Ditchmen • NUCA of Florida Ditchmen • August 2017 | Page 11

QUICK BITS Mandatory Use of New Form I-9 Begins September 18, 2017 U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) released another version of the Form I-9 on July 17, 2017, which includes minor revisions to the Instructions and the Lists of Acceptable Documents. Beginning Sept. 18, 2017, employers are no longer permitted to use the prior version of the form revised on Nov. 14, 2016. On the USCIS' Form I-9 website, employers can find such documents as the new "smart version" that includes error- checking capabilities, the regular print version, the supplement that must be used where more than one preparer or translator assist, the Form I-9 Instructions, and the Spanish versions of the same documents. The M-274 Handbook for Employers, Guidance for Completing Form I-9 has also been updated. JDSupra (08/25/17) Chatham, Elizabeth; Ehrlich, Alisa Nickel; Steinle, Renee Mueller OSHA Reduces Reports of Workplace Fatalities The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) is reducing its reporting of fatalities in the United States as part of an effort by the agency to scale back the amount of information about workplace accidents made available to the public. During the Obama administration, OSHA began publishing reports listing the names, locations, employers, and circumstances of people who were reported to OSHA as having died in apparent accidents at work. Previously, OSHA had compiled some information about fatalities, but former OSHA officials said Obama administration officials made the reports more publicized and included additional information. Last week, OSHA removed links to reports going back to 2009 from its website, instead posting a more limited set of information about U.S. workplace fatalities that resulted in citations for companies dating back to the beginning of the year. The new fatality-data listing respects the privacy of surviving family members because they do not give out the name of the worker who died, said an OSHA spokesperson. Among other things, OSHA has reduced the number of press releases it issues to publicize enforcement actions against employers. Wall Street Journal (08/28/17) P. B6 Berzon, Alexandra AUGUST 2017 • DITCHMEN 11