hey say change breeds opportunity. For a good example, consider the opportunities
brought on by a change in the federal government form that companies must fill out
when they hire a new employee.
As of December 2007, all U.S. companies have to use an updated
version of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Employment Eligibility
Verification Form I-9 to prove a new employee is in the country legally and eligible
to work.
Along with other changes, the revised form can now be completed
and stored electronically—and that’s where the opportunity kicks in.
Since the beginning of 2008, at least eight vendors have begun
selling Web-based paperless I-9 compliance services, which they maintain can help
companies fill out and store the forms more accurately, efficiently and safely than
they could by themselves.
In addition to helping with I-9 forms, some of the vendors
can also submit information to the government on behalf of customers participating
in E-Verify, a separate voluntary federal program that allows companies to instantly
match new employees’ documentation against databases at the Social Security Administration
and Department of Homeland Security to confirm they’re cleared to work. Some states,
notably Arizona, also have made the use of E-Verify mandatory for some employers.
In the short time Web-based I-9 compliance services have been
out, vendors claim to have signed up companies of all sizes in all types of industries.
An estimated 56,000 U.S. companies have signed up for E-Verify. Another 1,000 are
joining each week, according to Citizenship and Immigration Services, which is part
of the Department of Homeland Security,
Vendors that are marketing I-9 compliance software include
established background checking and hiring management firms such as Kroll, Acxiom
Information Security Services, Accurate Background and First Advantage. They also
include a smattering of startups, including Form I-9 Compliance, I9Advantage, Verified
Person and Verify I-9.
There’s so much competition that vendors are reluctant to
share details about customers they’ve signed or what they charge. However, industry
sources say standard rates run $5 to $10 a form, though volume discounts are common.
Most I-9 compliance software is sold as a Web-based application,
so a company doesn’t install anything on its own computer servers, but just logs
on to a Web site to fill out forms and access stored information. Vendors keep records
on servers at their own data centers, using multiple layers of encryption and security
technology so clients’ data isn’t hacked into or stolen.
Getting paperwork finished quickly and accurately and storing
it safely are important because Citizenship and Immigration Services gives companies
three days from an employee’s hire date to complete an I-9 form and requires them
to store records for three years after someone is hired or a year after they leave,
whichever is longer.
Fines for companies that fail government employment eligibility
audits are steep—up to $1,000 per form.
That’s the main reason a company should use an outside party:
If an issue comes up, someone else handles it, says Dave Dickerson, president of
Accurate Background in Lake Forest, California. "In an extreme case, there could
be 57 steps involved," including checking documents with the multiple federal agencies,
Dickerson says. "The employer doesn’t want to become an I-9 specialist. It’s easier
to outsource it."
Another selling point: Some software can be integrated into
a company’s HR software. To differentiate themselves from competitors, some vendors
paired up with partner companies that Citizenship and Immigration Services has approved
as E-Verify designated agents.
Kroll does both. The background check company’s I-9 service
can be integrated into a client’s applicant tracking or HR IT systems. Kroll also
partnered with Form I-9 Compliance, a Newport Beach, California-based startup and
E-Verify designated agent, to offer E-Verify services. Barry Nadell, a senior vice
president with Kroll’s background screening division, won’t disclose how many clients
the company has signed, though they range in size from very small to several hundred
thousand employees, he says.
More often than not, Kroll’s contact is a client’s HR manager,
though at larger companies the general counsel’s office gets involved too, Nadell
says.
The service can help large companies that previously had to
depend on branch office employees to get I-9 forms filled out for new hires, says
Chas Patterson, a Form I-9 Compliance vice president. "You have people at a store
whose job is retail, not HR," Patterson says. "This application makes it so you
don’t have to be an expert. It removes the worry."
Sales pitches aside, it is possible for even large companies
to handle I-9 forms on their own, says Grace Hoppin, an immigration attorney with
Jackson-Hertogs in San Francisco. In early April, Hoppin helped with an I-9 compliance
training workshop at a client with more than 5,000 employees, "and they still do
paper copies," she says.
Also, it might not make sense to invest in I-9 software if
the federal government changes employment verification requirements again, a distinct
possibility in light of pending immigration reform bills, Hoppin says.
Some of those bills call for electronic verification of all
employees, not just new hires, and different forms of electronic verification have
been proposed, Hoppin says.
In the end, a company’s main concern should be doing everything
possible to check out potential employees, especially if companies are in food service,
construction, manufacturing or other industries that have had chronic issues with
unauthorized workers, Hoppin says.
In those cases, companies need to have rigorous processes
to show they’re complying with the law. If that means using an outside service,
"that could be a really convenient tool to show they’re doing everything they can,
that they’re checking people out," she says.
Workforce Management Online, April 2008 -- Register Now!