Overview:
Since January 2025, employer-side immigration enforcement has escalated in ways that are directly affecting day-to-day operations—more ICE/HSI activity, more I-9 audit notices, and more “produce your records now” moments. In early May 2025, DHS confirmed visits to 100+ D.C.-area businesses to serve Notices of Inspection (not raids), showing how quickly routine operations can get rattled by an I-9 demand. Recent reporting has also described a sharp rise in employer inspections, adding to the reality that this isn’t isolated to one industry or region.
Looking
ahead, the administration’s “One Big Beautiful Bill” has been described as
expanding ICE resources, including plans to hire at least 10,000 additional
agents—another signal that employer scrutiny may remain elevated.
What
makes this high-risk in 2026 is that employers typically don’t get exposed
because of intent—they get exposed because processes break under pressure. Once
an inspection begins, employers receive at least three business days to produce
the requested I-9s, which is exactly when organizations discover missing forms,
wrong editions, inconsistent filing, or multiple practices across locations.
And even “small” paperwork breakdowns can add up fast when you multiply them
across a workforce—especially when teams haven’t been trained, onboarding is
decentralized, or old habits are still being used.
The
most common failure points are predictable: using an outdated Form
I-9, incomplete/late sections, inconsistent document-copying rules, weak
retention discipline, and missed follow-ups for expiring work authorization
because tracking is informal or owned by nobody. Temporary authorization shifts
can intensify that risk—DHS began issuing termination notices tied to the
Cuba/Haiti/Nicaragua/Venezuela parole program (CHNV) in June 2025, including
revocation of parole-based employment authorization, which forced many
employers to reassess their reverification readiness. Remote hiring adds
another layer: remote document examination is allowed only under specific
DHS/USCIS conditions (the DHS-authorized alternative procedure tied to eligible
E-Verify sites), not as a blanket convenience.
This
webinar is designed to help employers get a clear, practical compliance
picture—without overcomplicating it. We’ll cover what to expect in I-9 audits
(and how raids differ operationally), employer responsibilities, review of the
current I-9 form and rules (including remote verification requirements),
implementing follow-up for temporary work authorizations, setting internal
practices on document copying and retention, and conducting a defensible
self-audit—including how to correct mistakes properly—ending with clear action
items your team can apply immediately.
Areas
covered in the session:
- What
to Expect From the Trump Administration
- I-9
Audits
- Raids
– What They Are And The Effect on Your Operations
- Recent
Penalties for Non-Compliance
- Employer
Responsibilities
- Review
of The New I-9 Form
- Implementing
a Follow-Up for Temporary Work Authorizations
- Determining
Internal Practices on Retaining I-9 Forms
- Conducting
a Self Audit and Correcting Mistakes
- Action
Items
- Questions
Why
should you attend?
Because
I-9 risk in 2026 isn’t just about “having forms on file”—it’s about whether
your process holds up under scrutiny. When an inspection notice arrives, most
organizations don’t struggle with big legal questions; they struggle with
record gaps, inconsistent practices across locations, and simple errors that
multiply across the workforce.
This
session helps you close the most common failure points that create penalties
and disruption: using the correct Form I-9, completing it consistently, setting
clear internal rules on document copying and retention, managing remote
verification properly, and building a reliable follow-up process for expiring
work authorization.
You’ll
leave with a clearer compliance picture and practical action items you can
apply immediately—how to self-audit, how to correct mistakes the right way, and
how to prepare your HR team and managers to respond calmly and consistently if
ICE/HSI comes knocking.
Handouts:
Attendees
will gain access to exclusive handouts, including presentation materials
provided by the speaker and additional resources developed by Amorit Education
to aid your teams in post-session implementation.
Who
will benefit?
Organizations
that hire and onboard employees in the U.S.—especially those with multiple
locations, high turnover, remote hires, or a mix of temporary work
authorizations—will benefit from this practical I-9 audit and enforcement
readiness session. Professionals include:
- HR
Director / Head of HR
- HR
Manager
- HR
Compliance Manager
- HR
Operations Manager
- Talent
Acquisition Manager / Recruiting Manager
- Onboarding
Manager / New Hire Experience Lead
- I-9
Program Manager / Employment Eligibility Verification Lead
- E-Verify
Program Administrator
- Employee
Relations Manager (HR)
- Corporate
Compliance Manager (Employment/Worksite Compliance)
- Risk
& Compliance Officer (HR/Workforce Compliance)
- Internal
Audit Manager (HR/Operational Compliance)
- Payroll
Manager (when payroll/HR owns onboarding controls)
- HRIS
Manager / HR Systems Administrator (I-9/E-Verify system owner)
Bob McKenzie, has over 40 years of human resources management experience. His background includes a wide range of hands-on experience in all areas of Human resources management in all types of industries within the public and private sectors.
Bob
has been cited in a number of Human Resources trade publications. Among them
are HR.com, HR Magazine, HR Florida Review, Vault.com, BNA and the Institute of
Management and Administration and the Business Journal. He has been a speaker
at a number of conferences as well as audio and web-based seminars.
Bob
is a graduate of Rider University where he received a Bachelor of Science in
Commerce Degree and double majored in Industrial Relations and Organizational
Behavior.
Enrollment Options
Tags: I-9 Audits, ICE Raids, Worksite Enforcement, Form I-9, E-Verify, Remote Verification, Reverification Tracking, Self-Audit & Corrections, HR Compliance, Immigration Compliance, Record Retention, Audit Readiness, bob mckenzie, february 2026, webinar

