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🛂 Immigration Policy/E-Verify Mandates

E-Verify Mandates: El Monte vs Long Beach

How do e-verify mandates rules compare between El Monte, CA and Long Beach, CA?

El Monte and Long Beach have similar restriction levels.

El Monte, CA

Los Angeles County

Few Restrictions

California AB-1236 (Labor Code §2814) prohibits LA County and any city or county from requiring private employers to use E-Verify. Federal mandates apply only to federal contractors. LA County imposes no E-Verify requirement.

View full El Monte rules →

Long Beach, CA

Los Angeles County

Few Restrictions

Long Beach does not mandate E-Verify for private employers. California restricts mandatory E-Verify outside federal contractors, leaving the program voluntary for most Long Beach businesses.

View full Long Beach rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactEl MonteLong Beach
Federal mandateFederal contractors only-
California statuteLabor Code §2814 (AB-1236)-
County mandateNone; preempted by state-
Voluntary useAllowed for any employer-
Re-verificationLimited by federal anti-bias rules-
State law-Labor Code section 2814
Mandate status-Voluntary in California
Federal contractors-Must comply with FAR clause
Long Beach mandate-None adopted
Penalty-Up to $10,000 per violation

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

El Monte FAQ

Does LA County require employers to use E-Verify?

No. California AB-1236 (Labor Code §2814) bars counties from imposing E-Verify mandates on private employers, so LA County has no such rule for unincorporated areas or contract cities.

Can my employer use E-Verify voluntarily?

Yes. Any employer may enroll voluntarily through USCIS, but they must apply it consistently to all new hires and cannot selectively re-verify existing workers based on national origin.

Long Beach FAQ

Must Long Beach employers use E-Verify?

No. Most private employers are not required to use E-Verify in California. Federal contractors with the FAR E-Verify clause must enroll, but state law blocks broader local mandates.

Can employers voluntarily enroll?

Yes. Employers may sign up with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services voluntarily, but must apply E-Verify uniformly to new hires only and follow tentative non-confirmation procedures correctly.

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