employee compensation « Law Offices of Timothy Bowles | Top Employment Law Firm in Los Angeles

Posts Tagged ‘employee compensation’

PAST PAY IS PASSÉ

California’s Ban Clarified On Applicant Salary History Intended to eliminate traditional disparities in pay levels for the same or similar work, new California Labor Code section 432.3 prohibits employers from seeking an applicant’s salary history. See, What’s New 2018 – Salary History (December 2017). On the other hand, such employers must disclose a job position’s […]

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PART-TIMERS IN CALIFORNIA

Same Rules for Rest Breaks, Meal Periods and Paid Sick Leave Hiring workers for shortened hours or for fewer days weekly does not absolve an employer from complying with the full range of workplace legal requirements.  In fact, greater attention may be required with part-time employees to avoid the wage and hour pitfalls. Paid Rest […]

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KNOWLEDGE IS POWER

Changes to California’s Mandatory Workplace Notice and Pamphlet on State Benefit Programs California employers must conspicuously display required labor posters or notices where all employees may view them in each company location. The posters cover a broad array of topics including minimum wage requirements, safety and health requirements, workers’ compensation information, and whistleblowing protection. California […]

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PLEASE STANDBY

When Employees Earn On-Call Pay Some employers require workers to remain “on-call” or on “standby” outside scheduled hours, either at the worksite or off the premises. Depending on the circumstances, a company may be required to pay an hourly employee for on-call time, including all resultant overtime at the correct overtime rate. See The Basics […]

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CALIFORNIA PAID FAMILY LEAVE OVERVIEW

Is California’s “Paid Family Leave” a Protected Leave of Absence? Employers are sometimes uncertain how to properly respond to an employee’s request for Paid Family Leave because the name is somewhat misleading. Some unpaid “leaves of absence” (for example for medical conditions or family emergencies) are legally “protected,” meaning the employer must accept the eligible […]

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CAUTIONARY TALES EPISODE 16

Spa Nailed for $1.2 Million, “Wage Theft”   The California Labor Commissioner’s Office has announced large citations against Young’s Nail Spa in Temecula, for misclassification of 36 workers as independent contractors and for wage theft, paying by the service instead of paying them hourly and overtime in spite of 50-hour weeks. The salon was also […]

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CAUTIONARY TALE EPISODE 15

Drywall Company Plastered With Nearly $2 Million in Citations The Labor Commissioner has again looked to the construction industry for its latest round of wage theft citations. A July 24, 2018 release announces that Fullerton Pacific Interiors, Inc. will have to pay over $1.9 million for underpaying several hundred workers over a nearly two-year period. […]

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BASIC WORKPLACE “RULES OF THE ROAD”

2018 California Wage Orders Overview The California Department of Industrial Relations (DIR) through the California Industrial Welfare Commission (IWC) created and continues to refine 17 wage orders (Wage Orders) to regulate employee pay and working conditions by applicable industry or occupation. For example, Wage Order 4 applies to professional, technical, clerical, and mechanical occupations; Wage […]

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CAUTIONARY TALES EPISODE 12

646,000 Reasons to Pay Final Wages on Time Continuing her “Wage Theft is a Crime” crusade against employers who fail to pay workers all compensation in a timely fashion, the Labor Commissioner announced citations against Vista Santa Rosa, Inc., a San Bernardino farm labor contractor, and seven of its client employers, who failed to give […]

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CAUTIONARY TALES EPISODE 11

Cheesecake Factory and Its Janitorial Contractors Assessed $4.57 Million for “Wage Theft” The state Labor Commissioner has assessed Cheesecake Factory Restaurants, Inc. and two contractors hired for janitorial services some $4.57 million for underpayment of minimum wage and overtime to 559 janitorial workers at eight Southern California locations. The decision is a significant caution to […]

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