AB 1707 Goes to the Governor

Passes Senate 21-17, passed Assembly 47-31.

Read the Senate analysis here, and the bill as enrolled, here.

I put the odds of a veto at about 80%.

This bill would require employers to maintain employment records for a specified time and to provide inspection and copies within a specified time to current and former employees or their representatives. The bill would authorize those employees to recover a $750 penalty from an employer for failure to do so and to bring an action to obtain compliance, and it would provide that a violation of its provisions constitutes an infraction.

Legislature's Final Push

Every time I read a court opinion about the complexities of “legislative intent” I smile. The Legislature is to vote on 800 bills in the next two weeks. From the OC Register:

SACRAMENTO – The Legislature heard 183 bills on Tuesday, with 650 more
to go before the end of this year’s legislative calendar. Here’s a look
at some highlights from Tuesday.

Nothing too exciting to report on any of the big employment bills yet.

No Action on SB 737

SB 737, the spot bill prepared in advance of a the Kenneth Cole ruling, is apparently dead. I interpret this to mean that the pro-employee decision was unanticipated, and that the bill was only being prepared in case it went the other way to seek some sort of compromise between labor and business. Since it went the other way, the issue has apparently been dropped.

Legislative Response to Murphy v. Kenneth Cole?

In my rundown of the bills pending before the legislature related to employment, I came across SB 737. I am going to find out more in the coming days, but I just thought I’d post this in light on Monday’s ruling in Murphy. In the past, bills like this that are “empty shells” have been used to draft legislation after the cutoff for certain steps in the legislative process. Perhaps this bill was waiting on Murphy….

Existing law authorizes the Industrial Welfare Commission to adopt or amend working condition orders with respect to break periods, meal periods, and days of rest for any workers in this state consistent with the health and welfare of those workers. Other provisions of existing law prohibits an employer, except as provided, from employing an employee for more than 5 hours per day without providing the employee a meal period of not less than 30 minutes, or from employing an employee for more than 10 hours per day without providing the employee with a 2nd meal period of not less than 30 minutes.

This bill would state the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation to address issues related to meal periods and rest periods in employment.

UPDATE: I just spoke with a staffer of Senator Calderon, who introduced this bill. I asked whether it was proposed in anticipation of the Supreme Court’s ruling in the Murphy case. The response was that this was a “spot bill” (his term for the shell I mentioned above) that would end up being used as a vehicle for a compromise between employee and employer groups on rest breaks and meal periods. When asked whether the statute of limitations was part of this, the staffer responded that there were a “multitude” of different issues being negotiated.

I will be paying special attention to all of the developments related to SB 737.


					

2007 Employment Bills

AB 14 – The “Civil Rights Act of 2007″
AB 71 – Inflation indexing to minimum wage
AB 124 – Meal and rest periods for municipal lifeguards
AB 147 – “To assist and enact the ADA of 1990″ (???)
AB 510 – Employee designed individual alternative workweeks
AB 948 – “To addresse the issue of overtime exemptions for highly compensated employees.”
AB 1043 – Agreeing to choice of law other than California void.
AB 1425 – Changes to termination pay for temporary employees.
AB 1467 – Further restrictions on workplace smoking.
AB 1469 – Tweaks to alternative workweek voting
AB 1707 – Changes to record retention laws
AB 1708 – DFEH to create a program targeting age discrimination
SB 189 – Employment eligibility verification
SB 342 – Rest and meal periods for armored car drivers. (?)
SB 549 – Bereavement leave as a matter of right
SB 622 – “States the intent of the legislature to prohibit” misclassification of employees as independent contractors.
SB 737 – Intent of legislature to address rest and meal period issues. (?)
SB 836 – Adds “familial status” to protected classes in FEHA
SB 940 – Companion to AB 1425

This year, I’ll be doing more in depth coverage of each bill as they progress. Stay tuned.

Gov. Signs Minimum Wage Law

It’s official—Gov. signs minimum wage law. The minimum wage will increase to $7.50 on January 1, 2007, and to $8.00 on January 1, 2008. That means your “exempt” employees must be earning $31,200.00 per year on January 1, 2007, and $33,280.00 on January 1, 2008.

Apparently, however, the fight over the minimum wage is not over. (Spanish – La Opinion) Speaker Nunez wants to see a $12 /hr. “living wage” and there is still strong support for inflation-indexed increases. Interesting statistic: 53% of minimum wage earners are Latino, and 1 in 8 Latinos earns the minimum wage. Those statistics alone should mean that this will be an ongoing issue.

Minimum Wage

The LA Times reports a deal has been struck in Sacramento raising the minimum wage to $8.00 per hour, but first to $7.50 on 1/1/07. As I’ve mentioned, this will impact other workers besides minimum wage workers, because it will raise the threshhold for the salary test for non-hourly exemptions.

This one appears to be real. The GOP promises a fight, but without the Governor, they don’t have the numbers to do anything.