Important State Bills for Families Advance in Legislature
ERA-Sponsored Bill Enhancing Anti-Discrimination Protections for Working Families Clears California Senate
On May 29, the California State Senate passed SB 404, a bill authored by Senator Hannah-Beth Jackson (D-Dist. 19) and co-sponsored by Equal Rights Advocates (ERA), the California Employment Lawyers Association (CELA) and the Center for Worklife Law at UC Hastings. The bill will prohibit employers from discriminating against an employee based on his or her family responsibilities by adding “familial status” to the list of characteristics that are prohibited bases of discrimination under the employment provisions of the state’s Fair Employment and Housing Act.
As the law stands now, employees must draw on a patchwork of laws to show that an employer discriminated against the employee for being a primary caregiver by trying to prove that caregiving is a type of sex discrimination. Many employers base adverse employment decisions on preconceived notions about family responsibilities. For example, employers may reduce an employee’s hours without the employee’s consent or pass over these employees for promotions. This bill clarifies the law protecting caregivers giving guidance to both employees and employers about the rights of workers with family responsibilities.
“Today more and more workers are juggling both work and family care obligations, and the demands for elder care are projected to increase dramatically in the near future,” says Jamie Dolkas, Staff Attorney at ERA. “SB 404 provides much-needed protection to ensure that workers will not be treated unfairly because they care for their family members.”
Domestic Workers’ Bill of Rights and Bills Protecting Immigrant Workers From Retaliation Move Forward in California Legislature
Also on May 29, the Assembly passed “The Domestic Workers’ Bill of Rights,” (AB 241) introduced by Tom Ammiano (D-Dist. 17). This bill would protect domestic workers, including nannies and those who provide in-home care, by regulating wages, providing for rest time, and protecting other working conditions.
While it exempts certain employers such as licensed health facilities or people who receive domestic care from the State of California or In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS), AB 241 defines employers of domestic workers as those who employ or exercise control over the wages, hours or working conditions of a domestic work employee, including those who obtain the services from third parties.
The same day, the California Senate passed SB 666, a bill authored by Senator Darrell Steinberg (D- Dist. 6 and President pro Tem), that would prohibit employers from threatening to report undocumented workers or their families when they exercise their labor and employment rights. Employers may also risk losing their business licenses for retaliating against these employees.
Attorneys who use immigration status to threaten and intimidate witnesses would also face discipline, and whistle blowing protections would be extended to employees who testify before a legislature or other public body about anything related to a government investigation of the employer
AB 263, another bill protective of immigrant workers’ rights and, introduced by Roger Hernández (D-Dist. 48), passed through the Assembly. This bill would prevent employers from engaging in unfair immigration-related practices toward employees who assert their labor and employment rights. Unfair immigration-related practices would include threats of improperly using the Federal E-Verify system, requests of extraneous documents showing an employees’ eligibility to work, and threats of filing reports or contacting immigration authorities in response to an employee’s exercise of his or her rights.
“Equal Rights Advocates applauds the advancement of these three bills in the state legislature,” said Monali Sheth, Staff Attorney at ERA. “ AB 241, the Domestic Workers’ Bill of Rights, provides domestic workers the right to work for a living wage, decent working conditions, and with dignity, while SB 666 and AB 263 further protect the immigrant women we represent who are afraid of coming forward to complain when they have been overworked, underpaid, abused, and unlawfully harassed on the job.”
This post was written by Sonia Jacob, an ERA summer law clerk.
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