Section1

Description
Contains the US I-9 Form Employee Information and Verification to be completed by the employee.

Type : Section1Type

Definition
Contains the US I-9 Form Employee Information and Verification to be completed by the employee.
(Defined in file EmploymentEligibilityI-9.xsd , or a file it imports)

Elements
AddressLine
AlienEligibility
AlienID
BirthDateThis is formatted representation of a date, which may be specified as a date, date/time, year, or year/month.
CityNameIdentifies the town or the city
CountrySubDivisionCodeQualifies the further division of the Country. These may be Districts, Regions, States, Provinces etc. A possible list of values is as specified in ISO 3166-2. The name attribute identifies the name of this e.g. District, Region etc, and there is a pre-defined list of types supported, with the ability to add new ones as necessary
ElectronicSignatureIndicates that the document has been signed and provides the date of the signature.Indicates that the document has been signed and provides the date of the signature.
FamilyNameContains a non-given name. This is an inherited name or one representing a family relationship or in some cultural contexts a "Place Name" (where someone is from). In some cultural contexts, a single family name is typical, while in others there may be multiple family names. A "primary" attribute may be used in the case where there are multiple last names. A family name can have a "prefix," such as Von, De, Van, Al, etc. These can be represented using the FamilyName "prefix" attribute. Not all implementers may find it necessary to separate prefixes from the family name itself. Capturing the prefix and FamilyName as discrete fields can become important when formatting or appearance may vary based on context. For example, in some cultural contexts it may be common to use a blank space as the delimiter between the prefix and the family name, while in others a hyphen might be used. Separating the prefix from FamilyName allows such formatting requirements to be handled flexibly. This contains the name or names that generally would be inherited or indicative of a person's family. In Western contexts, this is what is commonly referred to as a "last name." If a person has multiple family names, the order in which the names appear is deemed significant. Generally, that order should correspond to the order in which the names would appear in a typical formatted representation. The order may be specifically identified by the sequence. A "primary" family name may be indicated using the attribute supplied for this purpose. Where multiple family names are presented, only a single name may be designated as primary = "true" Note that the attribute "prefix" may optionally contain a part of the person’s name that precedes the family name. For example: Van den, Von, Al, de, etc. Some implementers may choose not to represent a prefix separately from a Family Name. However, it may be desirable to do so for a number of reasons: 1. name sorting. For example, to support sorting on first letter of prefix and then by first letter of the family name. 2. formatting. For example, depending on the cultural context in which the name is presented, the type of delimiter (e.g., a space or a hyphen) between the prefix and the family name (or whether a delimiter appears at) all may depend on the "alphabet" and/or cultural context in which the name is presented.
FormerFamilyNameA previous family name, such as a "maiden name," which is a family name prior to marriage and assuming a spouse's name. This contains the name or names that generally would be inherited or indicative of a person's family. In Western contexts, this is what is commonly referred to as a "last name." If a person has multiple family names, the order in which the names appear is deemed significant. Generally, that order should correspond to the order in which the names would appear in a typical formatted representation. The order may be specifically identified by the sequence. A "primary" family name may be indicated using the attribute supplied for this purpose. Where multiple family names are presented, only a single name may be designated as primary = "true" Note that the attribute "prefix" may optionally contain a part of the person’s name that precedes the family name. For example: Van den, Von, Al, de, etc. Some implementers may choose not to represent a prefix separately from a Family Name. However, it may be desirable to do so for a number of reasons: 1. name sorting. For example, to support sorting on first letter of prefix and then by first letter of the family name. 2. formatting. For example, depending on the cultural context in which the name is presented, the type of delimiter (e.g., a space or a hyphen) between the prefix and the family name (or whether a delimiter appears at) all may depend on the "alphabet" and/or cultural context in which the name is presented.
GivenNameIs the Persons given name or first name.
MiddleName This is a second "given name" or sometimes depending on cultural context, representative of family relationships. A middle name can have a prefix. For example, in Saudi names the word "Bin" means "son of" and would be a common prefix to a middle name usually representing the first name of the person's father. Some implementers may choose not to represent a prefix separately from a middle name. However, it may be desirable to do so for a number of reasons: 1. name sorting. For example, to support sorting on first letter of prefix and then by first letter of the middle name. 2. formatting. For example, depending on the cultural context in which the name is presented, the type of delimiter (e.g., a space or a hyphen) between the prefix and the family name (or whether a delimiter appears at) all may depend on the "alphabet" and/or cultural context in which the name is presented. This is a second "given name" or sometimes depending on cultural context, representative of family relationships. A middle name can have a prefix. For example, in Saudi names the word "Bin" means "son of" and would be a common prefix to a middle name usually representing the first name of the person's father. Some implementers may choose not to represent a prefix separately from a middle name. However, it may be desirable to do so for a number of reasons: 1. name sorting. For example, to support sorting on first letter of prefix and then by first letter of the middle name. 2. formatting. For example, depending on the cultural context in which the name is presented, the type of delimiter (e.g., a space or a hyphen) between the prefix and the family name (or whether a delimiter appears at) all may depend on the "alphabet" and/or cultural context in which the name is presented.
PersonLegalID
PostalCodePostal Code of the Address.
PreparerCertificationContains the preparer and/or translator information completed by a person other than the employee.
UnitIdentifies the apartment number or office suite.
WorkerEligibilityType

Parents
\AcknowledgeEmploymentEligibilityI-9\DataArea\EmploymentEligibilityI-9\I-9Form