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AB 2495: Protecting California Workers from Immigration-Based Workplace Threats

When a worker discovers their employer is stealing wages, cutting corners on safety, or allowing harassment to go unchecked, they should be able to report it. That’s how workplace protections are supposed to work.

But for many workers in California, speaking up isn’t that simple.

Some employers have found a way to keep workers quiet: threaten them with immigration enforcement. It doesn’t even have to be explicit. An implied warning, a suggestion that someone might make a call, can be enough to shut down a complaint before it’s ever filed.

Immigration-based threats silence workers before violations are ever reported

California law already prohibits wage theft, unsafe working conditions, and harassment. But when workers are too afraid to report violations, those protections don’t mean much. Employers who use immigration-related threats as a management tool get to break the rules without consequence. And the workers who need protection most are left with none.

This is especially common in industries where immigrant workers are concentrated: construction, agriculture, food service, and domestic work. These workers keep California running. Some employers are counting on their fear to avoid accountability.


What AB 2495 would do

AB 2495 directly addresses immigration-based workplace coercion. The bill makes it explicitly unlawful for employers to use immigration-related threats to silence workers from reporting violations. Whether the threat is direct or implied, it would be a clear violation of California labor law.

No more intimidation. No more using fear as a management tool. Just clear accountability for employers who try to evade the law.


Why this matters for California worker rights

When workers cannot safely report violations, everyone loses. Workplace abuses go unchecked. Law-abiding employers get undercut by those who cheat the system. And the most vulnerable workers pay the price.


What can you do?

Email lawmakers to help pass AB 2495!

 

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