DHS Extends Optional Practical Training for Certain Highly Skilled Foreign Students Employed by Businesses Enrolled in E-Verify
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security released an interim final rule extending the period of Optional Practical Training from 12 to 29 months for qualified F-1 non-immigrant students with degrees in science, technology, engineering, or mathematics who are employed by businesses enrolled in the E-Verify program.
E-Verify Immigration Program Draws Criticism
California is one of the few states that have implemented the E-Verify program, which verifies the legal status of job candidates for 52,000 participating employers in a handful of states could expand rapidly into the rest of the nation experts say.
Day-labor numbers dropping in Orange
New ordinances cracking down on businesses allowing day workers to congregate add to declining numbers in Orange County, CA.
Immigration deal reached
SC legislative negotiators will allow private employers to use a variety of methods to verify the legal status of their employees, including the federal I-9 Employment Eligibility Verification Form and E-Verify.
Sanford reiterates call for strong immigration bill
Currently, the SC House version of the bill does not contain any verification requirements for private employers. The Senate version contains a verification requirement for private employers, but permits it to be satisfied by using the failed Federal I-9 form verification process. The I-9 process is an ineffective system already employed by the federal government in which fraudulent documents can be used to satisfy the verification requirements, and federal law prohibits employers or states from checking the validity of the documents.
A step in the right direction
Senate Bill 2988 requires all employers in Mississippi to confirm the legal status of all new employees by using the E-Verify Program, the federal online employment verification system. The bill makes it a discriminatory practice to dismiss a U.S. citizen or permanent resident alien while retaining an employee who is illegally in our country, and makes it a felony for an illegal alien to accept or perform employment.
More employers verifying immigration status
Employers have screened about 2.5 million new hires in the first six months of fiscal 2008 through E-Verify, the Department of Homeland Security's database that determines which employees can legally work in the U.S.
59 Arrested On Illegal Working Charges At Lansdowne
The investigation started in early July 2007 after a routine inspection of all I-9 employment eligibility verification forms at the resort. Through analysis of the I-9 forms, ICE agents identified information that led them to suspect that many of the employees were using fraudulent documents or had stolen someone else's identity to secure jobs at the resort.
E-Verify Immigration Program Draws Criticism
California is one of the few states that have implemented the E-Verify program, which verifies the legal status of job candidates for 52,000 participating employers in a handful of states could expand rapidly into the rest of the nation experts say.
Day-labor numbers dropping in Orange
New ordinances cracking down on businesses allowing day workers to congregate add to declining numbers in Orange County, CA.
Immigration deal reached
SC legislative negotiators will allow private employers to use a variety of methods to verify the legal status of their employees, including the federal I-9 Employment Eligibility Verification Form and E-Verify.
Sanford reiterates call for strong immigration bill
Currently, the SC House version of the bill does not contain any verification requirements for private employers. The Senate version contains a verification requirement for private employers, but permits it to be satisfied by using the failed Federal I-9 form verification process. The I-9 process is an ineffective system already employed by the federal government in which fraudulent documents can be used to satisfy the verification requirements, and federal law prohibits employers or states from checking the validity of the documents.
A step in the right direction
Senate Bill 2988 requires all employers in Mississippi to confirm the legal status of all new employees by using the E-Verify Program, the federal online employment verification system. The bill makes it a discriminatory practice to dismiss a U.S. citizen or permanent resident alien while retaining an employee who is illegally in our country, and makes it a felony for an illegal alien to accept or perform employment.
More employers verifying immigration status
Employers have screened about 2.5 million new hires in the first six months of fiscal 2008 through E-Verify, the Department of Homeland Security's database that determines which employees can legally work in the U.S.
59 Arrested On Illegal Working Charges At Lansdowne
The investigation started in early July 2007 after a routine inspection of all I-9 employment eligibility verification forms at the resort. Through analysis of the I-9 forms, ICE agents identified information that led them to suspect that many of the employees were using fraudulent documents or had stolen someone else's identity to secure jobs at the resort.

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