286). Employers have, since the Immigration Reform and Control Act of1986 (IRCA), been obligated to function under the laws that govern verifying applicant/employee citizenship, and which assigns costly fines to companies that do not comply with the 1986 guidelines of verification (Olds Som and Momblanco, 2006, p. 286). However, these rules were not enforced, and employers were not, for the most part, fined.
That has now changed. At present, because of the threat posed by international terrorism, and because of the burden on the states arising out of illegal immigration, which is collapsing some state social structures, which means that taxpayers are supporting the burden of illegal immigration in ways that make the arguments for workers who perform low income and unwanted jobs moot in the face of the cost of healthcare, education, legal and social services that have become burdened with supporting the illegal immigrant population.
Now, employers are faced with the prospect of documenting workers, and ensuring their status in the United States is a legal one. Additionally, court cases like one against Travelodge, where the courts determined that a Social Security "no match letter," which would suggest that the worker is not in the legal U.S. Social Security system, and the logical conclusion is, therefore, that the worker is undocumented; is not grounds for terminating an employee (Bacon, 2001, p. 15). These kinds of cases further complicate the role of the human resource office in complying with requirements for worker status verification, paperwork, and legal processing and representation against claims that arise against employers from the government and workers. Human resource offices must now answer the questions of:
What is the current system for documenting workers, and how effectively does it work?
What is the cost of documenting workers?
What are the costs of failing to document workers?
What are the legal ramifications of failing to document workers?
What are the legal ramifications of documenting workers?
What additional responsibilities must employers assume in documenting workers?
The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA) has four requirements of employers (Tunnell, Zimmermann and Seipel, 1993, p. 36):
Not to hire unauthorized aliens.
To verify the identity and work authorization for every new employee.
Not to discriminate on the basis of citizenship or national origin.
To recognize the amnesty rights of certain illegal aliens who are eligible for temporary or permanent resident status in the United States.
As we can see from these four requirements, the Act causes employers to consider not just the illegal status of the worker, but the worker's potential legal status. This is a unique area of understanding for which the HR staff must be trained and educated in regard to in order to make the best decisions on behalf of the company. Additionally, we see here, in item number three, that the employer is prohibited from discriminating on the basis of citizenship or national origin. This is a slippery slope for the employer, who then takes on a reporting role, by way of reporting the employee or new hire as an undocumented individual seeking employment. The Act imposes fines on any employer who knowingly hires an undocumented worker; but also prohibits the employer from discriminating - meaning using the criteria of the person as an undocumented worker - as a reason for denying the applicant work. This might be an example of why the Act has not previously been enforced.
HR person is responsible for packaging a new hire. The HR person processes the new hires' IRS information, state and federal (FICS) withholding taxes, as well as Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA), unless the new hire is an independent contract, in which case that individual would be responsible for his or her own withholdings; but the employer would still issue the 1099 statement of earnings (Tunnell, Zimmermann and Seipel, 1993, p. 36). Also, if the new hire is a foreign national who is in the country legally, the employer must, or HR person for the employer, would be responsible for issuing the I9 statement (see Index I), which documents the employee as a non-citizen, and, nonetheless, makes the proper withholdings on behalf of the employer. The employer can be fined for failure to issue the...
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