October, 2021
At the last hour on August 31, 2021, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) announced an extension of four months until December 31, 2021, of the policy allowing remote or virtual verification of the documentation required for a Form I-9 when a workforce is working remotely. This is the longest extension granted and it is unlikely that this will be the last one.
This policy began on March 19, 2020, when due to COVID-19 precautions implemented by employers and employees, DHS announced it would exercise prosecutorial discretion to defer the physical presence requirements associated with the Form I-9 pursuant to the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). The original period was to expire on May 19, 2020. Since then, it has been extended on numerous occasions with the last several extensions being for more than a month.
DHS’ temporary policy defers the requirements for employers to review Form I-9 documents in person with new employees where employers and workplaces are operating totally remotely due to COVID-19. In these situations, employers may inspect the Section 2 documents remotely through a virtual connection (e.g., video link, fax, or email). Then, employers may enter “COVID-19” as the reason for the physical inspection delay in the Section 2 “Additional Information” field. Additionally, the USCIS advises employers to write “Remote inspection completed on (date).” The exact language to be used at this point seems to be a moving target as it changed since the initial exception.
Once the National Emergency ends or normal operations resume, a term which has never been clearly defined by DHS, all employees, who were onboarded using remote verification, must report to their employer within three business days for in person physical verification of their identity and employment eligibility documentation. We continue to believe that DHS will ultimately realize this three-day rule will be impossible for many employers to reach.
In two recent extensions, DHS/ICE has added information for those employees hired on or after April 1, 2021, and on or after June 1, 2021. In these situations, if new employees work exclusively in a remote setting due to COVID-19-related precautions but his employer’s entire staff does not work remotely, the new employees are still temporarily exempt from the physical inspection requirements. This temporary reprieve lasts until they undertake non-remote employment on a regular, consistent, or predictable basis, or the extension of the flexibilities related to such requirements is terminated, whichever is earlier.
When an Employer must complete the Form I-9 at the time of in-person physical inspection, USCIS and ICE agree if the same employer representative reviewed the documents remotely and in person after resumption of normal operations, one should note “COVID-19 Documents Physically examined on (date) by (name)” in Section 2 “Additional Information” field.
However, if the person who virtually examined the Employment Authorization document(s) is not available to conduct the physical inspection, there is a difference of guidance from the two agencies. ICE has stated “Have the employer representative who is conducting the physical inspection complete a new second page (Section 2) of the Form I-9 and attach that to the (complete) remote inspection Form I-9.” In June 2020, the USCIS did not state a new Section 2 is needed, which is contrary to ICE’s guidance. Since ICE is the agency who will decide if an employer commits substantive violations for which a fine may be assessed, I advise following ICE’s guidance.
If a company is looking for an alternative to remote or virtual verification of the I-9 documentation, one may want to consider the use of authorized representatives, which may even mean use of a family member, to conduct an in-person verification on behalf of the employer. One advantage of the use of authorized representatives is it involves only one step – an in-person verification, as opposed to virtual verification, which requires two steps, a virtual verification and later an in-person verification.
If you are concerned about your company’s immigration compliance, I invite you to read The I-9 and E-Verify Handbook, a book that I co-authored with Greg Siskind, available at http://www.amazon.com/dp/0997083379.