Private Sector News
AB 800 Establishes Workplace Readiness Week to Educate High School Students on Workers’ Rights and the Labor Movement
Assembly Bill 800 becomes effective in California on August 1, 2024. The bill establishes the week including April 28 as Workplace Readiness Week, which shall be a part of Labor History Month in May each year. During this week, all public high schools, including charter schools, will be required to provide students in grades 11 and 12 with information on workers’ rights, including laws on child labor, wage and hour protections, worker safety, workers’ compensation, unemployment insurance, paid sick leave, paid family leave, state disability insurance, the California Family Rights Act, and the prohibition against misclassification of employees as independent contractors. Schools will also be required to educate these students on their right to organize a union in the workplace, prohibitions against retaliation, and the labor movement’s role in winning labor protections for workers. Furthermore, schools must provide students with an introduction to state-approved apprenticeship programs as an alternative career path.
SB 740 Applies Skilled & Trained Workforce Requirements to Hazardous Material Manufacturers
In 2013, the legislature adopted Senate Bill 54 (“SB 54”), which required oil refineries to hire construction contractors that would commit to employing a “skilled and trained workforce,” as defined by the statute, and to hiring subcontractors that would also commit to employing a skilled and trained workforce.
SB 808 Strengthens Oversight of Sexual Harassment on CSU Campuses
On October 7, 2023, Governor Newsom signed Senate Bill 808 (“SB 808”) into law, which amends the California Health and Safety Code to require the California State University (“CSU”) Chancellor’s Office and each of the CSU system’s 23 campuses to make certain annual disclosures about sexual harassment reports on campus. Specifically, the system will be required to disclose the number of sexual harassment reports they receive each year, how many of those reports resulted in investigations, how long it took the investigations to commence and conclude, and how many investigations triggered hearings and appeals. These annual reports must be posted on the system website for the public to access.
California SB 132, the Film and TV Tax Incentive, Diversity, and Safety Law
On July 10, 2023, Governor Newsom signed Senate Bill 132 (“SB 132”). SB 132 extends California’s $330 million Film and Television Tax Credit program by five years. An important change in the law allows production companies receiving the tax credit to submit for a refund if the credit exceeds the company’s state tax liability.
SB 428 Allows Employers to Seek Restraining Orders to Protect Employees Facing Harassment
Under existing law, California employers may seek a restraining order when one or more of their employees have suffered unlawful violence or a credible threat of violence connected to the workplace. Now, Senate Bill 428 (“SB 428”) enables employers to seek harassment-related restraining orders as well.
Farmworkers Can Unionize by Card-Check Agreement
For decades, California’s farmworkers could only gain union recognition through on-site elections. Last year, Governor Newsom signed a law allowing farmworkers to form a union through mail-in ballot elections or through card-check agreements. But he did so on the condition that the United Farm Workers and California Labor Federation agree to roll back the mail-in ballot option.
California Gives Teeth to Ban on Noncompete Agreements
California law already says that noncompete agreements in an employment contract are void. But some employers put noncompetes in their contracts anyway. Employers know that a noncompete agreement might coax workers to stay in their jobs—even though it has no legal effect. It’s a misleading and unfair way to do business.
Board Overturns Alstate Maintenance, Reestablishing the Totality of the Circumstances Test for Determining Whether an Employee’s Solo Conduct is Protected, Concerted Activity
When is the action of one employee protected, concerted activity? The National Labor Relations Board answered this question in Miller Plastic Products, Inc. 372 NLRB No. 134 (Aug. 25, 2023) by returning to the totality of the circumstances test for determining whether an employee acting on their own is engaged in protected, concerted activity.
NLRB Holds Employer Accountable for Some Unlawful Bargaining Tactics
ExxonMobil Research & Engineering Company, Inc., 372 NLRB No. 138 (Aug. 25, 2023) arises out of bargaining a successor collective bargaining agreement (“CBA”) between ExxonMobil (“Exxon”) and the Independent Laboratory Employees Union. Prior to the start of negotiations, Exxon subcontracted out bargaining unit work, changed the process for approval of paid time off (“PTO”) requests for union-represented employees, offered 8 weeks of paid parental leave to all non-union employees, and unilaterally changed performance evaluation methods for union-represented employees. The Union filed unfair labor practices alleging numerous violations, including that Exxon engaged in overall bad faith bargaining.
NLRB Clarifies Burden of Proof Under Wright Line
The Board recently issued a decision in Intertape Polymer Corp., 372 NLRB No. 133 (2023) clarifying what needs to be proven to show that an employee was disciplined on account of union or protected concerted activity.
NLRB Restores Right of Paid Employees to Advocate on Behalf of Unpaid Interns and Volunteers
On August 26, 2023, the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”) issued American Federation for Children, Inc., 372 NLRB No. 137 (2023) restoring protections for employees who show support for nonemployees, including unpaid interns working alongside them.
NLRB reinstates rule that Employers must maintain dues check off provisions after contract expiration
In Hood River Distillers, 372 NLRB No. 126 (2023) the National Labor Relations Board retroactively applied a prior, more union-friendly standard for dues check off provisions.
NLRB clarifies Employers cannot make unilateral changes during negotiations, unless strict conditions are met
On August 26, 2023, the NLRB issued Wendt Corporation overruling Raytheon Network Centric Systems, in which the Trump Board broke with decades of established precedent by drastically reinterpreting the rule established by the Supreme Court in NLRB v. Katz. Four days later, the NLRB announced Technocap LLC, 372 NLRB No. 136, which overrules the aspects of Raytheon that Wendt did not address. The NLRB’s restoration of the Katz rule eliminates a major employer-friendly loophole and represents a significant victory for organized labor.
Landmark Decision and Rule Changes Promise to Re-Shape Organizing for Private Sector Workers
Breaking news: two major developments last week will reshape the legal processes for organizing a union in the private sector.
On August 25, 2023, the National Labor Relations Board issued a landmark decision that promises to speed organizing and deter employers from committing unfair labor practices once a union demands recognition.
California Supreme Court Strengthens Wage and Hour Enforcement Rights
The Private Attorneys General Act (“PAGA”), California Labor Code §§ 2698-2699, allows employees to sue employers for wage and hour violations and recover monetary penalties for those violations. Employees may bring PAGA claims for violations of their own wage-and-hour rights and on behalf of other employees. But last year, the U.S. Supreme Court limited the ability to bring such claims in Viking River Cruises. In Viking River Cruises, the high court held that an employer and employee could waive the employee’s right to bring PAGA claims to court, and instead, arbitrate them. The question of whether bringing wage and hour claims in arbitration, as compared to in court, favors workers or only employers remains an ongoing hot-button issue.
DOL Issues Comprehensive Updates to Davis-Bacon Regulations Applicable to Federal Public Works Projects in a Positive Move for Workers
The Davis-Bacon and Related Acts (DBRA) require contractors performing work on federally funded or assisted contracts for the construction, alteration, or repair of public buildings or public works above $2,000 to pay their laborers and mechanics no less than the locally prevailing wages and fringe benefits as determined by the Secretary of Labor.
Expanding Organizing Opportunities, the NLRB Overturns Trump-Era Employee Classification Standard
A crucial question many workers and labor unions face is whether a worker is an employee or an independent contractor. The question arises because employees receive unemployment benefits, and they are protected under wage and hour laws, workers compensation, and workplace discrimination laws. Employees are also covered by the National Labor Relations Act, meaning they have a legal right to organize unions. Independent contractors do not receive these same protections.
NLRB Adopts New Legal Standard for Evaluating Employer Work Rules
In Stericycle Inc., 372 NLRB No. 113 (2023), the National Labor Relations Board established a new union-friendly standard for evaluating employer handbooks and work rules. Under the new standard, the Board must analyze whether the work rule has a reasonable tendency to chill employees from engaging in protected union-related activities. In doing so, the Board first must interpret the work rule from “the perspective of the reasonable employee who is economically dependent on her employer” and who is contemplating how the rule might impact their protected rights.
NLRB Makes it More Difficult for Employers to Punish Workers for Picket Line Conduct, Other Union Activity
In Lion Elastomers LLC II, 372 NLRB No. 83 (2023), the National Labor Relations Board overruled a bad anti-Union decision from 2020 and restored the long-established “setting-specific” standard for evaluating cases where employees are disciplined for alleged misconduct that occurs while the worker is engaged in protected activity.
Under the “setting-specific” standard, the Board evaluates the severity of an employee’s misconduct and the context in which it took place under three different tests
The Inflation Reduction Act Promises Booming Demand for Apprentices for Green Projects
In August 2022, President Biden signed the transformational, $740 billion Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). The IRA provides massive tax credits for energy efficient buildings, home, and EV charging stations—if the contractor provides good jobs for their workers. Most of these tax credits are not available unless contractors: (1) offer jobs to apprentices, and (2) pay prevailing wages. Contractors can receive five times the base tax credit for projects that meet these requirements.