California 2021-2022 Regular Session

California Senate Bill SB727 Compare Versions

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1-Senate Bill No. 727 CHAPTER 338An act to amend Section 218.7 of, and to add Section 218.8 to, the Labor Code, relating to employment. [ Approved by Governor September 27, 2021. Filed with Secretary of State September 27, 2021. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 727, Leyva. Labor-related liabilities: direct contractor.Existing law requires, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2018, a direct contractor, as defined, making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, to assume, and be liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the original contract.Existing law limits the direct contractors liability under those provisions to extend only to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, including interest owed and provides that liability does not extend to penalties or liquidated damages.This bill would extend, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, the direct contractors liability to penalties, liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor, except as provided.Existing law authorizes the Labor Commissioner to enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages pursuant to specified provisions, or through a civil action, and limits the direct contractors liability to unpaid wages, including any interest owed.This bill would require the Labor Commissioner to notify, as specified, the direct contractor and subcontractor at any tier on a private works project at least 30 days prior to taking certain actions for the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers. The bill would remove, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, the limitation of liability.Existing law requires, prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor, a joint labor-management cooperation committee to provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice, as provided.This bill would, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, require the notice to include the project name and name of the employer and provide that any liquidated damages awarded by the Labor Commissioner or the court shall be payable to the aggrieved employee. The bill would make conforming changes.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. Section 218.7 of the Labor Code is amended to read:218.7. (a) (1) For contracts entered into between January 1, 2018, and December 31, 2021, inclusive, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.(2) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend only to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, including interest owed but shall not extend to penalties or liquidated damages.(3) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor.(b) (1) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action. The direct contractors liability shall be limited to unpaid wages, including any interest owed.(2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.(3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier for unpaid wages owed to a wage claimant by the direct contractor or subcontractor for the performance of private work, including unpaid wages owed by the direct contractor, pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).(c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.(d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:(1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.(2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.(3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.(e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.(f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.(2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.(3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.(g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.(h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2019, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.SEC. 2. Section 218.8 is added to the Labor Code, to read:218.8. (a) (1) For contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.(2) Subject to paragraph (3), the direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor.(3) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to penalties and liquidates damages only as follows:If a worker employed by a subcontractor on a private construction project is not paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution owed by the subcontractor on account of the workers performance of labor on that project, the direct contractor of the project is not liable for any associated penalties or liquidated damages under paragraph (2) unless the direct contractor had knowledge of the subcontractors failure to pay the specified wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, or the direct contractor fails to comply with all of the following requirements:(A) The contractor shall monitor the payment by the subcontractor of wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, by periodic review of the subcontractors payroll records which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174.(B) Upon becoming aware of the failure of the subcontractor to pay the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, the contractor shall diligently take corrective action to halt or rectify the failure, including, but not limited to, retaining sufficient funds due the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project.(C) Prior to making final payment to the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project, the contractor shall obtain an affidavit signed under penalty of perjury from the subcontractor that the subcontractor has paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution due to the employees or the labor trust fund for all work performed on the private construction project.(4) The Division of Labor Standards Enforcement shall notify the contractor and subcontractor on a private works project within 15 days of the receipt by the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement of a complaint of the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers.(5) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor, including liability for associated penalties and liquidated damages.(b) (1) (A) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages, liquidated damages, interest, and penalties created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action.(B) The Labor Commissioner shall notify the direct contractor and subcontractor at any tier on a private works project at least 30 days prior to a hearing held on an administrative complaint pursuant to Section 98, prior to issuance of a citation pursuant to Section 1197.1, or prior to filing a civil action, for the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name or address, and the name of the employer. The notice shall not preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional contractors or wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.(3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier to enforce liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor on a private work pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name and the name of the employer, and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).(5) Any liquidated damages awarded by the Labor Commissioner or the court shall be payable to the aggrieved employee.(c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.(d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:(1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.(2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.(3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.(e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.(f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.(2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, the contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.(3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.(g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.(h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2022, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
1+Enrolled September 14, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 10, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 09, 2021 Amended IN Assembly September 02, 2021 Amended IN Senate April 29, 2021 Amended IN Senate April 21, 2021 Amended IN Senate March 09, 2021 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 727Introduced by Senator Leyva(Coauthor: Assembly Member Lorena Gonzalez)February 19, 2021An act to amend Section 218.7 of, and to add Section 218.8 to, the Labor Code, relating to employment.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 727, Leyva. Labor-related liabilities: direct contractor.Existing law requires, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2018, a direct contractor, as defined, making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, to assume, and be liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the original contract.Existing law limits the direct contractors liability under those provisions to extend only to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, including interest owed and provides that liability does not extend to penalties or liquidated damages.This bill would extend, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, the direct contractors liability to penalties, liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor, except as provided.Existing law authorizes the Labor Commissioner to enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages pursuant to specified provisions, or through a civil action, and limits the direct contractors liability to unpaid wages, including any interest owed.This bill would require the Labor Commissioner to notify, as specified, the direct contractor and subcontractor at any tier on a private works project at least 30 days prior to taking certain actions for the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers. The bill would remove, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, the limitation of liability.Existing law requires, prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor, a joint labor-management cooperation committee to provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice, as provided.This bill would, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, require the notice to include the project name and name of the employer and provide that any liquidated damages awarded by the Labor Commissioner or the court shall be payable to the aggrieved employee. The bill would make conforming changes.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. Section 218.7 of the Labor Code is amended to read:218.7. (a) (1) For contracts entered into between January 1, 2018, and December 31, 2021, inclusive, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.(2) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend only to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, including interest owed but shall not extend to penalties or liquidated damages.(3) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor.(b) (1) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action. The direct contractors liability shall be limited to unpaid wages, including any interest owed.(2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.(3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier for unpaid wages owed to a wage claimant by the direct contractor or subcontractor for the performance of private work, including unpaid wages owed by the direct contractor, pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).(c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.(d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:(1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.(2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.(3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.(e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.(f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.(2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.(3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.(g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.(h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2019, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.SEC. 2. Section 218.8 is added to the Labor Code, to read:218.8. (a) (1) For contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.(2) Subject to paragraph (3), the direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor.(3) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to penalties and liquidates damages only as follows:If a worker employed by a subcontractor on a private construction project is not paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution owed by the subcontractor on account of the workers performance of labor on that project, the direct contractor of the project is not liable for any associated penalties or liquidated damages under paragraph (2) unless the direct contractor had knowledge of the subcontractors failure to pay the specified wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, or the direct contractor fails to comply with all of the following requirements:(A) The contractor shall monitor the payment by the subcontractor of wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, by periodic review of the subcontractors payroll records which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174.(B) Upon becoming aware of the failure of the subcontractor to pay the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, the contractor shall diligently take corrective action to halt or rectify the failure, including, but not limited to, retaining sufficient funds due the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project.(C) Prior to making final payment to the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project, the contractor shall obtain an affidavit signed under penalty of perjury from the subcontractor that the subcontractor has paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution due to the employees or the labor trust fund for all work performed on the private construction project.(4) The Division of Labor Standards Enforcement shall notify the contractor and subcontractor on a private works project within 15 days of the receipt by the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement of a complaint of the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers.(5) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor, including liability for associated penalties and liquidated damages.(b) (1) (A) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages, liquidated damages, interest, and penalties created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action.(B) The Labor Commissioner shall notify the direct contractor and subcontractor at any tier on a private works project at least 30 days prior to a hearing held on an administrative complaint pursuant to Section 98, prior to issuance of a citation pursuant to Section 1197.1, or prior to filing a civil action, for the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name or address, and the name of the employer. The notice shall not preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional contractors or wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.(3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier to enforce liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor on a private work pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name and the name of the employer, and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).(5) Any liquidated damages awarded by the Labor Commissioner or the court shall be payable to the aggrieved employee.(c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.(d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:(1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.(2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.(3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.(e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.(f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.(2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, the contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.(3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.(g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.(h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2022, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
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3- Senate Bill No. 727 CHAPTER 338An act to amend Section 218.7 of, and to add Section 218.8 to, the Labor Code, relating to employment. [ Approved by Governor September 27, 2021. Filed with Secretary of State September 27, 2021. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 727, Leyva. Labor-related liabilities: direct contractor.Existing law requires, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2018, a direct contractor, as defined, making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, to assume, and be liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the original contract.Existing law limits the direct contractors liability under those provisions to extend only to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, including interest owed and provides that liability does not extend to penalties or liquidated damages.This bill would extend, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, the direct contractors liability to penalties, liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor, except as provided.Existing law authorizes the Labor Commissioner to enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages pursuant to specified provisions, or through a civil action, and limits the direct contractors liability to unpaid wages, including any interest owed.This bill would require the Labor Commissioner to notify, as specified, the direct contractor and subcontractor at any tier on a private works project at least 30 days prior to taking certain actions for the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers. The bill would remove, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, the limitation of liability.Existing law requires, prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor, a joint labor-management cooperation committee to provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice, as provided.This bill would, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, require the notice to include the project name and name of the employer and provide that any liquidated damages awarded by the Labor Commissioner or the court shall be payable to the aggrieved employee. The bill would make conforming changes.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Enrolled September 14, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 10, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 09, 2021 Amended IN Assembly September 02, 2021 Amended IN Senate April 29, 2021 Amended IN Senate April 21, 2021 Amended IN Senate March 09, 2021 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 727Introduced by Senator Leyva(Coauthor: Assembly Member Lorena Gonzalez)February 19, 2021An act to amend Section 218.7 of, and to add Section 218.8 to, the Labor Code, relating to employment.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 727, Leyva. Labor-related liabilities: direct contractor.Existing law requires, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2018, a direct contractor, as defined, making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, to assume, and be liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the original contract.Existing law limits the direct contractors liability under those provisions to extend only to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, including interest owed and provides that liability does not extend to penalties or liquidated damages.This bill would extend, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, the direct contractors liability to penalties, liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor, except as provided.Existing law authorizes the Labor Commissioner to enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages pursuant to specified provisions, or through a civil action, and limits the direct contractors liability to unpaid wages, including any interest owed.This bill would require the Labor Commissioner to notify, as specified, the direct contractor and subcontractor at any tier on a private works project at least 30 days prior to taking certain actions for the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers. The bill would remove, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, the limitation of liability.Existing law requires, prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor, a joint labor-management cooperation committee to provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice, as provided.This bill would, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, require the notice to include the project name and name of the employer and provide that any liquidated damages awarded by the Labor Commissioner or the court shall be payable to the aggrieved employee. The bill would make conforming changes.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Senate Bill No. 727 CHAPTER 338
5+ Enrolled September 14, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 10, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 09, 2021 Amended IN Assembly September 02, 2021 Amended IN Senate April 29, 2021 Amended IN Senate April 21, 2021 Amended IN Senate March 09, 2021
66
7- Senate Bill No. 727
7+Enrolled September 14, 2021
8+Passed IN Senate September 10, 2021
9+Passed IN Assembly September 09, 2021
10+Amended IN Assembly September 02, 2021
11+Amended IN Senate April 29, 2021
12+Amended IN Senate April 21, 2021
13+Amended IN Senate March 09, 2021
814
9- CHAPTER 338
15+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION
16+
17+ Senate Bill
18+
19+No. 727
20+
21+Introduced by Senator Leyva(Coauthor: Assembly Member Lorena Gonzalez)February 19, 2021
22+
23+Introduced by Senator Leyva(Coauthor: Assembly Member Lorena Gonzalez)
24+February 19, 2021
1025
1126 An act to amend Section 218.7 of, and to add Section 218.8 to, the Labor Code, relating to employment.
12-
13- [ Approved by Governor September 27, 2021. Filed with Secretary of State September 27, 2021. ]
1427
1528 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1629
1730 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1831
1932 SB 727, Leyva. Labor-related liabilities: direct contractor.
2033
2134 Existing law requires, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2018, a direct contractor, as defined, making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, to assume, and be liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the original contract.Existing law limits the direct contractors liability under those provisions to extend only to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, including interest owed and provides that liability does not extend to penalties or liquidated damages.This bill would extend, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, the direct contractors liability to penalties, liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor, except as provided.Existing law authorizes the Labor Commissioner to enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages pursuant to specified provisions, or through a civil action, and limits the direct contractors liability to unpaid wages, including any interest owed.This bill would require the Labor Commissioner to notify, as specified, the direct contractor and subcontractor at any tier on a private works project at least 30 days prior to taking certain actions for the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers. The bill would remove, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, the limitation of liability.Existing law requires, prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor, a joint labor-management cooperation committee to provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice, as provided.This bill would, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, require the notice to include the project name and name of the employer and provide that any liquidated damages awarded by the Labor Commissioner or the court shall be payable to the aggrieved employee. The bill would make conforming changes.
2235
2336 Existing law requires, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2018, a direct contractor, as defined, making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, to assume, and be liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the original contract.
2437
2538 Existing law limits the direct contractors liability under those provisions to extend only to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, including interest owed and provides that liability does not extend to penalties or liquidated damages.
2639
2740 This bill would extend, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, the direct contractors liability to penalties, liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor, except as provided.
2841
2942 Existing law authorizes the Labor Commissioner to enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages pursuant to specified provisions, or through a civil action, and limits the direct contractors liability to unpaid wages, including any interest owed.
3043
3144 This bill would require the Labor Commissioner to notify, as specified, the direct contractor and subcontractor at any tier on a private works project at least 30 days prior to taking certain actions for the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers. The bill would remove, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, the limitation of liability.
3245
3346 Existing law requires, prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor, a joint labor-management cooperation committee to provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice, as provided.
3447
3548 This bill would, for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, require the notice to include the project name and name of the employer and provide that any liquidated damages awarded by the Labor Commissioner or the court shall be payable to the aggrieved employee. The bill would make conforming changes.
3649
3750 ## Digest Key
3851
3952 ## Bill Text
4053
4154 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 218.7 of the Labor Code is amended to read:218.7. (a) (1) For contracts entered into between January 1, 2018, and December 31, 2021, inclusive, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.(2) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend only to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, including interest owed but shall not extend to penalties or liquidated damages.(3) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor.(b) (1) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action. The direct contractors liability shall be limited to unpaid wages, including any interest owed.(2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.(3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier for unpaid wages owed to a wage claimant by the direct contractor or subcontractor for the performance of private work, including unpaid wages owed by the direct contractor, pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).(c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.(d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:(1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.(2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.(3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.(e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.(f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.(2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.(3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.(g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.(h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2019, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.SEC. 2. Section 218.8 is added to the Labor Code, to read:218.8. (a) (1) For contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.(2) Subject to paragraph (3), the direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor.(3) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to penalties and liquidates damages only as follows:If a worker employed by a subcontractor on a private construction project is not paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution owed by the subcontractor on account of the workers performance of labor on that project, the direct contractor of the project is not liable for any associated penalties or liquidated damages under paragraph (2) unless the direct contractor had knowledge of the subcontractors failure to pay the specified wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, or the direct contractor fails to comply with all of the following requirements:(A) The contractor shall monitor the payment by the subcontractor of wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, by periodic review of the subcontractors payroll records which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174.(B) Upon becoming aware of the failure of the subcontractor to pay the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, the contractor shall diligently take corrective action to halt or rectify the failure, including, but not limited to, retaining sufficient funds due the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project.(C) Prior to making final payment to the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project, the contractor shall obtain an affidavit signed under penalty of perjury from the subcontractor that the subcontractor has paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution due to the employees or the labor trust fund for all work performed on the private construction project.(4) The Division of Labor Standards Enforcement shall notify the contractor and subcontractor on a private works project within 15 days of the receipt by the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement of a complaint of the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers.(5) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor, including liability for associated penalties and liquidated damages.(b) (1) (A) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages, liquidated damages, interest, and penalties created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action.(B) The Labor Commissioner shall notify the direct contractor and subcontractor at any tier on a private works project at least 30 days prior to a hearing held on an administrative complaint pursuant to Section 98, prior to issuance of a citation pursuant to Section 1197.1, or prior to filing a civil action, for the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name or address, and the name of the employer. The notice shall not preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional contractors or wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.(3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier to enforce liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor on a private work pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name and the name of the employer, and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).(5) Any liquidated damages awarded by the Labor Commissioner or the court shall be payable to the aggrieved employee.(c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.(d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:(1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.(2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.(3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.(e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.(f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.(2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, the contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.(3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.(g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.(h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2022, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
4255
4356 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4457
4558 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4659
4760 SECTION 1. Section 218.7 of the Labor Code is amended to read:218.7. (a) (1) For contracts entered into between January 1, 2018, and December 31, 2021, inclusive, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.(2) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend only to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, including interest owed but shall not extend to penalties or liquidated damages.(3) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor.(b) (1) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action. The direct contractors liability shall be limited to unpaid wages, including any interest owed.(2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.(3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier for unpaid wages owed to a wage claimant by the direct contractor or subcontractor for the performance of private work, including unpaid wages owed by the direct contractor, pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).(c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.(d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:(1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.(2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.(3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.(e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.(f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.(2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.(3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.(g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.(h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2019, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
4861
4962 SECTION 1. Section 218.7 of the Labor Code is amended to read:
5063
5164 ### SECTION 1.
5265
5366 218.7. (a) (1) For contracts entered into between January 1, 2018, and December 31, 2021, inclusive, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.(2) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend only to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, including interest owed but shall not extend to penalties or liquidated damages.(3) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor.(b) (1) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action. The direct contractors liability shall be limited to unpaid wages, including any interest owed.(2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.(3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier for unpaid wages owed to a wage claimant by the direct contractor or subcontractor for the performance of private work, including unpaid wages owed by the direct contractor, pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).(c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.(d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:(1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.(2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.(3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.(e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.(f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.(2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.(3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.(g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.(h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2019, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
5467
5568 218.7. (a) (1) For contracts entered into between January 1, 2018, and December 31, 2021, inclusive, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.(2) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend only to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, including interest owed but shall not extend to penalties or liquidated damages.(3) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor.(b) (1) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action. The direct contractors liability shall be limited to unpaid wages, including any interest owed.(2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.(3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier for unpaid wages owed to a wage claimant by the direct contractor or subcontractor for the performance of private work, including unpaid wages owed by the direct contractor, pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).(c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.(d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:(1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.(2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.(3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.(e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.(f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.(2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.(3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.(g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.(h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2019, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
5669
5770 218.7. (a) (1) For contracts entered into between January 1, 2018, and December 31, 2021, inclusive, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.(2) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend only to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, including interest owed but shall not extend to penalties or liquidated damages.(3) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor.(b) (1) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action. The direct contractors liability shall be limited to unpaid wages, including any interest owed.(2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.(3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier for unpaid wages owed to a wage claimant by the direct contractor or subcontractor for the performance of private work, including unpaid wages owed by the direct contractor, pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).(c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.(d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:(1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.(2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.(3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.(e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.(f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.(2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.(3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.(g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.(h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2019, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
5871
5972
6073
6174 218.7. (a) (1) For contracts entered into between January 1, 2018, and December 31, 2021, inclusive, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.
6275
6376 (2) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend only to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, including interest owed but shall not extend to penalties or liquidated damages.
6477
6578 (3) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor.
6679
6780 (b) (1) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action. The direct contractors liability shall be limited to unpaid wages, including any interest owed.
6881
6982 (2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.
7083
7184 (3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier for unpaid wages owed to a wage claimant by the direct contractor or subcontractor for the performance of private work, including unpaid wages owed by the direct contractor, pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.
7285
7386 (4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).
7487
7588 (c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.
7689
7790 (d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:
7891
7992 (1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.
8093
8194 (2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.
8295
8396 (3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.
8497
8598 (e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.
8699
87100 (f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.
88101
89102 (2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.
90103
91104 (3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.
92105
93106 (g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.
94107
95108 (h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.
96109
97110 (i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2019, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.
98111
99112 (j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
100113
101114 SEC. 2. Section 218.8 is added to the Labor Code, to read:218.8. (a) (1) For contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.(2) Subject to paragraph (3), the direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor.(3) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to penalties and liquidates damages only as follows:If a worker employed by a subcontractor on a private construction project is not paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution owed by the subcontractor on account of the workers performance of labor on that project, the direct contractor of the project is not liable for any associated penalties or liquidated damages under paragraph (2) unless the direct contractor had knowledge of the subcontractors failure to pay the specified wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, or the direct contractor fails to comply with all of the following requirements:(A) The contractor shall monitor the payment by the subcontractor of wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, by periodic review of the subcontractors payroll records which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174.(B) Upon becoming aware of the failure of the subcontractor to pay the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, the contractor shall diligently take corrective action to halt or rectify the failure, including, but not limited to, retaining sufficient funds due the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project.(C) Prior to making final payment to the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project, the contractor shall obtain an affidavit signed under penalty of perjury from the subcontractor that the subcontractor has paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution due to the employees or the labor trust fund for all work performed on the private construction project.(4) The Division of Labor Standards Enforcement shall notify the contractor and subcontractor on a private works project within 15 days of the receipt by the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement of a complaint of the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers.(5) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor, including liability for associated penalties and liquidated damages.(b) (1) (A) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages, liquidated damages, interest, and penalties created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action.(B) The Labor Commissioner shall notify the direct contractor and subcontractor at any tier on a private works project at least 30 days prior to a hearing held on an administrative complaint pursuant to Section 98, prior to issuance of a citation pursuant to Section 1197.1, or prior to filing a civil action, for the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name or address, and the name of the employer. The notice shall not preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional contractors or wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.(3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier to enforce liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor on a private work pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name and the name of the employer, and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).(5) Any liquidated damages awarded by the Labor Commissioner or the court shall be payable to the aggrieved employee.(c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.(d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:(1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.(2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.(3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.(e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.(f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.(2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, the contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.(3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.(g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.(h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2022, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
102115
103116 SEC. 2. Section 218.8 is added to the Labor Code, to read:
104117
105118 ### SEC. 2.
106119
107120 218.8. (a) (1) For contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.(2) Subject to paragraph (3), the direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor.(3) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to penalties and liquidates damages only as follows:If a worker employed by a subcontractor on a private construction project is not paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution owed by the subcontractor on account of the workers performance of labor on that project, the direct contractor of the project is not liable for any associated penalties or liquidated damages under paragraph (2) unless the direct contractor had knowledge of the subcontractors failure to pay the specified wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, or the direct contractor fails to comply with all of the following requirements:(A) The contractor shall monitor the payment by the subcontractor of wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, by periodic review of the subcontractors payroll records which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174.(B) Upon becoming aware of the failure of the subcontractor to pay the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, the contractor shall diligently take corrective action to halt or rectify the failure, including, but not limited to, retaining sufficient funds due the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project.(C) Prior to making final payment to the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project, the contractor shall obtain an affidavit signed under penalty of perjury from the subcontractor that the subcontractor has paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution due to the employees or the labor trust fund for all work performed on the private construction project.(4) The Division of Labor Standards Enforcement shall notify the contractor and subcontractor on a private works project within 15 days of the receipt by the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement of a complaint of the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers.(5) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor, including liability for associated penalties and liquidated damages.(b) (1) (A) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages, liquidated damages, interest, and penalties created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action.(B) The Labor Commissioner shall notify the direct contractor and subcontractor at any tier on a private works project at least 30 days prior to a hearing held on an administrative complaint pursuant to Section 98, prior to issuance of a citation pursuant to Section 1197.1, or prior to filing a civil action, for the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name or address, and the name of the employer. The notice shall not preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional contractors or wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.(3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier to enforce liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor on a private work pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name and the name of the employer, and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).(5) Any liquidated damages awarded by the Labor Commissioner or the court shall be payable to the aggrieved employee.(c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.(d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:(1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.(2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.(3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.(e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.(f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.(2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, the contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.(3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.(g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.(h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2022, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
108121
109122 218.8. (a) (1) For contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.(2) Subject to paragraph (3), the direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor.(3) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to penalties and liquidates damages only as follows:If a worker employed by a subcontractor on a private construction project is not paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution owed by the subcontractor on account of the workers performance of labor on that project, the direct contractor of the project is not liable for any associated penalties or liquidated damages under paragraph (2) unless the direct contractor had knowledge of the subcontractors failure to pay the specified wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, or the direct contractor fails to comply with all of the following requirements:(A) The contractor shall monitor the payment by the subcontractor of wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, by periodic review of the subcontractors payroll records which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174.(B) Upon becoming aware of the failure of the subcontractor to pay the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, the contractor shall diligently take corrective action to halt or rectify the failure, including, but not limited to, retaining sufficient funds due the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project.(C) Prior to making final payment to the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project, the contractor shall obtain an affidavit signed under penalty of perjury from the subcontractor that the subcontractor has paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution due to the employees or the labor trust fund for all work performed on the private construction project.(4) The Division of Labor Standards Enforcement shall notify the contractor and subcontractor on a private works project within 15 days of the receipt by the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement of a complaint of the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers.(5) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor, including liability for associated penalties and liquidated damages.(b) (1) (A) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages, liquidated damages, interest, and penalties created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action.(B) The Labor Commissioner shall notify the direct contractor and subcontractor at any tier on a private works project at least 30 days prior to a hearing held on an administrative complaint pursuant to Section 98, prior to issuance of a citation pursuant to Section 1197.1, or prior to filing a civil action, for the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name or address, and the name of the employer. The notice shall not preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional contractors or wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.(3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier to enforce liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor on a private work pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name and the name of the employer, and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).(5) Any liquidated damages awarded by the Labor Commissioner or the court shall be payable to the aggrieved employee.(c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.(d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:(1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.(2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.(3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.(e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.(f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.(2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, the contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.(3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.(g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.(h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2022, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
110123
111124 218.8. (a) (1) For contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.(2) Subject to paragraph (3), the direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor.(3) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to penalties and liquidates damages only as follows:If a worker employed by a subcontractor on a private construction project is not paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution owed by the subcontractor on account of the workers performance of labor on that project, the direct contractor of the project is not liable for any associated penalties or liquidated damages under paragraph (2) unless the direct contractor had knowledge of the subcontractors failure to pay the specified wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, or the direct contractor fails to comply with all of the following requirements:(A) The contractor shall monitor the payment by the subcontractor of wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, by periodic review of the subcontractors payroll records which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174.(B) Upon becoming aware of the failure of the subcontractor to pay the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, the contractor shall diligently take corrective action to halt or rectify the failure, including, but not limited to, retaining sufficient funds due the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project.(C) Prior to making final payment to the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project, the contractor shall obtain an affidavit signed under penalty of perjury from the subcontractor that the subcontractor has paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution due to the employees or the labor trust fund for all work performed on the private construction project.(4) The Division of Labor Standards Enforcement shall notify the contractor and subcontractor on a private works project within 15 days of the receipt by the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement of a complaint of the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers.(5) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor, including liability for associated penalties and liquidated damages.(b) (1) (A) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages, liquidated damages, interest, and penalties created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action.(B) The Labor Commissioner shall notify the direct contractor and subcontractor at any tier on a private works project at least 30 days prior to a hearing held on an administrative complaint pursuant to Section 98, prior to issuance of a citation pursuant to Section 1197.1, or prior to filing a civil action, for the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name or address, and the name of the employer. The notice shall not preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional contractors or wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.(3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier to enforce liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor on a private work pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name and the name of the employer, and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.(4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).(5) Any liquidated damages awarded by the Labor Commissioner or the court shall be payable to the aggrieved employee.(c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.(d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:(1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.(2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.(3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.(e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.(f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.(2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, the contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.(3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.(g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.(h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2022, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.(j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.
112125
113126
114127
115128 218.8. (a) (1) For contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2022, a direct contractor making or taking a contract in the state for the erection, construction, alteration, or repair of a building, structure, or other private work, shall assume, and is liable for, any debt owed to a wage claimant or third party on the wage claimants behalf, incurred by a subcontractor at any tier acting under, by, or for the direct contractor for the wage claimants performance of labor included in the subject of the contract between the direct contractor and the owner.
116129
117130 (2) Subject to paragraph (3), the direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor.
118131
119132 (3) The direct contractors liability under this section shall extend to penalties and liquidates damages only as follows:
120133
121134 If a worker employed by a subcontractor on a private construction project is not paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution owed by the subcontractor on account of the workers performance of labor on that project, the direct contractor of the project is not liable for any associated penalties or liquidated damages under paragraph (2) unless the direct contractor had knowledge of the subcontractors failure to pay the specified wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, or the direct contractor fails to comply with all of the following requirements:
122135
123136 (A) The contractor shall monitor the payment by the subcontractor of wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, by periodic review of the subcontractors payroll records which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174.
124137
125138 (B) Upon becoming aware of the failure of the subcontractor to pay the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution to the employees or the labor trust fund, the contractor shall diligently take corrective action to halt or rectify the failure, including, but not limited to, retaining sufficient funds due the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project.
126139
127140 (C) Prior to making final payment to the subcontractor for work performed on the private construction project, the contractor shall obtain an affidavit signed under penalty of perjury from the subcontractor that the subcontractor has paid the wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution due to the employees or the labor trust fund for all work performed on the private construction project.
128141
129142 (4) The Division of Labor Standards Enforcement shall notify the contractor and subcontractor on a private works project within 15 days of the receipt by the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement of a complaint of the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers.
130143
131144 (5) A direct contractor or any other person shall not evade, or commit any act that negates, the requirements of this section. This section does not prohibit a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier from establishing by contract or enforcing any otherwise lawful remedies against a subcontractor it hires for liability created by the nonpayment of wages, fringe or other benefit payments, or contributions by that subcontractor or by a subcontractor at any tier working under that subcontractor, including liability for associated penalties and liquidated damages.
132145
133146 (b) (1) (A) The Labor Commissioner may enforce against a direct contractor the liability for unpaid wages, liquidated damages, interest, and penalties created by subdivision (a) pursuant to Section 98 or 1197.1, or through a civil action.
134147
135148 (B) The Labor Commissioner shall notify the direct contractor and subcontractor at any tier on a private works project at least 30 days prior to a hearing held on an administrative complaint pursuant to Section 98, prior to issuance of a citation pursuant to Section 1197.1, or prior to filing a civil action, for the failure of a subcontractor on that private works project to pay the specified wage, fringe, or other benefit due to workers. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name or address, and the name of the employer. The notice shall not preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional contractors or wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.
136149
137150 (2) A third party owed fringe or other benefit payments or contributions on a wage claimants behalf may bring a civil action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees.
138151
139152 (3) A joint labor-management cooperation committee established pursuant to the federal Labor Management Cooperation Act of 1978 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 175a) may bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction against a direct contractor or subcontractor at any tier to enforce liability for any unpaid wage, fringe or other benefit payment or contribution, penalties or liquidated damages, and interest owed by the subcontractor on account of the performance of the labor on a private work pursuant to subdivision (a). The court shall award a prevailing plaintiff in such an action its reasonable attorneys fees and costs, including expert witness fees. Prior to commencement of an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a), the committee shall provide the direct contractor and subcontractor that employed the wage claimant with at least 30 days notice by first-class mail. The notice need only describe the general nature of the claim, the project name and the name of the employer, and shall not limit the liability of the direct contractor or preclude subsequent amendments of an action to encompass additional wage claimants employed by the subcontractor.
140153
141154 (4) No other party may bring an action against a direct contractor to enforce the liability created by subdivision (a).
142155
143156 (5) Any liquidated damages awarded by the Labor Commissioner or the court shall be payable to the aggrieved employee.
144157
145158 (c) Unless otherwise provided by law, property of the direct contractor may be attached, after trial, for the payment of any judgment received pursuant to this section.
146159
147160 (d) An action brought pursuant to this section shall be filed within one year of the earliest of the following:
148161
149162 (1) Recordation of the notice of completion of the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8182 of the Civil Code.
150163
151164 (2) Recordation of a notice of cessation of the work covered by the direct contract, pursuant to Section 8188 of the Civil Code.
152165
153166 (3) Actual completion of the work covered by the direct contract.
154167
155168 (e) This section does not apply to work performed by an employee of the state, a special district, a city, a county, a city and county, or any political subdivision of the state.
156169
157170 (f) (1) Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide payroll records, which, at a minimum, contain the information set forth in subdivision (a) of Section 226, and which are payroll records as contemplated by Section 1174, of its employees who are providing labor on a private work, which payroll records shall be marked or obliterated only to prevent disclosure of an individuals full social security number, but shall provide the last four digits of the social security number. The payroll records must contain information sufficient to apprise the requesting party of the subcontractors payment status in making fringe or other benefit payments or contributions to a third party on the employees behalf.
158171
159172 (2) Upon request of a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors under contract to the subcontractor shall provide the direct contractor award information that includes the project name, name and address of the subcontractor, the contractor with whom the subcontractor is under contract, anticipated start date, duration, and estimated journeymen and apprentice hours, and contact information for its subcontractors on the project.
160173
161174 (3) A subcontractors failure to comply with this subdivision shall not relieve a direct contractor from any of the obligations contained in this section.
162175
163176 (g) For purposes of this section, direct contractor and subcontractor have the same meanings as provided in Sections 8018 and 8046, respectively, of the Civil Code.
164177
165178 (h) Nothing in this section shall alter the owners obligation to timely pay a direct contractor as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8812 of the Civil Code, or a direct contractors obligation to timely pay a subcontractor as set forth in Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code and Section 8814 of the Civil Code, or the penalties for failing to do so as set forth in Sections 8800 and 8818 of the Civil Code and Section 7108.5 of the Business and Professions Code, except that the direct contractor may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.
166179
167180 (i) For any contract entered into on or after January 1, 2022, in order to withhold payments as disputed pursuant to subdivision (h), the direct contractor must specify, in its contract with the subcontractor, the specific documents and information that the direct contractor will require that the subcontractor provide under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f). Subcontractors may include the same requirements in their contracts with lower tiered subcontractors and may withhold as disputed all sums owed if a lower tiered subcontractor does not provide the information requested under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (f), until that information is provided.
168181
169182 (j) The provisions of this section are severable. If any provision of this section or its application is held invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application.