Sunday, October 04, 2015

CA Governor Signs AB 1506, a Bill Granting Limited PAGA Relief Re Wage Statements

Governor Jerry Brown signed AB 1506 (text here), which amends the Private Attorneys General Act, or PAGA.

This law affects only PAGA claims that are based on defective wage statement claims asserting violations of Labor Code section 226. And only those claims were the alleged defects are that the employer does not include on the wage statement:
(6) the inclusive dates of the period for which the employee is paid, 
(8) the name and address of the legal entity that is the employer
So, a PAGA claim based on those two criteria may be avoided if the employer "cures" the defect upon receiving notice from the employee.   How do you cure?

A violation of paragraph (6) or (8) of subdivision (a) of Section 226 shall only be considered cured upon a showing that the employer has provided a fully compliant, itemized wage statement to each aggrieved employee for each pay period for the three-year period prior to the date of the written notice sent pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 2699.3.
So, to "cure" you just have to re-do your wage statements for three years and re-issue them to all employees who received the defective ones.   It also means that the "aggrieved employees" must be "made whole," but it's unclear what that means unless someone has suffered some harm because the proper weeks or employer name were not listed on the wage statement.

The cure must occur after the employer receives notice of a PAGA claim within the 33 day period before the employee can file a lawsuit. If the employee claims the employer has not cured the defect, the employee may appeal to the DLSE. The DLSE has 17 days to rule on whether or not the defect was cured.  If not, the employer has three more days to cure.  If the employee still disagrees, he may appeal to the superior court.  If the DLSE finds the the employer did not cure, then the employee may file suit.

So, this is a very minor amendment to PAGA, but one that may help employers avoid an expensive claim in limited circumstances.

This is an "urgency" measure, which means it takes effect right away. Stay tuned for explanations of some of the other legislation that will take effect in January.