New April I-9 Form Deadline

March 27th, 2009 Posted by Cara

The deadline for employers’ compliance with changes to the I-9 form is April 3, 2009.

 

Essentially, the U.S. Citizenship and immigration Services, the agency in charge, has given employers a several-weeks respite.

 

Action by the new Presidential administration has helped the cause of those seeking a delay. Numerous employment law and regulatory deadlines put into action by the Bush Administration during its final months were postponed recently. Chief of Staff of the White House, Rahm Emmanuel, put out a memo urging federal agencies to take an additional 60 or 90 days to review all of those policies. The intention was to insure that the policies would be consistent with the standards of President Barack Obama.

 

An interim rule published by the USCIS in December of 2008 originally required all employers in the U.S. to begin using a new I-9 form by February 2, 2009. Under the new regulations, (more…)

New I-9 Deadline for Employer Comments

February 24th, 2009 Posted by Madison

A new I-9 form for employers has been developed. Otherwise known as the employment eligibility form, the I-9 form’s revised version is effective April 3, 2009.

At that time, all employers in the U.S. will be legally bound to use the new version.

 

Any such employers who wish to do so are invited to comment. It should be noted that many firms have already begun switching over to the new forms. Compliance is not mandatory yet, however. As in the past, employers may legally make copies of I-9 documentation, but must file such documentation in a location separate from a worker’s personnel file.

 

The deadline date represents a delay in the date originally put forward by the U.S. Citizenship and immigration Services following action under the Bush administration.

 

As a result of efforts by, among others, the new White House under President Barack Obama, the deadline was moved back from February 2, 2009.

 

Chief of Staff Rahm Emmanuel sent memos to federal agencies urging them to (more…)

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