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This legislative update was initially prepared by WPKT partner Michael S. Kalt for the Society for Human Resources Management, San Diego chapter, where he serves as the Vice President — Legislation.
LEGISLATIVE
California
New Alternative Work-Week
Schedule Amendments Take Effect Soon (ABX2 5)
As reported in our February
update, during the special session which adjourned on February 19, 2009,
the California legislature passed a bill amending the Labor Code provisions
concerning “alternative work-week” schedules. The enacted
bill did not specify an effective date, but pursuant to California Constitution
Article 4, Section 8(c)(1) and according to the Department of Industrial
Relations website, these new amendments take effect May 21, 2009.
These amendments are intended
to increase work schedule flexibility by making it easier for employers
and employees to adopt “alternative work-week” schedules.
For instance, Labor Code section 511 previously specified these alternative
schedules could be adopted after a two-thirds vote of affected employees
in a “work unit,” but it failed to define the term “work unit.”
As amended, section 511 now specifies that a work unit includes “a
division, a department, a job classification, a separate physical location
or a recognizable subdivision,” and may also include an individual
employee who otherwise satisfies the criteria of a “reasonably identifiable
work unit.”
The amendment further specifies
that employers may include on the menu of work schedule options a regular
schedule of eight-hour days. This amendment is intended to make
it easier for employees to vote for the full menu of potential work
schedules, even if that particular employee desires to keep working
a normal five day, eight hour a day schedule. These amendments
further provide that employees who adopt a menu of schedule options
may, with employer consent, move from one schedule option to another
on a weekly basis.
As reported in the March update,
a bill (AB 141) is presently pending in the California legislature which
would allow individual non-exempt employees to request alternative workweek
schedules, thus avoiding the need for a super-majority approval of employees
in a “work unit.”
Federal
Since our last update, there
have been additional employment-related bills introduced at the federal
level, including the following:
New Employee Verification
Act (H.R. 2028)
The just-introduced New Employee
Verification Act (NEVA) is intended to replace the current mechanisms
used to verify new employee work eligibility, thus not only ensuring
a legal workforce but also preventing identify theft. This bill
would develop a new paperless electronic employment eligibility system
to replace the federal E-Verify electronic system and to eliminate the
current I-9 Form. Employers would access this electronic
system, called the Electronic Employment Verification System (EEVS)
by the current state “new hire” reporting process currently used
for child support enforcement. The bill would also create a voluntary
biometrics option (e.g., a fingerprint) employers could use in the verification
process, thus reducing identity theft. The bill would also preclude
wages earned through future unauthorized work from being considered
in determining Social Security Benefits.
A similar version of this bill
was introduced in 2008 but stalled in the House. The just-introduced
version has been referred to the Education and Labor Committees.
Patriot Employer
Act Reintroduced (S. 829)
This reintroduced bill would
provide “patriot” employers with a one-percent tax credit against
their taxable income. The bill defines “patriot” employers
as those who, amongst other enumerated requirements: (1) maintain
their corporate headquarters in the United States; (2) pay at least
60 percent of their employee’s health care premiums; (3) maintain
and follow a policy of neutrality in union organizing drives; and (4)
for employers with more than 50 employees, maintain an equal number
of full-time employees in the United States as overseas. The bill
also specifies certain compensation and retirement benefits be paid
to employees depending on an employer’s size.
This bill is presently pending
before the Senate Finance Committee, and the House is currently considering
a similar bill, the Eagle Employer’s Act (H.R. 989). Notably,
then-Senator Obama co-sponsored the 2007 version of the Patriot Employer
Act, which stalled in the Senate.
Protecting America’s Workers
Act (H.R. 2067)
This bill would amend various
provisions of the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA). It
would expand OSHA’s coverage to include state and local public employees
and federal government workers, and expand the coverage and protections
for other currently covered industries, such as railroad and airline
employees. This bill would also codify whistleblower protections
and increase health and safety fines, and provide additional rights
to workers and their families, including the right to contest OSHA’s
failure to issue citations and its proposed penalties. This bill
is presently pending before the House Committee on Education and Labor.
401(k) Fair Disclosure for
Retirement Security Act (H.R. 1984)
This bill would amend the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) to require additional
reporting and disclosures for individual account plans, particularly
regarding fees charged for each account. For instance, plan
administrators for individual account plans would be precluded from
entering into plan services contracts unless the plan administrator
receives statements detailing the services to be provided, the annual
charges for the plan, including component charges for administration
and record-keeping, transaction-based charges, and investment management
charges.
This bill is presently pending
in the House, which passed a similar version last session. The
Senate is presently considering a similar bill, the Defined Contribution
Fee Disclosure Act of 2009 (S. 401).
AGENCY
California
DLSE Approves Alternative
Work-Week Schedules for Summer Months
California’s Department of
Labor Standards Enforcement (DLSE) recently posted an opinion letter
(DLSE Opinion 2009.03.23) authorizing employers to adopt alternative
workweek schedules for summer months, provided they comply with all
regulations otherwise applicable to the adoption of such schedules (e.g.,
election procedures, notice requirements, etc.). In this particular
instance, the DLSE allowed a manufacturer employer to adopt a summer
schedule (June to September) of four 9-hour days and one 4-hour day,
without incurring overtime for non-exempt employees working this schedule,
and to maintain a normal schedule of five 8-hour days the rest of the
year. This opinion letter provides some previously missing guidance
on whether “alternative workweek schedules” during only a particular
period satisfies the requirement work schedules be “regularly recurring.”
California’s Labor Code and
its Industrial Wage Orders contain numerous provisions concerning workweek
schedules, and the adoption of so-called alternative work-week schedules.
Simply summarized, Labor Code section 511 permits employers to adopt
“alternative workweek schedules,” thus allowing non-exempt employees
to work up to ten hours per day without overtime on any given day, provided
the employer satisfies fairly strict election procedures for adopting
such schedules (e.g., secret ballot election approval by two-thirds
vote of affected employees in a work unit). Labor Code section
500(b), however, defines “workweek” as any “fixed and regularly
recurring period of 168 hours, seven consecutive 24-hour periods,”
while Wage Order 1-2001 requires regularly scheduled alternative workweek
in which the specific number of work days and work hours are “regularly
recurring.”
Until this DLSE opinion, it
was unclear whether alternative work week schedules during only a particular
time of year would satisfy the requirement such schedules be “regularly
recurring,” or whether employers would have to maintain such schedules
for the entire year. In this opinion letter, the DLSE noted that
the Labor Code and Wage Orders require only the schedule be “regularly
recurring,” not that the alternative workweek schedule occur each
workweek of the year. The DLSE noted this schedule involved a
single, regular schedule occurring only during specified and temporary
time periods thus allowing employees to determine their schedule in
advance, and that all contemplated shifts exceeded four hours of work.
The DLSE also noted that to
the extent the alternative workweek schedule remains the same each year,
after it has been properly adopted by the employer under Labor Code
section 511, the employer would not be required to conduct further elections
each year.
The full text of this and other
opinion letters may be found on the DLSE’s website:
www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/DLSE_OpinionLetters.htm.
Federal
Government Agencies Provide
Guidance on Combating “Swine Flu”
In light of the Department
of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) public health emergency announcement
on April 26, 2009 concerning the H1N1 virus (also referred to as the
“swine flu”), employees and employers undoubtedly have questions
about the disease, and precautions they can adopt to prevent its spread
in the workplace. A number of government agencies have recently
posted informative materials about the disease and potential “best
practices” to limit its spread. For instance, information concerning
the disease and its transmission can be found on the HHS website, www.hhs.gov, and on the Center for Disease Control
and Prevention’s website, www.cdc.gov/swineflu.
The Department of Labor (DOL)
and OSHA have also published guidance materials concerning the disease
and potential employer “best practices” to prevent workplace infections.
For instance, OSHA has issued “Guidance on Preparing Workplaces for
an Influenza Pandemic” (OSHA 3327-02N 2007), which is also available
on its website: www.osha.gov/Publications/influenza_pandemic.html. The DOL website also offers
a guidance document entitled “Pandemic Influenza Preparedness and
Response Guidance of Healthcare Workers and Healthcare Employers”
(OSHA 3328-05 2007) available at www.osha.gov/publications/3328-05-2007-English.html. Another informative government
website is www.pandemicflu.gov which contains a number of “frequently
asked questions” regarding pandemic flus, and their impact on the
workplace and steps available to employers. These “frequently
asked questions” can be accessed at www.pandemicflu.gov/faq/workplace_questions/human_resource_policies/index.html.
E-Verify Requirements for
Federal Contractors Delayed Until June 30, 2009
The federal government has
again agreed to delay, this time until June 30, 2009, a new rule requiring
certain federal contractors and subcontractors to use the federal E-Verify
electronic system to determine the work eligibility for employees.
This new rule would be the first compelling certain employers to utilize
the otherwise voluntary federal E-Verify system. Specifically,
it would require covered federal contractors (as defined in the proposed
final rule) to use E-Verify for all new employees hired during a federal
contract’s term, and to verify current employees who would work on
the federal contract. (The particular requirements for this new
rule are detailed more fully in the December edition of the WPKT Employment
Newsletter available at www.wpkt.com).
This rule was originally scheduled
to take effect January 15, 2009, but has been delayed multiple times,
most recently until the just-postponed effective date of May 21, 2009,
due to various legal challenges.
EEOC Issues
“Best Practices” Guidelines for Family Caregiver Policies
In 2007, the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission (EEOC) issued a guidance document entitled “Disparate
Treatment of Workers with Caregiving Responsibilities,” to identify
circumstances under which discrimination against workers with caregiving
responsibilities might violate federal discrimination laws. Both
at the time and since the 2007 Guidance was issued, the EEOC has clarified
that caregivers are not a protected classification under federal discrimination
statutes, but noted that discrimination against employees because of
these caregiving responsibilities might violate other federal discrimination
laws.
On April 22, 2009, the EEOC
issued a guidance document entitled “Employer Best Practices for Workers
with Caregiving Responsibilities.” This new guidance document
is intended to supplement the 2007 guidance by identifying potential
“best practices” employers may adopt to reduce the potential for
equal employment opportunity violations against caregivers, and to remove
barriers to equal employment opportunity. The guidance identifies
many potential tools (e.g., training and policies) employers may consider
to assist in the recruitment, hiring, promotion and retention of employees
with caregiving responsibilities.
The full text of both this
“Best Practices” guidance and the 2007 guidance on Caregiving Responsibilities
may be found respectively on the EEOC website as follows: www.eeoc/policy/docs/caregiver-best-practices.html and www.eeoc.gov/policy/docs/caregiving.html.
JUDICIAL
California
California Supreme Court
to Decide Whether California Labor Code Applies to Non-Residents While
in California
As mentioned in a prior newsletter,
the ninth circuit recently issued a fairly controversial opinion in
which it concluded that California’s Labor Code provisions, including
those regulating overtime, applied to non-residents who temporarily
performed work in California. (See e.g., Sullivan v. Oracle,
Inc. (9th Cir. 2008) 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 2892.) In Sullivan,
the ninth circuit concluded Colorado residents who worked several days
in California were entitled to the California Labor Code’s protections
for the time worked in California, even though they were Colorado residents
who worked the overwhelming majority of their time in Colorado.
This decision drew considerable protests from many groups, including
California’s hospitality industry, who expressed concern this decision
might dissuade employers from sending employees to California on business.
The ninth circuit recently
ordered this opinion withdrawn, meaning it is no longer citable, and
it certified the following questions to the California Supreme Court:
(1) Does the California Labor Code apply to overtime work performed
in California for a California-based employer by out-of-state plaintiffs,
such that overtime pay is required for work in excess of eight hours
per day or in excess of forty hours per week? (2) Does Business and
Professions Code Section 17200 apply to the overtime work described
in question one? (3) Does Section 17200 apply to overtime work performed
outside California for a California-based employer by out-of-state plaintiffs
if the employer failed to comply with the overtime provisions of the
Fair Labor Standards Act?
As expected, the California
Supreme Court recently accepted these certified questions, and briefing
will begin shortly. However, a final decision on these issues
is not expected until at least 2010. (Sullivan v. Oracle Corp.,
Cal. Supreme Court Case No. S170577).
Another
Arbitration Class Action Waiver Deemed
Unconscionable
In a class action lawsuit by
restaurant managers seeking unpaid overtime, the restaurant employer
attempted to compel arbitration under its agreement which also contained
a class action waiver. Both the trial court and California court
of appeal concluded the class action waiver was substantively unconscionable,
and that the entire arbitration agreement was procedurally unconscionable.
The appellate court relied
heavily upon the California Supreme Court’s decision in Gentry
v. Superior Court (2007) 42 Cal.4th 443, 463, which held class action
waivers in arbitration agreements may be unenforceable if the waiver
impermissibly interferes with the employee’s ability to vindicate
unwaivable statutory rights. Applying Gentry, the appellate
court concluded overtime constituted an unwaivable statutory right,
and concluded the class action waiver would impermissibly interfere
with enforcement of these rights since the class members were low wage
earners with limited English language skills. The court also concluded
the agreement was procedurally unconscionable because of the power disparity
between the employer and the employee, meaning the employee did not
have real opportunity to reject the agreement, and because this employer’s
accompanying materials regarding the agreement were misleading.
(Olvera v. El Pollo Loco, Inc. (2009) ___ Cal.App.4th ___, 2009 Cal.App.LEXIS 618).
(NOTE: last month’s newsletter
discussed two other recently published appellate court decisions invalidating
class action waivers in arbitration agreements. [See e.g., Franco v. Athens Disposal Co., Inc. (2009) 171 Cal.App.4th 1277; Sanchez v. Western Pizza
Enterprises, Inc. (2009) 172 Cal.App.4th 154].
Since the California Supreme Court’s decision in Gentry, there
have now been four published appellate court decisions invalidating
the class action waivers in arbitration agreements, but none enforcing
it in the wage and hour context. Since the final result in most
of these decisions was to invalidate the entire arbitration agreement,
thus allowing the lawsuit to proceed in state court on a class basis,
employers may wish to carefully scrutinize their arbitration agreements
to determine whether they still want to include class action waivers.)
Arbitration Agreement in
Employment Application Upheld
In a seemingly rare victory
for employers, a California court of appeal recently issued a published
decision compelling arbitration and rejecting the employee’s myriad
arguments against enforceability.
In this FEHA discrimination
claim filed by a former employee, the employer sought to compel arbitration
based upon an arbitration provision contained in the employee’s initial
employment application. The employee/plaintiff opposed arbitration
arguing the provision’s language stating “I agree . . . that all
disputes that might arise out of my employment with the company” will
be arbitrated, was unfairly one-sided. The trial court
compelled arbitration and the California court of appeal affirmed.
The appellate court commenced
its analysis by reaffirming that arbitration agreements must be both
procedurally and substantively unconscionable, although not in equal
degrees, before courts will invalidate employment arbitration agreements.
The court agreed that this employment agreement was procedurally unconscionable,
but that its overall procedural unfairness was limited, thus essentially
increasing the level of substantive unconscionability required to be
shown by the party opposing arbitration. The court noted this
arbitration provision was set forth in a succinct easily understood
paragraph contained in a relatively short four-page agreement, and the
provision has been called to the applicant’s attention who was required
to initial his acknowledgment of this provision.
The court also rejected the
employee’s contention the arbitration provision was substantively
unconscionable (i.e., unfairly one-sided) simply because it used the
language “I agree.” The court observed the provision was broadly
worded to include all employment-related disputes, and did not contain
other language or provisions suggesting the employer retained the ability
to pursue its potential claims in court (i.e., there were no provisions
allowing the employer to seek injunctive relief in court, etc.).
The court also rejected the employee’s contention the employer had
waived its right to seek arbitration, noting the limited discovery conducted
before seeking arbitration was entirely consistent with the discovery
that would be generally permitted in the arbitration. (Roman v. Superior
Court (ex rel Flo-Kem, Inc.) ___ Cal.App.4th ____, 2009 Cal.App.LEXIS
543).
Appellate Court Upholds
Employee’s Release of Disputed Wage Claims, and Concludes Employee
Who Settles Class Action Claim No Longer Has Standing to Represent
the Class
Two employees filed a class
action against their employer seeking unpaid overtime for themselves
and a purported class of similarly situated employees. During
the convoluted procedural history, the first employee settled her claims
and executed a complete release in exchange for enhanced severance benefits.
After class certification was denied, the second plaintiff settled her
claims in exchange for a $51,000 payment, but attempted to retain the
right to appeal the class certification denial in her representative
capacity. The court of appeal concluded the first employee’s
release was enforceable and barred her wage claims, and that the second
employee’s settlement precluded her from participating as a class
representative.
Regarding the first employee’s
claims, the appellate court rejected the argument that the prior release
was unenforceable under Labor Code section 206.5 which generally precludes
employers from obtaining releases based upon wages already owed.
Relying upon the statutory language in Labor Code sections 206 and 206.5,
as well as the recent decision in Chindarah v. Pick Up
Stix, Inc (2009) 171 Cal. App. 4th 796 (covered in last month’s
newsletter), the court held that the employee and employer can release
claims for wages owed where a bona fide dispute exists regarding the
claim. In this case, the employer had already paid the employee
all wages undisputedly owed, and the employee had released the disputed
claims in exchanged for additional payments (“enhanced severance benefits”).
The appellate court concluded
the second employee’s settlement precluded any further continued involvement
as a class representative under California law, notwithstanding language
in her release agreement reserving her ability to continue acting as
a class representative. The court noted that an employee only
has her individual claims, not her individual claims plus some additional
class-related claims, and that class actions are simply a procedural
mechanism to pursue the individual claim. Accordingly, a class
representative’s voluntary settlement of her individual claim resolves
her claim and moots her ability to proceed as class representative.
Notably, however, the appellate court emphasized its ruling turned on
the voluntary nature of the representative’s settlement, and noted
that employers cannot “pick off” class representatives simply by
making an unsolicited offer of the amounts claimed by the class representative.
(Watkins v. Wachovia Corp. (April 16, 2009) _____ Cal. App. 4th ______, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 556).
Employer Not Liable for
Torts Committed by Former Employee after Employment Ended
Plaintiff sued a plumbing company
for negligent hiring and retention alleging the company’s hiring of
a former felon enabled the felon to meet and date, and ultimately murder
the plaintiff’s mother. The employer argued it could not be
liable for the former employee’s misconduct because the murder occurred
nearly two years after the employer terminated the employee. The
trial court and appellate court ruled in the employer’s favor finding
the employer does not owe a duty of care against harm inflicted by a
former employee after the employment relationship ends. The appellate
court stressed both the fact the employment relationship had already
ended and the amount of time between the termination and the tortious
conduct (two years) in concluding the employer owed no such duty.
(Phillips v. TLC Plumbing, Inc., et al. (2009) 172 Cal.App.4th
1133.)
Motor Carrier Hazardous
Material Transportation Exemption Limited to Days Drivers Actually Transport
Hazardous Materials and Drivers Not Entitled to Be Paid For On-Call
Time
Several service representatives
sued their employer for unpaid overtime on days they worked more than
eight hours transporting materials, and for unpaid compensation for
hours spent “on call.” The employer argued the service representatives,
whose duties frequently involved transporting hazardous materials, were
covered by the motor carrier exemption in California’s Industrial
Wage Orders and therefore exempt from California’s overtime law.
Relying heavily upon the 2002
Update of the DLSE Enforcement Manual, the court of appeal agreed the
motor carrier exemption would exempt the drivers from generally applicable
overtime laws, but only on the days the service representatives actually
transported hazardous materials for at least part of the day.
The appellate court noted that the drivers would be entitled to overtime
incurred on any day during which the driver performed non-driving duties
for the entire workday. Accordingly, the appellate court
reversed the summary adjudication ruling in the employer’s favor because
the employer had failed to present evidence the plaintiffs transported
hazardous materials on each workday for which they claimed overtime.
The appellate court concluded,
however, the plaintiffs were not entitled to compensation for the “on
call” time spent being available to respond to customer inquiries.
The court agreed “on call” time may be compensable if it is spent
primarily for the employer’s benefit, which depends heavily upon the
restrictions imposed by the employer upon the employee’s free time.
However, the court concluded the on-call restrictions in this case (e.g.,
wearing a beeper, responding to telephone calls within 30 minutes, and
two hours to respond to a patient’s home) were not unduly restrictive
and, thus, were non-compensable. (Gomez v. Lincare, Inc. (April 29, 2009) ___ Cal.App.4th ___, 2009 Cal.App.LEXIS 2713.)
Federal
United States Supreme Court
Upholds Collective Bargaining Agreement Provision Requiring Arbitration
of Age Discrimination Claims
Several night watchmen, all
of whom were union members, filed suit in federal district court against
their employer under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA).
The employer attempted to compel arbitration pursuant to the collective
bargaining agreement (CBA) provision requiring all employment discrimination
claims be submitted to binding arbitration under the CBA’s grievance
and dispute resolution procedures. Both the district and circuit
courts denied arbitration holding collective bargaining agreements could
not waive a covered employee’s right to a judicial forum for statutory
discrimination claims.
In a 5-4 decision, the United
States Supreme Court reversed, holding that CBA provisions that “clearly
and unmistakably” require union members to arbitrate ADEA claims are
enforceable. The Court noted that the ADEA does not currently
prohibit arbitration of employee age discrimination claims. The Court
also distinguished prior decisions in which it had declined to require
arbitration of statutory discrimination claims on the grounds the CBA
provisions at issue in those cases did not expressly cover both statutory
discrimination and contractual claims. (14 Penn Plaza LLC v.
Pyett (2009) ___ S.Ct. ___, 2009 U.S. LEXIS 2497.)
Notably, 14 Penn Plaza appears to apply only to those CBA provisions expressly requiring arbitration
of statutory discrimination claims, and not to broadly worded CBA provisions
not referencing such claims. Secondly, since this decision rests
heavily upon the absence of any ADEA provision precluding CBA waivers
for such claims, it is foreseeable Congress may soon attempt to amend
the ADEA (and perhaps other federal civil rights statutes) to preclude
such waivers.
This Employment Law Alert is a publication of Wilson Petty Kosmo & Turner LLP and should not be construed as legal advice or a legal opinion on any specific facts or circumstances. The contents are intended for general information purposes only and you are urged to consult an attorney concerning your own situation and any specific legal questions you may have. Internal Revenue Service regulations require that certain types of written advice include a disclaimer. To the extent the preceding message contains advice relating to a tax issue, the advice is not intended or written to be used, and it cannot be used by the recipient or any other taxpayer, for the purpose of avoiding Federal tax penalties. Copyright © 2009 WPKT LLP. All rights reserved. |