, signature, date
- if appears in Section 2 or copy made of INS docs
for Section 2
79Technical/Paperwork Violations
- Section 2
- No title, doc , or expiration date of
document(s) examined
- No business title, name address
- No date of hire
- No employer attestation date
- Attestation not completed within 3 days of hire
(if date of hire falls on/after 9/30/96)
- If copy retained of examined docs
80Technical/Paperwork Violations
- Section 3
- No document title, or expiration date
- No date of rehire
- if copy of examined document is retained
81Substantive Violations
- Big violation
- No I-9 prepared or presented
82Substantive Violations
- Section 1
- No employee name
- No check mark indicating basis of employees
permission to work in US
- No A next to phrase A Lawful Permanent
resident
- No Alien or Admission next to phrase Alien
authorized to work until
- No employee signature
- Attestation not completed at time of hire if
employee hired before 9/30/96
- if appears in Section 2 or copy made if INS docs
for Section 2
83Substantive Violations
- Section 2
- Improper documents reviewed or verified
- No documentation title, or expiration date
unless a copy of examined documents is attached
- No employer attestation signature
- Attestation not completed within 3 days of hire
if employee hired before 9/30/96 or if employee
only works for 3 days or less)
84Substantive Violations
- Section 3
- Improper documents reviewed or verified
- No documentation title, or expiration date
unless a copy of examined documents is attached
- No signature
- No date
- Section 3 dated after date work authorization
expired
85Factors that Affect Assessed Penalties
- Size of employer
- Good faith effort to comply
- Seriousness of violation
- Intentional falsification
- Deliberate refusal to prepare I-9
- Negligent failure to prepare I-9
- Partial preparation of I-9, but employee/employer
not signing
- Employer failure to sign
- Improperly checked boxes
86Factors that Affect Assessed Penalties
- Employee authorized to work
- Employer history of violations
- Other factors
- Repeat offense
- Timely completion or inaccurate completion
- Altered or backdated I-9
- Employers overall practice
- Evidence of employer concealment of unlawful
status
- Reasonable care and diligence