PremierSource's strategic alliance partner McAfee & Taft
has published an important Employment Law Alert regarding implementation of the revised I-9 form.

U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has delayed the effective
date of the new Form I-9 for 60 days until April 3, 2009. In December
2008, USCIS published an interim final rule intended to streamline the
employment eligibility verification process in which an employer
completes USCIS Form I-9 for each newly hired employee, or in some
cases, for re-verifying the employment authorization of existing
employees. The interim final rule and revised USCIS Form I-9 narrowed
the list of acceptable identity documents and prohibited any expired
documents from being used for identification.
The interim final rule was to have taken effect on February 2,
2009. Employers would have been required to use the revised Form I-9,
dated 02/02/2009, for all new hires and to re-verify any employee with
expiring employment authorization on and after that date. However, the
current version of Form I-9, dated 06/05/2007, should remain in use
until at least April 3, 2009, or further notice.
Employers should continue to follow standard Form I-9 procedures.
Employers must complete Form I-9 for each newly hired employee to
verify his or her identity and authorization to work in the United
States. The list of approved documents that an employee can present to
verify his or her identity and employment authorization is divided into
three sections: List A documents verify identity and employment authorization, List B documents only verify identity, and List C documents only verify employment authorization. An employee may present one document from List A or one document from each of List B and List C.
The revised Form I-9 eliminates Forms I-688, I-688A, and I-688B
(Temporary Resident Card and older versions of the Employment
Authorization Card/Document) from List A. USCIS no longer issues these cards, and all those that were in circulation have expired. Added to List A
are (a) a foreign passport with a temporary I-551 stamp or a temporary
I-551 printed notation on a machine-readable immigrant visa, (b)
documentation for certain citizens of the Federated States of
Micronesia (FSM) and the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI), and
(c) the new U.S. Passport Card. The new form has other changes, such as
revisions to the employee attestation section. In “Section 1 – Employee
Information and Verification,” an employee can now attest to being
either a citizen or noncitizen national of the United States.
If you have further questions, please do not hesitate to contact Richard Salamy at (405) 552-2232 or any of the Labor and Employment attorneys.
* * *
This Alert has been provided for information of
clients and friends of McAfee & Taft and PremierSource. It
does not provide legal advice, and it is not intended to create a
lawyer-client relationship. Readers should not act upon the information
in this Alert without seeking professional counsel.
Posted on
Monday, February 2, 2009
by Brad Neese