Immigration enforcement activity can be unsettling for business owners and employees alike. Especially during the second Trump presidency, since it has become more aggressive in its enforcement. Here in Arizona, Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) activities have mainly taken the form of raids on restaurants so far. Is ICE near your business? Do not panic—being calm and in command is the key attitude to protecting your business while staying within the law.
Read the practical, lawful steps business owners should take when ICE agents are close or make contact.
1. Prepare by Implementing Strong Compliance Practices on Employment Eligibility
In our last blog, we explained why it is important for businesses follow best compliance practices for employment eligibility. These processes ensure you are doing everything to comply with the law.
Among the tasks that demonstrate compliance are:
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Completing Form I-9 accurately and on time
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Submitting the I-9 information within three business days of the employee’s start work date to the E-Verify platform
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Maintaining I-9 records separately from general personnel files, either electronically or in hard copy
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Keeping only what is required by law—do not retain or request extra documentation beyond what the I-9 process mandates.
2. Train Your Team Before Anything Happens
The worst time to create a plan is during enforcement activity. Preparing a plan and delivering formal training to your employees are vital to your business’s success.
Business owners should:
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Train managers on ICE protocols
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Provide staff with simple, written instructions
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Revisit policies regularly as laws and enforcement priorities change
Preparedness protects your business, your personal assets, and your workers’ privacy.
3. Stay Calm and Designate a Point Person
Every business should have one trained individual—usually an owner, manager, or HR lead—authorized to interact with government agents.
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Employees should not answer questions or provide documents on their own.
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Front-line staff should know to only say:
“Our manager/attorney handles all government inquiries.”
A calm, consistent response reduces confusion and risk.

