The state Labor Commissioner recently issued citations to a Chino warehouse and distribution company for overtime violations and failure to provide a required 30-minute meal period to employees. The citations involved 865 employees and resulted in wages and penalties of over $1 million.
The commissioner’s investigation revealed that the company, Quetico, LLC, “established restrictive procedures which shorted workers their wages.”
Among those procedures:
“Wage theft takes many forms,” said Labor Commissioner Julie Su in a statement. “My office will crack down on any employer who is taking hard-earned wages from workers by falsifying time cards and systematically preventing employees from taking a full meal break.”
Wage theft prevention has been at the top of the Labor Commissioner’s agenda. Last year HR Informant reported on the creation of a criminal investigation unit to target employers who perpetrate “wage theft.”
HR That Works members can get an in-depth discussion of California’s stringent meal and rest break requirements and tips on compliance from HR That Work’s Meal and Rest Breaks page. Not a member? Take a Free Trial now!