California employees « Law Offices of Timothy Bowles | Top Employment Law Firm in Los Angeles

Posts Tagged ‘California employees’

THE BASICS OF OVERTIME

Five Rules for California California law requires most non-exempt employees to receive overtime pay for time worked beyond forty hours in any one workweek or after eight hours in one workday. A workweek is any seven consecutive days, starting with the same calendar day each week beginning at any hour, so long as the cycle […]

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GENDER DESIGNATIONS IN THE WORKPLACE

“Non-binary” will Join “He” and “She” in California California law prohibits discrimination against employees for their membership in any protected class.  This includes gender identity, defined as “each person’s internal understanding of their gender, or the perception of a person’s gender identity, which may include male, female, a combination of male and female, neither male […]

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DO THE MATH

California Supreme Court Sets Out New Formula for Overtime When “Flat Sum” Bonuses Paid Often California employers reward employees with bonuses without realizing the proper way to calculate overtime when doing so.  This can put an employer at substantial risk if miscalculated over significant time for a large number of workers. Depending on the number […]

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PAPERLESS PAYSTUBS

Do They Comply with California Wage Statement Laws? As the corporate world heads towards paperless offices, more employers may wish to remit pay stubs electronically without running afoul of applicable law. California Labor Code section 226(a) requires employers to furnish wage statements “in writing” and itemized deductions to be recorded “in ink or other indelible […]

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CUPID’S ARROWS ARE FLYING

How to Regulate Workplace Romances With sexual harassment allegations surfacing daily in the media, it’s not surprising that coworkers may be more hesitant to date each other. In the 2018 CareerBuilder’s Annual Valentine’s Day survey, only 36% percent of workers reported having dated a coworker, a 10-year low. Regardless, office romances remain a fact of […]

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LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION … LOCATION

California Municipal Minimum Wage Rates Continue to Grow California hourly minimum wage is currently $10.50 for employers with 26 or more on payroll and $10.00 for employers with 25 or less and on January 1, 2018, the rates increase to $11.00 and $10.50 respectively. The state minimum wage will continue to increase each year until […]

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NEW NOTICE POSTING REQUIREMENTS FOR BARBERS AND COSMETOLOGISTS

CUTTING TO THE CHASE – New Workplace Posting Requirements for California’s Salon Industries, Effective July 1, 2017 Starting July 1, 2017, California’s  Board of Barbering and Cosmetology (BBC) requires its licensees – including hair salons, nail salons, estheticians, and barbers —  to post a special Labor Commissioner notice on applicable employment laws. The notice includes information […]

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EXPANDING POLICY AND NOTICE REQUIREMENTS TO PROTECT EMPLOYEES

PREVENTING WORKPLACE HARASSMENT – California’s Guidelines and Mandatory Measures California’s Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH), the state agency responsible for enforcing the Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA), has released a new employer guide and an updated sexual harassment brochure to further assist California employers in developing effective anti-harassment programs. According to DFEH Director […]

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WHAT’S NEW IN 2017

Employers Must Notify All California Workers if Income Tax Credit Congress created the Federal Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) in 1975 to incentivize low-income workers to seek employment rather than welfare. In 2015, California authorized the “Cal EITC” for the same purposes. The federal and California EITC programs each reduce the amount of tax that […]

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WHAT’S NEW FOR 2017

California Imposes Controls on Janitorial Businesses Requirements Include Registration and Mandatory Sexual Harassment Prevention Training California Assembly Bill (AB) 1978, enacted September 2016 as the Property Services Protection law (the Act), will require janitorial service providers to register annually with the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement (DLSE) and to provide sexual harassment training to their […]

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