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No-Match Letter Regulation is on Hold
Posted
Sep 21, 2007
和urthyDotCom
A U.S. district court in Northern California issued a temporary restraining
order
on
August 31, 2007, in the case of
AFL-CIO et al v.
Michael Chertoff et al, which is a lawsuit against the controversial
"no-match" letter regulation issued by the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security (DHS). A temporary restraining order prevents the DHS from
implementing the regulation, pending a hearing on the matter.
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The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) issued an updated
regulation on August 15, 2007, as part of the
stepped-up worksite enforcement initiative. As MurthyDotCom
and MurthyBulletin readers were informed in our August 17, 2007
article, Liability for Employers who Receive No-Match Letters,
this was to go into effect on
September 14, 2007.
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Court Stops Regulation Temporarily, Hearing to
be Held
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The plaintiffs in this case are the American Federation of Labor and
Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO) together with other
professional organizations. The defendants are DHS, the Social Security
Administration (SSA), and their agents. The federal court determined that
the plaintiffs "raised serious questions as to whether the new Department of
Homeland Security rule is inconsistent with statute and beyond the statutory
authority of the Department of Homeland Security and the Social Security
Administration." Therefore, the court issued an order, temporarily
preventing the defendants from implementing the regulation. The court
further ordered them to appear at a hearing scheduled for October 1, 2007,
to explain their position in favor of the regulation. It is expected that
the defendants will vigorously support their position.
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"No-Match" Regulation
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The "no-match" regulation describes the legal obligations of an employer who
receives a no-match letter from the SSA, or a letter from the DHS,
indicating that there is a discrepancy between the agency's records and I-9
employment eligibility documents. Such a discrepancy, or no-match, in
records could be caused by the use of a false identity for employment
authorization documents. There are other possible reasons, however, that
information may not match and the generation of a letter could be prompted.
The regulation also provides
"safe harbor" procedures
for an employer to follow in order to avoid various civil and criminal
penalties in cases where the employer is deemed to have constructive
knowledge that its employees are not authorized to work. See our
MurthyBulletin article,
Liability for
Employers who Receive No-Match Letters, for more detail on the
safe harbor provision.
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Conclusion
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This
lawsuit will delay or modify the implementation of the no-match letter
regulation, but it could ultimately still go into effect in some fashion.
The SSA is concerned that a delay in implementation of this regulation will
cause millions of dollars to be lost and delay SSA payments to eligible
beneficiaries. Employers and their HR managers and other representatives are
encouraged to educate themselves and prepare for these and other worksite
enforcement actions, in anticipation of these regulations, if and when they
are put into effect.

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