California 2023-2024 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB636 Compare Versions

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1-Assembly Bill No. 636 CHAPTER 451 An act to amend Section 2810.5 of the Labor Code, relating to employment. [ Approved by Governor October 08, 2023. Filed with Secretary of State October 08, 2023. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 636, Kalra. Employers: agricultural employees: required disclosures.Existing law requires an employer to provide an employee, at the time of hiring, a written notice including specified information in the language that the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to the employee. Existing law requires the Labor Commissioner to prepare a template that includes the information and to make the template available to employers in a manner as determined by the commissioner.This bill would require an employer to include in the written notice information regarding the existence of a federal or state disaster declaration applicable to the county or counties in which the employee will be employed, as specified.This bill would require an employer, beginning on March 15, 2024, to give an employee admitted pursuant to the federal H-2A agricultural visa, on the day that the H-2A employee begins work for the employer in the state or on the first day that the employee begins work for another H-2A employer, additional information in a separate and distinct section of the notice described above, in Spanish, and, if requested by the employee, in English, describing an agricultural employees additional rights and protection under California law, as specified. The bill would provide employers who employ both H-2A and non-H-2A employees with the option to provide the notice to non-H-2A employees in English or Spanish, at the employees request, or in the language that the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to non-H-2A employees. The bill would require the Labor Commissioner to create a template for the notice that complies with this requirement and to post the template on its internet website commencing March 1, 2024.Existing law specifies that for purposes of these provisions, the term employee does not include, among other persons, an employee who is covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement if the agreement expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employee, and if the agreement provides premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate wage.This bill would, in addition, exclude an H-2A employee from the definition of employee if they are covered by an agreement that provides for wage rates of not less than the federal H-2A program wage required to be paid during the contract period.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. The Legislature finds and declare all of the following:(a) In 2011, Californias Wage Theft Prevention Act was signed into law, requiring most employers in California to provide a notice of basic wage and hour information to all employees at the time of hire. In subsequent years, the act was amended to require employers to advise workers of their right to accrue and take sick leave without fear of retaliation and to file a complaint to remedy a violation of that right. The act was also amended to require employers of temporary workers to provide additional business location and contact information because this workforce is seen as uniquely vulnerable to workplace violations.(b) This act continues the evolution of the notice requirements described above to protect vulnerable workers from a lack of key information about work conditions by placing new requirements on employers of farmworkers who are brought into California for work in agriculture under the federal H-2A agricultural worker visa program.(c) The notice required by this act is intended to create a California H-2A farmworker legal rights and disclosure requirement that would allow each H-2A farmworker to readily comprehend their employers obligations under important California law and regulations, equip workers with the knowledge needed to quickly ascertain whether those laws are being complied with in their workplaces, and provide workers with information about how to initiate complaints covering possible violations with state and federal agencies, their collective bargaining representatives, or nonprofit legal assistance organizations that represent farmworkers.(d) The Legislature finds that the notice required by this act is necessary because more than 43,000 foreign agricultural temporary workers were admitted to California in the 2022 federal fiscal year under the federal H-2A visa program, a number that has grown dramatically in recent years. Many of these farmworkers have never worked in California, and are believed to speak and read little or no English. Fewer still are believed to be familiar with their basic legal rights and remedies under California law, and many are provided false or misleading information about California laws in the federal job order approved for their admissions.(e) Although all employers of H-2A farmworkers are required to comply with federal, state, and local law, neither the United States Department of Labor nor the Employment Development Department, which both administer the program, require H-2A employers to accurately disclose in writing to H-2A farmworkers any information about fundamental California labor, housing, health and safety, and other laws that afford them greater protections than federal law. Neither the United States Department of Labor, nor the Employment Development Department, require H-2A employers to inform H-2A farmworkers of the existence of either federal or state emergency or disaster declarations that may affect their health and safety during their employment in California. Because of the recent COVID-19 pandemic, the Legislature finds that notice of these declarations is in workers interests and in keeping with prior amendments to the important Worker Right to Know statute.SEC. 2. Section 2810.5 of the Labor Code is amended to read:2810.5. (a) (1) At the time of hiring, an employer shall provide to each employee a written notice, in the language the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to the employee, containing the following information:(A) The rate or rates of pay and basis thereof, whether paid by the hour, shift, day, week, salary, piece, commission, or otherwise, including any rates for overtime, as applicable.(B) Allowances, if any, claimed as part of the minimum wage, including meal or lodging allowances.(C) The regular payday designated by the employer in accordance with the requirements of this code.(D) The name of the employer, including any doing business as names used by the employer.(E) The physical address of the employers main office or principal place of business, and a mailing address, if different.(F) The telephone number of the employer.(G) The name, address, and telephone number of the employers workers compensation insurance carrier.(H) That an employee: may accrue and use sick leave; has a right to request and use accrued paid sick leave; may not be terminated or retaliated against for using or requesting the use of accrued paid sick leave; and has the right to file a complaint against an employer who retaliates.(I) The existence of a federal or state emergency or disaster declaration applicable to the county or counties where the employee is to be employed, and that was issued within 30 days before the employees first day of employment, that may affect their health and safety during their employment. (J) Any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary.(2) The Labor Commissioner shall prepare templates for the required notices that comply with the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (4). The templates shall be made available to employers in a manner as determined by the Labor Commissioner, and as set forth in subdivision (d). Commencing March 1, 2024, the template developed pursuant to paragraph (4) shall be posted on the Labor Commissioners internet website.(3) If the employer is a temporary services employer, as defined in Section 201.3, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include the name, the physical address of the main office, the mailing address if different from the physical address of the main office, and the telephone number of the legal entity for whom the employee will perform work, and any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary. The requirements of this paragraph do not apply to a security services company that is licensed by the Department of Consumer Affairs and that solely provides security services.(4) (A) If an employee is admitted under the federal H-2A agricultural visa program pursuant to Section 1188 of Title 8 of the United States Code, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include, in Spanish, a separate and distinct section containing nonduplicative information succinctly describing an agricultural employees additional rights and protections under California law and regulations, including, but not limited to, information addressing the federal H-2A program wage rate required to be paid during the contract period; overtime wage rates; frequency of pay; pay for piece rate workers; 10-minute rest periods; 30-minute meal periods; transportation travel time compensation when required, including transportation from housing to work sites; employee housing rights; nonretaliation protections for complaints or organizing; contents of itemized wage statements; sexual harassment prohibitions; toilets; requirements regarding availability of potable water and handwashing facilities; requirements relating to hot weather working conditions and the availability of shade; pesticide exposure protections; workplace safety requirements, training and correction of hazards; transportation in defined farm labor vehicles; prohibitions against tool or equipment charges, prohibitions against deductions for meals not taken; training and necessary equipment and lighting for night work; prohibitions against use of short-handled hoes and limits on hand weeding; employee-paid health insurance; right to accrue and take sick leave; workers compensation coverage, disability pay, and medical care for injuries; and the right to complain to state or federal agencies and to seek advice from collective bargaining representatives or legal assistance organizations.(B) (i) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an employer shall provide the notice required by subparagraph (A) in Spanish to the H-2A employee on the day that the H-2A employee begins work in the state or on the first day that the employee begins work for another H-2A employer. An H-2A employee may request that the employer also provide the notice in English.(ii) An employer who employs both H-2A and non-H-2A employees at the same time may satisfy the requirements of paragraph (1) with respect to the employers non-H-2A employees by opting to provide those employees with the notice required by subparagraph (A) or by providing the notice required by paragraph (1).(b) An employer shall notify their employees in writing of any changes to the information set forth in the notice within seven calendar days after the time of the changes, unless one of the following applies:(1) All changes are reflected on a timely wage statement furnished in accordance with Section 226.(2) Notice of all changes is provided in another writing required by law within seven days of the changes.(c) For purposes of this section, employee does not include any of the following:(1) An employee directly employed by the state or any political subdivision thereof, including any city, county, city and county, or special district.(2) An employee who is exempt from the payment of overtime wages by statute or the wage orders of the Industrial Welfare Commission.(3) An employee who is covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement if the agreement expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employee, and if the agreement provides premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate of pay for those employees of not less than 30 percent more than the state minimum wage. This subdivision applies to employees admitted to the federal H-2A program only if the collective bargaining agreement provides for wage rates of not less than the federal H-2A program wage required to be paid during the contract period.(d) Commencing March 15, 2024, an employer of an employee admitted pursuant to the federal H-2A agricultural visa program shall comply with subdivision (a) by giving workers a copy of the template developed by the Labor Commissioner in accordance with paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).
1+Enrolled September 07, 2023 Passed IN Senate September 05, 2023 Passed IN Assembly May 18, 2023 Amended IN Assembly May 11, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 636Introduced by Assembly Member KalraFebruary 09, 2023 An act to amend Section 2810.5 of the Labor Code, relating to employment. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 636, Kalra. Employers: agricultural employees: required disclosures.Existing law requires an employer to provide an employee, at the time of hiring, a written notice including specified information in the language that the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to the employee. Existing law requires the Labor Commissioner to prepare a template that includes the information and to make the template available to employers in a manner as determined by the commissioner.This bill would require an employer to include in the written notice information regarding the existence of a federal or state disaster declaration applicable to the county or counties in which the employee will be employed, as specified.This bill would require an employer, beginning on March 15, 2024, to give an employee admitted pursuant to the federal H-2A agricultural visa, on the day that the H-2A employee begins work for the employer in the state or on the first day that the employee begins work for another H-2A employer, additional information in a separate and distinct section of the notice described above, in Spanish, and, if requested by the employee, in English, describing an agricultural employees additional rights and protection under California law, as specified. The bill would provide employers who employ both H-2A and non-H-2A employees with the option to provide the notice to non-H-2A employees in English or Spanish, at the employees request, or in the language that the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to non-H-2A employees. The bill would require the Labor Commissioner to create a template for the notice that complies with this requirement and to post the template on its internet website commencing March 1, 2024.Existing law specifies that for purposes of these provisions, the term employee does not include, among other persons, an employee who is covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement if the agreement expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employee, and if the agreement provides premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate wage.This bill would, in addition, exclude an H-2A employee from the definition of employee if they are covered by an agreement that provides for wage rates of not less than the federal H-2A program wage required to be paid during the contract period.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. The Legislature finds and declare all of the following:(a) In 2011, Californias Wage Theft Prevention Act was signed into law, requiring most employers in California to provide a notice of basic wage and hour information to all employees at the time of hire. In subsequent years, the act was amended to require employers to advise workers of their right to accrue and take sick leave without fear of retaliation and to file a complaint to remedy a violation of that right. The act was also amended to require employers of temporary workers to provide additional business location and contact information because this workforce is seen as uniquely vulnerable to workplace violations.(b) This act continues the evolution of the notice requirements described above to protect vulnerable workers from a lack of key information about work conditions by placing new requirements on employers of farmworkers who are brought into California for work in agriculture under the federal H-2A agricultural worker visa program.(c) The notice required by this act is intended to create a California H-2A farmworker legal rights and disclosure requirement that would allow each H-2A farmworker to readily comprehend their employers obligations under important California law and regulations, equip workers with the knowledge needed to quickly ascertain whether those laws are being complied with in their workplaces, and provide workers with information about how to initiate complaints covering possible violations with state and federal agencies, their collective bargaining representatives, or nonprofit legal assistance organizations that represent farmworkers.(d) The Legislature finds that the notice required by this act is necessary because more than 43,000 foreign agricultural temporary workers were admitted to California in the 2022 federal fiscal year under the federal H-2A visa program, a number that has grown dramatically in recent years. Many of these farmworkers have never worked in California, and are believed to speak and read little or no English. Fewer still are believed to be familiar with their basic legal rights and remedies under California law, and many are provided false or misleading information about California laws in the federal job order approved for their admissions.(e) Although all employers of H-2A farmworkers are required to comply with federal, state, and local law, neither the United States Department of Labor nor the Employment Development Department, which both administer the program, require H-2A employers to accurately disclose in writing to H-2A farmworkers any information about fundamental California labor, housing, health and safety, and other laws that afford them greater protections than federal law. Neither the United States Department of Labor, nor the Employment Development Department, require H-2A employers to inform H-2A farmworkers of the existence of either federal or state emergency or disaster declarations that may affect their health and safety during their employment in California. Because of the recent COVID-19 pandemic, the Legislature finds that notice of these declarations is in workers interests and in keeping with prior amendments to the important Worker Right to Know statute.SEC. 2. Section 2810.5 of the Labor Code is amended to read:2810.5. (a) (1) At the time of hiring, an employer shall provide to each employee a written notice, in the language the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to the employee, containing the following information:(A) The rate or rates of pay and basis thereof, whether paid by the hour, shift, day, week, salary, piece, commission, or otherwise, including any rates for overtime, as applicable.(B) Allowances, if any, claimed as part of the minimum wage, including meal or lodging allowances.(C) The regular payday designated by the employer in accordance with the requirements of this code.(D) The name of the employer, including any doing business as names used by the employer.(E) The physical address of the employers main office or principal place of business, and a mailing address, if different.(F) The telephone number of the employer.(G) The name, address, and telephone number of the employers workers compensation insurance carrier.(H) That an employee: may accrue and use sick leave; has a right to request and use accrued paid sick leave; may not be terminated or retaliated against for using or requesting the use of accrued paid sick leave; and has the right to file a complaint against an employer who retaliates.(I) The existence of a federal or state emergency or disaster declaration applicable to the county or counties where the employee is to be employed, and that was issued within 30 days before the employees first day of employment, that may affect their health and safety during their employment. (J) Any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary.(2) The Labor Commissioner shall prepare templates for the required notices that comply with the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (4). The templates shall be made available to employers in a manner as determined by the Labor Commissioner, and as set forth in subdivision (d). Commencing March 1, 2024, the template developed pursuant to paragraph (4) shall be posted on the Labor Commissioners internet website.(3) If the employer is a temporary services employer, as defined in Section 201.3, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include the name, the physical address of the main office, the mailing address if different from the physical address of the main office, and the telephone number of the legal entity for whom the employee will perform work, and any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary. The requirements of this paragraph do not apply to a security services company that is licensed by the Department of Consumer Affairs and that solely provides security services.(4) (A) If an employee is admitted under the federal H-2A agricultural visa program pursuant to Section 1188 of Title 8 of the United States Code, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include, in Spanish, a separate and distinct section containing nonduplicative information succinctly describing an agricultural employees additional rights and protections under California law and regulations, including, but not limited to, information addressing the federal H-2A program wage rate required to be paid during the contract period; overtime wage rates; frequency of pay; pay for piece rate workers; 10-minute rest periods; 30-minute meal periods; transportation travel time compensation when required, including transportation from housing to work sites; employee housing rights; nonretaliation protections for complaints or organizing; contents of itemized wage statements; sexual harassment prohibitions; toilets; requirements regarding availability of potable water and handwashing facilities; requirements relating to hot weather working conditions and the availability of shade; pesticide exposure protections; workplace safety requirements, training and correction of hazards; transportation in defined farm labor vehicles; prohibitions against tool or equipment charges, prohibitions against deductions for meals not taken; training and necessary equipment and lighting for night work; prohibitions against use of short-handled hoes and limits on hand weeding; employee-paid health insurance; right to accrue and take sick leave; workers compensation coverage, disability pay, and medical care for injuries; and the right to complain to state or federal agencies and to seek advice from collective bargaining representatives or legal assistance organizations.(B) (i) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an employer shall provide the notice required by subparagraph (A) in Spanish to the H-2A employee on the day that the H-2A employee begins work in the state or on the first day that the employee begins work for another H-2A employer. An H-2A employee may request that the employer also provide the notice in English.(ii) An employer who employs both H-2A and non-H-2A employees at the same time may satisfy the requirements of paragraph (1) with respect to the employers non-H-2A employees by opting to provide those employees with the notice required by subparagraph (A) or by providing the notice required by paragraph (1).(b) An employer shall notify their employees in writing of any changes to the information set forth in the notice within seven calendar days after the time of the changes, unless one of the following applies:(1) All changes are reflected on a timely wage statement furnished in accordance with Section 226.(2) Notice of all changes is provided in another writing required by law within seven days of the changes.(c) For purposes of this section, employee does not include any of the following:(1) An employee directly employed by the state or any political subdivision thereof, including any city, county, city and county, or special district.(2) An employee who is exempt from the payment of overtime wages by statute or the wage orders of the Industrial Welfare Commission.(3) An employee who is covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement if the agreement expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employee, and if the agreement provides premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate of pay for those employees of not less than 30 percent more than the state minimum wage. This subdivision applies to employees admitted to the federal H-2A program only if the collective bargaining agreement provides for wage rates of not less than the federal H-2A program wage required to be paid during the contract period.(d) Commencing March 15, 2024, an employer of an employee admitted pursuant to the federal H-2A agricultural visa program shall comply with subdivision (a) by giving workers a copy of the template developed by the Labor Commissioner in accordance with paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).
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3- Assembly Bill No. 636 CHAPTER 451 An act to amend Section 2810.5 of the Labor Code, relating to employment. [ Approved by Governor October 08, 2023. Filed with Secretary of State October 08, 2023. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 636, Kalra. Employers: agricultural employees: required disclosures.Existing law requires an employer to provide an employee, at the time of hiring, a written notice including specified information in the language that the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to the employee. Existing law requires the Labor Commissioner to prepare a template that includes the information and to make the template available to employers in a manner as determined by the commissioner.This bill would require an employer to include in the written notice information regarding the existence of a federal or state disaster declaration applicable to the county or counties in which the employee will be employed, as specified.This bill would require an employer, beginning on March 15, 2024, to give an employee admitted pursuant to the federal H-2A agricultural visa, on the day that the H-2A employee begins work for the employer in the state or on the first day that the employee begins work for another H-2A employer, additional information in a separate and distinct section of the notice described above, in Spanish, and, if requested by the employee, in English, describing an agricultural employees additional rights and protection under California law, as specified. The bill would provide employers who employ both H-2A and non-H-2A employees with the option to provide the notice to non-H-2A employees in English or Spanish, at the employees request, or in the language that the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to non-H-2A employees. The bill would require the Labor Commissioner to create a template for the notice that complies with this requirement and to post the template on its internet website commencing March 1, 2024.Existing law specifies that for purposes of these provisions, the term employee does not include, among other persons, an employee who is covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement if the agreement expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employee, and if the agreement provides premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate wage.This bill would, in addition, exclude an H-2A employee from the definition of employee if they are covered by an agreement that provides for wage rates of not less than the federal H-2A program wage required to be paid during the contract period.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Enrolled September 07, 2023 Passed IN Senate September 05, 2023 Passed IN Assembly May 18, 2023 Amended IN Assembly May 11, 2023 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 636Introduced by Assembly Member KalraFebruary 09, 2023 An act to amend Section 2810.5 of the Labor Code, relating to employment. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 636, Kalra. Employers: agricultural employees: required disclosures.Existing law requires an employer to provide an employee, at the time of hiring, a written notice including specified information in the language that the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to the employee. Existing law requires the Labor Commissioner to prepare a template that includes the information and to make the template available to employers in a manner as determined by the commissioner.This bill would require an employer to include in the written notice information regarding the existence of a federal or state disaster declaration applicable to the county or counties in which the employee will be employed, as specified.This bill would require an employer, beginning on March 15, 2024, to give an employee admitted pursuant to the federal H-2A agricultural visa, on the day that the H-2A employee begins work for the employer in the state or on the first day that the employee begins work for another H-2A employer, additional information in a separate and distinct section of the notice described above, in Spanish, and, if requested by the employee, in English, describing an agricultural employees additional rights and protection under California law, as specified. The bill would provide employers who employ both H-2A and non-H-2A employees with the option to provide the notice to non-H-2A employees in English or Spanish, at the employees request, or in the language that the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to non-H-2A employees. The bill would require the Labor Commissioner to create a template for the notice that complies with this requirement and to post the template on its internet website commencing March 1, 2024.Existing law specifies that for purposes of these provisions, the term employee does not include, among other persons, an employee who is covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement if the agreement expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employee, and if the agreement provides premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate wage.This bill would, in addition, exclude an H-2A employee from the definition of employee if they are covered by an agreement that provides for wage rates of not less than the federal H-2A program wage required to be paid during the contract period.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
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5- Assembly Bill No. 636 CHAPTER 451
5+ Enrolled September 07, 2023 Passed IN Senate September 05, 2023 Passed IN Assembly May 18, 2023 Amended IN Assembly May 11, 2023
66
7- Assembly Bill No. 636
7+Enrolled September 07, 2023
8+Passed IN Senate September 05, 2023
9+Passed IN Assembly May 18, 2023
10+Amended IN Assembly May 11, 2023
811
9- CHAPTER 451
12+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20232024 REGULAR SESSION
13+
14+ Assembly Bill
15+
16+No. 636
17+
18+Introduced by Assembly Member KalraFebruary 09, 2023
19+
20+Introduced by Assembly Member Kalra
21+February 09, 2023
1022
1123 An act to amend Section 2810.5 of the Labor Code, relating to employment.
12-
13- [ Approved by Governor October 08, 2023. Filed with Secretary of State October 08, 2023. ]
1424
1525 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1626
1727 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1828
1929 AB 636, Kalra. Employers: agricultural employees: required disclosures.
2030
2131 Existing law requires an employer to provide an employee, at the time of hiring, a written notice including specified information in the language that the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to the employee. Existing law requires the Labor Commissioner to prepare a template that includes the information and to make the template available to employers in a manner as determined by the commissioner.This bill would require an employer to include in the written notice information regarding the existence of a federal or state disaster declaration applicable to the county or counties in which the employee will be employed, as specified.This bill would require an employer, beginning on March 15, 2024, to give an employee admitted pursuant to the federal H-2A agricultural visa, on the day that the H-2A employee begins work for the employer in the state or on the first day that the employee begins work for another H-2A employer, additional information in a separate and distinct section of the notice described above, in Spanish, and, if requested by the employee, in English, describing an agricultural employees additional rights and protection under California law, as specified. The bill would provide employers who employ both H-2A and non-H-2A employees with the option to provide the notice to non-H-2A employees in English or Spanish, at the employees request, or in the language that the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to non-H-2A employees. The bill would require the Labor Commissioner to create a template for the notice that complies with this requirement and to post the template on its internet website commencing March 1, 2024.Existing law specifies that for purposes of these provisions, the term employee does not include, among other persons, an employee who is covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement if the agreement expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employee, and if the agreement provides premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate wage.This bill would, in addition, exclude an H-2A employee from the definition of employee if they are covered by an agreement that provides for wage rates of not less than the federal H-2A program wage required to be paid during the contract period.
2232
2333 Existing law requires an employer to provide an employee, at the time of hiring, a written notice including specified information in the language that the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to the employee. Existing law requires the Labor Commissioner to prepare a template that includes the information and to make the template available to employers in a manner as determined by the commissioner.
2434
2535 This bill would require an employer to include in the written notice information regarding the existence of a federal or state disaster declaration applicable to the county or counties in which the employee will be employed, as specified.
2636
2737 This bill would require an employer, beginning on March 15, 2024, to give an employee admitted pursuant to the federal H-2A agricultural visa, on the day that the H-2A employee begins work for the employer in the state or on the first day that the employee begins work for another H-2A employer, additional information in a separate and distinct section of the notice described above, in Spanish, and, if requested by the employee, in English, describing an agricultural employees additional rights and protection under California law, as specified. The bill would provide employers who employ both H-2A and non-H-2A employees with the option to provide the notice to non-H-2A employees in English or Spanish, at the employees request, or in the language that the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to non-H-2A employees. The bill would require the Labor Commissioner to create a template for the notice that complies with this requirement and to post the template on its internet website commencing March 1, 2024.
2838
2939 Existing law specifies that for purposes of these provisions, the term employee does not include, among other persons, an employee who is covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement if the agreement expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employee, and if the agreement provides premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate wage.
3040
3141 This bill would, in addition, exclude an H-2A employee from the definition of employee if they are covered by an agreement that provides for wage rates of not less than the federal H-2A program wage required to be paid during the contract period.
3242
3343 ## Digest Key
3444
3545 ## Bill Text
3646
3747 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declare all of the following:(a) In 2011, Californias Wage Theft Prevention Act was signed into law, requiring most employers in California to provide a notice of basic wage and hour information to all employees at the time of hire. In subsequent years, the act was amended to require employers to advise workers of their right to accrue and take sick leave without fear of retaliation and to file a complaint to remedy a violation of that right. The act was also amended to require employers of temporary workers to provide additional business location and contact information because this workforce is seen as uniquely vulnerable to workplace violations.(b) This act continues the evolution of the notice requirements described above to protect vulnerable workers from a lack of key information about work conditions by placing new requirements on employers of farmworkers who are brought into California for work in agriculture under the federal H-2A agricultural worker visa program.(c) The notice required by this act is intended to create a California H-2A farmworker legal rights and disclosure requirement that would allow each H-2A farmworker to readily comprehend their employers obligations under important California law and regulations, equip workers with the knowledge needed to quickly ascertain whether those laws are being complied with in their workplaces, and provide workers with information about how to initiate complaints covering possible violations with state and federal agencies, their collective bargaining representatives, or nonprofit legal assistance organizations that represent farmworkers.(d) The Legislature finds that the notice required by this act is necessary because more than 43,000 foreign agricultural temporary workers were admitted to California in the 2022 federal fiscal year under the federal H-2A visa program, a number that has grown dramatically in recent years. Many of these farmworkers have never worked in California, and are believed to speak and read little or no English. Fewer still are believed to be familiar with their basic legal rights and remedies under California law, and many are provided false or misleading information about California laws in the federal job order approved for their admissions.(e) Although all employers of H-2A farmworkers are required to comply with federal, state, and local law, neither the United States Department of Labor nor the Employment Development Department, which both administer the program, require H-2A employers to accurately disclose in writing to H-2A farmworkers any information about fundamental California labor, housing, health and safety, and other laws that afford them greater protections than federal law. Neither the United States Department of Labor, nor the Employment Development Department, require H-2A employers to inform H-2A farmworkers of the existence of either federal or state emergency or disaster declarations that may affect their health and safety during their employment in California. Because of the recent COVID-19 pandemic, the Legislature finds that notice of these declarations is in workers interests and in keeping with prior amendments to the important Worker Right to Know statute.SEC. 2. Section 2810.5 of the Labor Code is amended to read:2810.5. (a) (1) At the time of hiring, an employer shall provide to each employee a written notice, in the language the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to the employee, containing the following information:(A) The rate or rates of pay and basis thereof, whether paid by the hour, shift, day, week, salary, piece, commission, or otherwise, including any rates for overtime, as applicable.(B) Allowances, if any, claimed as part of the minimum wage, including meal or lodging allowances.(C) The regular payday designated by the employer in accordance with the requirements of this code.(D) The name of the employer, including any doing business as names used by the employer.(E) The physical address of the employers main office or principal place of business, and a mailing address, if different.(F) The telephone number of the employer.(G) The name, address, and telephone number of the employers workers compensation insurance carrier.(H) That an employee: may accrue and use sick leave; has a right to request and use accrued paid sick leave; may not be terminated or retaliated against for using or requesting the use of accrued paid sick leave; and has the right to file a complaint against an employer who retaliates.(I) The existence of a federal or state emergency or disaster declaration applicable to the county or counties where the employee is to be employed, and that was issued within 30 days before the employees first day of employment, that may affect their health and safety during their employment. (J) Any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary.(2) The Labor Commissioner shall prepare templates for the required notices that comply with the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (4). The templates shall be made available to employers in a manner as determined by the Labor Commissioner, and as set forth in subdivision (d). Commencing March 1, 2024, the template developed pursuant to paragraph (4) shall be posted on the Labor Commissioners internet website.(3) If the employer is a temporary services employer, as defined in Section 201.3, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include the name, the physical address of the main office, the mailing address if different from the physical address of the main office, and the telephone number of the legal entity for whom the employee will perform work, and any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary. The requirements of this paragraph do not apply to a security services company that is licensed by the Department of Consumer Affairs and that solely provides security services.(4) (A) If an employee is admitted under the federal H-2A agricultural visa program pursuant to Section 1188 of Title 8 of the United States Code, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include, in Spanish, a separate and distinct section containing nonduplicative information succinctly describing an agricultural employees additional rights and protections under California law and regulations, including, but not limited to, information addressing the federal H-2A program wage rate required to be paid during the contract period; overtime wage rates; frequency of pay; pay for piece rate workers; 10-minute rest periods; 30-minute meal periods; transportation travel time compensation when required, including transportation from housing to work sites; employee housing rights; nonretaliation protections for complaints or organizing; contents of itemized wage statements; sexual harassment prohibitions; toilets; requirements regarding availability of potable water and handwashing facilities; requirements relating to hot weather working conditions and the availability of shade; pesticide exposure protections; workplace safety requirements, training and correction of hazards; transportation in defined farm labor vehicles; prohibitions against tool or equipment charges, prohibitions against deductions for meals not taken; training and necessary equipment and lighting for night work; prohibitions against use of short-handled hoes and limits on hand weeding; employee-paid health insurance; right to accrue and take sick leave; workers compensation coverage, disability pay, and medical care for injuries; and the right to complain to state or federal agencies and to seek advice from collective bargaining representatives or legal assistance organizations.(B) (i) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an employer shall provide the notice required by subparagraph (A) in Spanish to the H-2A employee on the day that the H-2A employee begins work in the state or on the first day that the employee begins work for another H-2A employer. An H-2A employee may request that the employer also provide the notice in English.(ii) An employer who employs both H-2A and non-H-2A employees at the same time may satisfy the requirements of paragraph (1) with respect to the employers non-H-2A employees by opting to provide those employees with the notice required by subparagraph (A) or by providing the notice required by paragraph (1).(b) An employer shall notify their employees in writing of any changes to the information set forth in the notice within seven calendar days after the time of the changes, unless one of the following applies:(1) All changes are reflected on a timely wage statement furnished in accordance with Section 226.(2) Notice of all changes is provided in another writing required by law within seven days of the changes.(c) For purposes of this section, employee does not include any of the following:(1) An employee directly employed by the state or any political subdivision thereof, including any city, county, city and county, or special district.(2) An employee who is exempt from the payment of overtime wages by statute or the wage orders of the Industrial Welfare Commission.(3) An employee who is covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement if the agreement expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employee, and if the agreement provides premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate of pay for those employees of not less than 30 percent more than the state minimum wage. This subdivision applies to employees admitted to the federal H-2A program only if the collective bargaining agreement provides for wage rates of not less than the federal H-2A program wage required to be paid during the contract period.(d) Commencing March 15, 2024, an employer of an employee admitted pursuant to the federal H-2A agricultural visa program shall comply with subdivision (a) by giving workers a copy of the template developed by the Labor Commissioner in accordance with paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).
3848
3949 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4050
4151 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4252
4353 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declare all of the following:(a) In 2011, Californias Wage Theft Prevention Act was signed into law, requiring most employers in California to provide a notice of basic wage and hour information to all employees at the time of hire. In subsequent years, the act was amended to require employers to advise workers of their right to accrue and take sick leave without fear of retaliation and to file a complaint to remedy a violation of that right. The act was also amended to require employers of temporary workers to provide additional business location and contact information because this workforce is seen as uniquely vulnerable to workplace violations.(b) This act continues the evolution of the notice requirements described above to protect vulnerable workers from a lack of key information about work conditions by placing new requirements on employers of farmworkers who are brought into California for work in agriculture under the federal H-2A agricultural worker visa program.(c) The notice required by this act is intended to create a California H-2A farmworker legal rights and disclosure requirement that would allow each H-2A farmworker to readily comprehend their employers obligations under important California law and regulations, equip workers with the knowledge needed to quickly ascertain whether those laws are being complied with in their workplaces, and provide workers with information about how to initiate complaints covering possible violations with state and federal agencies, their collective bargaining representatives, or nonprofit legal assistance organizations that represent farmworkers.(d) The Legislature finds that the notice required by this act is necessary because more than 43,000 foreign agricultural temporary workers were admitted to California in the 2022 federal fiscal year under the federal H-2A visa program, a number that has grown dramatically in recent years. Many of these farmworkers have never worked in California, and are believed to speak and read little or no English. Fewer still are believed to be familiar with their basic legal rights and remedies under California law, and many are provided false or misleading information about California laws in the federal job order approved for their admissions.(e) Although all employers of H-2A farmworkers are required to comply with federal, state, and local law, neither the United States Department of Labor nor the Employment Development Department, which both administer the program, require H-2A employers to accurately disclose in writing to H-2A farmworkers any information about fundamental California labor, housing, health and safety, and other laws that afford them greater protections than federal law. Neither the United States Department of Labor, nor the Employment Development Department, require H-2A employers to inform H-2A farmworkers of the existence of either federal or state emergency or disaster declarations that may affect their health and safety during their employment in California. Because of the recent COVID-19 pandemic, the Legislature finds that notice of these declarations is in workers interests and in keeping with prior amendments to the important Worker Right to Know statute.
4454
4555 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declare all of the following:(a) In 2011, Californias Wage Theft Prevention Act was signed into law, requiring most employers in California to provide a notice of basic wage and hour information to all employees at the time of hire. In subsequent years, the act was amended to require employers to advise workers of their right to accrue and take sick leave without fear of retaliation and to file a complaint to remedy a violation of that right. The act was also amended to require employers of temporary workers to provide additional business location and contact information because this workforce is seen as uniquely vulnerable to workplace violations.(b) This act continues the evolution of the notice requirements described above to protect vulnerable workers from a lack of key information about work conditions by placing new requirements on employers of farmworkers who are brought into California for work in agriculture under the federal H-2A agricultural worker visa program.(c) The notice required by this act is intended to create a California H-2A farmworker legal rights and disclosure requirement that would allow each H-2A farmworker to readily comprehend their employers obligations under important California law and regulations, equip workers with the knowledge needed to quickly ascertain whether those laws are being complied with in their workplaces, and provide workers with information about how to initiate complaints covering possible violations with state and federal agencies, their collective bargaining representatives, or nonprofit legal assistance organizations that represent farmworkers.(d) The Legislature finds that the notice required by this act is necessary because more than 43,000 foreign agricultural temporary workers were admitted to California in the 2022 federal fiscal year under the federal H-2A visa program, a number that has grown dramatically in recent years. Many of these farmworkers have never worked in California, and are believed to speak and read little or no English. Fewer still are believed to be familiar with their basic legal rights and remedies under California law, and many are provided false or misleading information about California laws in the federal job order approved for their admissions.(e) Although all employers of H-2A farmworkers are required to comply with federal, state, and local law, neither the United States Department of Labor nor the Employment Development Department, which both administer the program, require H-2A employers to accurately disclose in writing to H-2A farmworkers any information about fundamental California labor, housing, health and safety, and other laws that afford them greater protections than federal law. Neither the United States Department of Labor, nor the Employment Development Department, require H-2A employers to inform H-2A farmworkers of the existence of either federal or state emergency or disaster declarations that may affect their health and safety during their employment in California. Because of the recent COVID-19 pandemic, the Legislature finds that notice of these declarations is in workers interests and in keeping with prior amendments to the important Worker Right to Know statute.
4656
4757 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declare all of the following:
4858
4959 ### SECTION 1.
5060
5161 (a) In 2011, Californias Wage Theft Prevention Act was signed into law, requiring most employers in California to provide a notice of basic wage and hour information to all employees at the time of hire. In subsequent years, the act was amended to require employers to advise workers of their right to accrue and take sick leave without fear of retaliation and to file a complaint to remedy a violation of that right. The act was also amended to require employers of temporary workers to provide additional business location and contact information because this workforce is seen as uniquely vulnerable to workplace violations.
5262
5363 (b) This act continues the evolution of the notice requirements described above to protect vulnerable workers from a lack of key information about work conditions by placing new requirements on employers of farmworkers who are brought into California for work in agriculture under the federal H-2A agricultural worker visa program.
5464
5565 (c) The notice required by this act is intended to create a California H-2A farmworker legal rights and disclosure requirement that would allow each H-2A farmworker to readily comprehend their employers obligations under important California law and regulations, equip workers with the knowledge needed to quickly ascertain whether those laws are being complied with in their workplaces, and provide workers with information about how to initiate complaints covering possible violations with state and federal agencies, their collective bargaining representatives, or nonprofit legal assistance organizations that represent farmworkers.
5666
5767 (d) The Legislature finds that the notice required by this act is necessary because more than 43,000 foreign agricultural temporary workers were admitted to California in the 2022 federal fiscal year under the federal H-2A visa program, a number that has grown dramatically in recent years. Many of these farmworkers have never worked in California, and are believed to speak and read little or no English. Fewer still are believed to be familiar with their basic legal rights and remedies under California law, and many are provided false or misleading information about California laws in the federal job order approved for their admissions.
5868
5969 (e) Although all employers of H-2A farmworkers are required to comply with federal, state, and local law, neither the United States Department of Labor nor the Employment Development Department, which both administer the program, require H-2A employers to accurately disclose in writing to H-2A farmworkers any information about fundamental California labor, housing, health and safety, and other laws that afford them greater protections than federal law. Neither the United States Department of Labor, nor the Employment Development Department, require H-2A employers to inform H-2A farmworkers of the existence of either federal or state emergency or disaster declarations that may affect their health and safety during their employment in California. Because of the recent COVID-19 pandemic, the Legislature finds that notice of these declarations is in workers interests and in keeping with prior amendments to the important Worker Right to Know statute.
6070
6171 SEC. 2. Section 2810.5 of the Labor Code is amended to read:2810.5. (a) (1) At the time of hiring, an employer shall provide to each employee a written notice, in the language the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to the employee, containing the following information:(A) The rate or rates of pay and basis thereof, whether paid by the hour, shift, day, week, salary, piece, commission, or otherwise, including any rates for overtime, as applicable.(B) Allowances, if any, claimed as part of the minimum wage, including meal or lodging allowances.(C) The regular payday designated by the employer in accordance with the requirements of this code.(D) The name of the employer, including any doing business as names used by the employer.(E) The physical address of the employers main office or principal place of business, and a mailing address, if different.(F) The telephone number of the employer.(G) The name, address, and telephone number of the employers workers compensation insurance carrier.(H) That an employee: may accrue and use sick leave; has a right to request and use accrued paid sick leave; may not be terminated or retaliated against for using or requesting the use of accrued paid sick leave; and has the right to file a complaint against an employer who retaliates.(I) The existence of a federal or state emergency or disaster declaration applicable to the county or counties where the employee is to be employed, and that was issued within 30 days before the employees first day of employment, that may affect their health and safety during their employment. (J) Any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary.(2) The Labor Commissioner shall prepare templates for the required notices that comply with the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (4). The templates shall be made available to employers in a manner as determined by the Labor Commissioner, and as set forth in subdivision (d). Commencing March 1, 2024, the template developed pursuant to paragraph (4) shall be posted on the Labor Commissioners internet website.(3) If the employer is a temporary services employer, as defined in Section 201.3, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include the name, the physical address of the main office, the mailing address if different from the physical address of the main office, and the telephone number of the legal entity for whom the employee will perform work, and any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary. The requirements of this paragraph do not apply to a security services company that is licensed by the Department of Consumer Affairs and that solely provides security services.(4) (A) If an employee is admitted under the federal H-2A agricultural visa program pursuant to Section 1188 of Title 8 of the United States Code, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include, in Spanish, a separate and distinct section containing nonduplicative information succinctly describing an agricultural employees additional rights and protections under California law and regulations, including, but not limited to, information addressing the federal H-2A program wage rate required to be paid during the contract period; overtime wage rates; frequency of pay; pay for piece rate workers; 10-minute rest periods; 30-minute meal periods; transportation travel time compensation when required, including transportation from housing to work sites; employee housing rights; nonretaliation protections for complaints or organizing; contents of itemized wage statements; sexual harassment prohibitions; toilets; requirements regarding availability of potable water and handwashing facilities; requirements relating to hot weather working conditions and the availability of shade; pesticide exposure protections; workplace safety requirements, training and correction of hazards; transportation in defined farm labor vehicles; prohibitions against tool or equipment charges, prohibitions against deductions for meals not taken; training and necessary equipment and lighting for night work; prohibitions against use of short-handled hoes and limits on hand weeding; employee-paid health insurance; right to accrue and take sick leave; workers compensation coverage, disability pay, and medical care for injuries; and the right to complain to state or federal agencies and to seek advice from collective bargaining representatives or legal assistance organizations.(B) (i) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an employer shall provide the notice required by subparagraph (A) in Spanish to the H-2A employee on the day that the H-2A employee begins work in the state or on the first day that the employee begins work for another H-2A employer. An H-2A employee may request that the employer also provide the notice in English.(ii) An employer who employs both H-2A and non-H-2A employees at the same time may satisfy the requirements of paragraph (1) with respect to the employers non-H-2A employees by opting to provide those employees with the notice required by subparagraph (A) or by providing the notice required by paragraph (1).(b) An employer shall notify their employees in writing of any changes to the information set forth in the notice within seven calendar days after the time of the changes, unless one of the following applies:(1) All changes are reflected on a timely wage statement furnished in accordance with Section 226.(2) Notice of all changes is provided in another writing required by law within seven days of the changes.(c) For purposes of this section, employee does not include any of the following:(1) An employee directly employed by the state or any political subdivision thereof, including any city, county, city and county, or special district.(2) An employee who is exempt from the payment of overtime wages by statute or the wage orders of the Industrial Welfare Commission.(3) An employee who is covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement if the agreement expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employee, and if the agreement provides premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate of pay for those employees of not less than 30 percent more than the state minimum wage. This subdivision applies to employees admitted to the federal H-2A program only if the collective bargaining agreement provides for wage rates of not less than the federal H-2A program wage required to be paid during the contract period.(d) Commencing March 15, 2024, an employer of an employee admitted pursuant to the federal H-2A agricultural visa program shall comply with subdivision (a) by giving workers a copy of the template developed by the Labor Commissioner in accordance with paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).
6272
6373 SEC. 2. Section 2810.5 of the Labor Code is amended to read:
6474
6575 ### SEC. 2.
6676
6777 2810.5. (a) (1) At the time of hiring, an employer shall provide to each employee a written notice, in the language the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to the employee, containing the following information:(A) The rate or rates of pay and basis thereof, whether paid by the hour, shift, day, week, salary, piece, commission, or otherwise, including any rates for overtime, as applicable.(B) Allowances, if any, claimed as part of the minimum wage, including meal or lodging allowances.(C) The regular payday designated by the employer in accordance with the requirements of this code.(D) The name of the employer, including any doing business as names used by the employer.(E) The physical address of the employers main office or principal place of business, and a mailing address, if different.(F) The telephone number of the employer.(G) The name, address, and telephone number of the employers workers compensation insurance carrier.(H) That an employee: may accrue and use sick leave; has a right to request and use accrued paid sick leave; may not be terminated or retaliated against for using or requesting the use of accrued paid sick leave; and has the right to file a complaint against an employer who retaliates.(I) The existence of a federal or state emergency or disaster declaration applicable to the county or counties where the employee is to be employed, and that was issued within 30 days before the employees first day of employment, that may affect their health and safety during their employment. (J) Any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary.(2) The Labor Commissioner shall prepare templates for the required notices that comply with the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (4). The templates shall be made available to employers in a manner as determined by the Labor Commissioner, and as set forth in subdivision (d). Commencing March 1, 2024, the template developed pursuant to paragraph (4) shall be posted on the Labor Commissioners internet website.(3) If the employer is a temporary services employer, as defined in Section 201.3, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include the name, the physical address of the main office, the mailing address if different from the physical address of the main office, and the telephone number of the legal entity for whom the employee will perform work, and any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary. The requirements of this paragraph do not apply to a security services company that is licensed by the Department of Consumer Affairs and that solely provides security services.(4) (A) If an employee is admitted under the federal H-2A agricultural visa program pursuant to Section 1188 of Title 8 of the United States Code, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include, in Spanish, a separate and distinct section containing nonduplicative information succinctly describing an agricultural employees additional rights and protections under California law and regulations, including, but not limited to, information addressing the federal H-2A program wage rate required to be paid during the contract period; overtime wage rates; frequency of pay; pay for piece rate workers; 10-minute rest periods; 30-minute meal periods; transportation travel time compensation when required, including transportation from housing to work sites; employee housing rights; nonretaliation protections for complaints or organizing; contents of itemized wage statements; sexual harassment prohibitions; toilets; requirements regarding availability of potable water and handwashing facilities; requirements relating to hot weather working conditions and the availability of shade; pesticide exposure protections; workplace safety requirements, training and correction of hazards; transportation in defined farm labor vehicles; prohibitions against tool or equipment charges, prohibitions against deductions for meals not taken; training and necessary equipment and lighting for night work; prohibitions against use of short-handled hoes and limits on hand weeding; employee-paid health insurance; right to accrue and take sick leave; workers compensation coverage, disability pay, and medical care for injuries; and the right to complain to state or federal agencies and to seek advice from collective bargaining representatives or legal assistance organizations.(B) (i) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an employer shall provide the notice required by subparagraph (A) in Spanish to the H-2A employee on the day that the H-2A employee begins work in the state or on the first day that the employee begins work for another H-2A employer. An H-2A employee may request that the employer also provide the notice in English.(ii) An employer who employs both H-2A and non-H-2A employees at the same time may satisfy the requirements of paragraph (1) with respect to the employers non-H-2A employees by opting to provide those employees with the notice required by subparagraph (A) or by providing the notice required by paragraph (1).(b) An employer shall notify their employees in writing of any changes to the information set forth in the notice within seven calendar days after the time of the changes, unless one of the following applies:(1) All changes are reflected on a timely wage statement furnished in accordance with Section 226.(2) Notice of all changes is provided in another writing required by law within seven days of the changes.(c) For purposes of this section, employee does not include any of the following:(1) An employee directly employed by the state or any political subdivision thereof, including any city, county, city and county, or special district.(2) An employee who is exempt from the payment of overtime wages by statute or the wage orders of the Industrial Welfare Commission.(3) An employee who is covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement if the agreement expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employee, and if the agreement provides premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate of pay for those employees of not less than 30 percent more than the state minimum wage. This subdivision applies to employees admitted to the federal H-2A program only if the collective bargaining agreement provides for wage rates of not less than the federal H-2A program wage required to be paid during the contract period.(d) Commencing March 15, 2024, an employer of an employee admitted pursuant to the federal H-2A agricultural visa program shall comply with subdivision (a) by giving workers a copy of the template developed by the Labor Commissioner in accordance with paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).
6878
6979 2810.5. (a) (1) At the time of hiring, an employer shall provide to each employee a written notice, in the language the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to the employee, containing the following information:(A) The rate or rates of pay and basis thereof, whether paid by the hour, shift, day, week, salary, piece, commission, or otherwise, including any rates for overtime, as applicable.(B) Allowances, if any, claimed as part of the minimum wage, including meal or lodging allowances.(C) The regular payday designated by the employer in accordance with the requirements of this code.(D) The name of the employer, including any doing business as names used by the employer.(E) The physical address of the employers main office or principal place of business, and a mailing address, if different.(F) The telephone number of the employer.(G) The name, address, and telephone number of the employers workers compensation insurance carrier.(H) That an employee: may accrue and use sick leave; has a right to request and use accrued paid sick leave; may not be terminated or retaliated against for using or requesting the use of accrued paid sick leave; and has the right to file a complaint against an employer who retaliates.(I) The existence of a federal or state emergency or disaster declaration applicable to the county or counties where the employee is to be employed, and that was issued within 30 days before the employees first day of employment, that may affect their health and safety during their employment. (J) Any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary.(2) The Labor Commissioner shall prepare templates for the required notices that comply with the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (4). The templates shall be made available to employers in a manner as determined by the Labor Commissioner, and as set forth in subdivision (d). Commencing March 1, 2024, the template developed pursuant to paragraph (4) shall be posted on the Labor Commissioners internet website.(3) If the employer is a temporary services employer, as defined in Section 201.3, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include the name, the physical address of the main office, the mailing address if different from the physical address of the main office, and the telephone number of the legal entity for whom the employee will perform work, and any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary. The requirements of this paragraph do not apply to a security services company that is licensed by the Department of Consumer Affairs and that solely provides security services.(4) (A) If an employee is admitted under the federal H-2A agricultural visa program pursuant to Section 1188 of Title 8 of the United States Code, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include, in Spanish, a separate and distinct section containing nonduplicative information succinctly describing an agricultural employees additional rights and protections under California law and regulations, including, but not limited to, information addressing the federal H-2A program wage rate required to be paid during the contract period; overtime wage rates; frequency of pay; pay for piece rate workers; 10-minute rest periods; 30-minute meal periods; transportation travel time compensation when required, including transportation from housing to work sites; employee housing rights; nonretaliation protections for complaints or organizing; contents of itemized wage statements; sexual harassment prohibitions; toilets; requirements regarding availability of potable water and handwashing facilities; requirements relating to hot weather working conditions and the availability of shade; pesticide exposure protections; workplace safety requirements, training and correction of hazards; transportation in defined farm labor vehicles; prohibitions against tool or equipment charges, prohibitions against deductions for meals not taken; training and necessary equipment and lighting for night work; prohibitions against use of short-handled hoes and limits on hand weeding; employee-paid health insurance; right to accrue and take sick leave; workers compensation coverage, disability pay, and medical care for injuries; and the right to complain to state or federal agencies and to seek advice from collective bargaining representatives or legal assistance organizations.(B) (i) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an employer shall provide the notice required by subparagraph (A) in Spanish to the H-2A employee on the day that the H-2A employee begins work in the state or on the first day that the employee begins work for another H-2A employer. An H-2A employee may request that the employer also provide the notice in English.(ii) An employer who employs both H-2A and non-H-2A employees at the same time may satisfy the requirements of paragraph (1) with respect to the employers non-H-2A employees by opting to provide those employees with the notice required by subparagraph (A) or by providing the notice required by paragraph (1).(b) An employer shall notify their employees in writing of any changes to the information set forth in the notice within seven calendar days after the time of the changes, unless one of the following applies:(1) All changes are reflected on a timely wage statement furnished in accordance with Section 226.(2) Notice of all changes is provided in another writing required by law within seven days of the changes.(c) For purposes of this section, employee does not include any of the following:(1) An employee directly employed by the state or any political subdivision thereof, including any city, county, city and county, or special district.(2) An employee who is exempt from the payment of overtime wages by statute or the wage orders of the Industrial Welfare Commission.(3) An employee who is covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement if the agreement expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employee, and if the agreement provides premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate of pay for those employees of not less than 30 percent more than the state minimum wage. This subdivision applies to employees admitted to the federal H-2A program only if the collective bargaining agreement provides for wage rates of not less than the federal H-2A program wage required to be paid during the contract period.(d) Commencing March 15, 2024, an employer of an employee admitted pursuant to the federal H-2A agricultural visa program shall comply with subdivision (a) by giving workers a copy of the template developed by the Labor Commissioner in accordance with paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).
7080
7181 2810.5. (a) (1) At the time of hiring, an employer shall provide to each employee a written notice, in the language the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to the employee, containing the following information:(A) The rate or rates of pay and basis thereof, whether paid by the hour, shift, day, week, salary, piece, commission, or otherwise, including any rates for overtime, as applicable.(B) Allowances, if any, claimed as part of the minimum wage, including meal or lodging allowances.(C) The regular payday designated by the employer in accordance with the requirements of this code.(D) The name of the employer, including any doing business as names used by the employer.(E) The physical address of the employers main office or principal place of business, and a mailing address, if different.(F) The telephone number of the employer.(G) The name, address, and telephone number of the employers workers compensation insurance carrier.(H) That an employee: may accrue and use sick leave; has a right to request and use accrued paid sick leave; may not be terminated or retaliated against for using or requesting the use of accrued paid sick leave; and has the right to file a complaint against an employer who retaliates.(I) The existence of a federal or state emergency or disaster declaration applicable to the county or counties where the employee is to be employed, and that was issued within 30 days before the employees first day of employment, that may affect their health and safety during their employment. (J) Any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary.(2) The Labor Commissioner shall prepare templates for the required notices that comply with the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (4). The templates shall be made available to employers in a manner as determined by the Labor Commissioner, and as set forth in subdivision (d). Commencing March 1, 2024, the template developed pursuant to paragraph (4) shall be posted on the Labor Commissioners internet website.(3) If the employer is a temporary services employer, as defined in Section 201.3, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include the name, the physical address of the main office, the mailing address if different from the physical address of the main office, and the telephone number of the legal entity for whom the employee will perform work, and any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary. The requirements of this paragraph do not apply to a security services company that is licensed by the Department of Consumer Affairs and that solely provides security services.(4) (A) If an employee is admitted under the federal H-2A agricultural visa program pursuant to Section 1188 of Title 8 of the United States Code, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include, in Spanish, a separate and distinct section containing nonduplicative information succinctly describing an agricultural employees additional rights and protections under California law and regulations, including, but not limited to, information addressing the federal H-2A program wage rate required to be paid during the contract period; overtime wage rates; frequency of pay; pay for piece rate workers; 10-minute rest periods; 30-minute meal periods; transportation travel time compensation when required, including transportation from housing to work sites; employee housing rights; nonretaliation protections for complaints or organizing; contents of itemized wage statements; sexual harassment prohibitions; toilets; requirements regarding availability of potable water and handwashing facilities; requirements relating to hot weather working conditions and the availability of shade; pesticide exposure protections; workplace safety requirements, training and correction of hazards; transportation in defined farm labor vehicles; prohibitions against tool or equipment charges, prohibitions against deductions for meals not taken; training and necessary equipment and lighting for night work; prohibitions against use of short-handled hoes and limits on hand weeding; employee-paid health insurance; right to accrue and take sick leave; workers compensation coverage, disability pay, and medical care for injuries; and the right to complain to state or federal agencies and to seek advice from collective bargaining representatives or legal assistance organizations.(B) (i) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an employer shall provide the notice required by subparagraph (A) in Spanish to the H-2A employee on the day that the H-2A employee begins work in the state or on the first day that the employee begins work for another H-2A employer. An H-2A employee may request that the employer also provide the notice in English.(ii) An employer who employs both H-2A and non-H-2A employees at the same time may satisfy the requirements of paragraph (1) with respect to the employers non-H-2A employees by opting to provide those employees with the notice required by subparagraph (A) or by providing the notice required by paragraph (1).(b) An employer shall notify their employees in writing of any changes to the information set forth in the notice within seven calendar days after the time of the changes, unless one of the following applies:(1) All changes are reflected on a timely wage statement furnished in accordance with Section 226.(2) Notice of all changes is provided in another writing required by law within seven days of the changes.(c) For purposes of this section, employee does not include any of the following:(1) An employee directly employed by the state or any political subdivision thereof, including any city, county, city and county, or special district.(2) An employee who is exempt from the payment of overtime wages by statute or the wage orders of the Industrial Welfare Commission.(3) An employee who is covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement if the agreement expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employee, and if the agreement provides premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate of pay for those employees of not less than 30 percent more than the state minimum wage. This subdivision applies to employees admitted to the federal H-2A program only if the collective bargaining agreement provides for wage rates of not less than the federal H-2A program wage required to be paid during the contract period.(d) Commencing March 15, 2024, an employer of an employee admitted pursuant to the federal H-2A agricultural visa program shall comply with subdivision (a) by giving workers a copy of the template developed by the Labor Commissioner in accordance with paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).
7282
7383
7484
7585 2810.5. (a) (1) At the time of hiring, an employer shall provide to each employee a written notice, in the language the employer normally uses to communicate employment-related information to the employee, containing the following information:
7686
7787 (A) The rate or rates of pay and basis thereof, whether paid by the hour, shift, day, week, salary, piece, commission, or otherwise, including any rates for overtime, as applicable.
7888
7989 (B) Allowances, if any, claimed as part of the minimum wage, including meal or lodging allowances.
8090
8191 (C) The regular payday designated by the employer in accordance with the requirements of this code.
8292
8393 (D) The name of the employer, including any doing business as names used by the employer.
8494
8595 (E) The physical address of the employers main office or principal place of business, and a mailing address, if different.
8696
8797 (F) The telephone number of the employer.
8898
8999 (G) The name, address, and telephone number of the employers workers compensation insurance carrier.
90100
91101 (H) That an employee: may accrue and use sick leave; has a right to request and use accrued paid sick leave; may not be terminated or retaliated against for using or requesting the use of accrued paid sick leave; and has the right to file a complaint against an employer who retaliates.
92102
93103 (I) The existence of a federal or state emergency or disaster declaration applicable to the county or counties where the employee is to be employed, and that was issued within 30 days before the employees first day of employment, that may affect their health and safety during their employment.
94104
95105 (J) Any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary.
96106
97107 (2) The Labor Commissioner shall prepare templates for the required notices that comply with the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (4). The templates shall be made available to employers in a manner as determined by the Labor Commissioner, and as set forth in subdivision (d). Commencing March 1, 2024, the template developed pursuant to paragraph (4) shall be posted on the Labor Commissioners internet website.
98108
99109 (3) If the employer is a temporary services employer, as defined in Section 201.3, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include the name, the physical address of the main office, the mailing address if different from the physical address of the main office, and the telephone number of the legal entity for whom the employee will perform work, and any other information the Labor Commissioner deems material and necessary. The requirements of this paragraph do not apply to a security services company that is licensed by the Department of Consumer Affairs and that solely provides security services.
100110
101111 (4) (A) If an employee is admitted under the federal H-2A agricultural visa program pursuant to Section 1188 of Title 8 of the United States Code, the notice described in paragraph (1) shall also include, in Spanish, a separate and distinct section containing nonduplicative information succinctly describing an agricultural employees additional rights and protections under California law and regulations, including, but not limited to, information addressing the federal H-2A program wage rate required to be paid during the contract period; overtime wage rates; frequency of pay; pay for piece rate workers; 10-minute rest periods; 30-minute meal periods; transportation travel time compensation when required, including transportation from housing to work sites; employee housing rights; nonretaliation protections for complaints or organizing; contents of itemized wage statements; sexual harassment prohibitions; toilets; requirements regarding availability of potable water and handwashing facilities; requirements relating to hot weather working conditions and the availability of shade; pesticide exposure protections; workplace safety requirements, training and correction of hazards; transportation in defined farm labor vehicles; prohibitions against tool or equipment charges, prohibitions against deductions for meals not taken; training and necessary equipment and lighting for night work; prohibitions against use of short-handled hoes and limits on hand weeding; employee-paid health insurance; right to accrue and take sick leave; workers compensation coverage, disability pay, and medical care for injuries; and the right to complain to state or federal agencies and to seek advice from collective bargaining representatives or legal assistance organizations.
102112
103113 (B) (i) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), an employer shall provide the notice required by subparagraph (A) in Spanish to the H-2A employee on the day that the H-2A employee begins work in the state or on the first day that the employee begins work for another H-2A employer. An H-2A employee may request that the employer also provide the notice in English.
104114
105115 (ii) An employer who employs both H-2A and non-H-2A employees at the same time may satisfy the requirements of paragraph (1) with respect to the employers non-H-2A employees by opting to provide those employees with the notice required by subparagraph (A) or by providing the notice required by paragraph (1).
106116
107117 (b) An employer shall notify their employees in writing of any changes to the information set forth in the notice within seven calendar days after the time of the changes, unless one of the following applies:
108118
109119 (1) All changes are reflected on a timely wage statement furnished in accordance with Section 226.
110120
111121 (2) Notice of all changes is provided in another writing required by law within seven days of the changes.
112122
113123 (c) For purposes of this section, employee does not include any of the following:
114124
115125 (1) An employee directly employed by the state or any political subdivision thereof, including any city, county, city and county, or special district.
116126
117127 (2) An employee who is exempt from the payment of overtime wages by statute or the wage orders of the Industrial Welfare Commission.
118128
119129 (3) An employee who is covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement if the agreement expressly provides for the wages, hours of work, and working conditions of the employee, and if the agreement provides premium wage rates for all overtime hours worked and a regular hourly rate of pay for those employees of not less than 30 percent more than the state minimum wage. This subdivision applies to employees admitted to the federal H-2A program only if the collective bargaining agreement provides for wage rates of not less than the federal H-2A program wage required to be paid during the contract period.
120130
121131 (d) Commencing March 15, 2024, an employer of an employee admitted pursuant to the federal H-2A agricultural visa program shall comply with subdivision (a) by giving workers a copy of the template developed by the Labor Commissioner in accordance with paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).