
Jake Beckman Accountant MS EA PB PTP We spEAk tax!
(602) 717-0673, info@artandbusinessconsulting.com
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ABC LLC's experience with setting up for
E-Verify:
The process is reasonably simple, but you will need online access. Your company
will be required to supply: the company name, physical address (NO PO Boxes),
EIN, NAICS code (they have a way to figure it out if you don't know it), phone number, number of hiring locations and at least one Point
of Contact (POC). The POC also needs a name, phone number and email address. If
you are missing some of this information the initial registration process will
not complete.
Someone within your company must be assigned the role of Program Administrator
(PA)-generally if you only have one person signing in performing E-verify this
person must be the PA. You can designate more than one PA. Other individuals can
use the system to verify employees as a general agent, as opposed to the role of
PA, who also maintains the records of all users in addition to using the system
to verify employees. Any new user will be required to read through a tutorial on
the use of E-Verify and pass a test on it. New users can not access the system
until they read through and pass the test-the system bookmarks the user's
location in this process so you can't skip ahead. All users will be required to
create a user ID & password, supply a phone number, email address, read the
tutorial and pass the test.
People who do verifications on behalf of the company are called designated
agents. They do not need to be employees of your company, and indeed you can
assign a third party such as ABC LLC to be your designated agent; however,
regardless of whether your company assigns a third party to perform E-Verify or
does it internally, the company will be required to sign a Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU) with the Department of Homeland Security and the Social
Security Administration (and third party Designated Agent if your business is
using one.).
ABC LLC's experience was that it took about 3 to 4 hours to complete the entire
process: creating the company account, getting the temporarily password via
email, logging in, changing the password, reading through the entire tutorial
and passing the test. Jake Beckman, accountant Art & Business Consulting LLC,
completed the process on January 30, 2008. Your business may have a
different experience.
To begin the process go to https://www.vis-dhs.com/EmployerRegistration/StartPage.aspx?JS=YES Back to Top
NOTE: ABC LLC has no connection with the
originators of the following opinion - as always check with your own legal
counsel before acting...
An attorney's take on E-Verify
"An
employer that needs to verify a worker's employment eligibility gathers the
required proof of identity and employment eligibility from the lists on Form
I-9. Through the miracle of the digital age, government databases confirm within
seconds that the new employee's name matches the name on file for the social
security number (SSN) (s)he gave. The computer shows a photo that the employer can
match against the identity document provided by the new hire.
"In theory, employers get better data faster, and the government puts the
information on the "frontline" of the hiring process. An employer that uses the
system correctly (but is nevertheless found with unauthorized workers on the
payroll) is entitled to a rebuttable presumption that it hasn't violated the law
intentionally.
The system sounds perfect, but plenty of traps are waiting.
"Basic Pilot rebranded, updated As of October, some 23,000 employers had signed
up to use the system now known as "E-verify." It had been in place for about
10 years under the name Basic Pilot, but the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) -- in an effort at "rebranding" - updated the program's name and
added new features this fall.
"To use E-verify, employers must register, sign a memorandum of understanding (MOU),
and train employees who will be using the system. To perform a query, the
employer enters information found in Sections 1 and 2 of the new employee's I-9
form, such as name, date of birth, SSN, and immigration "A" number (if
applicable). The system should return an initial report within seconds.
"How the system works. The initial report checks a Social Security
Administration (SSA) database to verify that the SSN the new employee has
provided matches the name, date of birth, and other information on the I-9. The
government touts instant feedback as one way to reduce the number of "no-match"
letters that employers will receive. It also provides the employer and the
government with a chance to intervene and follow up on a no-match letter by
moving to a second- stage query into the DHS database.
"If the SSA database returns a "tentative nonconfirmation" (it doesn't believe
that the proffered SSN matches the other biographical data), you should verify
that no errors were made in sending the information to the agency. You may
retransmit the information to eliminate the chance of clerical errors. You
should refer an employee to the local SSA field office only if:
* the automated system directs you to do so; and
* the employee intends to contest the tentative nonconfirmation.
If the employee does intend to contest the result, two deadlines come into play:
(1) The employee has eight federal government workdays to report to the local
SSA field office, and (2) you as the employer must make a second SSA inquiry on
the 10th federal government workday. That inquiry should give you either a final
confirmation of eligibility or a final nonconfirmation.
"Photos play key role. To combat immigration document fraud, you also should be
able to see the photo on record linked to the new employee's immigration
documents. In particular, the DHS is trying to eliminate employees' ability to
put a false photograph on an otherwise valid I-551 or I-766 form. If the photo
that an employee presents at the work site differs from the one that the agency
believes is linked to that person, a "photographic nonmatch" will occur.
"As with an SSN mismatch, you must follow certain procedures if an employee
shows up and his identification photo doesn't match the photo in the DHS
database. If you can't determine whether the two photos match or if the employee
intends to contest the photographic nonmatch, you must send the photo to the DHS
either by scanning and uploading it or by express mail. In either case, the
agency intends to give you final confirmation or nonconfirmation within 10 days.
"What can go wrong?
States disagree. The most pressing legal issue that many employers face now is
whether using (or failing to use) E-verify is legal. During the past few months,
the answer to that question has begun to vary by state.
"Although the DHS stresses that the program is voluntary, Arizona passed a law
requiring all employers to register and use it by January 1, 2008. Illinois has
taken the opposite approach - forbidding employers from using the program until
the DHS can prove that it provides accurate results.
"A variety of groups, ranging from immigrants' rights groups and the American
Civil Liberties Union to Arizona businesses, are challenging that state's law.
The federal government is challenging the Illinois law. Exactly what will come
of those lawsuits remains to be seen.
"In addition, the federal government intends to require all federal contractors
to register and use E-verify perhaps as early as next year. So what do you do if
you're a federal contractor with significant operations in Illinois and Arizona?
Now would be a good time to talk with your attorneys.
"Read the fine print. Be sure to read the fine print of your agreement to use
E-verify:
* By registering for the program, you agree to accept only "List B"
documents that have a picture. While most of those documents have a photo, some
don't.
*
By enrolling in E-verify, you agree not to accept nonphoto proofs of identity.
*
You agree to use E-verify for all employment eligibility verifications.
*
If you intend to continue to employ someone after receiving a report that she
isn't eligible, you must notify the DHS or face potential fines.
"While the government says that relying on E-verify can show that a violation
wasn't intentional, the other possibility exists: If the SSA and the DHS have
electronically informed an employer of final nonconfirmation, continued
employment could be presumed to be an intentional violation of the Immigration
and Nationality Act.
"Don't commit discrimination. Most employers are required (by either Title VII
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 or the Immigration Reform and Control Act) to
refrain from national origin discrimination. Examples of the discriminatory use
of E-verify could include:
*
prescreening job applicants by using the system to determine work eligibility
before a job is offered;
*
giving preferential hiring or start dates to new hires based on how quickly the
system returns favorable results;
*
using E-verify selectively instead of applying it uniformly to all new hires;
*
using E-verify to recheck current workers' eligibility retroactively; or
*
using the system's DHS photo-verification phase even if the SSA check shows
eligibility.
"Pay attention to new photo rule. One final legal challenge that E-verify might
create stems from the MOU's requirement that you accept only "List B" documents
with a photo. You might have received advice in the past that the law required
you to accept any document that "appears to be genuine" and that the choice
remained with the employee.
"It's certainly illegal to require extra documents or refuse to honor otherwise
genuine documents "for the purpose or with the intent of discriminating."
Because the rule requiring only photo-bearing documents is new, no courts have
yet had the chance to balance it against the general rule (barring you from
refusing particular types of documents).
"Bottom line While E-verify has the potential to make the employment eligibility
verification process faster and more accurate, you face different - and, for
now, rapidly changing - legal challenges in deciding whether to register and use
the system and how to react to the confirmation process If you're considering
the system or wondering how to react to a tentative nonconfirmation notice, you
should consider talking with your attorneys."
- Source - Excerpted from
Indiana Employment Law Letter and written by an attorney at the law firm of
Baker & Daniels by Matthew G. Morris
NOTE: ABC LLC has no connection
with the originators of this opinion - as always check with your own legal
counsel before acting... Back to Top
Adventures in E-Verify page of Art and Business Consulting, LLC (ABC LLC). Accounting as Easy as ABC!
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