Monthly Archives: April 2026

April 23, 2026

RIFs in the Age of AI: Why Data-Driven Decisions Are Increasing Employer Risk

Adam Bouka

By Adam Bouka

Employers have long used reductions in force (“RIFs”) as a high-risk but familiar response to economic pressure, restructuring, or strategic change. Traditionally, employers evaluated RIF-related risk through relatively discrete lenses: compliance with the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (“WARN”) Act, potential discrimination claims, and the adequacy of internal documentation.

That approach today, may no longer be sufficient.

As employers increasingly rely on data-driven tools, including AI-assisted systems, in their RIF processes, the reductions are becoming more complex. They may now include structured, data-rich decision systems that can be reconstructed and challenged under multiple legal frameworks. At the same time, regulators—particularly in jurisdictions like California—are making clear that using these tools does not necessarily reduce liability exposure.

It could actually increase it. Read more >>

April 16, 2026

How ICE Is Raising the Stakes on I-9 Audits

Chris Thomas

By Chris L. Thomas

ICE’s recent Fact Sheet signals a long-anticipated escalation in worksite enforcement that warrants immediate attention from employers. We have observed a consistent and concerning shift in enforcement patterns over the past several months with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) taking worksite enforcement to steps to increase legal exposure for employers.

Historically, after serving a Notice of Inspection (which initiates a formal I-9 audit), ICE would typically follow up with a Notice of Suspect Documents. That second notice provided employers with a defined period (usually 10 days, and often negotiable) to reverify affected employees and, where necessary, take appropriate employment action. More recently, however, ICE appears to be bypassing this step entirely. Instead of issuing a Notice of Suspect Documents, the agency is using information gathered during I-9 audits, including copies of employee documentation, to support criminal warrant applications and conduct enforcement actions, including workplace raids. We have seen this ongoing pattern in a number of recent cases. Read more >>