California 2017-2018 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB1885 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Assembly April 09, 2018 Amended IN Assembly February 28, 2018 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1885Introduced by Assembly Members Eduardo Garcia, Caballero, and Mathis(Principal coauthor: Senator Cannella)January 18, 2018 An act to add Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 11050) to Part 1 of Division 3 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, relating to undocumented workers.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1885, as amended, Eduardo Garcia. Undocumented workers: California Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.Existing provisions of federal law regulate immigration.This bill would require the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture to determine the extent of labor shortages in the state agricultural and service industries and provide that information to specified federal government entities. The bill would require those departments to convene a working group to address the issues relating to a work permit program for undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees to work and live in the state, and to serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government. The bill would require the working group to create and submit to the Legislature and the Governor a report expressing its recommendations, which would be required to incorporate specified provisions describing a model program. The bill would require the Governor, using the report, to make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California. The bill would require the Governor to issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program. The bill would make the implementation of these requirements contingent on a determination by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture that nonstate funds are available for the purposes of the bill. The bill would state the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation if the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the California Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares the following:(a) The California economy relies upon the agricultural and service industries.(b) Since 2007, Californias farms and ranches continue to experience the highest agricultural output in the nation. In 2015, they generated an estimated $47 billion, which was 17 percent lower than in 2014, when they generated $54 billion. In 2013, they generated $51.3 billion. This is a substantial increase from the $36.3 billion in 2007 and $37.5 billion in 2010. Despite severe droughts and labor shortages, California continues to lead the nation in cash farm receipts. On a global scale, California ranks between 5th and 9th in the world, ahead of such countries as Canada, Mexico, Germany, and Spain. According to a study by the University of California, Davis, every dollar of value added (labor and property income and indirect business taxes) in farming and agricultural related farming- and agriculture-related industries generates an additional $1.27 in the state economy. For every 100 jobs in agriculture, there are 94 additional jobs created throughout the state.(c) In the past decade, farming costs have increased an estimated 88 percent, due in part to new and expanding state and federal laws and regulations. Meanwhile, foreign-produced food is being imported at an accelerated pace, and at far lower costs. In todays global market, California farmers cannot simply pass their costs onto consumers. The high costs of doing business in the state have resulted in consolidation of land and a reduction in total farmed acreage, which is detrimental to the states economy. (d) Californias agricultural industry is dependent on immigrant labor, as evidenced by the most recent National Agricultural Workers Survey, which found that most of the states agricultural workers were born in Mexico and that 60 percent of crop workers have been unauthorized for the last 10 years.(e) A previous study of the status of 2,300 farmworkers in California in 13 counties suggested that 95 percent of California agricultural workers were born outside the United States and 91 percent in Mexico. On average, they have been in the United States 11.1 years. Twenty-two percent have been in the United States two years or less, 10 percent are United States citizens, 33 percent have a Green Card, officially known as a Permanent Resident Card, and 57 percent are unauthorized. Of the newcomers who have been here less than two years, 99 percent are unauthorized.(f) The federal employment-based immigration programs for admitting foreign workers for temporary and permanent jobs are rigid, cumbersome, inefficient, do not respond very well to employers needs, and give almost no attention to adapting the number and characteristics of foreign workers to domestic labor shortages. (g) Nevertheless, the United States Congress has repeatedly failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform, instead choosing to annually introduce primarily interior and border enforcement-only legislation and temporary worker proposals that ignore the socioeconomic profile of this essential workforce and do not account for the unique workforce needs of Californias diverse agricultural industry.(h) Congress has also had strong advocacy for having the E-Verify program become mandatory for all employers in conjunction with the new guest worker program. The agricultural employer community throughout the United States believes the E-Verify program requirement, without a guest worker program, would eliminate a significant portion of the existing agricultural workforce with no certainty that these vacancies will be filled by United States citizens and legal residents.(i) Due to the unworkable framework of the federal H-2A guest worker program, the absence of a suitable alternative program, and the potential for Congress to pass stand-alone E-verify legislation, agricultural interests in Oklahoma and Utah have introduced legislation creating state guest worker programs, while several other states are considering the introduction of similar state initiatives.(j) Among Californias key economic industry sectors, the hospitality and tourism sector plays a central role in stimulating Californias sluggish economy. In 2011, the leisure and hospitality industry accounted for over $100 billion in travel-related spending. According to state records, more than two million employees, or 14 percent of all employees in California, work in leisure, hospitality, and other services. These workers serve as a foundational workforce for the states $1.8 trillion economy.(k) Despite well-documented labor shortages, especially in agriculture where hourly wages have increased significantly and housing and health care services are being offered, United States-born citizens continue to avoid employment in agriculture.(l) Recognizing the significant contributions that unauthorized workers make to Californias economy and the need to bring these workers out of the shadows in order to improve worker conditions and at the same time provide a legal workforce for the agricultural and service industries, it is imperative that a program be created for current unauthorized workers in these industries.(m) It is the intent of the Legislature that the executive and legislative branches of the federal government give the highest priority to enacting legislation to create a guest worker program that would confer legal status to reside in the United States to persons who would participate in the program described in this act.(n) It is the intent of the Legislature that the costs of the working group established pursuant to this act be covered by nonstate funding sources.SEC. 3. Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 11050) is added to Part 1 of Division 3 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, to read: CHAPTER 8. California Resident Worker Program Article 1. General Provisions11050. As used in this chapter:(a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and or a service industry employer.(c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.(d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.(e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.(f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.(h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.(b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and representatives of stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.(d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:(1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.(2) Documentation requirements for applicants.(3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.(4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.(5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for to cover the costs of the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.(7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.(8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.(9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.(10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.(11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.(12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (e), shall make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.(g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation.11052. The requirements of Section 11051 shall be implemented only after the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture make a determination that nonstate funds in an amount sufficient to fully support the purposes of Section 11051 are available. Article 2. Model Program Requirements11055. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature that this article provide a model and framework for a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.(b) It is the further intent of the Legislature to recognize that, if the federal government enacts a guest worker program, it would preempt the state program.11056. (a) The program shall be implemented based on the information gathered by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture and provided to the federal government and members of the California congressional delegation pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 11051.(b) The program should be limited to undocumented persons who meet all of the following criteria:(1) The undocumented person must be 18 years of age or older.(2) The undocumented person must live in California.(3) (A) The undocumented person must have performed agricultural or service industry employment in the United States for at least 863 hours or 150 workdays during the 24-month period ending on January 25, 2019, or earned at least seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) from agricultural or service industry employment in the United States, and must have maintained agricultural or service industry employment for 431 hours or 75 workdays, or earned three thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($3,750) from that employment, on an annual basis after receiving the permit.(B) An undocumented person should be allowed to conclusively establish employment status by submitting any of the following records demonstrating the employment:(i) Records maintained by the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or any other federal, state, or local government agency, an employer, a labor organization, service labor organization, or day labor center.(ii) Itemized wage statements issued to the employee pursuant to Section 226 of the Labor Code.(C) An undocumented person who is unable to submit a document described in subparagraph (B) should be allowed to satisfy the requirement in subparagraph (A) by submitting at least two other types of reliable documents that provide evidence of employment, including any of the following:(i) Bank records.(ii) Business records.(iii) Remittance records.(D) The program should be implemented in a manner that recognizes and takes into account the difficulties encountered by an undocumented person in obtaining evidence of employment due to the persons undocumented status, including the crediting of work in cases in which an undocumented person has been employed under an assumed name.(4) The undocumented person must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(5) The undocumented person must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(6) The undocumented person must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.(c) The program should extend to an undocumented person who is an immediate family member of a person to whom a work permit has been issued. The immediate family member should be required to meet all of the following:(1) The immediate family member must reside with the undocumented person to whom a permit was issued or be enrolled in an accredited two- or four-year college or graduate program in California.(2) The immediate family member must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(3) The immediate family member must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(4) The immediate family member must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.11057. Once the program becomes authorized and operational, the following requirements should apply:(a) (1) An official or employee of the state government should not do any of the following:(A) Use information furnished by an applicant for purposes of applying for a permit under the program or any information provided by an employer or former employer for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application.(B) Make any publication in which the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified.(C) Permit a person other than a sworn officer or employee of the state to examine individual applications.(2) Information furnished by an applicant should be provided to both of the following:(A) A duly recognized state law enforcement entity in connection with a criminal investigation or a prosecution, if the information is requested in writing by the entity.(B) An official coroner, for purposes of affirmatively identifying a deceased individual, whether or not the death of the individual resulted from a crime.(3) Any person who files an application under the program and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing that it contains any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry should be disqualified from applying under the program.(b) The entities administering the program should ensure that employers employing workers authorized under the program make each of the following assurances:(1) That the job opportunity for which an employer employs an undocumented person authorized under the program is not vacant because a worker is involved in a strike, lockout, or because of a work stoppage in the course of a labor dispute involving the job opportunity at the same place of employment.(2) That the wages and benefits provided to undocumented persons working under a permit issued under the program are comparable to the wages and benefits provided to legal residents who are United States citizens, but in no case less than the state minimum wage.(3) That an employer participating in the program shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local labor laws, including laws affecting migrant and seasonal agricultural workers, with respect to all United States workers and undocumented workers.(c) An employer of a person permitted to work in this state under the program should provide a written record of employment, demonstrating the hours worked and wages paid, to the employee issued a permit, and provide a copy of the record to the state.11058. (a) An employee permitted to work in this state under the program should be entitled to the same wage, hour, and working condition protections provided to an employee who is a legal resident of California.(b) A permit issued under the program should not limit an employee to a single employer or occupation.11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:(a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.(b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.(c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.(d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industries to provide greater assurances that employers are in compliance with state laws regarding these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers. conditions.(f) Recommendations for how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.(g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.
1+Amended IN Assembly February 28, 2018 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1885Introduced by Assembly Members Eduardo Garcia, Caballero, and Mathis(Principal coauthor: Senator Cannella)January 18, 2018 An act to add Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 11050) to Part 1 of Division 3 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, relating to undocumented workers.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1885, as amended, Eduardo Garcia. Undocumented workers: California Agricultural and Service Worker Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.Existing provisions of federal law regulate immigration.This bill would require the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture to convene a working group to address the issues relating to a work permit program for undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees to work and live in the state state, and to serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government. The bill would require the working group to create and submit to the Legislature and the Governor a report expressing its recommendations, which would be required to incorporate specified provisions describing a model program. The bill would require the Governor, using the report, to either make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, or California. The bill would require the Governor to issue an explanation as to why a formal request was not made and make recommendations to the Legislature for how a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California should be structured. if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program. The bill would state the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation if the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the California Agricultural and Service Worker Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares the following:(a) The California economy relies upon the agricultural and service industries.(a)(b) Since 2007, Californias farms and ranches continue to experience the highest agricultural output in the nation. In 2015, they generated an estimated $47 billion, which was 17 percent lower than in 2014, when they generated $54 billion. In 2013, they generated $51.3 billion. This is a substantial increase from the $36.3 billion in 2007 and $37.5 billion in 2010. Despite severe droughts and labor shortages, California continues to lead the nation in cash farm receipts. On a global scale, California ranks between 5th and 9th in the world, ahead of such countries as Canada, Mexico, Germany, and Spain. According to a study by the University of California, Davis, every dollar of value added (labor and property income and indirect business taxes) in farming and agricultural related industries generates an additional $1.27 in the state economy. For every 100 jobs in agriculture, there are 94 additional jobs created throughout the state.(c) In the past decade, farming costs have increased an estimated 88 percent, due in part to new and expanding state and federal laws and regulations. Meanwhile, foreign-produced food is being imported at an accelerated pace, and at far lower costs. In todays global market, California farmers cannot simply pass their costs onto consumers. The high costs of doing business in the state have resulted in consolidation of land and a reduction in total farmed acreage, which is detrimental to the states economy. (b)(d) Californias agricultural industry is dependent on immigrant labor, as evidenced by the most recent National Agricultural Workers Survey, which found that most of the states agricultural workers were born in Mexico and that 60 percent of crop workers have been unauthorized for the last 10 years.(c)(e) A previous study of the status of 2,300 farmworkers in California in 13 counties suggested that 95 percent of California agricultural workers were born outside the United States and 91 percent in Mexico. On average, they have been in the United States 11.1 years. Twenty-two percent have been in the United States two years or less, 10 percent are United States citizens, 33 percent have a Green Card, officially known as a Permanent Resident Card, and 57 percent are unauthorized. Of the newcomers who have been here less than two years, 99 percent are unauthorized.(d)Immigration policies that seek to deport unauthorized farmworkers or force them to abandon their jobs in agriculture would wreak swift and substantial damage to the agricultural industry in California. California agriculture would lose much of its experienced work force that has made it the most productive agricultural area in the world. At the same time, these policies would impose a substantial human cost on hundreds of thousands of farmworkers and their children, most of whom are United States citizens.(e)The federal employment-based immigration system is broken. The programs for admitting foreign workers for temporary and permanent jobs are rigid, cumbersome, inefficient, do little to protect the wages and working conditions of foreign and domestic workers, do not respond very well to employers needs, and give almost no attention to adapting the number and characteristics of foreign workers to domestic labor shortages.(f) The federal employment-based immigration programs for admitting foreign workers for temporary and permanent jobs are rigid, cumbersome, inefficient, do not respond very well to employers needs, and give almost no attention to adapting the number and characteristics of foreign workers to domestic labor shortages. (f)(g) Nevertheless, the United States Congress has repeatedly failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform, instead choosing to annually introduce primarily interior and border enforcement-only legislation and temporary worker proposals that ignore the socioeconomic profile of this essential workforce. workforce and do not account for the unique workforce needs of Californias diverse agricultural industry.(g)(h) Congress has also had strong advocacy for having the E-Verify program become mandatory for all employers. employers in conjunction with the new guest worker program. The agricultural employer community throughout the United States believes the E-Verify program requirement requirement, without a guest worker program, would eliminate a significant portion of the existing agricultural workforce with no certainty that these vacancies will be filled by United States citizens and legal residents.(h)Due to the absence of federal action on comprehensive immigration reform, the problematic and discriminatory results of E-Verify, and the unworkable framework of the federal H-2A guest worker program, agricultural interests in Oklahoma and Utah have introduced legislation creating state guest worker programs, while several other states are considering the introduction of similar state initiatives.(i) Due to the unworkable framework of the federal H-2A guest worker program, the absence of a suitable alternative program, and the potential for Congress to pass stand-alone E-verify legislation, agricultural interests in Oklahoma and Utah have introduced legislation creating state guest worker programs, while several other states are considering the introduction of similar state initiatives.(i)(j) Among Californias key economic industry sectors, the hospitality and tourism sector plays a central role in stimulating Californias sluggish economy. In 2011, the leisure and hospitality industry accounted for over $100 billion in travel-related spending. According to state records, more than two million employees, or 14 percent of all employees in California, work in leisure, hospitality, and other services. These workers serve as a foundational workforce for the states $1.8 trillion economy.(j)(k) Despite well-documented labor shortages, especially in agriculture where hourly wages have increased significantly and housing and health care services are being offered, United States-born citizens continue to avoid employment in agriculture. Observers have also begun to see the consequences to the health care of the current agricultural workforce in the state of the immigration enforcement activities of the United States Department of Homeland Security. These health care consequences have been well documented over a two-year study of agricultural workers and their healthcare profiles included in the longest running longitudinal birth cohort study based in a United States farmworker community, the Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS) Study. The two-year study found a clear link between the fear of deportations and multiple heart health risk factors in female farmworkers. The researchers at UC San Francisco and UC Berkeleys Center for Environmental Research and Childrens Health published this recent study in January 2018, further underscoring the vulnerability of the current agricultural workforce.(k)(l) Recognizing the significant contributions that unauthorized workers make to Californias economy and the need to bring these workers out of the shadows in order to improve worker conditions and at the same time provide a legal workforce for the agricultural and service industries, it is imperative that a program be created for current unauthorized workers in these industries.(l)(m) It is the intent of the Legislature that the executive and legislative branches of the federal government give the highest priority to enacting comprehensive immigration reform legislation to create a guest worker program that would confer legal status to reside in the United States to persons who would participate in the program described in this act.(m)(n) It is the intent of the Legislature that the costs of the working group established pursuant to this act be covered by nonstate funding sources.SEC. 3. Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 11050) is added to Part 1 of Division 3 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, to read: CHAPTER 8. California Agricultural and Service Resident Worker Program Article 1. General Provisions11050. As used in this chapter:(a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and a service industry employer.(c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.(d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.(e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.(f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.(h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.(b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.(d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:(1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.(2) Documentation requirements for applicants.(3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.(4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.(5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.(7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.(8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.(9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.(10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.(11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.(12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). This The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (d), (e), shall either make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, or issue an explanation as to why a formal request was not made and make recommendations to the Legislature for how a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California should be structured. California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.(g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation. Article 2. Model Program Requirements11055. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature that this article provide a model and framework for a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.(b) It is the further intent of the Legislature to recognize that, if the federal government enacts a guest worker program, it would preempt the state program.11056. (a) The program shall be implemented based on the information gathered by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture and provided to the federal government and members of the California congressional delegation pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 11051.(b) The program should be limited to undocumented persons who meet all of the following criteria:(1) The undocumented person must be 18 years of age or older.(2) The undocumented person must live in California.(3) (A) The undocumented person must have performed agricultural or service industry employment in the United States for at least 863 hours or 150 workdays during the 24-month period ending on January 25, 2019, or earned at least seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) from agricultural or service industry employment in the United States, and must have maintained agricultural or service industry employment for 431 hours or 75 workdays, or earned three thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($3,750) from that employment, on an annual basis after receiving the permit.(B) An undocumented person should be allowed to conclusively establish employment status by submitting any of the following records demonstrating the employment:(i) Records maintained by the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or any other federal, state, or local government agency, an employer, a labor organization, service labor organization, or day labor center.(ii) Itemized wage statements issued to the employee pursuant to Section 226 of the Labor Code.(C) An undocumented person who is unable to submit a document described in subparagraph (B) should be allowed to satisfy the requirement in subparagraph (A) by submitting at least two other types of reliable documents that provide evidence of employment, including any of the following:(i) Bank records.(ii) Business records.(iii) Remittance records.(D) The program should be implemented in a manner that recognizes and takes into account the difficulties encountered by an undocumented person in obtaining evidence of employment due to the persons undocumented status, including the crediting of work in cases in which an undocumented person has been employed under an assumed name.(4) The undocumented person must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(5) The undocumented person must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(6) The undocumented person must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.(c) The program should extend to an undocumented person who is an immediate family member of a person to whom a work permit has been issued. The immediate family member should be required to meet all of the following:(1) The immediate family member must reside with the undocumented person to whom a permit was issued or be enrolled in an accredited two- or four-year college or graduate program in California.(2) The immediate family member must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(3) The immediate family member must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(4) The immediate family member must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.11057. Once the program becomes authorized and operational, the following requirements should apply:(a) (1) An official or employee of the state government should not do any of the following:(A) Use information furnished by an applicant for purposes of applying for a permit under the program or any information provided by an employer or former employer for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application.(B) Make any publication in which the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified.(C) Permit a person other than a sworn officer or employee of the state to examine individual applications.(2) Information furnished by an applicant should be provided to both of the following:(A) A duly recognized state law enforcement entity in connection with a criminal investigation or a prosecution, if the information is requested in writing by the entity.(B) An official coroner, for purposes of affirmatively identifying a deceased individual, whether or not the death of the individual resulted from a crime.(3) Any person who files an application under the program and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing that it contains any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry should be disqualified from applying under the program.(b) The entities administering the program should ensure that employers employing workers authorized under the program make each of the following assurances:(1) That the job opportunity for which an employer employs an undocumented person authorized under the program is not vacant because a worker is involved in a strike, lockout, or because of a work stoppage in the course of a labor dispute involving the job opportunity at the same place of employment.(2) That the wages and benefits provided to undocumented persons working under a permit issued under the program are comparable to the wages and benefits provided to legal residents who are United States citizens, but in no case less than the state minimum wage.(3) That an employer participating in the program shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local labor laws, including laws affecting migrant and seasonal agricultural workers, with respect to all United States workers and undocumented workers.(c) An employer of a person permitted to work in this state under the program should provide a written record of employment, demonstrating the hours worked and wages paid, to the employee issued a permit, and provide a copy of the record to the state.11058. (a) An employee permitted to work in this state under the program should be entitled to the same wage, hour, and working condition protections provided to an employee who is a legal resident of California.(b) A permit issued under the program should not limit an employee to a single employer or occupation.11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:(a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.(b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.(c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.(d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industry industries to provide greater assurances that these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers.(f) Recommendations for addressing the process how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.(g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.
22
3- Amended IN Assembly April 09, 2018 Amended IN Assembly February 28, 2018 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1885Introduced by Assembly Members Eduardo Garcia, Caballero, and Mathis(Principal coauthor: Senator Cannella)January 18, 2018 An act to add Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 11050) to Part 1 of Division 3 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, relating to undocumented workers.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1885, as amended, Eduardo Garcia. Undocumented workers: California Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.Existing provisions of federal law regulate immigration.This bill would require the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture to determine the extent of labor shortages in the state agricultural and service industries and provide that information to specified federal government entities. The bill would require those departments to convene a working group to address the issues relating to a work permit program for undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees to work and live in the state, and to serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government. The bill would require the working group to create and submit to the Legislature and the Governor a report expressing its recommendations, which would be required to incorporate specified provisions describing a model program. The bill would require the Governor, using the report, to make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California. The bill would require the Governor to issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program. The bill would make the implementation of these requirements contingent on a determination by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture that nonstate funds are available for the purposes of the bill. The bill would state the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation if the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Assembly February 28, 2018 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1885Introduced by Assembly Members Eduardo Garcia, Caballero, and Mathis(Principal coauthor: Senator Cannella)January 18, 2018 An act to add Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 11050) to Part 1 of Division 3 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, relating to undocumented workers.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1885, as amended, Eduardo Garcia. Undocumented workers: California Agricultural and Service Worker Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.Existing provisions of federal law regulate immigration.This bill would require the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture to convene a working group to address the issues relating to a work permit program for undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees to work and live in the state state, and to serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government. The bill would require the working group to create and submit to the Legislature and the Governor a report expressing its recommendations, which would be required to incorporate specified provisions describing a model program. The bill would require the Governor, using the report, to either make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, or California. The bill would require the Governor to issue an explanation as to why a formal request was not made and make recommendations to the Legislature for how a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California should be structured. if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program. The bill would state the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation if the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Amended IN Assembly April 09, 2018 Amended IN Assembly February 28, 2018
5+ Amended IN Assembly February 28, 2018
66
7-Amended IN Assembly April 09, 2018
87 Amended IN Assembly February 28, 2018
98
109 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION
1110
1211 Assembly Bill No. 1885
1312
1413 Introduced by Assembly Members Eduardo Garcia, Caballero, and Mathis(Principal coauthor: Senator Cannella)January 18, 2018
1514
1615 Introduced by Assembly Members Eduardo Garcia, Caballero, and Mathis(Principal coauthor: Senator Cannella)
1716 January 18, 2018
1817
1918 An act to add Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 11050) to Part 1 of Division 3 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, relating to undocumented workers.
2019
2120 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2221
2322 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2423
25-AB 1885, as amended, Eduardo Garcia. Undocumented workers: California Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.
24+AB 1885, as amended, Eduardo Garcia. Undocumented workers: California Agricultural and Service Worker Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.
2625
27-Existing provisions of federal law regulate immigration.This bill would require the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture to determine the extent of labor shortages in the state agricultural and service industries and provide that information to specified federal government entities. The bill would require those departments to convene a working group to address the issues relating to a work permit program for undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees to work and live in the state, and to serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government. The bill would require the working group to create and submit to the Legislature and the Governor a report expressing its recommendations, which would be required to incorporate specified provisions describing a model program. The bill would require the Governor, using the report, to make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California. The bill would require the Governor to issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program. The bill would make the implementation of these requirements contingent on a determination by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture that nonstate funds are available for the purposes of the bill. The bill would state the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation if the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.
26+Existing provisions of federal law regulate immigration.This bill would require the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture to convene a working group to address the issues relating to a work permit program for undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees to work and live in the state state, and to serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government. The bill would require the working group to create and submit to the Legislature and the Governor a report expressing its recommendations, which would be required to incorporate specified provisions describing a model program. The bill would require the Governor, using the report, to either make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, or California. The bill would require the Governor to issue an explanation as to why a formal request was not made and make recommendations to the Legislature for how a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California should be structured. if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program. The bill would state the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation if the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.
2827
2928 Existing provisions of federal law regulate immigration.
3029
31-This bill would require the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture to determine the extent of labor shortages in the state agricultural and service industries and provide that information to specified federal government entities. The bill would require those departments to convene a working group to address the issues relating to a work permit program for undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees to work and live in the state, and to serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government. The bill would require the working group to create and submit to the Legislature and the Governor a report expressing its recommendations, which would be required to incorporate specified provisions describing a model program. The bill would require the Governor, using the report, to make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California. The bill would require the Governor to issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program. The bill would make the implementation of these requirements contingent on a determination by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture that nonstate funds are available for the purposes of the bill. The bill would state the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation if the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.
30+This bill would require the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture to convene a working group to address the issues relating to a work permit program for undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees to work and live in the state state, and to serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government. The bill would require the working group to create and submit to the Legislature and the Governor a report expressing its recommendations, which would be required to incorporate specified provisions describing a model program. The bill would require the Governor, using the report, to either make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, or California. The bill would require the Governor to issue an explanation as to why a formal request was not made and make recommendations to the Legislature for how a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California should be structured. if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program. The bill would state the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation if the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.
3231
3332 ## Digest Key
3433
3534 ## Bill Text
3635
37-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the California Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares the following:(a) The California economy relies upon the agricultural and service industries.(b) Since 2007, Californias farms and ranches continue to experience the highest agricultural output in the nation. In 2015, they generated an estimated $47 billion, which was 17 percent lower than in 2014, when they generated $54 billion. In 2013, they generated $51.3 billion. This is a substantial increase from the $36.3 billion in 2007 and $37.5 billion in 2010. Despite severe droughts and labor shortages, California continues to lead the nation in cash farm receipts. On a global scale, California ranks between 5th and 9th in the world, ahead of such countries as Canada, Mexico, Germany, and Spain. According to a study by the University of California, Davis, every dollar of value added (labor and property income and indirect business taxes) in farming and agricultural related farming- and agriculture-related industries generates an additional $1.27 in the state economy. For every 100 jobs in agriculture, there are 94 additional jobs created throughout the state.(c) In the past decade, farming costs have increased an estimated 88 percent, due in part to new and expanding state and federal laws and regulations. Meanwhile, foreign-produced food is being imported at an accelerated pace, and at far lower costs. In todays global market, California farmers cannot simply pass their costs onto consumers. The high costs of doing business in the state have resulted in consolidation of land and a reduction in total farmed acreage, which is detrimental to the states economy. (d) Californias agricultural industry is dependent on immigrant labor, as evidenced by the most recent National Agricultural Workers Survey, which found that most of the states agricultural workers were born in Mexico and that 60 percent of crop workers have been unauthorized for the last 10 years.(e) A previous study of the status of 2,300 farmworkers in California in 13 counties suggested that 95 percent of California agricultural workers were born outside the United States and 91 percent in Mexico. On average, they have been in the United States 11.1 years. Twenty-two percent have been in the United States two years or less, 10 percent are United States citizens, 33 percent have a Green Card, officially known as a Permanent Resident Card, and 57 percent are unauthorized. Of the newcomers who have been here less than two years, 99 percent are unauthorized.(f) The federal employment-based immigration programs for admitting foreign workers for temporary and permanent jobs are rigid, cumbersome, inefficient, do not respond very well to employers needs, and give almost no attention to adapting the number and characteristics of foreign workers to domestic labor shortages. (g) Nevertheless, the United States Congress has repeatedly failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform, instead choosing to annually introduce primarily interior and border enforcement-only legislation and temporary worker proposals that ignore the socioeconomic profile of this essential workforce and do not account for the unique workforce needs of Californias diverse agricultural industry.(h) Congress has also had strong advocacy for having the E-Verify program become mandatory for all employers in conjunction with the new guest worker program. The agricultural employer community throughout the United States believes the E-Verify program requirement, without a guest worker program, would eliminate a significant portion of the existing agricultural workforce with no certainty that these vacancies will be filled by United States citizens and legal residents.(i) Due to the unworkable framework of the federal H-2A guest worker program, the absence of a suitable alternative program, and the potential for Congress to pass stand-alone E-verify legislation, agricultural interests in Oklahoma and Utah have introduced legislation creating state guest worker programs, while several other states are considering the introduction of similar state initiatives.(j) Among Californias key economic industry sectors, the hospitality and tourism sector plays a central role in stimulating Californias sluggish economy. In 2011, the leisure and hospitality industry accounted for over $100 billion in travel-related spending. According to state records, more than two million employees, or 14 percent of all employees in California, work in leisure, hospitality, and other services. These workers serve as a foundational workforce for the states $1.8 trillion economy.(k) Despite well-documented labor shortages, especially in agriculture where hourly wages have increased significantly and housing and health care services are being offered, United States-born citizens continue to avoid employment in agriculture.(l) Recognizing the significant contributions that unauthorized workers make to Californias economy and the need to bring these workers out of the shadows in order to improve worker conditions and at the same time provide a legal workforce for the agricultural and service industries, it is imperative that a program be created for current unauthorized workers in these industries.(m) It is the intent of the Legislature that the executive and legislative branches of the federal government give the highest priority to enacting legislation to create a guest worker program that would confer legal status to reside in the United States to persons who would participate in the program described in this act.(n) It is the intent of the Legislature that the costs of the working group established pursuant to this act be covered by nonstate funding sources.SEC. 3. Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 11050) is added to Part 1 of Division 3 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, to read: CHAPTER 8. California Resident Worker Program Article 1. General Provisions11050. As used in this chapter:(a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and or a service industry employer.(c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.(d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.(e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.(f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.(h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.(b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and representatives of stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.(d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:(1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.(2) Documentation requirements for applicants.(3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.(4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.(5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for to cover the costs of the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.(7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.(8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.(9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.(10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.(11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.(12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (e), shall make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.(g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation.11052. The requirements of Section 11051 shall be implemented only after the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture make a determination that nonstate funds in an amount sufficient to fully support the purposes of Section 11051 are available. Article 2. Model Program Requirements11055. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature that this article provide a model and framework for a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.(b) It is the further intent of the Legislature to recognize that, if the federal government enacts a guest worker program, it would preempt the state program.11056. (a) The program shall be implemented based on the information gathered by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture and provided to the federal government and members of the California congressional delegation pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 11051.(b) The program should be limited to undocumented persons who meet all of the following criteria:(1) The undocumented person must be 18 years of age or older.(2) The undocumented person must live in California.(3) (A) The undocumented person must have performed agricultural or service industry employment in the United States for at least 863 hours or 150 workdays during the 24-month period ending on January 25, 2019, or earned at least seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) from agricultural or service industry employment in the United States, and must have maintained agricultural or service industry employment for 431 hours or 75 workdays, or earned three thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($3,750) from that employment, on an annual basis after receiving the permit.(B) An undocumented person should be allowed to conclusively establish employment status by submitting any of the following records demonstrating the employment:(i) Records maintained by the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or any other federal, state, or local government agency, an employer, a labor organization, service labor organization, or day labor center.(ii) Itemized wage statements issued to the employee pursuant to Section 226 of the Labor Code.(C) An undocumented person who is unable to submit a document described in subparagraph (B) should be allowed to satisfy the requirement in subparagraph (A) by submitting at least two other types of reliable documents that provide evidence of employment, including any of the following:(i) Bank records.(ii) Business records.(iii) Remittance records.(D) The program should be implemented in a manner that recognizes and takes into account the difficulties encountered by an undocumented person in obtaining evidence of employment due to the persons undocumented status, including the crediting of work in cases in which an undocumented person has been employed under an assumed name.(4) The undocumented person must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(5) The undocumented person must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(6) The undocumented person must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.(c) The program should extend to an undocumented person who is an immediate family member of a person to whom a work permit has been issued. The immediate family member should be required to meet all of the following:(1) The immediate family member must reside with the undocumented person to whom a permit was issued or be enrolled in an accredited two- or four-year college or graduate program in California.(2) The immediate family member must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(3) The immediate family member must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(4) The immediate family member must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.11057. Once the program becomes authorized and operational, the following requirements should apply:(a) (1) An official or employee of the state government should not do any of the following:(A) Use information furnished by an applicant for purposes of applying for a permit under the program or any information provided by an employer or former employer for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application.(B) Make any publication in which the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified.(C) Permit a person other than a sworn officer or employee of the state to examine individual applications.(2) Information furnished by an applicant should be provided to both of the following:(A) A duly recognized state law enforcement entity in connection with a criminal investigation or a prosecution, if the information is requested in writing by the entity.(B) An official coroner, for purposes of affirmatively identifying a deceased individual, whether or not the death of the individual resulted from a crime.(3) Any person who files an application under the program and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing that it contains any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry should be disqualified from applying under the program.(b) The entities administering the program should ensure that employers employing workers authorized under the program make each of the following assurances:(1) That the job opportunity for which an employer employs an undocumented person authorized under the program is not vacant because a worker is involved in a strike, lockout, or because of a work stoppage in the course of a labor dispute involving the job opportunity at the same place of employment.(2) That the wages and benefits provided to undocumented persons working under a permit issued under the program are comparable to the wages and benefits provided to legal residents who are United States citizens, but in no case less than the state minimum wage.(3) That an employer participating in the program shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local labor laws, including laws affecting migrant and seasonal agricultural workers, with respect to all United States workers and undocumented workers.(c) An employer of a person permitted to work in this state under the program should provide a written record of employment, demonstrating the hours worked and wages paid, to the employee issued a permit, and provide a copy of the record to the state.11058. (a) An employee permitted to work in this state under the program should be entitled to the same wage, hour, and working condition protections provided to an employee who is a legal resident of California.(b) A permit issued under the program should not limit an employee to a single employer or occupation.11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:(a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.(b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.(c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.(d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industries to provide greater assurances that employers are in compliance with state laws regarding these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers. conditions.(f) Recommendations for how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.(g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.
36+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the California Agricultural and Service Worker Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares the following:(a) The California economy relies upon the agricultural and service industries.(a)(b) Since 2007, Californias farms and ranches continue to experience the highest agricultural output in the nation. In 2015, they generated an estimated $47 billion, which was 17 percent lower than in 2014, when they generated $54 billion. In 2013, they generated $51.3 billion. This is a substantial increase from the $36.3 billion in 2007 and $37.5 billion in 2010. Despite severe droughts and labor shortages, California continues to lead the nation in cash farm receipts. On a global scale, California ranks between 5th and 9th in the world, ahead of such countries as Canada, Mexico, Germany, and Spain. According to a study by the University of California, Davis, every dollar of value added (labor and property income and indirect business taxes) in farming and agricultural related industries generates an additional $1.27 in the state economy. For every 100 jobs in agriculture, there are 94 additional jobs created throughout the state.(c) In the past decade, farming costs have increased an estimated 88 percent, due in part to new and expanding state and federal laws and regulations. Meanwhile, foreign-produced food is being imported at an accelerated pace, and at far lower costs. In todays global market, California farmers cannot simply pass their costs onto consumers. The high costs of doing business in the state have resulted in consolidation of land and a reduction in total farmed acreage, which is detrimental to the states economy. (b)(d) Californias agricultural industry is dependent on immigrant labor, as evidenced by the most recent National Agricultural Workers Survey, which found that most of the states agricultural workers were born in Mexico and that 60 percent of crop workers have been unauthorized for the last 10 years.(c)(e) A previous study of the status of 2,300 farmworkers in California in 13 counties suggested that 95 percent of California agricultural workers were born outside the United States and 91 percent in Mexico. On average, they have been in the United States 11.1 years. Twenty-two percent have been in the United States two years or less, 10 percent are United States citizens, 33 percent have a Green Card, officially known as a Permanent Resident Card, and 57 percent are unauthorized. Of the newcomers who have been here less than two years, 99 percent are unauthorized.(d)Immigration policies that seek to deport unauthorized farmworkers or force them to abandon their jobs in agriculture would wreak swift and substantial damage to the agricultural industry in California. California agriculture would lose much of its experienced work force that has made it the most productive agricultural area in the world. At the same time, these policies would impose a substantial human cost on hundreds of thousands of farmworkers and their children, most of whom are United States citizens.(e)The federal employment-based immigration system is broken. The programs for admitting foreign workers for temporary and permanent jobs are rigid, cumbersome, inefficient, do little to protect the wages and working conditions of foreign and domestic workers, do not respond very well to employers needs, and give almost no attention to adapting the number and characteristics of foreign workers to domestic labor shortages.(f) The federal employment-based immigration programs for admitting foreign workers for temporary and permanent jobs are rigid, cumbersome, inefficient, do not respond very well to employers needs, and give almost no attention to adapting the number and characteristics of foreign workers to domestic labor shortages. (f)(g) Nevertheless, the United States Congress has repeatedly failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform, instead choosing to annually introduce primarily interior and border enforcement-only legislation and temporary worker proposals that ignore the socioeconomic profile of this essential workforce. workforce and do not account for the unique workforce needs of Californias diverse agricultural industry.(g)(h) Congress has also had strong advocacy for having the E-Verify program become mandatory for all employers. employers in conjunction with the new guest worker program. The agricultural employer community throughout the United States believes the E-Verify program requirement requirement, without a guest worker program, would eliminate a significant portion of the existing agricultural workforce with no certainty that these vacancies will be filled by United States citizens and legal residents.(h)Due to the absence of federal action on comprehensive immigration reform, the problematic and discriminatory results of E-Verify, and the unworkable framework of the federal H-2A guest worker program, agricultural interests in Oklahoma and Utah have introduced legislation creating state guest worker programs, while several other states are considering the introduction of similar state initiatives.(i) Due to the unworkable framework of the federal H-2A guest worker program, the absence of a suitable alternative program, and the potential for Congress to pass stand-alone E-verify legislation, agricultural interests in Oklahoma and Utah have introduced legislation creating state guest worker programs, while several other states are considering the introduction of similar state initiatives.(i)(j) Among Californias key economic industry sectors, the hospitality and tourism sector plays a central role in stimulating Californias sluggish economy. In 2011, the leisure and hospitality industry accounted for over $100 billion in travel-related spending. According to state records, more than two million employees, or 14 percent of all employees in California, work in leisure, hospitality, and other services. These workers serve as a foundational workforce for the states $1.8 trillion economy.(j)(k) Despite well-documented labor shortages, especially in agriculture where hourly wages have increased significantly and housing and health care services are being offered, United States-born citizens continue to avoid employment in agriculture. Observers have also begun to see the consequences to the health care of the current agricultural workforce in the state of the immigration enforcement activities of the United States Department of Homeland Security. These health care consequences have been well documented over a two-year study of agricultural workers and their healthcare profiles included in the longest running longitudinal birth cohort study based in a United States farmworker community, the Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS) Study. The two-year study found a clear link between the fear of deportations and multiple heart health risk factors in female farmworkers. The researchers at UC San Francisco and UC Berkeleys Center for Environmental Research and Childrens Health published this recent study in January 2018, further underscoring the vulnerability of the current agricultural workforce.(k)(l) Recognizing the significant contributions that unauthorized workers make to Californias economy and the need to bring these workers out of the shadows in order to improve worker conditions and at the same time provide a legal workforce for the agricultural and service industries, it is imperative that a program be created for current unauthorized workers in these industries.(l)(m) It is the intent of the Legislature that the executive and legislative branches of the federal government give the highest priority to enacting comprehensive immigration reform legislation to create a guest worker program that would confer legal status to reside in the United States to persons who would participate in the program described in this act.(m)(n) It is the intent of the Legislature that the costs of the working group established pursuant to this act be covered by nonstate funding sources.SEC. 3. Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 11050) is added to Part 1 of Division 3 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, to read: CHAPTER 8. California Agricultural and Service Resident Worker Program Article 1. General Provisions11050. As used in this chapter:(a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and a service industry employer.(c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.(d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.(e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.(f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.(h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.(b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.(d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:(1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.(2) Documentation requirements for applicants.(3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.(4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.(5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.(7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.(8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.(9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.(10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.(11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.(12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). This The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (d), (e), shall either make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, or issue an explanation as to why a formal request was not made and make recommendations to the Legislature for how a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California should be structured. California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.(g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation. Article 2. Model Program Requirements11055. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature that this article provide a model and framework for a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.(b) It is the further intent of the Legislature to recognize that, if the federal government enacts a guest worker program, it would preempt the state program.11056. (a) The program shall be implemented based on the information gathered by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture and provided to the federal government and members of the California congressional delegation pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 11051.(b) The program should be limited to undocumented persons who meet all of the following criteria:(1) The undocumented person must be 18 years of age or older.(2) The undocumented person must live in California.(3) (A) The undocumented person must have performed agricultural or service industry employment in the United States for at least 863 hours or 150 workdays during the 24-month period ending on January 25, 2019, or earned at least seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) from agricultural or service industry employment in the United States, and must have maintained agricultural or service industry employment for 431 hours or 75 workdays, or earned three thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($3,750) from that employment, on an annual basis after receiving the permit.(B) An undocumented person should be allowed to conclusively establish employment status by submitting any of the following records demonstrating the employment:(i) Records maintained by the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or any other federal, state, or local government agency, an employer, a labor organization, service labor organization, or day labor center.(ii) Itemized wage statements issued to the employee pursuant to Section 226 of the Labor Code.(C) An undocumented person who is unable to submit a document described in subparagraph (B) should be allowed to satisfy the requirement in subparagraph (A) by submitting at least two other types of reliable documents that provide evidence of employment, including any of the following:(i) Bank records.(ii) Business records.(iii) Remittance records.(D) The program should be implemented in a manner that recognizes and takes into account the difficulties encountered by an undocumented person in obtaining evidence of employment due to the persons undocumented status, including the crediting of work in cases in which an undocumented person has been employed under an assumed name.(4) The undocumented person must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(5) The undocumented person must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(6) The undocumented person must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.(c) The program should extend to an undocumented person who is an immediate family member of a person to whom a work permit has been issued. The immediate family member should be required to meet all of the following:(1) The immediate family member must reside with the undocumented person to whom a permit was issued or be enrolled in an accredited two- or four-year college or graduate program in California.(2) The immediate family member must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(3) The immediate family member must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(4) The immediate family member must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.11057. Once the program becomes authorized and operational, the following requirements should apply:(a) (1) An official or employee of the state government should not do any of the following:(A) Use information furnished by an applicant for purposes of applying for a permit under the program or any information provided by an employer or former employer for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application.(B) Make any publication in which the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified.(C) Permit a person other than a sworn officer or employee of the state to examine individual applications.(2) Information furnished by an applicant should be provided to both of the following:(A) A duly recognized state law enforcement entity in connection with a criminal investigation or a prosecution, if the information is requested in writing by the entity.(B) An official coroner, for purposes of affirmatively identifying a deceased individual, whether or not the death of the individual resulted from a crime.(3) Any person who files an application under the program and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing that it contains any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry should be disqualified from applying under the program.(b) The entities administering the program should ensure that employers employing workers authorized under the program make each of the following assurances:(1) That the job opportunity for which an employer employs an undocumented person authorized under the program is not vacant because a worker is involved in a strike, lockout, or because of a work stoppage in the course of a labor dispute involving the job opportunity at the same place of employment.(2) That the wages and benefits provided to undocumented persons working under a permit issued under the program are comparable to the wages and benefits provided to legal residents who are United States citizens, but in no case less than the state minimum wage.(3) That an employer participating in the program shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local labor laws, including laws affecting migrant and seasonal agricultural workers, with respect to all United States workers and undocumented workers.(c) An employer of a person permitted to work in this state under the program should provide a written record of employment, demonstrating the hours worked and wages paid, to the employee issued a permit, and provide a copy of the record to the state.11058. (a) An employee permitted to work in this state under the program should be entitled to the same wage, hour, and working condition protections provided to an employee who is a legal resident of California.(b) A permit issued under the program should not limit an employee to a single employer or occupation.11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:(a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.(b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.(c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.(d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industry industries to provide greater assurances that these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers.(f) Recommendations for addressing the process how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.(g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.
3837
3938 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4039
4140 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4241
43-SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the California Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.
42+SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the California Agricultural and Service Worker Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.
4443
45-SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the California Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.
44+SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the California Agricultural and Service Worker Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.
4645
47-SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the California Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.
46+SECTION 1. This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the California Agricultural and Service Worker Resident Worker Program and Economic Stabilization Act.
4847
4948 ### SECTION 1.
5049
51-SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares the following:(a) The California economy relies upon the agricultural and service industries.(b) Since 2007, Californias farms and ranches continue to experience the highest agricultural output in the nation. In 2015, they generated an estimated $47 billion, which was 17 percent lower than in 2014, when they generated $54 billion. In 2013, they generated $51.3 billion. This is a substantial increase from the $36.3 billion in 2007 and $37.5 billion in 2010. Despite severe droughts and labor shortages, California continues to lead the nation in cash farm receipts. On a global scale, California ranks between 5th and 9th in the world, ahead of such countries as Canada, Mexico, Germany, and Spain. According to a study by the University of California, Davis, every dollar of value added (labor and property income and indirect business taxes) in farming and agricultural related farming- and agriculture-related industries generates an additional $1.27 in the state economy. For every 100 jobs in agriculture, there are 94 additional jobs created throughout the state.(c) In the past decade, farming costs have increased an estimated 88 percent, due in part to new and expanding state and federal laws and regulations. Meanwhile, foreign-produced food is being imported at an accelerated pace, and at far lower costs. In todays global market, California farmers cannot simply pass their costs onto consumers. The high costs of doing business in the state have resulted in consolidation of land and a reduction in total farmed acreage, which is detrimental to the states economy. (d) Californias agricultural industry is dependent on immigrant labor, as evidenced by the most recent National Agricultural Workers Survey, which found that most of the states agricultural workers were born in Mexico and that 60 percent of crop workers have been unauthorized for the last 10 years.(e) A previous study of the status of 2,300 farmworkers in California in 13 counties suggested that 95 percent of California agricultural workers were born outside the United States and 91 percent in Mexico. On average, they have been in the United States 11.1 years. Twenty-two percent have been in the United States two years or less, 10 percent are United States citizens, 33 percent have a Green Card, officially known as a Permanent Resident Card, and 57 percent are unauthorized. Of the newcomers who have been here less than two years, 99 percent are unauthorized.(f) The federal employment-based immigration programs for admitting foreign workers for temporary and permanent jobs are rigid, cumbersome, inefficient, do not respond very well to employers needs, and give almost no attention to adapting the number and characteristics of foreign workers to domestic labor shortages. (g) Nevertheless, the United States Congress has repeatedly failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform, instead choosing to annually introduce primarily interior and border enforcement-only legislation and temporary worker proposals that ignore the socioeconomic profile of this essential workforce and do not account for the unique workforce needs of Californias diverse agricultural industry.(h) Congress has also had strong advocacy for having the E-Verify program become mandatory for all employers in conjunction with the new guest worker program. The agricultural employer community throughout the United States believes the E-Verify program requirement, without a guest worker program, would eliminate a significant portion of the existing agricultural workforce with no certainty that these vacancies will be filled by United States citizens and legal residents.(i) Due to the unworkable framework of the federal H-2A guest worker program, the absence of a suitable alternative program, and the potential for Congress to pass stand-alone E-verify legislation, agricultural interests in Oklahoma and Utah have introduced legislation creating state guest worker programs, while several other states are considering the introduction of similar state initiatives.(j) Among Californias key economic industry sectors, the hospitality and tourism sector plays a central role in stimulating Californias sluggish economy. In 2011, the leisure and hospitality industry accounted for over $100 billion in travel-related spending. According to state records, more than two million employees, or 14 percent of all employees in California, work in leisure, hospitality, and other services. These workers serve as a foundational workforce for the states $1.8 trillion economy.(k) Despite well-documented labor shortages, especially in agriculture where hourly wages have increased significantly and housing and health care services are being offered, United States-born citizens continue to avoid employment in agriculture.(l) Recognizing the significant contributions that unauthorized workers make to Californias economy and the need to bring these workers out of the shadows in order to improve worker conditions and at the same time provide a legal workforce for the agricultural and service industries, it is imperative that a program be created for current unauthorized workers in these industries.(m) It is the intent of the Legislature that the executive and legislative branches of the federal government give the highest priority to enacting legislation to create a guest worker program that would confer legal status to reside in the United States to persons who would participate in the program described in this act.(n) It is the intent of the Legislature that the costs of the working group established pursuant to this act be covered by nonstate funding sources.
50+SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares the following:(a) The California economy relies upon the agricultural and service industries.(a)(b) Since 2007, Californias farms and ranches continue to experience the highest agricultural output in the nation. In 2015, they generated an estimated $47 billion, which was 17 percent lower than in 2014, when they generated $54 billion. In 2013, they generated $51.3 billion. This is a substantial increase from the $36.3 billion in 2007 and $37.5 billion in 2010. Despite severe droughts and labor shortages, California continues to lead the nation in cash farm receipts. On a global scale, California ranks between 5th and 9th in the world, ahead of such countries as Canada, Mexico, Germany, and Spain. According to a study by the University of California, Davis, every dollar of value added (labor and property income and indirect business taxes) in farming and agricultural related industries generates an additional $1.27 in the state economy. For every 100 jobs in agriculture, there are 94 additional jobs created throughout the state.(c) In the past decade, farming costs have increased an estimated 88 percent, due in part to new and expanding state and federal laws and regulations. Meanwhile, foreign-produced food is being imported at an accelerated pace, and at far lower costs. In todays global market, California farmers cannot simply pass their costs onto consumers. The high costs of doing business in the state have resulted in consolidation of land and a reduction in total farmed acreage, which is detrimental to the states economy. (b)(d) Californias agricultural industry is dependent on immigrant labor, as evidenced by the most recent National Agricultural Workers Survey, which found that most of the states agricultural workers were born in Mexico and that 60 percent of crop workers have been unauthorized for the last 10 years.(c)(e) A previous study of the status of 2,300 farmworkers in California in 13 counties suggested that 95 percent of California agricultural workers were born outside the United States and 91 percent in Mexico. On average, they have been in the United States 11.1 years. Twenty-two percent have been in the United States two years or less, 10 percent are United States citizens, 33 percent have a Green Card, officially known as a Permanent Resident Card, and 57 percent are unauthorized. Of the newcomers who have been here less than two years, 99 percent are unauthorized.(d)Immigration policies that seek to deport unauthorized farmworkers or force them to abandon their jobs in agriculture would wreak swift and substantial damage to the agricultural industry in California. California agriculture would lose much of its experienced work force that has made it the most productive agricultural area in the world. At the same time, these policies would impose a substantial human cost on hundreds of thousands of farmworkers and their children, most of whom are United States citizens.(e)The federal employment-based immigration system is broken. The programs for admitting foreign workers for temporary and permanent jobs are rigid, cumbersome, inefficient, do little to protect the wages and working conditions of foreign and domestic workers, do not respond very well to employers needs, and give almost no attention to adapting the number and characteristics of foreign workers to domestic labor shortages.(f) The federal employment-based immigration programs for admitting foreign workers for temporary and permanent jobs are rigid, cumbersome, inefficient, do not respond very well to employers needs, and give almost no attention to adapting the number and characteristics of foreign workers to domestic labor shortages. (f)(g) Nevertheless, the United States Congress has repeatedly failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform, instead choosing to annually introduce primarily interior and border enforcement-only legislation and temporary worker proposals that ignore the socioeconomic profile of this essential workforce. workforce and do not account for the unique workforce needs of Californias diverse agricultural industry.(g)(h) Congress has also had strong advocacy for having the E-Verify program become mandatory for all employers. employers in conjunction with the new guest worker program. The agricultural employer community throughout the United States believes the E-Verify program requirement requirement, without a guest worker program, would eliminate a significant portion of the existing agricultural workforce with no certainty that these vacancies will be filled by United States citizens and legal residents.(h)Due to the absence of federal action on comprehensive immigration reform, the problematic and discriminatory results of E-Verify, and the unworkable framework of the federal H-2A guest worker program, agricultural interests in Oklahoma and Utah have introduced legislation creating state guest worker programs, while several other states are considering the introduction of similar state initiatives.(i) Due to the unworkable framework of the federal H-2A guest worker program, the absence of a suitable alternative program, and the potential for Congress to pass stand-alone E-verify legislation, agricultural interests in Oklahoma and Utah have introduced legislation creating state guest worker programs, while several other states are considering the introduction of similar state initiatives.(i)(j) Among Californias key economic industry sectors, the hospitality and tourism sector plays a central role in stimulating Californias sluggish economy. In 2011, the leisure and hospitality industry accounted for over $100 billion in travel-related spending. According to state records, more than two million employees, or 14 percent of all employees in California, work in leisure, hospitality, and other services. These workers serve as a foundational workforce for the states $1.8 trillion economy.(j)(k) Despite well-documented labor shortages, especially in agriculture where hourly wages have increased significantly and housing and health care services are being offered, United States-born citizens continue to avoid employment in agriculture. Observers have also begun to see the consequences to the health care of the current agricultural workforce in the state of the immigration enforcement activities of the United States Department of Homeland Security. These health care consequences have been well documented over a two-year study of agricultural workers and their healthcare profiles included in the longest running longitudinal birth cohort study based in a United States farmworker community, the Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS) Study. The two-year study found a clear link between the fear of deportations and multiple heart health risk factors in female farmworkers. The researchers at UC San Francisco and UC Berkeleys Center for Environmental Research and Childrens Health published this recent study in January 2018, further underscoring the vulnerability of the current agricultural workforce.(k)(l) Recognizing the significant contributions that unauthorized workers make to Californias economy and the need to bring these workers out of the shadows in order to improve worker conditions and at the same time provide a legal workforce for the agricultural and service industries, it is imperative that a program be created for current unauthorized workers in these industries.(l)(m) It is the intent of the Legislature that the executive and legislative branches of the federal government give the highest priority to enacting comprehensive immigration reform legislation to create a guest worker program that would confer legal status to reside in the United States to persons who would participate in the program described in this act.(m)(n) It is the intent of the Legislature that the costs of the working group established pursuant to this act be covered by nonstate funding sources.
5251
53-SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares the following:(a) The California economy relies upon the agricultural and service industries.(b) Since 2007, Californias farms and ranches continue to experience the highest agricultural output in the nation. In 2015, they generated an estimated $47 billion, which was 17 percent lower than in 2014, when they generated $54 billion. In 2013, they generated $51.3 billion. This is a substantial increase from the $36.3 billion in 2007 and $37.5 billion in 2010. Despite severe droughts and labor shortages, California continues to lead the nation in cash farm receipts. On a global scale, California ranks between 5th and 9th in the world, ahead of such countries as Canada, Mexico, Germany, and Spain. According to a study by the University of California, Davis, every dollar of value added (labor and property income and indirect business taxes) in farming and agricultural related farming- and agriculture-related industries generates an additional $1.27 in the state economy. For every 100 jobs in agriculture, there are 94 additional jobs created throughout the state.(c) In the past decade, farming costs have increased an estimated 88 percent, due in part to new and expanding state and federal laws and regulations. Meanwhile, foreign-produced food is being imported at an accelerated pace, and at far lower costs. In todays global market, California farmers cannot simply pass their costs onto consumers. The high costs of doing business in the state have resulted in consolidation of land and a reduction in total farmed acreage, which is detrimental to the states economy. (d) Californias agricultural industry is dependent on immigrant labor, as evidenced by the most recent National Agricultural Workers Survey, which found that most of the states agricultural workers were born in Mexico and that 60 percent of crop workers have been unauthorized for the last 10 years.(e) A previous study of the status of 2,300 farmworkers in California in 13 counties suggested that 95 percent of California agricultural workers were born outside the United States and 91 percent in Mexico. On average, they have been in the United States 11.1 years. Twenty-two percent have been in the United States two years or less, 10 percent are United States citizens, 33 percent have a Green Card, officially known as a Permanent Resident Card, and 57 percent are unauthorized. Of the newcomers who have been here less than two years, 99 percent are unauthorized.(f) The federal employment-based immigration programs for admitting foreign workers for temporary and permanent jobs are rigid, cumbersome, inefficient, do not respond very well to employers needs, and give almost no attention to adapting the number and characteristics of foreign workers to domestic labor shortages. (g) Nevertheless, the United States Congress has repeatedly failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform, instead choosing to annually introduce primarily interior and border enforcement-only legislation and temporary worker proposals that ignore the socioeconomic profile of this essential workforce and do not account for the unique workforce needs of Californias diverse agricultural industry.(h) Congress has also had strong advocacy for having the E-Verify program become mandatory for all employers in conjunction with the new guest worker program. The agricultural employer community throughout the United States believes the E-Verify program requirement, without a guest worker program, would eliminate a significant portion of the existing agricultural workforce with no certainty that these vacancies will be filled by United States citizens and legal residents.(i) Due to the unworkable framework of the federal H-2A guest worker program, the absence of a suitable alternative program, and the potential for Congress to pass stand-alone E-verify legislation, agricultural interests in Oklahoma and Utah have introduced legislation creating state guest worker programs, while several other states are considering the introduction of similar state initiatives.(j) Among Californias key economic industry sectors, the hospitality and tourism sector plays a central role in stimulating Californias sluggish economy. In 2011, the leisure and hospitality industry accounted for over $100 billion in travel-related spending. According to state records, more than two million employees, or 14 percent of all employees in California, work in leisure, hospitality, and other services. These workers serve as a foundational workforce for the states $1.8 trillion economy.(k) Despite well-documented labor shortages, especially in agriculture where hourly wages have increased significantly and housing and health care services are being offered, United States-born citizens continue to avoid employment in agriculture.(l) Recognizing the significant contributions that unauthorized workers make to Californias economy and the need to bring these workers out of the shadows in order to improve worker conditions and at the same time provide a legal workforce for the agricultural and service industries, it is imperative that a program be created for current unauthorized workers in these industries.(m) It is the intent of the Legislature that the executive and legislative branches of the federal government give the highest priority to enacting legislation to create a guest worker program that would confer legal status to reside in the United States to persons who would participate in the program described in this act.(n) It is the intent of the Legislature that the costs of the working group established pursuant to this act be covered by nonstate funding sources.
52+SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares the following:(a) The California economy relies upon the agricultural and service industries.(a)(b) Since 2007, Californias farms and ranches continue to experience the highest agricultural output in the nation. In 2015, they generated an estimated $47 billion, which was 17 percent lower than in 2014, when they generated $54 billion. In 2013, they generated $51.3 billion. This is a substantial increase from the $36.3 billion in 2007 and $37.5 billion in 2010. Despite severe droughts and labor shortages, California continues to lead the nation in cash farm receipts. On a global scale, California ranks between 5th and 9th in the world, ahead of such countries as Canada, Mexico, Germany, and Spain. According to a study by the University of California, Davis, every dollar of value added (labor and property income and indirect business taxes) in farming and agricultural related industries generates an additional $1.27 in the state economy. For every 100 jobs in agriculture, there are 94 additional jobs created throughout the state.(c) In the past decade, farming costs have increased an estimated 88 percent, due in part to new and expanding state and federal laws and regulations. Meanwhile, foreign-produced food is being imported at an accelerated pace, and at far lower costs. In todays global market, California farmers cannot simply pass their costs onto consumers. The high costs of doing business in the state have resulted in consolidation of land and a reduction in total farmed acreage, which is detrimental to the states economy. (b)(d) Californias agricultural industry is dependent on immigrant labor, as evidenced by the most recent National Agricultural Workers Survey, which found that most of the states agricultural workers were born in Mexico and that 60 percent of crop workers have been unauthorized for the last 10 years.(c)(e) A previous study of the status of 2,300 farmworkers in California in 13 counties suggested that 95 percent of California agricultural workers were born outside the United States and 91 percent in Mexico. On average, they have been in the United States 11.1 years. Twenty-two percent have been in the United States two years or less, 10 percent are United States citizens, 33 percent have a Green Card, officially known as a Permanent Resident Card, and 57 percent are unauthorized. Of the newcomers who have been here less than two years, 99 percent are unauthorized.(d)Immigration policies that seek to deport unauthorized farmworkers or force them to abandon their jobs in agriculture would wreak swift and substantial damage to the agricultural industry in California. California agriculture would lose much of its experienced work force that has made it the most productive agricultural area in the world. At the same time, these policies would impose a substantial human cost on hundreds of thousands of farmworkers and their children, most of whom are United States citizens.(e)The federal employment-based immigration system is broken. The programs for admitting foreign workers for temporary and permanent jobs are rigid, cumbersome, inefficient, do little to protect the wages and working conditions of foreign and domestic workers, do not respond very well to employers needs, and give almost no attention to adapting the number and characteristics of foreign workers to domestic labor shortages.(f) The federal employment-based immigration programs for admitting foreign workers for temporary and permanent jobs are rigid, cumbersome, inefficient, do not respond very well to employers needs, and give almost no attention to adapting the number and characteristics of foreign workers to domestic labor shortages. (f)(g) Nevertheless, the United States Congress has repeatedly failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform, instead choosing to annually introduce primarily interior and border enforcement-only legislation and temporary worker proposals that ignore the socioeconomic profile of this essential workforce. workforce and do not account for the unique workforce needs of Californias diverse agricultural industry.(g)(h) Congress has also had strong advocacy for having the E-Verify program become mandatory for all employers. employers in conjunction with the new guest worker program. The agricultural employer community throughout the United States believes the E-Verify program requirement requirement, without a guest worker program, would eliminate a significant portion of the existing agricultural workforce with no certainty that these vacancies will be filled by United States citizens and legal residents.(h)Due to the absence of federal action on comprehensive immigration reform, the problematic and discriminatory results of E-Verify, and the unworkable framework of the federal H-2A guest worker program, agricultural interests in Oklahoma and Utah have introduced legislation creating state guest worker programs, while several other states are considering the introduction of similar state initiatives.(i) Due to the unworkable framework of the federal H-2A guest worker program, the absence of a suitable alternative program, and the potential for Congress to pass stand-alone E-verify legislation, agricultural interests in Oklahoma and Utah have introduced legislation creating state guest worker programs, while several other states are considering the introduction of similar state initiatives.(i)(j) Among Californias key economic industry sectors, the hospitality and tourism sector plays a central role in stimulating Californias sluggish economy. In 2011, the leisure and hospitality industry accounted for over $100 billion in travel-related spending. According to state records, more than two million employees, or 14 percent of all employees in California, work in leisure, hospitality, and other services. These workers serve as a foundational workforce for the states $1.8 trillion economy.(j)(k) Despite well-documented labor shortages, especially in agriculture where hourly wages have increased significantly and housing and health care services are being offered, United States-born citizens continue to avoid employment in agriculture. Observers have also begun to see the consequences to the health care of the current agricultural workforce in the state of the immigration enforcement activities of the United States Department of Homeland Security. These health care consequences have been well documented over a two-year study of agricultural workers and their healthcare profiles included in the longest running longitudinal birth cohort study based in a United States farmworker community, the Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS) Study. The two-year study found a clear link between the fear of deportations and multiple heart health risk factors in female farmworkers. The researchers at UC San Francisco and UC Berkeleys Center for Environmental Research and Childrens Health published this recent study in January 2018, further underscoring the vulnerability of the current agricultural workforce.(k)(l) Recognizing the significant contributions that unauthorized workers make to Californias economy and the need to bring these workers out of the shadows in order to improve worker conditions and at the same time provide a legal workforce for the agricultural and service industries, it is imperative that a program be created for current unauthorized workers in these industries.(l)(m) It is the intent of the Legislature that the executive and legislative branches of the federal government give the highest priority to enacting comprehensive immigration reform legislation to create a guest worker program that would confer legal status to reside in the United States to persons who would participate in the program described in this act.(m)(n) It is the intent of the Legislature that the costs of the working group established pursuant to this act be covered by nonstate funding sources.
5453
5554 SEC. 2. The Legislature finds and declares the following:
5655
5756 ### SEC. 2.
5857
5958 (a) The California economy relies upon the agricultural and service industries.
6059
61-(b) Since 2007, Californias farms and ranches continue to experience the highest agricultural output in the nation. In 2015, they generated an estimated $47 billion, which was 17 percent lower than in 2014, when they generated $54 billion. In 2013, they generated $51.3 billion. This is a substantial increase from the $36.3 billion in 2007 and $37.5 billion in 2010. Despite severe droughts and labor shortages, California continues to lead the nation in cash farm receipts. On a global scale, California ranks between 5th and 9th in the world, ahead of such countries as Canada, Mexico, Germany, and Spain. According to a study by the University of California, Davis, every dollar of value added (labor and property income and indirect business taxes) in farming and agricultural related farming- and agriculture-related industries generates an additional $1.27 in the state economy. For every 100 jobs in agriculture, there are 94 additional jobs created throughout the state.
60+(a)
61+
62+
63+
64+(b) Since 2007, Californias farms and ranches continue to experience the highest agricultural output in the nation. In 2015, they generated an estimated $47 billion, which was 17 percent lower than in 2014, when they generated $54 billion. In 2013, they generated $51.3 billion. This is a substantial increase from the $36.3 billion in 2007 and $37.5 billion in 2010. Despite severe droughts and labor shortages, California continues to lead the nation in cash farm receipts. On a global scale, California ranks between 5th and 9th in the world, ahead of such countries as Canada, Mexico, Germany, and Spain. According to a study by the University of California, Davis, every dollar of value added (labor and property income and indirect business taxes) in farming and agricultural related industries generates an additional $1.27 in the state economy. For every 100 jobs in agriculture, there are 94 additional jobs created throughout the state.
6265
6366 (c) In the past decade, farming costs have increased an estimated 88 percent, due in part to new and expanding state and federal laws and regulations. Meanwhile, foreign-produced food is being imported at an accelerated pace, and at far lower costs. In todays global market, California farmers cannot simply pass their costs onto consumers. The high costs of doing business in the state have resulted in consolidation of land and a reduction in total farmed acreage, which is detrimental to the states economy.
6467
68+(b)
69+
70+
71+
6572 (d) Californias agricultural industry is dependent on immigrant labor, as evidenced by the most recent National Agricultural Workers Survey, which found that most of the states agricultural workers were born in Mexico and that 60 percent of crop workers have been unauthorized for the last 10 years.
73+
74+(c)
75+
76+
6677
6778 (e) A previous study of the status of 2,300 farmworkers in California in 13 counties suggested that 95 percent of California agricultural workers were born outside the United States and 91 percent in Mexico. On average, they have been in the United States 11.1 years. Twenty-two percent have been in the United States two years or less, 10 percent are United States citizens, 33 percent have a Green Card, officially known as a Permanent Resident Card, and 57 percent are unauthorized. Of the newcomers who have been here less than two years, 99 percent are unauthorized.
6879
80+(d)Immigration policies that seek to deport unauthorized farmworkers or force them to abandon their jobs in agriculture would wreak swift and substantial damage to the agricultural industry in California. California agriculture would lose much of its experienced work force that has made it the most productive agricultural area in the world. At the same time, these policies would impose a substantial human cost on hundreds of thousands of farmworkers and their children, most of whom are United States citizens.
81+
82+
83+
84+(e)The federal employment-based immigration system is broken. The programs for admitting foreign workers for temporary and permanent jobs are rigid, cumbersome, inefficient, do little to protect the wages and working conditions of foreign and domestic workers, do not respond very well to employers needs, and give almost no attention to adapting the number and characteristics of foreign workers to domestic labor shortages.
85+
86+
87+
6988 (f) The federal employment-based immigration programs for admitting foreign workers for temporary and permanent jobs are rigid, cumbersome, inefficient, do not respond very well to employers needs, and give almost no attention to adapting the number and characteristics of foreign workers to domestic labor shortages.
7089
71-(g) Nevertheless, the United States Congress has repeatedly failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform, instead choosing to annually introduce primarily interior and border enforcement-only legislation and temporary worker proposals that ignore the socioeconomic profile of this essential workforce and do not account for the unique workforce needs of Californias diverse agricultural industry.
90+(f)
7291
73-(h) Congress has also had strong advocacy for having the E-Verify program become mandatory for all employers in conjunction with the new guest worker program. The agricultural employer community throughout the United States believes the E-Verify program requirement, without a guest worker program, would eliminate a significant portion of the existing agricultural workforce with no certainty that these vacancies will be filled by United States citizens and legal residents.
92+
93+
94+(g) Nevertheless, the United States Congress has repeatedly failed to pass comprehensive immigration reform, instead choosing to annually introduce primarily interior and border enforcement-only legislation and temporary worker proposals that ignore the socioeconomic profile of this essential workforce. workforce and do not account for the unique workforce needs of Californias diverse agricultural industry.
95+
96+(g)
97+
98+
99+
100+(h) Congress has also had strong advocacy for having the E-Verify program become mandatory for all employers. employers in conjunction with the new guest worker program. The agricultural employer community throughout the United States believes the E-Verify program requirement requirement, without a guest worker program, would eliminate a significant portion of the existing agricultural workforce with no certainty that these vacancies will be filled by United States citizens and legal residents.
101+
102+(h)Due to the absence of federal action on comprehensive immigration reform, the problematic and discriminatory results of E-Verify, and the unworkable framework of the federal H-2A guest worker program, agricultural interests in Oklahoma and Utah have introduced legislation creating state guest worker programs, while several other states are considering the introduction of similar state initiatives.
103+
104+
74105
75106 (i) Due to the unworkable framework of the federal H-2A guest worker program, the absence of a suitable alternative program, and the potential for Congress to pass stand-alone E-verify legislation, agricultural interests in Oklahoma and Utah have introduced legislation creating state guest worker programs, while several other states are considering the introduction of similar state initiatives.
76107
108+(i)
109+
110+
111+
77112 (j) Among Californias key economic industry sectors, the hospitality and tourism sector plays a central role in stimulating Californias sluggish economy. In 2011, the leisure and hospitality industry accounted for over $100 billion in travel-related spending. According to state records, more than two million employees, or 14 percent of all employees in California, work in leisure, hospitality, and other services. These workers serve as a foundational workforce for the states $1.8 trillion economy.
78113
79-(k) Despite well-documented labor shortages, especially in agriculture where hourly wages have increased significantly and housing and health care services are being offered, United States-born citizens continue to avoid employment in agriculture.
114+(j)
115+
116+
117+
118+(k) Despite well-documented labor shortages, especially in agriculture where hourly wages have increased significantly and housing and health care services are being offered, United States-born citizens continue to avoid employment in agriculture. Observers have also begun to see the consequences to the health care of the current agricultural workforce in the state of the immigration enforcement activities of the United States Department of Homeland Security. These health care consequences have been well documented over a two-year study of agricultural workers and their healthcare profiles included in the longest running longitudinal birth cohort study based in a United States farmworker community, the Center for the Health Assessment of Mothers and Children of Salinas (CHAMACOS) Study. The two-year study found a clear link between the fear of deportations and multiple heart health risk factors in female farmworkers. The researchers at UC San Francisco and UC Berkeleys Center for Environmental Research and Childrens Health published this recent study in January 2018, further underscoring the vulnerability of the current agricultural workforce.
119+
120+(k)
121+
122+
80123
81124 (l) Recognizing the significant contributions that unauthorized workers make to Californias economy and the need to bring these workers out of the shadows in order to improve worker conditions and at the same time provide a legal workforce for the agricultural and service industries, it is imperative that a program be created for current unauthorized workers in these industries.
82125
83-(m) It is the intent of the Legislature that the executive and legislative branches of the federal government give the highest priority to enacting legislation to create a guest worker program that would confer legal status to reside in the United States to persons who would participate in the program described in this act.
126+(l)
127+
128+
129+
130+(m) It is the intent of the Legislature that the executive and legislative branches of the federal government give the highest priority to enacting comprehensive immigration reform legislation to create a guest worker program that would confer legal status to reside in the United States to persons who would participate in the program described in this act.
131+
132+(m)
133+
134+
84135
85136 (n) It is the intent of the Legislature that the costs of the working group established pursuant to this act be covered by nonstate funding sources.
86137
87-SEC. 3. Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 11050) is added to Part 1 of Division 3 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, to read: CHAPTER 8. California Resident Worker Program Article 1. General Provisions11050. As used in this chapter:(a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and or a service industry employer.(c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.(d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.(e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.(f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.(h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.(b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and representatives of stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.(d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:(1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.(2) Documentation requirements for applicants.(3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.(4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.(5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for to cover the costs of the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.(7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.(8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.(9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.(10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.(11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.(12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (e), shall make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.(g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation.11052. The requirements of Section 11051 shall be implemented only after the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture make a determination that nonstate funds in an amount sufficient to fully support the purposes of Section 11051 are available. Article 2. Model Program Requirements11055. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature that this article provide a model and framework for a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.(b) It is the further intent of the Legislature to recognize that, if the federal government enacts a guest worker program, it would preempt the state program.11056. (a) The program shall be implemented based on the information gathered by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture and provided to the federal government and members of the California congressional delegation pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 11051.(b) The program should be limited to undocumented persons who meet all of the following criteria:(1) The undocumented person must be 18 years of age or older.(2) The undocumented person must live in California.(3) (A) The undocumented person must have performed agricultural or service industry employment in the United States for at least 863 hours or 150 workdays during the 24-month period ending on January 25, 2019, or earned at least seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) from agricultural or service industry employment in the United States, and must have maintained agricultural or service industry employment for 431 hours or 75 workdays, or earned three thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($3,750) from that employment, on an annual basis after receiving the permit.(B) An undocumented person should be allowed to conclusively establish employment status by submitting any of the following records demonstrating the employment:(i) Records maintained by the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or any other federal, state, or local government agency, an employer, a labor organization, service labor organization, or day labor center.(ii) Itemized wage statements issued to the employee pursuant to Section 226 of the Labor Code.(C) An undocumented person who is unable to submit a document described in subparagraph (B) should be allowed to satisfy the requirement in subparagraph (A) by submitting at least two other types of reliable documents that provide evidence of employment, including any of the following:(i) Bank records.(ii) Business records.(iii) Remittance records.(D) The program should be implemented in a manner that recognizes and takes into account the difficulties encountered by an undocumented person in obtaining evidence of employment due to the persons undocumented status, including the crediting of work in cases in which an undocumented person has been employed under an assumed name.(4) The undocumented person must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(5) The undocumented person must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(6) The undocumented person must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.(c) The program should extend to an undocumented person who is an immediate family member of a person to whom a work permit has been issued. The immediate family member should be required to meet all of the following:(1) The immediate family member must reside with the undocumented person to whom a permit was issued or be enrolled in an accredited two- or four-year college or graduate program in California.(2) The immediate family member must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(3) The immediate family member must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(4) The immediate family member must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.11057. Once the program becomes authorized and operational, the following requirements should apply:(a) (1) An official or employee of the state government should not do any of the following:(A) Use information furnished by an applicant for purposes of applying for a permit under the program or any information provided by an employer or former employer for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application.(B) Make any publication in which the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified.(C) Permit a person other than a sworn officer or employee of the state to examine individual applications.(2) Information furnished by an applicant should be provided to both of the following:(A) A duly recognized state law enforcement entity in connection with a criminal investigation or a prosecution, if the information is requested in writing by the entity.(B) An official coroner, for purposes of affirmatively identifying a deceased individual, whether or not the death of the individual resulted from a crime.(3) Any person who files an application under the program and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing that it contains any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry should be disqualified from applying under the program.(b) The entities administering the program should ensure that employers employing workers authorized under the program make each of the following assurances:(1) That the job opportunity for which an employer employs an undocumented person authorized under the program is not vacant because a worker is involved in a strike, lockout, or because of a work stoppage in the course of a labor dispute involving the job opportunity at the same place of employment.(2) That the wages and benefits provided to undocumented persons working under a permit issued under the program are comparable to the wages and benefits provided to legal residents who are United States citizens, but in no case less than the state minimum wage.(3) That an employer participating in the program shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local labor laws, including laws affecting migrant and seasonal agricultural workers, with respect to all United States workers and undocumented workers.(c) An employer of a person permitted to work in this state under the program should provide a written record of employment, demonstrating the hours worked and wages paid, to the employee issued a permit, and provide a copy of the record to the state.11058. (a) An employee permitted to work in this state under the program should be entitled to the same wage, hour, and working condition protections provided to an employee who is a legal resident of California.(b) A permit issued under the program should not limit an employee to a single employer or occupation.11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:(a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.(b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.(c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.(d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industries to provide greater assurances that employers are in compliance with state laws regarding these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers. conditions.(f) Recommendations for how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.(g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.
138+SEC. 3. Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 11050) is added to Part 1 of Division 3 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, to read: CHAPTER 8. California Agricultural and Service Resident Worker Program Article 1. General Provisions11050. As used in this chapter:(a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and a service industry employer.(c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.(d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.(e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.(f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.(h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.(b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.(d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:(1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.(2) Documentation requirements for applicants.(3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.(4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.(5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.(7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.(8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.(9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.(10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.(11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.(12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). This The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (d), (e), shall either make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, or issue an explanation as to why a formal request was not made and make recommendations to the Legislature for how a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California should be structured. California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.(g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation. Article 2. Model Program Requirements11055. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature that this article provide a model and framework for a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.(b) It is the further intent of the Legislature to recognize that, if the federal government enacts a guest worker program, it would preempt the state program.11056. (a) The program shall be implemented based on the information gathered by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture and provided to the federal government and members of the California congressional delegation pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 11051.(b) The program should be limited to undocumented persons who meet all of the following criteria:(1) The undocumented person must be 18 years of age or older.(2) The undocumented person must live in California.(3) (A) The undocumented person must have performed agricultural or service industry employment in the United States for at least 863 hours or 150 workdays during the 24-month period ending on January 25, 2019, or earned at least seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) from agricultural or service industry employment in the United States, and must have maintained agricultural or service industry employment for 431 hours or 75 workdays, or earned three thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($3,750) from that employment, on an annual basis after receiving the permit.(B) An undocumented person should be allowed to conclusively establish employment status by submitting any of the following records demonstrating the employment:(i) Records maintained by the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or any other federal, state, or local government agency, an employer, a labor organization, service labor organization, or day labor center.(ii) Itemized wage statements issued to the employee pursuant to Section 226 of the Labor Code.(C) An undocumented person who is unable to submit a document described in subparagraph (B) should be allowed to satisfy the requirement in subparagraph (A) by submitting at least two other types of reliable documents that provide evidence of employment, including any of the following:(i) Bank records.(ii) Business records.(iii) Remittance records.(D) The program should be implemented in a manner that recognizes and takes into account the difficulties encountered by an undocumented person in obtaining evidence of employment due to the persons undocumented status, including the crediting of work in cases in which an undocumented person has been employed under an assumed name.(4) The undocumented person must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(5) The undocumented person must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(6) The undocumented person must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.(c) The program should extend to an undocumented person who is an immediate family member of a person to whom a work permit has been issued. The immediate family member should be required to meet all of the following:(1) The immediate family member must reside with the undocumented person to whom a permit was issued or be enrolled in an accredited two- or four-year college or graduate program in California.(2) The immediate family member must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(3) The immediate family member must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(4) The immediate family member must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.11057. Once the program becomes authorized and operational, the following requirements should apply:(a) (1) An official or employee of the state government should not do any of the following:(A) Use information furnished by an applicant for purposes of applying for a permit under the program or any information provided by an employer or former employer for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application.(B) Make any publication in which the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified.(C) Permit a person other than a sworn officer or employee of the state to examine individual applications.(2) Information furnished by an applicant should be provided to both of the following:(A) A duly recognized state law enforcement entity in connection with a criminal investigation or a prosecution, if the information is requested in writing by the entity.(B) An official coroner, for purposes of affirmatively identifying a deceased individual, whether or not the death of the individual resulted from a crime.(3) Any person who files an application under the program and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing that it contains any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry should be disqualified from applying under the program.(b) The entities administering the program should ensure that employers employing workers authorized under the program make each of the following assurances:(1) That the job opportunity for which an employer employs an undocumented person authorized under the program is not vacant because a worker is involved in a strike, lockout, or because of a work stoppage in the course of a labor dispute involving the job opportunity at the same place of employment.(2) That the wages and benefits provided to undocumented persons working under a permit issued under the program are comparable to the wages and benefits provided to legal residents who are United States citizens, but in no case less than the state minimum wage.(3) That an employer participating in the program shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local labor laws, including laws affecting migrant and seasonal agricultural workers, with respect to all United States workers and undocumented workers.(c) An employer of a person permitted to work in this state under the program should provide a written record of employment, demonstrating the hours worked and wages paid, to the employee issued a permit, and provide a copy of the record to the state.11058. (a) An employee permitted to work in this state under the program should be entitled to the same wage, hour, and working condition protections provided to an employee who is a legal resident of California.(b) A permit issued under the program should not limit an employee to a single employer or occupation.11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:(a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.(b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.(c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.(d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industry industries to provide greater assurances that these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers.(f) Recommendations for addressing the process how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.(g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.
88139
89140 SEC. 3. Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 11050) is added to Part 1 of Division 3 of the Unemployment Insurance Code, to read:
90141
91142 ### SEC. 3.
92143
93- CHAPTER 8. California Resident Worker Program Article 1. General Provisions11050. As used in this chapter:(a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and or a service industry employer.(c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.(d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.(e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.(f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.(h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.(b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and representatives of stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.(d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:(1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.(2) Documentation requirements for applicants.(3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.(4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.(5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for to cover the costs of the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.(7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.(8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.(9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.(10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.(11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.(12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (e), shall make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.(g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation.11052. The requirements of Section 11051 shall be implemented only after the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture make a determination that nonstate funds in an amount sufficient to fully support the purposes of Section 11051 are available. Article 2. Model Program Requirements11055. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature that this article provide a model and framework for a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.(b) It is the further intent of the Legislature to recognize that, if the federal government enacts a guest worker program, it would preempt the state program.11056. (a) The program shall be implemented based on the information gathered by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture and provided to the federal government and members of the California congressional delegation pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 11051.(b) The program should be limited to undocumented persons who meet all of the following criteria:(1) The undocumented person must be 18 years of age or older.(2) The undocumented person must live in California.(3) (A) The undocumented person must have performed agricultural or service industry employment in the United States for at least 863 hours or 150 workdays during the 24-month period ending on January 25, 2019, or earned at least seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) from agricultural or service industry employment in the United States, and must have maintained agricultural or service industry employment for 431 hours or 75 workdays, or earned three thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($3,750) from that employment, on an annual basis after receiving the permit.(B) An undocumented person should be allowed to conclusively establish employment status by submitting any of the following records demonstrating the employment:(i) Records maintained by the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or any other federal, state, or local government agency, an employer, a labor organization, service labor organization, or day labor center.(ii) Itemized wage statements issued to the employee pursuant to Section 226 of the Labor Code.(C) An undocumented person who is unable to submit a document described in subparagraph (B) should be allowed to satisfy the requirement in subparagraph (A) by submitting at least two other types of reliable documents that provide evidence of employment, including any of the following:(i) Bank records.(ii) Business records.(iii) Remittance records.(D) The program should be implemented in a manner that recognizes and takes into account the difficulties encountered by an undocumented person in obtaining evidence of employment due to the persons undocumented status, including the crediting of work in cases in which an undocumented person has been employed under an assumed name.(4) The undocumented person must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(5) The undocumented person must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(6) The undocumented person must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.(c) The program should extend to an undocumented person who is an immediate family member of a person to whom a work permit has been issued. The immediate family member should be required to meet all of the following:(1) The immediate family member must reside with the undocumented person to whom a permit was issued or be enrolled in an accredited two- or four-year college or graduate program in California.(2) The immediate family member must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(3) The immediate family member must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(4) The immediate family member must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.11057. Once the program becomes authorized and operational, the following requirements should apply:(a) (1) An official or employee of the state government should not do any of the following:(A) Use information furnished by an applicant for purposes of applying for a permit under the program or any information provided by an employer or former employer for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application.(B) Make any publication in which the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified.(C) Permit a person other than a sworn officer or employee of the state to examine individual applications.(2) Information furnished by an applicant should be provided to both of the following:(A) A duly recognized state law enforcement entity in connection with a criminal investigation or a prosecution, if the information is requested in writing by the entity.(B) An official coroner, for purposes of affirmatively identifying a deceased individual, whether or not the death of the individual resulted from a crime.(3) Any person who files an application under the program and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing that it contains any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry should be disqualified from applying under the program.(b) The entities administering the program should ensure that employers employing workers authorized under the program make each of the following assurances:(1) That the job opportunity for which an employer employs an undocumented person authorized under the program is not vacant because a worker is involved in a strike, lockout, or because of a work stoppage in the course of a labor dispute involving the job opportunity at the same place of employment.(2) That the wages and benefits provided to undocumented persons working under a permit issued under the program are comparable to the wages and benefits provided to legal residents who are United States citizens, but in no case less than the state minimum wage.(3) That an employer participating in the program shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local labor laws, including laws affecting migrant and seasonal agricultural workers, with respect to all United States workers and undocumented workers.(c) An employer of a person permitted to work in this state under the program should provide a written record of employment, demonstrating the hours worked and wages paid, to the employee issued a permit, and provide a copy of the record to the state.11058. (a) An employee permitted to work in this state under the program should be entitled to the same wage, hour, and working condition protections provided to an employee who is a legal resident of California.(b) A permit issued under the program should not limit an employee to a single employer or occupation.11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:(a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.(b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.(c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.(d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industries to provide greater assurances that employers are in compliance with state laws regarding these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers. conditions.(f) Recommendations for how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.(g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.
144+ CHAPTER 8. California Agricultural and Service Resident Worker Program Article 1. General Provisions11050. As used in this chapter:(a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and a service industry employer.(c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.(d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.(e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.(f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.(h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.(b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.(d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:(1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.(2) Documentation requirements for applicants.(3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.(4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.(5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.(7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.(8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.(9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.(10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.(11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.(12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). This The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (d), (e), shall either make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, or issue an explanation as to why a formal request was not made and make recommendations to the Legislature for how a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California should be structured. California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.(g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation. Article 2. Model Program Requirements11055. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature that this article provide a model and framework for a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.(b) It is the further intent of the Legislature to recognize that, if the federal government enacts a guest worker program, it would preempt the state program.11056. (a) The program shall be implemented based on the information gathered by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture and provided to the federal government and members of the California congressional delegation pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 11051.(b) The program should be limited to undocumented persons who meet all of the following criteria:(1) The undocumented person must be 18 years of age or older.(2) The undocumented person must live in California.(3) (A) The undocumented person must have performed agricultural or service industry employment in the United States for at least 863 hours or 150 workdays during the 24-month period ending on January 25, 2019, or earned at least seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) from agricultural or service industry employment in the United States, and must have maintained agricultural or service industry employment for 431 hours or 75 workdays, or earned three thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($3,750) from that employment, on an annual basis after receiving the permit.(B) An undocumented person should be allowed to conclusively establish employment status by submitting any of the following records demonstrating the employment:(i) Records maintained by the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or any other federal, state, or local government agency, an employer, a labor organization, service labor organization, or day labor center.(ii) Itemized wage statements issued to the employee pursuant to Section 226 of the Labor Code.(C) An undocumented person who is unable to submit a document described in subparagraph (B) should be allowed to satisfy the requirement in subparagraph (A) by submitting at least two other types of reliable documents that provide evidence of employment, including any of the following:(i) Bank records.(ii) Business records.(iii) Remittance records.(D) The program should be implemented in a manner that recognizes and takes into account the difficulties encountered by an undocumented person in obtaining evidence of employment due to the persons undocumented status, including the crediting of work in cases in which an undocumented person has been employed under an assumed name.(4) The undocumented person must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(5) The undocumented person must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(6) The undocumented person must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.(c) The program should extend to an undocumented person who is an immediate family member of a person to whom a work permit has been issued. The immediate family member should be required to meet all of the following:(1) The immediate family member must reside with the undocumented person to whom a permit was issued or be enrolled in an accredited two- or four-year college or graduate program in California.(2) The immediate family member must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(3) The immediate family member must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(4) The immediate family member must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.11057. Once the program becomes authorized and operational, the following requirements should apply:(a) (1) An official or employee of the state government should not do any of the following:(A) Use information furnished by an applicant for purposes of applying for a permit under the program or any information provided by an employer or former employer for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application.(B) Make any publication in which the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified.(C) Permit a person other than a sworn officer or employee of the state to examine individual applications.(2) Information furnished by an applicant should be provided to both of the following:(A) A duly recognized state law enforcement entity in connection with a criminal investigation or a prosecution, if the information is requested in writing by the entity.(B) An official coroner, for purposes of affirmatively identifying a deceased individual, whether or not the death of the individual resulted from a crime.(3) Any person who files an application under the program and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing that it contains any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry should be disqualified from applying under the program.(b) The entities administering the program should ensure that employers employing workers authorized under the program make each of the following assurances:(1) That the job opportunity for which an employer employs an undocumented person authorized under the program is not vacant because a worker is involved in a strike, lockout, or because of a work stoppage in the course of a labor dispute involving the job opportunity at the same place of employment.(2) That the wages and benefits provided to undocumented persons working under a permit issued under the program are comparable to the wages and benefits provided to legal residents who are United States citizens, but in no case less than the state minimum wage.(3) That an employer participating in the program shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local labor laws, including laws affecting migrant and seasonal agricultural workers, with respect to all United States workers and undocumented workers.(c) An employer of a person permitted to work in this state under the program should provide a written record of employment, demonstrating the hours worked and wages paid, to the employee issued a permit, and provide a copy of the record to the state.11058. (a) An employee permitted to work in this state under the program should be entitled to the same wage, hour, and working condition protections provided to an employee who is a legal resident of California.(b) A permit issued under the program should not limit an employee to a single employer or occupation.11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:(a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.(b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.(c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.(d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industry industries to provide greater assurances that these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers.(f) Recommendations for addressing the process how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.(g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.
94145
95- CHAPTER 8. California Resident Worker Program Article 1. General Provisions11050. As used in this chapter:(a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and or a service industry employer.(c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.(d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.(e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.(f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.(h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.(b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and representatives of stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.(d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:(1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.(2) Documentation requirements for applicants.(3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.(4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.(5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for to cover the costs of the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.(7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.(8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.(9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.(10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.(11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.(12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (e), shall make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.(g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation.11052. The requirements of Section 11051 shall be implemented only after the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture make a determination that nonstate funds in an amount sufficient to fully support the purposes of Section 11051 are available. Article 2. Model Program Requirements11055. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature that this article provide a model and framework for a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.(b) It is the further intent of the Legislature to recognize that, if the federal government enacts a guest worker program, it would preempt the state program.11056. (a) The program shall be implemented based on the information gathered by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture and provided to the federal government and members of the California congressional delegation pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 11051.(b) The program should be limited to undocumented persons who meet all of the following criteria:(1) The undocumented person must be 18 years of age or older.(2) The undocumented person must live in California.(3) (A) The undocumented person must have performed agricultural or service industry employment in the United States for at least 863 hours or 150 workdays during the 24-month period ending on January 25, 2019, or earned at least seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) from agricultural or service industry employment in the United States, and must have maintained agricultural or service industry employment for 431 hours or 75 workdays, or earned three thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($3,750) from that employment, on an annual basis after receiving the permit.(B) An undocumented person should be allowed to conclusively establish employment status by submitting any of the following records demonstrating the employment:(i) Records maintained by the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or any other federal, state, or local government agency, an employer, a labor organization, service labor organization, or day labor center.(ii) Itemized wage statements issued to the employee pursuant to Section 226 of the Labor Code.(C) An undocumented person who is unable to submit a document described in subparagraph (B) should be allowed to satisfy the requirement in subparagraph (A) by submitting at least two other types of reliable documents that provide evidence of employment, including any of the following:(i) Bank records.(ii) Business records.(iii) Remittance records.(D) The program should be implemented in a manner that recognizes and takes into account the difficulties encountered by an undocumented person in obtaining evidence of employment due to the persons undocumented status, including the crediting of work in cases in which an undocumented person has been employed under an assumed name.(4) The undocumented person must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(5) The undocumented person must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(6) The undocumented person must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.(c) The program should extend to an undocumented person who is an immediate family member of a person to whom a work permit has been issued. The immediate family member should be required to meet all of the following:(1) The immediate family member must reside with the undocumented person to whom a permit was issued or be enrolled in an accredited two- or four-year college or graduate program in California.(2) The immediate family member must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(3) The immediate family member must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(4) The immediate family member must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.11057. Once the program becomes authorized and operational, the following requirements should apply:(a) (1) An official or employee of the state government should not do any of the following:(A) Use information furnished by an applicant for purposes of applying for a permit under the program or any information provided by an employer or former employer for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application.(B) Make any publication in which the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified.(C) Permit a person other than a sworn officer or employee of the state to examine individual applications.(2) Information furnished by an applicant should be provided to both of the following:(A) A duly recognized state law enforcement entity in connection with a criminal investigation or a prosecution, if the information is requested in writing by the entity.(B) An official coroner, for purposes of affirmatively identifying a deceased individual, whether or not the death of the individual resulted from a crime.(3) Any person who files an application under the program and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing that it contains any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry should be disqualified from applying under the program.(b) The entities administering the program should ensure that employers employing workers authorized under the program make each of the following assurances:(1) That the job opportunity for which an employer employs an undocumented person authorized under the program is not vacant because a worker is involved in a strike, lockout, or because of a work stoppage in the course of a labor dispute involving the job opportunity at the same place of employment.(2) That the wages and benefits provided to undocumented persons working under a permit issued under the program are comparable to the wages and benefits provided to legal residents who are United States citizens, but in no case less than the state minimum wage.(3) That an employer participating in the program shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local labor laws, including laws affecting migrant and seasonal agricultural workers, with respect to all United States workers and undocumented workers.(c) An employer of a person permitted to work in this state under the program should provide a written record of employment, demonstrating the hours worked and wages paid, to the employee issued a permit, and provide a copy of the record to the state.11058. (a) An employee permitted to work in this state under the program should be entitled to the same wage, hour, and working condition protections provided to an employee who is a legal resident of California.(b) A permit issued under the program should not limit an employee to a single employer or occupation.11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:(a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.(b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.(c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.(d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industries to provide greater assurances that employers are in compliance with state laws regarding these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers. conditions.(f) Recommendations for how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.(g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.
146+ CHAPTER 8. California Agricultural and Service Resident Worker Program Article 1. General Provisions11050. As used in this chapter:(a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and a service industry employer.(c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.(d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.(e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.(f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.(h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.(b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.(d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:(1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.(2) Documentation requirements for applicants.(3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.(4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.(5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.(7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.(8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.(9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.(10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.(11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.(12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). This The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (d), (e), shall either make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, or issue an explanation as to why a formal request was not made and make recommendations to the Legislature for how a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California should be structured. California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.(g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation. Article 2. Model Program Requirements11055. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature that this article provide a model and framework for a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.(b) It is the further intent of the Legislature to recognize that, if the federal government enacts a guest worker program, it would preempt the state program.11056. (a) The program shall be implemented based on the information gathered by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture and provided to the federal government and members of the California congressional delegation pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 11051.(b) The program should be limited to undocumented persons who meet all of the following criteria:(1) The undocumented person must be 18 years of age or older.(2) The undocumented person must live in California.(3) (A) The undocumented person must have performed agricultural or service industry employment in the United States for at least 863 hours or 150 workdays during the 24-month period ending on January 25, 2019, or earned at least seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) from agricultural or service industry employment in the United States, and must have maintained agricultural or service industry employment for 431 hours or 75 workdays, or earned three thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($3,750) from that employment, on an annual basis after receiving the permit.(B) An undocumented person should be allowed to conclusively establish employment status by submitting any of the following records demonstrating the employment:(i) Records maintained by the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or any other federal, state, or local government agency, an employer, a labor organization, service labor organization, or day labor center.(ii) Itemized wage statements issued to the employee pursuant to Section 226 of the Labor Code.(C) An undocumented person who is unable to submit a document described in subparagraph (B) should be allowed to satisfy the requirement in subparagraph (A) by submitting at least two other types of reliable documents that provide evidence of employment, including any of the following:(i) Bank records.(ii) Business records.(iii) Remittance records.(D) The program should be implemented in a manner that recognizes and takes into account the difficulties encountered by an undocumented person in obtaining evidence of employment due to the persons undocumented status, including the crediting of work in cases in which an undocumented person has been employed under an assumed name.(4) The undocumented person must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(5) The undocumented person must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(6) The undocumented person must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.(c) The program should extend to an undocumented person who is an immediate family member of a person to whom a work permit has been issued. The immediate family member should be required to meet all of the following:(1) The immediate family member must reside with the undocumented person to whom a permit was issued or be enrolled in an accredited two- or four-year college or graduate program in California.(2) The immediate family member must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(3) The immediate family member must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(4) The immediate family member must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.11057. Once the program becomes authorized and operational, the following requirements should apply:(a) (1) An official or employee of the state government should not do any of the following:(A) Use information furnished by an applicant for purposes of applying for a permit under the program or any information provided by an employer or former employer for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application.(B) Make any publication in which the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified.(C) Permit a person other than a sworn officer or employee of the state to examine individual applications.(2) Information furnished by an applicant should be provided to both of the following:(A) A duly recognized state law enforcement entity in connection with a criminal investigation or a prosecution, if the information is requested in writing by the entity.(B) An official coroner, for purposes of affirmatively identifying a deceased individual, whether or not the death of the individual resulted from a crime.(3) Any person who files an application under the program and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing that it contains any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry should be disqualified from applying under the program.(b) The entities administering the program should ensure that employers employing workers authorized under the program make each of the following assurances:(1) That the job opportunity for which an employer employs an undocumented person authorized under the program is not vacant because a worker is involved in a strike, lockout, or because of a work stoppage in the course of a labor dispute involving the job opportunity at the same place of employment.(2) That the wages and benefits provided to undocumented persons working under a permit issued under the program are comparable to the wages and benefits provided to legal residents who are United States citizens, but in no case less than the state minimum wage.(3) That an employer participating in the program shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local labor laws, including laws affecting migrant and seasonal agricultural workers, with respect to all United States workers and undocumented workers.(c) An employer of a person permitted to work in this state under the program should provide a written record of employment, demonstrating the hours worked and wages paid, to the employee issued a permit, and provide a copy of the record to the state.11058. (a) An employee permitted to work in this state under the program should be entitled to the same wage, hour, and working condition protections provided to an employee who is a legal resident of California.(b) A permit issued under the program should not limit an employee to a single employer or occupation.11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:(a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.(b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.(c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.(d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industry industries to provide greater assurances that these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers.(f) Recommendations for addressing the process how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.(g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.
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97- CHAPTER 8. California Resident Worker Program
148+ CHAPTER 8. California Agricultural and Service Resident Worker Program
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150+ CHAPTER 8. California Agricultural and Service Resident Worker Program
100151
101- Article 1. General Provisions11050. As used in this chapter:(a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and or a service industry employer.(c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.(d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.(e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.(f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.(h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.(b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and representatives of stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.(d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:(1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.(2) Documentation requirements for applicants.(3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.(4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.(5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for to cover the costs of the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.(7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.(8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.(9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.(10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.(11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.(12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (e), shall make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.(g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation.11052. The requirements of Section 11051 shall be implemented only after the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture make a determination that nonstate funds in an amount sufficient to fully support the purposes of Section 11051 are available.
152+ Article 1. General Provisions11050. As used in this chapter:(a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and a service industry employer.(c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.(d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.(e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.(f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.(h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.(b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.(d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:(1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.(2) Documentation requirements for applicants.(3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.(4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.(5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.(7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.(8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.(9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.(10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.(11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.(12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). This The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (d), (e), shall either make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, or issue an explanation as to why a formal request was not made and make recommendations to the Legislature for how a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California should be structured. California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.(g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation.
102153
103154 Article 1. General Provisions
104155
105156 Article 1. General Provisions
106157
107-11050. As used in this chapter:(a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and or a service industry employer.(c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.(d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.(e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.(f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.(h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.
158+11050. As used in this chapter:(a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and a service industry employer.(c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.(d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.(e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.(f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.(g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.(h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.
108159
109160
110161
111162 11050. As used in this chapter:
112163
113164 (a) Employee means an agricultural employee, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, and a person employed to provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.
114165
115-(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and or a service industry employer.
166+(b) Employer means an agricultural employer, as defined in Section 1140.4 of the Labor Code, a farm labor contractor, and a service industry employer.
116167
117168 (c) Farm labor contractor shall have the same meaning as in Section 1682 of the Labor Code.
118169
119170 (d) Farm labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in the production of agricultural products.
120171
121172 (e) Immediate family member means a spouse or child under 18 years of age or 18 years of age or older if the child is enrolled in an accredited program as described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 11056.
122173
123174 (f) Service industry employer means a person who is self-employed for the purpose of, or who employs others to, provide domestic services, janitorial or building maintenance services, food preparation services, or housekeeping services.
124175
125176 (g) Service labor organization means a labor organization, as defined in Section 1117 of the Labor Code, that represents employees rendering personal services in connection with the production of service industry products.
126177
127178 (h) Undocumented person means a person who is an unauthorized alien, as defined in Section 1324a(h)(3) of Title 8 of the United States Code.
128179
129-11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.(b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and representatives of stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.(d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:(1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.(2) Documentation requirements for applicants.(3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.(4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.(5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for to cover the costs of the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.(7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.(8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.(9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.(10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.(11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.(12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (e), shall make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.(g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation.
180+11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.(b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.(d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:(1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.(2) Documentation requirements for applicants.(3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.(4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.(5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.(7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.(8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.(9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.(10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.(11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.(12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). This The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (d), (e), shall either make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, or issue an explanation as to why a formal request was not made and make recommendations to the Legislature for how a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California should be structured. California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.(g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation.
130181
131182
132183
133184 11051. (a) No later than March 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall determine the extent of labor shortages in the agricultural and service industries in the state. This information shall be provided not later than March 20, 2019, to the United States Department of Labor, the United States Department of Agriculture, and the United States Department of Homeland Security. The information shall also be provided to members of the California congressional delegation. Recognizing the short timeframe for this work, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture are also requested to provide as much detail as possible associated with these labor shortages and the consequences to the states economy. Lastly, it is requested that the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture address whether there is a viable, available, and efficient workforce of United States-born workers in California or other states that would be able to fill these labor shortages.
134185
135186 (b) No later than April 1, 2019, the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture shall convene a working group to address the issues listed in subdivision (d) and serve as liaison to the United States Department of Homeland Security and the United States Department of Justice to ensure that state departments are not taking on responsibilities in matters dealing with immigration policy that are the jurisdiction of the federal government.
136187
137-(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and representatives of stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.
188+(c) The working group shall consist of representatives from the Employment Development Department, the Department of Food and Agriculture, the California Attorney General, two Members of the Senate appointed by the Senate Committee on Rules, two Members of the Assembly appointed by the Speaker of the Assembly, and stakeholders, including, but not limited to, agricultural and service industry employers, farm labor contractors, farm and service labor organizations, academia, and policy experts in the field of immigration reform policy.
138189
139190 (d) Issues to be addressed by the working group shall include the following:
140191
141192 (1) Qualifying criteria for undocumented persons to apply for a permit to work and live in California.
142193
143194 (2) Documentation requirements for applicants.
144195
145196 (3) A determination of which agency will issue the permits.
146197
147198 (4) Ensuring security, including through the development of tamper-proof work authorization documentation or security procedures and protocols, or all of these methods.
148199
149200 (5) A determination of the process and the agency that should conduct background and security checks and the extent to which background and security checks should be required.
150201
151-(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for to cover the costs of the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.
202+(6) A determination regarding the payment that should be required for the submission and review of applications and background and security checks.
152203
153204 (7) Protocols regarding tracking of employees under the program.
154205
155206 (8) Consideration of a renewal process for the work permit.
156207
157208 (9) Consideration of the extent to which employees will be allowed to travel out of the country and the requirements for that travel.
158209
159210 (10) Determination of a fee structure to cover the costs of the program, including who will pay and how often the fee should be assessed to cover costs of the program.
160211
161212 (11) Determination of the costs involved in receiving, processing, and issuing work permits.
162213
163214 (12) Any other procedures and legal requirements associated with implementation of the program required by the federal government to ensure the proper role and responsibilities of the State of California.
164215
165-(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.
216+(e) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the working group, in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code, shall create a report expressing its recommendations, which shall incorporate the model program described in Article 2 (commencing with Section 11055). This The working group shall make every attempt to reach unanimous agreement and this report shall be submitted to the Legislature and the Governor no later than July 1, 2019. If the working group fails to meet this deadline, the working group shall notify the Governor and the Legislature of its expected completion date.
166217
167-(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (e), shall make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.
218+(f) By August 1, 2019, or no later than 30 calendar days after receipt of the working groups report, whichever is later, the Governor, using the report described in subdivision (d), (e), shall either make a formal request to the federal government to implement a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, or issue an explanation as to why a formal request was not made and make recommendations to the Legislature for how a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California should be structured. California. The Governor shall issue an explanation if the federal government proposes a program and the Governor disapproves of the proposed program.
168219
169220 (g) If the federal government approves or adopts a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact necessary implementing legislation.
170221
171-11052. The requirements of Section 11051 shall be implemented only after the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture make a determination that nonstate funds in an amount sufficient to fully support the purposes of Section 11051 are available.
172-
173-
174-
175-11052. The requirements of Section 11051 shall be implemented only after the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture make a determination that nonstate funds in an amount sufficient to fully support the purposes of Section 11051 are available.
176-
177- Article 2. Model Program Requirements11055. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature that this article provide a model and framework for a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.(b) It is the further intent of the Legislature to recognize that, if the federal government enacts a guest worker program, it would preempt the state program.11056. (a) The program shall be implemented based on the information gathered by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture and provided to the federal government and members of the California congressional delegation pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 11051.(b) The program should be limited to undocumented persons who meet all of the following criteria:(1) The undocumented person must be 18 years of age or older.(2) The undocumented person must live in California.(3) (A) The undocumented person must have performed agricultural or service industry employment in the United States for at least 863 hours or 150 workdays during the 24-month period ending on January 25, 2019, or earned at least seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) from agricultural or service industry employment in the United States, and must have maintained agricultural or service industry employment for 431 hours or 75 workdays, or earned three thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($3,750) from that employment, on an annual basis after receiving the permit.(B) An undocumented person should be allowed to conclusively establish employment status by submitting any of the following records demonstrating the employment:(i) Records maintained by the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or any other federal, state, or local government agency, an employer, a labor organization, service labor organization, or day labor center.(ii) Itemized wage statements issued to the employee pursuant to Section 226 of the Labor Code.(C) An undocumented person who is unable to submit a document described in subparagraph (B) should be allowed to satisfy the requirement in subparagraph (A) by submitting at least two other types of reliable documents that provide evidence of employment, including any of the following:(i) Bank records.(ii) Business records.(iii) Remittance records.(D) The program should be implemented in a manner that recognizes and takes into account the difficulties encountered by an undocumented person in obtaining evidence of employment due to the persons undocumented status, including the crediting of work in cases in which an undocumented person has been employed under an assumed name.(4) The undocumented person must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(5) The undocumented person must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(6) The undocumented person must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.(c) The program should extend to an undocumented person who is an immediate family member of a person to whom a work permit has been issued. The immediate family member should be required to meet all of the following:(1) The immediate family member must reside with the undocumented person to whom a permit was issued or be enrolled in an accredited two- or four-year college or graduate program in California.(2) The immediate family member must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(3) The immediate family member must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(4) The immediate family member must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.11057. Once the program becomes authorized and operational, the following requirements should apply:(a) (1) An official or employee of the state government should not do any of the following:(A) Use information furnished by an applicant for purposes of applying for a permit under the program or any information provided by an employer or former employer for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application.(B) Make any publication in which the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified.(C) Permit a person other than a sworn officer or employee of the state to examine individual applications.(2) Information furnished by an applicant should be provided to both of the following:(A) A duly recognized state law enforcement entity in connection with a criminal investigation or a prosecution, if the information is requested in writing by the entity.(B) An official coroner, for purposes of affirmatively identifying a deceased individual, whether or not the death of the individual resulted from a crime.(3) Any person who files an application under the program and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing that it contains any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry should be disqualified from applying under the program.(b) The entities administering the program should ensure that employers employing workers authorized under the program make each of the following assurances:(1) That the job opportunity for which an employer employs an undocumented person authorized under the program is not vacant because a worker is involved in a strike, lockout, or because of a work stoppage in the course of a labor dispute involving the job opportunity at the same place of employment.(2) That the wages and benefits provided to undocumented persons working under a permit issued under the program are comparable to the wages and benefits provided to legal residents who are United States citizens, but in no case less than the state minimum wage.(3) That an employer participating in the program shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local labor laws, including laws affecting migrant and seasonal agricultural workers, with respect to all United States workers and undocumented workers.(c) An employer of a person permitted to work in this state under the program should provide a written record of employment, demonstrating the hours worked and wages paid, to the employee issued a permit, and provide a copy of the record to the state.11058. (a) An employee permitted to work in this state under the program should be entitled to the same wage, hour, and working condition protections provided to an employee who is a legal resident of California.(b) A permit issued under the program should not limit an employee to a single employer or occupation.11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:(a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.(b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.(c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.(d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industries to provide greater assurances that employers are in compliance with state laws regarding these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers. conditions.(f) Recommendations for how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.(g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.
222+ Article 2. Model Program Requirements11055. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature that this article provide a model and framework for a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.(b) It is the further intent of the Legislature to recognize that, if the federal government enacts a guest worker program, it would preempt the state program.11056. (a) The program shall be implemented based on the information gathered by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture and provided to the federal government and members of the California congressional delegation pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 11051.(b) The program should be limited to undocumented persons who meet all of the following criteria:(1) The undocumented person must be 18 years of age or older.(2) The undocumented person must live in California.(3) (A) The undocumented person must have performed agricultural or service industry employment in the United States for at least 863 hours or 150 workdays during the 24-month period ending on January 25, 2019, or earned at least seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) from agricultural or service industry employment in the United States, and must have maintained agricultural or service industry employment for 431 hours or 75 workdays, or earned three thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($3,750) from that employment, on an annual basis after receiving the permit.(B) An undocumented person should be allowed to conclusively establish employment status by submitting any of the following records demonstrating the employment:(i) Records maintained by the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or any other federal, state, or local government agency, an employer, a labor organization, service labor organization, or day labor center.(ii) Itemized wage statements issued to the employee pursuant to Section 226 of the Labor Code.(C) An undocumented person who is unable to submit a document described in subparagraph (B) should be allowed to satisfy the requirement in subparagraph (A) by submitting at least two other types of reliable documents that provide evidence of employment, including any of the following:(i) Bank records.(ii) Business records.(iii) Remittance records.(D) The program should be implemented in a manner that recognizes and takes into account the difficulties encountered by an undocumented person in obtaining evidence of employment due to the persons undocumented status, including the crediting of work in cases in which an undocumented person has been employed under an assumed name.(4) The undocumented person must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(5) The undocumented person must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(6) The undocumented person must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.(c) The program should extend to an undocumented person who is an immediate family member of a person to whom a work permit has been issued. The immediate family member should be required to meet all of the following:(1) The immediate family member must reside with the undocumented person to whom a permit was issued or be enrolled in an accredited two- or four-year college or graduate program in California.(2) The immediate family member must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(3) The immediate family member must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(4) The immediate family member must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.11057. Once the program becomes authorized and operational, the following requirements should apply:(a) (1) An official or employee of the state government should not do any of the following:(A) Use information furnished by an applicant for purposes of applying for a permit under the program or any information provided by an employer or former employer for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application.(B) Make any publication in which the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified.(C) Permit a person other than a sworn officer or employee of the state to examine individual applications.(2) Information furnished by an applicant should be provided to both of the following:(A) A duly recognized state law enforcement entity in connection with a criminal investigation or a prosecution, if the information is requested in writing by the entity.(B) An official coroner, for purposes of affirmatively identifying a deceased individual, whether or not the death of the individual resulted from a crime.(3) Any person who files an application under the program and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing that it contains any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry should be disqualified from applying under the program.(b) The entities administering the program should ensure that employers employing workers authorized under the program make each of the following assurances:(1) That the job opportunity for which an employer employs an undocumented person authorized under the program is not vacant because a worker is involved in a strike, lockout, or because of a work stoppage in the course of a labor dispute involving the job opportunity at the same place of employment.(2) That the wages and benefits provided to undocumented persons working under a permit issued under the program are comparable to the wages and benefits provided to legal residents who are United States citizens, but in no case less than the state minimum wage.(3) That an employer participating in the program shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local labor laws, including laws affecting migrant and seasonal agricultural workers, with respect to all United States workers and undocumented workers.(c) An employer of a person permitted to work in this state under the program should provide a written record of employment, demonstrating the hours worked and wages paid, to the employee issued a permit, and provide a copy of the record to the state.11058. (a) An employee permitted to work in this state under the program should be entitled to the same wage, hour, and working condition protections provided to an employee who is a legal resident of California.(b) A permit issued under the program should not limit an employee to a single employer or occupation.11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:(a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.(b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.(c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.(d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industry industries to provide greater assurances that these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers.(f) Recommendations for addressing the process how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.(g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.
178223
179224 Article 2. Model Program Requirements
180225
181226 Article 2. Model Program Requirements
182227
183228 11055. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature that this article provide a model and framework for a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.(b) It is the further intent of the Legislature to recognize that, if the federal government enacts a guest worker program, it would preempt the state program.
184229
185230
186231
187232 11055. (a) It is the intent of the Legislature that this article provide a model and framework for a program to provide undocumented persons who are agricultural or service industry employees with a permit to work and live in California.
188233
189234 (b) It is the further intent of the Legislature to recognize that, if the federal government enacts a guest worker program, it would preempt the state program.
190235
191236 11056. (a) The program shall be implemented based on the information gathered by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture and provided to the federal government and members of the California congressional delegation pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 11051.(b) The program should be limited to undocumented persons who meet all of the following criteria:(1) The undocumented person must be 18 years of age or older.(2) The undocumented person must live in California.(3) (A) The undocumented person must have performed agricultural or service industry employment in the United States for at least 863 hours or 150 workdays during the 24-month period ending on January 25, 2019, or earned at least seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) from agricultural or service industry employment in the United States, and must have maintained agricultural or service industry employment for 431 hours or 75 workdays, or earned three thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($3,750) from that employment, on an annual basis after receiving the permit.(B) An undocumented person should be allowed to conclusively establish employment status by submitting any of the following records demonstrating the employment:(i) Records maintained by the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or any other federal, state, or local government agency, an employer, a labor organization, service labor organization, or day labor center.(ii) Itemized wage statements issued to the employee pursuant to Section 226 of the Labor Code.(C) An undocumented person who is unable to submit a document described in subparagraph (B) should be allowed to satisfy the requirement in subparagraph (A) by submitting at least two other types of reliable documents that provide evidence of employment, including any of the following:(i) Bank records.(ii) Business records.(iii) Remittance records.(D) The program should be implemented in a manner that recognizes and takes into account the difficulties encountered by an undocumented person in obtaining evidence of employment due to the persons undocumented status, including the crediting of work in cases in which an undocumented person has been employed under an assumed name.(4) The undocumented person must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(5) The undocumented person must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(6) The undocumented person must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.(c) The program should extend to an undocumented person who is an immediate family member of a person to whom a work permit has been issued. The immediate family member should be required to meet all of the following:(1) The immediate family member must reside with the undocumented person to whom a permit was issued or be enrolled in an accredited two- or four-year college or graduate program in California.(2) The immediate family member must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.(3) The immediate family member must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.(4) The immediate family member must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.
192237
193238
194239
195240 11056. (a) The program shall be implemented based on the information gathered by the Employment Development Department and the Department of Food and Agriculture and provided to the federal government and members of the California congressional delegation pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 11051.
196241
197242 (b) The program should be limited to undocumented persons who meet all of the following criteria:
198243
199244 (1) The undocumented person must be 18 years of age or older.
200245
201246 (2) The undocumented person must live in California.
202247
203248 (3) (A) The undocumented person must have performed agricultural or service industry employment in the United States for at least 863 hours or 150 workdays during the 24-month period ending on January 25, 2019, or earned at least seven thousand five hundred dollars ($7,500) from agricultural or service industry employment in the United States, and must have maintained agricultural or service industry employment for 431 hours or 75 workdays, or earned three thousand seven hundred fifty dollars ($3,750) from that employment, on an annual basis after receiving the permit.
204249
205250 (B) An undocumented person should be allowed to conclusively establish employment status by submitting any of the following records demonstrating the employment:
206251
207252 (i) Records maintained by the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or any other federal, state, or local government agency, an employer, a labor organization, service labor organization, or day labor center.
208253
209254 (ii) Itemized wage statements issued to the employee pursuant to Section 226 of the Labor Code.
210255
211256 (C) An undocumented person who is unable to submit a document described in subparagraph (B) should be allowed to satisfy the requirement in subparagraph (A) by submitting at least two other types of reliable documents that provide evidence of employment, including any of the following:
212257
213258 (i) Bank records.
214259
215260 (ii) Business records.
216261
217262 (iii) Remittance records.
218263
219264 (D) The program should be implemented in a manner that recognizes and takes into account the difficulties encountered by an undocumented person in obtaining evidence of employment due to the persons undocumented status, including the crediting of work in cases in which an undocumented person has been employed under an assumed name.
220265
221266 (4) The undocumented person must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.
222267
223268 (5) The undocumented person must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.
224269
225270 (6) The undocumented person must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.
226271
227272 (c) The program should extend to an undocumented person who is an immediate family member of a person to whom a work permit has been issued. The immediate family member should be required to meet all of the following:
228273
229274 (1) The immediate family member must reside with the undocumented person to whom a permit was issued or be enrolled in an accredited two- or four-year college or graduate program in California.
230275
231276 (2) The immediate family member must submit to a fingerprinted criminal history background check.
232277
233278 (3) The immediate family member must never have been convicted of a felony, or three or more misdemeanors, as confirmed by the fingerprinted criminal history background check.
234279
235280 (4) The immediate family member must pay a fee to cover the costs of administering the program.
236281
237282 11057. Once the program becomes authorized and operational, the following requirements should apply:(a) (1) An official or employee of the state government should not do any of the following:(A) Use information furnished by an applicant for purposes of applying for a permit under the program or any information provided by an employer or former employer for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application.(B) Make any publication in which the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified.(C) Permit a person other than a sworn officer or employee of the state to examine individual applications.(2) Information furnished by an applicant should be provided to both of the following:(A) A duly recognized state law enforcement entity in connection with a criminal investigation or a prosecution, if the information is requested in writing by the entity.(B) An official coroner, for purposes of affirmatively identifying a deceased individual, whether or not the death of the individual resulted from a crime.(3) Any person who files an application under the program and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing that it contains any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry should be disqualified from applying under the program.(b) The entities administering the program should ensure that employers employing workers authorized under the program make each of the following assurances:(1) That the job opportunity for which an employer employs an undocumented person authorized under the program is not vacant because a worker is involved in a strike, lockout, or because of a work stoppage in the course of a labor dispute involving the job opportunity at the same place of employment.(2) That the wages and benefits provided to undocumented persons working under a permit issued under the program are comparable to the wages and benefits provided to legal residents who are United States citizens, but in no case less than the state minimum wage.(3) That an employer participating in the program shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local labor laws, including laws affecting migrant and seasonal agricultural workers, with respect to all United States workers and undocumented workers.(c) An employer of a person permitted to work in this state under the program should provide a written record of employment, demonstrating the hours worked and wages paid, to the employee issued a permit, and provide a copy of the record to the state.
238283
239284
240285
241286 11057. Once the program becomes authorized and operational, the following requirements should apply:
242287
243288 (a) (1) An official or employee of the state government should not do any of the following:
244289
245290 (A) Use information furnished by an applicant for purposes of applying for a permit under the program or any information provided by an employer or former employer for any purpose other than to make a determination on the application.
246291
247292 (B) Make any publication in which the information furnished by any particular individual can be identified.
248293
249294 (C) Permit a person other than a sworn officer or employee of the state to examine individual applications.
250295
251296 (2) Information furnished by an applicant should be provided to both of the following:
252297
253298 (A) A duly recognized state law enforcement entity in connection with a criminal investigation or a prosecution, if the information is requested in writing by the entity.
254299
255300 (B) An official coroner, for purposes of affirmatively identifying a deceased individual, whether or not the death of the individual resulted from a crime.
256301
257302 (3) Any person who files an application under the program and knowingly and willfully falsifies, conceals, or covers up a material fact or makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing or document knowing that it contains any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry should be disqualified from applying under the program.
258303
259304 (b) The entities administering the program should ensure that employers employing workers authorized under the program make each of the following assurances:
260305
261306 (1) That the job opportunity for which an employer employs an undocumented person authorized under the program is not vacant because a worker is involved in a strike, lockout, or because of a work stoppage in the course of a labor dispute involving the job opportunity at the same place of employment.
262307
263308 (2) That the wages and benefits provided to undocumented persons working under a permit issued under the program are comparable to the wages and benefits provided to legal residents who are United States citizens, but in no case less than the state minimum wage.
264309
265310 (3) That an employer participating in the program shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and local labor laws, including laws affecting migrant and seasonal agricultural workers, with respect to all United States workers and undocumented workers.
266311
267312 (c) An employer of a person permitted to work in this state under the program should provide a written record of employment, demonstrating the hours worked and wages paid, to the employee issued a permit, and provide a copy of the record to the state.
268313
269314 11058. (a) An employee permitted to work in this state under the program should be entitled to the same wage, hour, and working condition protections provided to an employee who is a legal resident of California.(b) A permit issued under the program should not limit an employee to a single employer or occupation.
270315
271316
272317
273318 11058. (a) An employee permitted to work in this state under the program should be entitled to the same wage, hour, and working condition protections provided to an employee who is a legal resident of California.
274319
275320 (b) A permit issued under the program should not limit an employee to a single employer or occupation.
276321
277-11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:(a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.(b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.(c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.(d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industries to provide greater assurances that employers are in compliance with state laws regarding these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers. conditions.(f) Recommendations for how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.(g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.
322+11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:(a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.(b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.(c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.(d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industry industries to provide greater assurances that these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers.(f) Recommendations for addressing the process how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.(g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.
278323
279324
280325
281326 11059. Not later than three years after the program is implemented, the administering entities should prepare and transmit to the Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment and the Senate Standing Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations a report describing the results of a review of the implementation of, and compliance with, the requirements of the program. The report should address and provide information as to all the following:
282327
283328 (a) Whether the program ensured an adequate and timely supply of qualified, eligible workers at the time and place needed by employers.
284329
285330 (b) Whether the program ensured that undocumented persons authorized to work under the program did not displace eligible, qualified United States workers or diminished the wages and other terms and conditions of employment of eligible United States workers.
286331
287332 (c) Recommendations for improving the operation of the program for the benefit of participating employers, eligible United States workers, participating undocumented workers, and governmental agencies involved in the administration of the program.
288333
289334 (d) Recommendations for the continuation or termination of the program.
290335
291-(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industries to provide greater assurances that employers are in compliance with state laws regarding these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers. conditions.
336+(e) Recommendations to increase funding and improve enforcement of state labor law protections for employees in the agricultural and service industry industries to provide greater assurances that these workers rights and worksite conditions are in compliance by employers.
292337
293-(f) Recommendations for how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.
338+(f) Recommendations for addressing the process how local governments can improve their established processes for determining and providing local and regional affordable housing needs for farmworkers.
294339
295340 (g) Recommendations for how the individual employer, pool of employers, or countywide health care system can provide an essential package of comprehensive preventive primary health care services, including, but not limited to, mental health and dental care for farmworkers participating in this program.