April 2026
 

Illinois Becomes the Fifth State to Ban the Box

8/21/14

Illinois has passed the Job Opportunities for Qualified Applicants Act. The Act provides that a private employer may not inquire into or require disclosure of a job applicant's criminal record or criminal history before the candidate has been notified that the candidate has been selected for a job interview or has been offered a conditional offer of employment. It requires consideration of the nature and gravity of a candidate's conviction record, the time elapsed since the conviction, and whether the conviction has a direct bearing on the candidate's fitness before excluding a candidate.

Tuesday, August 19, 2014/Author: SuperUser Account/Number of views (19386)/Comments (0)/
Categories: Illinois

Illinois Firearms Concealed Carry Act Update

11/07/13

Executive Summary

Property owners wishing to prohibit concealed firearms from being carried on their property must post officially approved signage conspicuously at the entrance of their building, premises or real property, according to a regulation published by the Illinois State Police. Owners of parcels where concealed carry is prohibited by the Illinois Firearms Concealed Carry Act also must post the required sign in the same manner. The IL state police have released guidance on the posting requirements as well as a model poster. For more information please review the details below.

Wednesday, July 9, 2014/Author: Shirley Johnson/Number of views (14318)/Comments (0)/
Categories: Illinois

Medical Marijuana Legalized in Illinois

11/21/13

Executive Summary

On January 1, 2014, Illinois will become the 20th state in the nation to legalize marijuana for medicinal purposes. Illinois’ governor signed the legislation, the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Pilot Program Act (“Cannabis Act”), to create the four-year pilot program. The program allows patients diagnosed with one of 42 specific, debilitating medical conditions to use medicinal marijuana. Qualifying individuals will be issued a Registry Identification Card by the Department of Public Health. Illinois has removed state-level criminal penalties from the medical use and cultivation of cannabis. The purpose of the Act is to protect patients with certain debilitating medical conditions, as well as their physicians and providers, from arrest and prosecution, criminal and other penalties, and property forfeiture if the patients engage in the medical use of cannabis.

Wednesday, July 9, 2014/Author: Shirley Johnson/Number of views (12674)/Comments (0)/
Categories: Illinois

Illinois Workplace Violence Prevention Act

11/21/13

Executive Summary

Illinois has passed a law with the stated intention to assist employers in protecting its workforce, customers, guests and property by limiting access to workplace venues by potentially violent individuals. Effective January 1, 2014, IL employers with 5 or more employees may seek a court order of protection if the business or its employees are threatened by an individual.

Wednesday, July 9, 2014/Author: Shirley Johnson/Number of views (12329)/Comments (0)/
Categories: Illinois

New Chicago Ordinance Bans Smoking of E-Cigarettes Indoors

09/06/14

Executive Summary

Effective April 29, 2014, a new Chicago ordinance will prohibit smoking of electronic cigarettes (or e-cigarettes) in enclosed public places and enclosed places of employment in the city. Chicago joins New York City and a handful of other jurisdictions (including the states of Arkansas, North Dakota, and Utah) to have included e-cigarettes in their indoor smoking regulations. 


Wednesday, July 9, 2014/Author: Shirley Johnson/Number of views (12314)/Comments (0)/
Categories: Illinois
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Recent IL Updates

USCIS Policy Change Retroactively Shortens Certain TPS-Based EAD Automatic Extensions

04/02/26

Author: ADP Admin/Tuesday, March 31, 2026/Categories: Compliance Corner , Federal Compliance Update


Impacted Employers: All employers with employees holding Temporary Protected Status (TPS)-based Employment Authorization Documents (EADs),

Effective Dates: Policy clarification published March 13, 2026; impacts TPS-based EAD renewal filings made before and after July 22, 2025, as described below.

Summary:United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has clarified that, in light of the “Big Beautiful Bill Act” (H.R.1), automatic extensions of work authorization for TPS-based EAD renewal applicants are now capped at one year (365 days). USCIS takes the position that the cap is retroactive,

Next Steps:

Employers and TPS beneficiaries should be aware that TPS policy continues to shift rapidly and remains the subject of ongoing litigation. Given the complexity of TPS programs, evolving litigation, and USCIS’s partially retroactive interpretation of H.R. 1, employers should consult counsel regarding particular employee scenarios, appropriate I
9 notations, and any alternative employment authorization pathways.

ADP® will continue to monitor and report future developments.

 

Background

On Oct. 30, 2025, USCIS issued a final rule eliminating automatic extensions of EADs for renewal applicants who timely filed Form I‑765. Prior to that rule, many EAD renewal applicants received automatic extensions of up to 540 days while their renewals were pending.

TPS-based EAD renewals are treated differently.  H.R. 1 mandates that all TPS benefits, including renewals and any automatic extensions, be limited to one year.  As a result, TPS-based EAD renewal applications filed between July 22, 2025, and Oct.  29, 2025, are  limited to a maximum automatic extension of one year (or the remaining duration of the TPS designation, if shorter), instead of the previously available 540 days.

USCIS Clarification - Partial Retroactivity

USCIS posted a brief news update on its I‑9 Central website directed at TPS beneficiaries clarifying how it interprets the interaction between H.R. 1’s one‑year limitation on TPS benefits; and the prior 540‑day automatic extension rule that applied to renewal filings made before the Oct.  30, 2025, final rule. DHS is taking the position that H.R.1 is partially retroactive. 

According to USCIS:
 

“If you have a TPS-based EAD and maintain TPS status, and your renewal application was pending on or filed after July 22 but before Oct. 30, 2025, your automatic extension is limited by H.R. 1 to 1 year or the duration of TPS, whichever is shorter. You cannot claim the full 540-day extension, even if it is listed on your Form I-797C notice.  Please note: if the Form I-797C receipt notice has a “Received Date” of July 21, 2025, or earlier, the up-to-540-day automatic extension applies; however, any part of this extension that falls after July 22, 2025, cannot last longer than 1 year from this date or for the duration of the TPS designation period, whichever is shorter.”


Calculating the Automatic Extension for Pre–July 22, 2025, Filings

The brief USCIS news update does not clearly explain how to calculate the revised expiration date for TPS-based EAD automatic extensions tied to applications filed before July 22, 2025.  The automatic extension of work authorization in this scenario could, for example, end on the earliest of:

·      540 days after the expiration of the previous EAD;

·      July 21, 2026; or

·      the end of the country’s TPS designation.

Critically, USCIS indicates that this earlier end date applies even where the Form I797C Receipt Notice previously issued to the employee states that the individual is entitled to the full 540day automatic extension.

Given the lack of clarity in the USCIS news update,  impacted employers should discuss the calculation and handling with legal counsel.


Impact to Form I-9

Employers may have completed Form I
9s for TPS-based EAD holders using expiration dates calculated under the prior 540day automatic extension guidance.

Under the new interpretation, some of those documented expiration dates may now extend beyond the permissible period of work authorization, potentially requiring updates or corrections.

Next Steps

Employers and TPS beneficiaries should be aware that TPS policy continues to shift rapidly and remains the subject of ongoing litigation.  Given the complexity of TPS programs, evolving litigation, and USCIS’s partially retroactive interpretation of H.R. 1, employers should consult legal counsel regarding particular employee scenarios, appropriate I‑9 notations, and any alternative employment authorization pathways.

ADP®
will continue to monitor and report future developments.

Number of views (98)/Comments (0)

Tags: 04/02/26
 

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