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Electronic
Signature and Storage of the I-9 Employment Eligibility Verification
Form
U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Department
of Homeland Security (DHS) have received inquiries from many
employers regarding the availability of electronic Employment
Eligibility Verification Forms (Form I-9). Employers have
expressed their frustration with being required to keep paper
forms or to store the forms on microfilm or microfiche when
all other aspects of their business have been automated.
On
April 28, 2005, a new law will take effect allowing employers
to sign and store Forms I-9 electronically. While DHS is still
developing a regulation for this new law, ICE is pleased to
provide the following background and interim guidelines for
making use of these electronic forms.
Background
As
part of its mission to ensure national security, DHS is charged
with enforcing the laws requiring employers to employ only
individuals authorized to work in the United States. The Form
I-9 requirement stems from Section 274A of the Immigration
and Nationality Act and implementing regulations, which require
all U.S. employers (including agricultural associations or
employers who recruit or refer persons for employment for
a fee) to verify on the Form I-9 the identity and employment
eligibility of all employees -- including U.S. citizens --
hired to work in the United States after November 6, 1986.
Completed
Forms I-9 are not filed with the federal government. Instead,
they must be retained by the employer in its own files and
made available for inspection by DHS, the Special Counsel
for Immigration-Related Unfair Employment Practices (OSC),
or the Department of Labor (DOL) for three years after the
date of hire or one year after the date the employee's employment
is terminated, whichever is later. Recruiters or referrers
for a fee are required to retain the Form I-9 records for
three years after the date of the hire. Failure to properly
complete and retain the Form I-9 subjects the employer to
civil penalties ranging from $110 to $1,100.
On
October 30, 2004, the President signed legislation into law
(Public Law 108-390) authorizing employers to retain Forms
I-9 in electronic format, in addition to the current choices
of paper, microfilm or microfiche. The legislation also authorizes
attestations on the Form I-9 to be manifested by an electronic
signature. The legislation prescribed an effective date of
April 28, 2005, or the effective date of implementing regulations,
whichever occurred first.
Guidance
for Electronic Signatures and Retention of Form I-9
Under
this law, employers will have a variety of electronic Form
I-9 options. For example, employers may interpret the law
to mean that they may continue to complete Forms I-9 on paper
but choose to store the forms electronically. Alternatively,
employers may choose to both complete and retain the Form
I-9 wholly electronically.
It
is important to note that there is no single government-wide
electronic signature or record-keeping standard. However,
some federal agencies have provided electronic record-keeping
standards for their own transactions with the public. For
example, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has established
electronic standards (IRS Revenue Procedure 97-22) that provides
helpful guidance for electronic storage of records for taxpayers.
These standards may serve as a helpful reference for employers
until DHS issues regulations to govern the storage of Forms
I-9.
The
use of accepted standards ensures the integrity, accuracy
and reliability of the electronic signature and storage system.
For example, if a Form I-9 is completed electronically, the
electronic signatures used to manifest the required attestations
should be created though use of a system that includes a method
to acknowledge that the attestation to be signed has been
read by the signatory and attach (or logically associate)
the electronic signature to an electronically completed Form
I-9 at the time of the transaction. Currently, electronic
signatures are accomplished using various technologies, such
as electronic signature pads, Personal Identification Numbers,
biometrics and click to accept dialog boxes.
The
electronic storage system used by an employer to retain the
Form I-9 may include a quality assurance program that includes
regular evaluations of the system. Such evaluations could
include periodic checks of electronically stored data and
methods to prevent and detect the unauthorized creation of,
addition to, alteration of, deletion of, or deterioration
of electronically stored data. To facilitate Form I-9 inspections
by officers of DHS, OSC, and DOL, employers may consider an
electronic storage system that includes an indexing system
and ability to reproduce legible and readable hardcopies of
electronically stored Forms I-9.
Advantages
of Electronic Signature and Storage
There
are a number of real and potential advantages that employers
are likely to realize through use of electronic Forms I-9:
- Many employers may experience cost savings by storing
Forms I-9 electronically rather than using conventional
filing and storage of paper copies or transferring the forms
to microfilm or microfiche.
- Electronic forms will allow employers to better ensure
that each Form I-9 is properly completed and retained. Some
employers may find that electronic completion and storage
renders the process less prone to error.
- Electronically retained Forms I-9 are more easily searchable,
which is important for re-verification, quality assurance
and inspection purposes. This will be especially helpful
and cost-effective for large employers that have job sites
across the country or that have high employee turnover rates.
# ICE #
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is the largest
investigative arm of the Department of Homeland Security,
responsible for the enforcement of border, economic, infrastructure
and transportation security laws. ICE seeks to prevent acts
of terrorism by targeting the people, money and materials
that support terrorist and criminal activities.
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