Tag Archives: Minimum Wage


By, Tracy Emmerich & Tracy Long

 

The California legislature saw fit to pass several employment laws that will go into effect on January 1, 2024 and beyond. As always, Leap Solutions is here to help you face them proactively and confidently. Our HR professionals have the knowledge, expertise, and resources to inform and guide you through ever-changing legislation and empower your company to thrive in 2024 and beyond.

 

In this issue of our newsletter:

  • 2024 Minimum Wage
  • Updates on Current and New Legislative Bills
  • Meal and Rest Break Premium Pay
  • Ongoing Mandatory Harassment Prevention Training
  • Employee Handbook Review/Updates
  • Injury and Illness Prevention Program and COVID Prevention Plan
  • California Labor Law Posters

 

2024 MINIMUM WAGE

 

 
January 1, 2024 brings another increase in the California state hourly minimum wage for both non-exempt and exempt salary workers. Due to the increased annual inflation rate, the minimum wage was increased to $16.00 per hour regardless of the number of workers employed by an employer. The exempt salary threshold is two times the minimum wage, therefore, it increases to $66,560 for employers regardless of the number of workers employed.

Local (city and county) non-exempt minimum wage ordinance changes became effective July 1, 2023 to June 30, 2024. We recommend that a compensation review be conducted as soon as possible to ensure that you have identified those in your workforce who need to be brought to the minimum. Your review may reveal wage compression or other issues that you may want/need to address.
 

 

UPDATES ON LEGISLATIVE BILLS


The following is a summary of recent legislation and is not intended as legal advice.

New I-9 Form
Effective 11/1/2023 – Applies to All Employers
The new Form I-9, Employment Eligibility Verification, which was released on August 1, 2023, must be used for all new hires, effective November 1, 2023. Some of the changes include reducing sections 1 and 2 to one page. The Lists of Acceptable Documents page has been revised to include acceptable receipts in addition to physical documents. The updated Form I-9 also provides guidance and links to information on automatic extensions of employment authorization documentation. The new I-9 form is available in on the USCIS website (www.uscis.gov).
What this could mean for you: Update new hire packets to include the new I-9 form.

 
SB 616: Paid Sick Leave Expansion
Effective 1/1/2024 – Applies to All Employers
Under the current Paid Sick Leave, all employers are required to provide up to 24 hours or three days (whichever is greater) of paid sick leave per year. Under the new law, employers will be required to increase that amount to 40 hours per year. Employers may still front load the hours at the beginning of the year with no carry over or accrue paid sick leave based on hours worked (one hour for every 30 hours worked) with two times the annual accrual capped at 80 hours or 10 days (whichever is greater). Employers who front load paid sick leave or accrue based on payroll cycles (not actual hours worked) must ensure that an employee has no less than 24 hours by their 120^th day and an additional 16 hours (40 annual hours) of accrued sick leave by their 200th calendar day of employment. Employers using the accrual method with a cap of 80 hours can still limit employees paid sick leave to 40 hours or 5 days per year, whichever is greater. In addition, SB 616 extends some protections to these
employees covered by a collective bargaining agreement such as covered uses, replacement worker prohibition, and anti-retaliation protections.
What this could mean for you: Review and update existing handbook policies/practices and forms to ensure that employees are aware of the expanded paid sick leave expansion.
 
SB 848: Reproductive Loss Leave
Effective: 1/1/2024 – Applies 5+ Employees
SB 848 adds to California’s bereavement leave policy by allowing employees who have worked for the company for at least 30 days to use leave for a “reproductive loss event,” which is defined as “the day or, for a multiple-day event, the final day of a failed adoption, failed surrogacy, miscarriage, stillbirth, or an unsuccessful assisted reproduction.” Employers with 5 or more employees will be required to provide up to five days of leave for a reproductive loss event. The law limits the amount of reproductive loss leave to a maximum of 20 days within a 12-month period should an employee experience multiple losses in a 12-month period. Eligible employees must take the leave within three months of the triggering event; however, the leave does not need to be taken on consecutive days. Leave under the statute is unpaid, unless the employer has an existing policy requiring paid leave. Eligible employees may choose to use any accrued and available sick leave, or other paid time off, for reproductive loss leave.
What this could mean for you: Review and update existing handbook policies/practices and forms to ensure that employees are aware of the expanded leave expansion.
 

 
AB 2188, SB 700: Cannabis Employment Discrimination
Effective: 1/1/2024 – Applies to All Employers
This new protection prohibits discrimination based on the person’s use of cannabis off the job and away from the workplace, which includes an employer-required drug screening test that has found the person to have “non-psychoactive” cannabis metabolites in their hair, blood, urine, or other bodily fluids. In addition, an employer cannot request information from a job applicant relating to the applicant’s prior use of cannabis, including in the applicant’s criminal history. Exceptions apply for certain trades and where federal laws require applicants or employees to be tested for controlled substances. An employer may discriminate in hiring, or any term or condition of employment, or otherwise penalize a person based on scientifically valid preemployment drug screening that do not screen for non-psychoactive cannabis metabolites.
What this could mean for you: Employers may need to look for alternative testing to determine impairment. Employers may still maintain a drug-free and alcohol-free workplace policy where employees may not possess, be impaired by, or use cannabis on the job.
 
SB 699, AB 1076: Non-Compete Agreements Unlawful
Effective: 1/1/2024 – Applies to All Employers
Most noncompetition agreements are unenforceable in California. Agreements that restrict an employee’s ability to pursue similar employment after leaving a job are prohibited unless a noncompetition agreement clearly falls under one of the following exceptions:

  • Trade secrets protections, which can legally restrict an employee’s ability to use confidential information or company-defined trade secrets.
  • Sale of a business, which can legally restrict a seller’s ability to compete with the buyer in the geographic location where the seller had carried on his/her business.
  • Dissolution of a partnership, which can legally define a geographic area within which one of the partners cannot conduct a similar business.

The new statute creates a private right of action for employees whose agreements include restrictive covenants for any current, former, or even prospective employee who successfully brings suit over an employer’s use of those restrictive covenants. An employer that may have included a noncompete clause in an employment contract, requires the company to issue a notice to all current and former employees who were employed after January 1, 2022, that the noncompete clauses in their contracts are void. The deadline for this notice is February 14, 2024.
What this could mean for you: Employers should review any non-compete agreements and send out the required notices by February 14, 2024 if applicable.
 
Cal. Code Regs. Tit. 2, § 11017.1.: Criminal History Inquiries
Effective: 7/1/2024 – Applies to All Employers
New regulations prohibit employers from inquiring into, considering, distributing, or disseminating information related to the criminal history of an applicant until after the employer has made a conditional offer of employment to the applicant. If an employer intends to deny an applicant the employment position they were conditionally offered based solely or in part on the applicant’s conviction history, the employer must first conduct an individualized assessment to determine if there is a direct and adverse relationship with the specific duties of the job that justify denying the applicant the position and that it is job-related and consistent with business necessity. If, after conducting an individualized assessment, an employer makes a preliminary decision that the applicant’s conviction history disqualifies them from the employment conditionally offered, the employer shall notify the applicant in writing. Employers must then permit applicants to respond by providing evidence of rehabilitation or mitigating circumstances and/or evidence challenging the accuracy of the conviction history report that is the basis for the preliminary decision to rescind the offer. Employers shall consider any information submitted by an applicant before making a final decision regarding whether to rescind a conditional offer.
What this could mean for you: Employers who conduct criminal background checks should update their background policy and create a procedure for reviewing all background checks for compliance.
 

 
SB 553: Workplace Violence Prevention Program
Effective: 7/1/2024 – Applies to All Employers
Under the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health (Cal/OSHA, covered employers will be required to develop and implement a workplace violence prevention plan (WVPP) as part of their required Injury and Illness Prevention Plans (IIPP) by July 1, 2024. Employers will also have to provide training, create workplace violence incident logs, and keep various records for up to five years.
What this could mean for you: Employers should review their current Violence in the Workplace policy and begin to assess relevant factors to determine the risk level your organization faces for workplace violence such as location, previous incidents of violence, the presence of cash on site. Leap will be available to help write your Workplace Violence Prevention Plan and conduct on-site training for your employees to help you stay in compliance.
 
SB 476: Food Handler Card Costs
Effective: 01/01/2024 – Applies to all Employers
Employees who work in a food facility or mobile food facility (catering or produce trucks, carts, etc.) who are involved in the preparation, storage, or service of food, is a food handler and needs a California food handler card. California requires relevant workers to obtain a food handler card within 30 days of their date of hire. Under SB 476, employers will be required to cover the cost associated with obtaining a food handler card, including the cost of the test, and paying employees at their regular rate of pay for any time spent completing the training and taking the test. Currently employees can complete the training through American National Standards Institute (ANSI). Under SB 476 the California Department of Public Health will be required to post a list or a link to all certified food handler training programs, including the cost of each program on their website by January 1, 2025.
What this could mean for you: Employers should update their written food handler and timekeeping policies to include the employer paying for food handler cards and all time spent in such training and plan how employees should report it on their timesheets.
 
 

OTHER EMPLOYMENT LAWS TO KEEP IN MIND FOR 2024

Meal and Rest Break Premium Pay
Applies to All Employers
The burden of meal break compliance proof rests squarely on the employer. It is imperative that non-exempt employees document their meal breaks daily on their time records and that premiums are paid timely. Premiums must be reported on the employee’s pay statement when an employee misses or does not complete their full (at least 30 minutes) meal period. Meal and/or rest break premium pay is considered “wages,” similar to overtime premium pay, reporting time pay, or split-shift pay. Failure to pay can cause expensive waiting time and wage statement penalties. In very limited situations, when the nature of the employee’s duties prevents the employee from being relieved of all duty, certain designated employees may be authorized to work an “on-duty meal period.” (An example would be a lone cashier at a gas station who works the night shift.) An employee will be permitted to take an on-duty meal period only if the nature of their job requires an on-duty meal period, and the employee and the company have agreed, in advance, and in writing, to an on-duty meal period. In this situation, the on-duty meal period will be paid and treated as hours worked.
 

 
Ongoing Mandatory Harassment Prevention Training
Applies to 5+ Employers
Employers with five or more employees must provide one hour of sexual harassment prevention training to nonsupervisory employees and two hours of training to employees with supervisory authority. (This includes part-time, temporary, seasonal, and on-call staff as well as independent contractors, workers from staffing agencies, and employees outside of California, although you are only required to train supervisors located in California or those who supervise any California employees.)

  • Training must take place within six months of hire or promotion and every two years thereafter.
  • Seasonal and temporary employees or employees hired to work less than 6 months, must be trained within 30 calendar days after hire or within 100 hours worked, whichever is earlier.
  • Employers are not required to train employees who are employed for fewer than 30 calendar days and work for fewer than 100 hours.

Leap Solutions can provide interactive onsite or online Harassment Prevention training for your employees!
 

EMPLOYEE HANDBOOK REVIEW/UPDATES

If your employee handbook has not been reviewed in over a year, you may have missed out on important changes that could affect employee retention and increase your liability. Our HR consultants work with you to customize your handbook while ensuring that you and your employees have clear, up-to-date information to inform and to instruct.
 

INJURY AND ILLNESS PREVENTION PROGRAM AND COVID PREVENTION PLAN

A written, effective Injury and Illness Prevention Program (IIPP) which includes a COVID Prevention Plan (CPP) is required for every California employer. We can develop a plan with you to ensure that you are in compliance!
 

DON’T FORGET TO UPDATE YOUR CALIFORNIA LABOR LAW POSTERS TO REFLECT 2024 CHANGES!

The California Department of Industrial Relations requires employers to post current information related to wages, hours and working conditions in an area frequented by employees where it may be easily read during the workday. Remote employees also need to receive required notices. CalChamber Store can help> Labor Law Posters
 

 

LEAPING FORWARD

The HR professionals at Leap Solutions can demystify these and many other complicated new employment and labor laws for you, your employees and your hiring managers and supervisors. Count on us to guide you through the complexities of each new piece of legislation and help you respond efficiently, reduce legal risk, minimize expenses, and achieve the peace of mind that comes with keeping your organization compliant and your people safe, strong, and successful.

Are You Ready to Leap into 2024?

 

*****

 

Leap Solutions is a diverse group of highly skilled management, organizational development, and human resources, and executive search and recruitment professionals who have spent decades doing what we feel passionate about helping you feel passionate about what you do. Our HR specialists can help you get a handle on the ever-changing COVID-19 guidelines, programs, and legislation that may impact you and your employees. We are available to work with you to develop practical solutions and smart planning decisions for your organization’s immediate, near, and long-term needs.

 

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During the current COVID-19 pandemic, every day brings new information, concerns, and challenges regarding the spread of the virus, its economic and social impacts, and government directives. Leap Solutions remains dedicated to keeping you informed and empowered by delivering relevant, up-to-the-minute information and resources.

Our organizational development specialists are here to help support you with your online strategic planning, team development, executive coaching, training, program evaluation, and community engagement. Essentially, we can convert anything that you need in support of your business to a virtual experience. You still want to accomplish your plans, goals, and outcomes. We are here—virtually to help you achieve them.

 

The coming of a new year means the coming of new California employment and labor laws. As always, Leap Solutions is here to help you face them proactively and confidently. Our HR professionals have the knowledge, expertise, and resources to inform and guide you through ever-changing legislation and empower your company to thrive in 2021 and beyond.

Our Newsletter will cover:

  • Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA)
  • AB 685 Workplace Safety (Effective January 01, 2021)
  • Written COVID-19 Prevention Program (November 20, 2020)
  • SB 1383 Expands California Family Rights Act (CFRA) (Effective January 01, 2021)
  • Mandatory Sexual Harassment Training (Effective January 01, 2021)
  • Minimum Wage and Salary Requirements for Exempt Employees (Effective January 01, 2021)
  • Paid Family Leave (Effective January 01, 2021)
  • Agriculture under Wage Order 14 (Effective January 01, 2021)
  • Additional Handbook Policies to Review

Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA)

The Families First Coronavirus Response Act (“FFCRA”) expired December 31, 2020. The FFCRA applied to employers with 500 or fewer employees and provided workers emergency paid sick leave because of the COVID-19 pandemic.   The Department of Labor recently confirmed that employers are not required to provide employees with FFCRA leave after December 31, 2020, but may voluntarily decide to provide employees such leave.  Congress also extended employer tax credits for paid sick leave and the expanded family and medical leave for voluntary use through March 31, 2021.  It is important that employers have a way to document the sick and leave under FFCRA to receive the payroll credits.

 

AB 685 Workplace Safety
(Effective January 01, 2021)

AB 685 expands employee COVID-19 protections by requiring employers to provide notice of a “potential exposure” to COVID-19 within one business day.  The notice should go to all employees and employers of subcontracted employees (and employee-representatives) who were at a worksite within the infectious period who may have been exposed to the virus. The notice must be written in a manner typically used to communicate to all employees, employers of subcontracted employees, and employee representatives (e.g., unions), in the form of a letter, email, or text message, but only if employees anticipate receiving communication from the employer in this manner. The notification must be in writing and a phone call will not satisfy this requirement. Also, written communication should be in English and the language understood by the majority of the employees.

The notice must contain:

  • Information regarding COVID-19 related benefits that employees may receive, including paid sick leave, workers’ compensation, and anti-retaliation protections
  • Company’s disinfection protocols and safety plan to eliminate any further exposures

Companies are also required to notify California’s Department of Public Health if there are sufficient COVID-19 positive cases that meet the definition of a COVID-19 outbreak.

Written COVID-19 Prevention Program
(November 20, 2020)

The Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board (Cal/OSHA) adopted comprehensive and complex COVID-19 emergency regulations directing employers to address a variety of issues related to COVID-19 in the workplace including establishing and implementing a written COVID-19 Prevention Program (CPP) detailing the systems and protocols in place for mitigating and responding to COVID-19 infections in the workplace. This program can be integrated into the employer’s existing Injury and Illness Prevention Program (IIPP) or can be a stand-alone document. There are 11 sections the program must address.  If your workplace regularly receives customers, clients, patients or visitors, make sure your COVID-19 plan covers workplace violence in in the response plan.  Contact Leap Solutions if you need help writing your plan.

 

SB 1383 Expands California Family Rights Act (CFRA)
(Effective January 1, 2021)

SB 1383 reduces the number of employees required for the California Family Rights Act (“CFRA”) to apply to employers with five (5) or more employees; a significant reduction from the old standard, which was fifty (50) or more employees.  The updated CFRA offers employees 12-weeks of unpaid job protected leave and repeals The New Parent Leave Act (“NPLA”).  CFRA also expands the definition of “family member” to include a child (of any age) of a domestic partner, grandparent, grandchild, sibling, or domestic partner.  It is important to modify existing policies and procedures to provide for CFRA leaves of absence. CFRA can be complex with specific employee notice requirements that must be properly implemented. For a company with 50 or more employees who has already been covered under CFRA (and FMLA), revisions should be made to existing FMLA/CFRA leave policies to incorporate these revisions to CFRA.

 

Mandatory Sexual Harassment Training
(Effective January 1, 2021)

Employers with five or more employees are required to have provided two hours of sexual harassment training to supervisors and one hour to non-supervisorial employees within six months of hire or promotion, and employers must continue this training every two years thereafter.  Temporary and seasonal employees will be required to be trained within 30 days of hire or 100 hours worked, whichever is earlier.

 

Minimum Wage and Salary Requirements for Exempt Employees
(Effective January 1, 2021)

The minimum monthly salary requirement for exempt executive, administrative, and professional employees is no less than two times the state minimum wage for full-time employment. It is based on the current state minimum wage, not any applicable local minimum wage. Accordingly, January 1, 2021 minimum salary threshold for these exemptions is as follows:

  • For employers with 25 or fewer employees, the state minimum is $13 per hour. Accordingly, the minimum monthly salary test for these exemptions is $4,506.67 per month ($54,080 per year).
  • For employers with 26 or more employees, the state minimum wage is $14 per hour. Accordingly, the minimum monthly salary test for these exemptions is $4,853.33 per month ($58,240 per year).

 

Paid Family Leave
(Effective January 1, 2021)

California’s Paid Family Leave (PFL) offers employees wage replacement through EDD program is expanded to include payments for time off for “qualifying exigencies” related to a family member’s military service. Benefits will be available if employees take time off for activities related to the covered active-duty status of their spouse, registered domestic partner, child, or parent who is a member of the U.S. Armed Forces. Called “qualifying exigencies,” these activities might include such things as official military ceremonies; briefings; changes to child care or financial or legal arrangements as a result of military service; counseling; or spending time with the covered servicemember during rest and recuperation leave.

Beginning July 1, 2020, PFL benefits were extended to a maximum of eight weeks in a 12-month period.

Agriculture under Wage Order 14
(Effective January 1, 2021)

Agricultural employers under Wage Order 14 with 26 or more employees are subject to a series of phased-in overtime changes. Agricultural employers with 25 or fewer employees remain covered by the old rules but will begin phased-in overtime changes in 2022. Agricultural employers with 26 or more employees will now pay time and one-half for hours worked more than 8.5 per day or 45 per week.  On the seventh consecutive day of work in a workweek, agricultural employees are entitled to time and a half for the first eight hours and double-time after eight hours. It is important employers designate their workweek. If a workweek is not designated, the law presumes a workweek of 12:01 a.m. Sunday to midnight Saturday.  In addition, the day of rest requirement does not apply when hours worked do not exceed 30 in any workweek or six in any workday.  The exception for employees working shifts of six hours or less only applies to those who never exceed six hours of work on any day of the workweek.

 

Additional Handbook Policies to Review

Due to the coronavirus pandemic, many employer practices may have changed, which might warrant employee handbook updates.  Ensure your written documents match your practices.

Victims of Crime or Abuse

  • Expands the prohibition on discrimination and retaliation against employees who are victims of crime or abuse when they take time off for judicial proceedings or to seek medical attention or related relief for domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking or other crime that causes physical or mental injury.

Paid Leave

  • Review how paid leave policies may have changed due to COVID-19.
  • Review time-off request procedures to indicate when time off can be required by the employer should sick employees need to be sent home (paid or unpaid).
  • Review Kin Care to clarify that employees have the right to designate sick leave as kin care  or not.

Attendance/Scheduling

  • Update to reflect relaxed attendance policies to encourage sick employees to stay home.
  • Update attendance or scheduling policies to be more flexible for parents with child care challenges, or employees with other caregiver issues related to COVID-19.

Safety

  • Physical distancing practices detailed to support a safe workplace.
  • Employee health screening policies including temperature taking and the confidential handling processes of resulting records.
  • Added policy and procedures for employees to report and how the employer will handle a positive COVID-19 case at the worksite.
  • Procedures implemented for employee quarantine requirements due to symptoms or positive test results, including return-to-work procedures (two negative tests, 10 days after symptoms are gone, doctor’s note, etc.).
  • Contact tracing practices implemented to help contain the spread of infection.
  • Visitor policies updated with health screening practices.

Travel

  • Travel policies updated to reflect essential versus nonessential travel and the impact of domestic or global travel restrictions.
  • Quarantine policies added to address both business and personal travel, including pay arrangements when telecommuting is not possible.

Telecommuting

  • Telecommuting policies updated to reflect the type of work or specific positions that are able to be done remotely and the procedures for requesting telework.
  • Added or updated policies on which telecommuting-related costs the employer will or will not cover.

Technology

  • Information technology policies revised to reflect remote work hardware, software, and support.

 

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Leap Solutions is a diverse group of highly skilled management, organizational development, and human resources, and executive search and recruitment professionals who have spent decades doing what we feel passionate about helping you feel passionate about what you do. Our HR specialists can help you get a handle on the ever-changing COVID-19 guidelines, programs, and legislation that may impact you and your employees. We are available to work with you to develop practical solutions and smart planning decisions for your organization’s immediate, near, and long-term needs.

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