[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 20, Volume 3]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 20CFR655.110]

[Page 484-487]
 
                      TITLE 20--EMPLOYEES' BENEFITS
 
 CHAPTER V--EMPLOYMENT AND TRAINING ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
 
PART 655_TEMPORARY EMPLOYMENT OF ALIENS IN THE UNITED STATES
--Table of Contents
 
    Subpart B_Labor Certification Process for Temporary Agricultural 
             Employment in the United States (H	2A Workers)
 
Sec. 655.110  Employer penalties for noncompliance with terms and conditions 
of temporary alien agricultural labor certifications.

    (a) Investigation of violations. If, during the period of two years 
after a temporary alien agricultural labor certification has been 
granted (in whole or in part), the RA has reason to believe that an 
employer violated a material term or condition of the temporary alien 
agricultural labor certification,

[[Page 485]]

the RA shall, except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, 
investigate the matter. If, after the investigation, the RA determines 
that a substantial violation has occurred, the RA, after consultation 
with the Director, shall notify the employer that a temporary alien 
agricultural certification request will not be granted for the next 
period of time in a calendar year during which the employer would 
normally be expected to request a temporary alien agricultural labor 
certification, and any application subsequently submitted by the 
employer for that time period will not be accepted by the RA. If 
multiple or repeated substantial violations are involved, the RA's 
notice to the employer shall specify that the prospective denial of the 
temporary alien agricultural labor certification will apply not only to 
the next anticipated period for which a temporary alien agricultural 
labor certification would normally be requested, but also to any periods 
within the coming two or three years; two years for two violations, or 
repetitions of the same violations, and three years for three or more 
violations, or repetitions thereof. The RA's notice shall be in writing, 
shall state the reasons for the determinations, and shall offer the 
employer an opportunity to request an expedited administrative review or 
a de novo hearing before an administrative law judge of the 
determination within seven calendar days of the date of the notice. If 
the employer requests an expedited administrative review or a de novo 
hearing before an administrative law judge, the procedures in Sec. 
655.112 of this part shall be followed.
    (b) Employment Standards Administration investigations. The RA may 
make the determination described in paragraph (a) of this section based 
on information and recommendations provided by the Employment Standards 
Administration, after an Employment Standards Administration 
investigation has been conducted in accordance with the Employment 
Standards Administration procedures, that an employer has not complied 
with the terms and conditions of employment prescribed as a condition 
for a temporary alien agricultural labor certification. In such 
instances, the RA need not conduct any investigation of his/her own, and 
the subsequent notification to the employer and other procedures 
contained in paragraph (a) of this section will apply. Penalties invoked 
by the Employment Standards Administration for violations of temporary 
alien agricultural labor certification terms and conditions shall be 
treated and handled separately from sanctions available to the RA, and 
an employer's obligations for compliance with the Employment Standards 
Administration's enforcement penalties shall not absolve an employer 
from sanctions applied by ETA under this section (except as noted in 
paragraph (a) of this section).
    (c) Less than substantial violations--(1) Requirement of special 
procedures. If, after investigation as provided for under paragraph (a) 
of this section, or an Employment Standards Administration notification 
as provided under paragraph (b) of this section, the RA determines that 
a less than substantial violation has occurred, but the RA has reason to 
believe that past actions on the part of the employer may have had and 
may continue to have a chilling or otherwise negative effect on the 
recruitment, employment, and retention of U.S. workers, the RA may 
require the employer to conform to special procedures before and after 
the temporary alien labor certification determination (including special 
on-site positive recruitment and streamlined interviewing and referral 
techniques) designed to enhance U.S. worker recruitment and retention in 
the next year as a condition for receiving a temporary alien 
agricultural labor certification. Such requirements shall be reasonable, 
and shall not require the employer to offer better wages, working 
conditions and benefits than those specified in Sec. 655.102 of this 
part, and shall be no more than deemed necessary to assure employer 
compliance with the test of U.S. worker availability and adverse effect 
criteria of this subpart. The RA shall notify the employer in writing of 
the special procedures which will be required in the coming year. The 
notification shall state the reasons for the imposition of the 
requirements, state that the employer's agreement to accept the 
conditions will constitute inclusion of them

[[Page 486]]

as bona fide conditions and terms of a temporary alien agricultural 
labor certification, and shall offer the employer an opportunity to 
request an administrative review or a de novo hearing before an 
administrative law judge. If an administrative review or de novo hearing 
is requested, the procedures prescribed in Sec. 655.112 of this part 
shall apply.
    (2) Failure to comply with special procedures. If the RA determines 
that the employer has failed to comply with special procedures required 
pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of this section, the RA shall send a 
written notice to the employer, stating that the employer's otherwise 
affirmative temporary alien agricultural labor certification 
determination will be reduced by twenty-five percent of the total number 
of H-2A aliens requested (which cannot be more than those requested in 
the previous year) for a period of one year. Notice of such a reduction 
in the number of workers requested shall be conveyed to the employer by 
the RA in the RA's written temporary alien agricultural labor 
certification determination required by Sec. 655.101 of this part (with 
the concurrence of the Director). The notice shall offer the employer an 
opportunity to request an administrative review or a de novo hearing 
before an administrative law judge. If an administrative review or de 
novo hearing is requested, the procedures prescribed in Sec. 655.112 of 
this part shall apply, provided that if the administrative law judge 
affirms the RA's determination that the employer has failed to comply 
with special procedures required by paragraph (c)(1) of this section, 
the reduction in the number of workers requested shall be twenty-five 
percent of the total number of H-2A aliens requested (which cannot be 
more than those requested in the previous year) for a period of one 
year.
    (d) Penalties involving members of associations. If, after 
investigation as provided for under paragraph (a) of this section, or 
notification from the Employment Standards Administration under 
paragraph (b) of this section, the RA determines that a substantial 
violation has occurred, and if an individual producer member of a joint 
employer association is determined to have committed the violation, the 
denial of temporary alien agricultural labor certification penalty 
prescribed in paragraph (a) shall apply only to that member of the 
association unless the RA determines that the association or other 
association member participated in, had knowledge of, or had reason to 
know of the violation, in which case the penalty shall be invoked 
against the association or other association member as well.
    (e) Penalties involving associations acting as joint employers. If, 
after investigation as provided for under paragraph (a) of this section, 
or notification from the Employment Standards Administration under 
paragraph (b) of this section, the RA determines that a substantial 
violation has occurred, and if an association acting as a joint employer 
with its members is determined to have committed the violation, the 
denial of temporary alien agricultural labor certification penalty 
prescribed in paragraph (a) of this section shall apply only to the 
association, and shall not be applied to any individual producer member 
of the association unless the RA determines that the member participated 
in, had knowledge of, or reason to know of the violation, in which case 
the penalty shall be invoked against the association member as well.
    (f) Penalties involving associations acting as sole employers. If, 
after investigation as provided for under paragraph (a) of this section, 
or notification from the Employment Standards Administration under 
paragraph (b) of this section, the RA determines that a substantial 
violation has occurred, and if an association acting as a sole employer 
is determined to have committed the violation, no individual producer 
member of the association shall be permitted to employ certified H-2A 
workers in the crop and occupation for which the H-2A workers had been 
previously certified for the sole employer association unless the 
producer member applies for temporary alien agricultural labor 
certification under the provisions of this subpart in the capacity of an 
individual employer/applicant or as a member of a joint employer 
association, and is granted temporary alien

[[Page 487]]

agricultural labor certification by the RA.
    (g) Types of violations--(1) Substantial violation. For the purposes 
of this subpart, a substantial violation is one or more actions of 
commission or omission on the part of the employer or the employer's 
agent, with respect to which the RA determines:
    (i)(A) That the action(s) is/are significantly injurious to the 
wages, benefits, or working conditions of 10 percent or more of an 
employer's U.S. and/or H-2A workforce; and that:
    (1) With respect to the action(s), the employer has failed to comply 
with one or more penalties imposed by the Employment Standards 
Administration for violation(s) of contractual obligations found by that 
agency (if applicable), or with one or more decisions or orders of the 
Secretary or a court pursuant to Sec. 216 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1186), 
this subpart, or 29 CFR part 501 (Employment Standards Administration 
enforcement of contractual obligations); or
    (2) The employer has engaged in a pattern or practice of actions 
which are significantly injurious to the wages, benefits, or working 
conditions of 10 percent or more of an employer's U.S. and/or H-2A 
workforce;
    (B) That the action(s) involve(s) impeding an investigation of an 
employer pursuant to Sec. 216 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1186), this subpart, 
or 29 CFR part 501 (Employment Standards Administration enforcement of 
contractual obligations);
    (C) That the employer has not paid the necessary fee in a timely 
manner;
    (D) That the employer is not currently eligible to apply for a 
temporary alien agricultural labor certification pursuant to Sec. 
655.210 of this part (failure of an employer to comply with the terms of 
a temporary alien agricultural labor certification in which the 
application was filed under subpart C of this part prior to June 1, 
1987); or
    (E) That there was fraud involving the application for temporary 
alien agricultural labor certification of that the employer made a 
material misrepresentation of fact during the application process; and
    (ii) That there are no extenuating circumstances involved with the 
action(s) described in paragraph (g)(1)(i) of this section (as 
determined by the RA).
    (2) Less than substantial violation. For the purposes of this 
subpart, a less than substantial violation is an action of commission or 
omission on the part of the employer or the employer's agent which 
violates a requirement of this subpart, but is not a substantial 
violation.