Over the weekend Governor Gavin Newsom announced that he has signed AB 1034, our sponsored legislation extending the authority to waive the application of the Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) within construction industry Collective Bargaining Agreements (CBAs).
Under existing law, PAGA exempts, until January 1, 2028, from its applicability, an employee in the construction industry covered by a valid CBA in effect any time before January 1, 2025, if that CBA provides premium wage rates and expressly waives the requirements of PAGA in clear and unambiguous terms. AB 1034 deletes the January 1, 2025 date and extends this important industry exemption until January 1, 2038.
This result was achieved through a tremendous lobbying campaign by the union signatory contractor community and was emphasized by grassroots advocacy efforts that generated hundreds of emails to the Governor.
We want to thank Assemblymember Grayson, Senator Cortese, and their staff for all of their hard work in getting AB 1034 amended and passed into law. Without their efforts, we would not have obtained a legislative vehicle and passed it through all required policy, fiscal and floor votes over a 10-day period during the final days of the legislative session.
— Updated on September 30
Agreement on PAGA Reform Reached – PAGA Repeal Initiative Removed from the November Ballot
On July 1, 2024, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed two bills, Senate Bill 92 and Assembly Bill 2288, that amend the state’s Labor Code Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA), which deputizes private parties to enforce the Labor Code on behalf of the state.
In mid-June, the governor announced a deal had been reached with the legislature and business groups to reform PAGA. According to the agreement, business groups would withdraw a ballot measure to repeal PAGA if the two bills were signed.
As detailed below, highlights from the amendments include important changes to: (1) PAGA’s early evaluation and cure options; (2) PAGA’s standing requirements; (3) PAGA’s penalties; and (4) a court’s tools to ensure that PAGA actions remain manageable. The amendments apply to PAGA actions filed on or after June 19, 2024.
Early Evaluation Conference; Cure Options
The amendments include a new procedure for employers to address and cure alleged Labor Code violations after an employer is served with a PAGA action complaint.
At the time of any initial appearance in the case, an employer may request an early evaluation conference and stay of the court proceeding. The employer must submit a confidential statement explaining which alleged Labor Code violations it disputes and which, if any, alleged Labor Code violations it intends to cure. The PAGA plaintiff, in turn, must submit a confidential statement explaining the factual basis for the alleged Labor Code violations, the amount of penalties claimed for each violation, the basis for accepting or not accepting any cure proposal presented by the employer, and any demand for settlement of the case in its entirety. A neutral evaluator will conduct a confidential early evaluation conference to explore the strengths and weaknesses of the plaintiff’s claims, whether any cure proposal by the employer should be adopted, and whether the plaintiff’s claims can be settled. If the neutral evaluator accepts an employer’s cure proposal and the employer subsequently proves the cure has been made, the potential PAGA penalties that may be recovered for the alleged violation are significantly reduced (discussed further below).
In addition, starting October 1, 2024, employers with fewer than 100 employees have expanded options to cure alleged Labor Code violations upon receiving a PAGA notice. In addition to the early evaluation conference discussed above, employers with fewer than 100 employees may preempt the filing of a PAGA action in whole or part by curing the Labor Code violations alleged in the PAGA notice.
Penalty Reform
Some of the most significant changes under the amendments affect PAGA’s penalty structure. The new legislation seeks to strike a balance between enforcement and fairness, with an emphasis on reducing penalties for technical violations or where the employer can demonstrate good faith efforts at complying with the Labor Code.
- Penalty Caps for Good Faith Compliance: PAGA penalties are capped at 15% for employers who demonstrate that, prior to receiving a PAGA notice or a request for employment records from the PAGA plaintiff, the employer took “all reasonable steps” toward complying with the Labor Code provisions in the PAGA notice. The amendments define “all reasonable steps” as including, but not limited to, conducting periodic payroll audits, taking action in response to the results of the audits, disseminating lawful written wage and hour policies, training supervisors on wage and hour compliance, and taking appropriate corrective action with regard to supervisors. The cap is 30% if an employer demonstrates that, within 60 days of receiving a PAGA notice, it took all reasonable steps toward complying with the Labor Code provisions identified in the PAGA notice.
- Reduced Penalties for Wage Statement Violations: PAGA penalties for wage statement violations are reduced from a general maximum $100 to $25 per aggrieved employee per pay period if the employee could promptly and easily determine from the wage statement alone the information allegedly unlawfully missing from the wage statement.
- Reduced Penalties for Derivative Violations: PAGA penalties for untimely payment of wages during employment and/or upon separation are not recoverable if the claim is derivative of an unpaid wage claim and the violation was neither willful nor intentional. Similarly, PAGA penalties for inaccurate wage statements are not recoverable if the claim is derivative of an unpaid wage claim and the violation was neither knowing nor intentional.
- Reduced Penalties for Cured Violations: If an employer cures a violation through the early evaluation conference (discussed above), the PAGA penalty is capped at $15 per aggrieved employee per pay period. Further, if the cured violation was by an employer who took all reasonable steps to comply with the Labor Code provision at issue or one relating to wage statements, the PAGA penalty is reduced to $0.
- Reduced Penalties for Isolated Violations: If a violation occurred due to an isolated, nonrecurring event that did not extend beyond the lesser of 30 consecutive days or four consecutive pay periods, the PAGA penalty is capped at $50 per aggrieved employee per pay period.
- Relief for Employers With Weekly Pay Periods: The amendments reduce any PAGA penalties recoverable against employers who have weekly pay periods by one-half. This effectively places employers with weekly pay periods on equal footing as employers who have biweekly pay periods.
- Limited Aggravated Penalties: PAGA’s aggravated penalty of $200 per aggrieved employee per pay period applies only where either (a) within five years preceding the alleged violation, a court or the LWDA issued a determination that the employer violated the Labor Code provision in dispute; or (b) the employer’s conduct was malicious, fraudulent, or oppressive.
- Increased Employee Share of Penalties: PAGA penalties will be distributed as follows: 65% to the LWDA and 35% to the aggrieved employees. PAGA previously allocated 75% of the penalties to the LWDA and 25% to the aggrieved employees.
- Injunctive Relief: A plaintiff may pursue injunctive relief under PAGA.
Standing Requirements
Except for certain non-profit legal aid agencies, PAGA plaintiffs will face stricter standing requirements. Previously, a plaintiff could pursue PAGA claims even if they did not personally experience each of the alleged Labor Code violations asserted in the lawsuit; rather, the plaintiff had to experience only one of the alleged Labor Code violations to have standing to assert all the other claims. Under the amendments, the plaintiff must personally experience each of the Labor Code violations alleged in the lawsuit. Moreover, the plaintiff must have personally experienced the Labor Code violation within the one-year period prior to the PAGA notice. The impact of the amendment is to essentially bring state court PAGA standing standards more in line with the federal PAGA standing standards.
For example, previously, a plaintiff who experienced only meal period violations could assert and pursue PAGA claims not only for meal period violations but also for alleged rest break violations, unpaid overtime, and other Labor Code violations unrelated to meal periods. Under the amendments, if the plaintiff experienced only meal period violations, the plaintiff may pursue only PAGA claims related to meal periods.
Manageability
PAGA cases can be complex and unwieldy, especially when the case involves multiple alleged Labor Code violations and numerous employees with differing working conditions. To address this issue and ensure that PAGA claims remain manageable, the amendments expressly grant California courts the discretion to limit the scope of PAGA claims and evidence presented at trial. Courts may also consolidate or coordinate different PAGA actions that involve overlapping violations against the same employer.
What Should Employers Do Now?
The amendments incentivize and reward employers for making good faith efforts at complying with the Labor Code. Employers should regularly review their wage and hour policies and practices, which include auditing all payroll and timekeeping practices, to be able to reduce potential PAGA penalties should inadvertent compliance issues arise. Moreover, an employer should promptly review any PAGA notices it receives to determine whether to utilize PAGA’s newly expanded cure and early evaluation options. Doing so can substantially reduce the potential risk and exposure posed by the PAGA action.
— Updated on July 17
Agreement on PAGA Reform Reached – PAGA Repeal Initiative Removed from the November Ballot
Governor Newsom, legislative leaders, the California Chamber of Commerce and the California Labor Federation have reached an agreement on reforms to the Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) that avoids a contentious ballot measure campaign. The proposed initiative was aimed at repealing PAGA which gave workers the right to sue their employers for themselves and other workers for labor violations. That proposed initiative will now be kept off the November ballot. In its place, legislation to reform PAGA will be approved and implement the following:
Reform penalty structure
- Encourages compliance with labor laws by capping penalties on employers who quickly take steps to fix policies and practices, and make workers whole, after receiving a PAGA notice, as well as on employers that act responsibly to take steps proactively to comply with the labor code before even receiving a PAGA notice.
- Creates new, higher penalties on employers who act maliciously, fraudulently or oppressively in violating labor laws.
- Ensures that more of the penalty money goes to employees by increasing the amount allocated to employees from 25% to 35%.
Reducing and streamlining litigation
- Expands which Labor Code sections can be cured to reduce the need for litigation and make employees whole quickly.
- Protects small employers by providing a more robust right to cure process through the Labor and Workforce Development Agency (LWDA) to reduce litigation and costs.
- Codifies that a court may limit both the scope of claims presented at trial to ensure cases can be managed effectively.
Improving measures for injunctive relief and standing
- Allows courts to provide injunctive relief to compel businesses to implement changes in the workplace to remedy labor law violations.
- Requires the employee to personally experience the alleged violations brought in a claim.
Strengthening state enforcement
- Give the Department of Industrial Relations (DIR) the ability to expedite hiring and fill vacancies to ensure effective and timely enforcement of employee labor claims.
While the reform bill language is not yet in print, it is our understanding that the compromise legislation does not impact our industry authority that allows signatory contractors to be exempt through their collective bargaining agreement (CBA) from being exposed to PAGA lawsuits. That said, there are two sunset dates in existing law attached to the CBA carveout statute with one expiring 1/1/25 and the other expiring on 1/1/28. The first sunset date will not allow CBAs to benefit from the exemption if a CBA expires between the two dates. The second sunset date eliminates the CBA carveout provision unless extended by the legislature. Union signatory contractor associations had been requesting that language be included in the PAGA compromise bill that would extend or eliminate the carveout sunset dates. Those efforts were rebuffed due to concerns from a few building trades unions. We hope we can work out an agreement with those unions to remove or extend the sunset dates before the end of this year’s legislative session which concludes in August.
Once the Legislature approves the bill reflecting the compromise deal and Newsom signs it, the proponents of the businesses backed PAGA repeal initiative will withdraw the ballot measure. The bill must be signed by the governor by June 27, the deadline for the Secretary of State to certify ballot measures for the November general election.
This content was provided by SCGMA’s professional counsel and is for general informational purposes only. Readers should contact their own professional counsel for company specific matters in the relevant jurisdiction.