On September 17, 2020, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed legislation (AB 685) authorizing the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health (division) to mandate the closure of, and prohibiting entry to, a workplace where the exposure to COVID-19 is an imminent hazard to employees. Closure is limited to immediate area where the imminent hazard exists. The division will provide an employer with a closure notice that it must conspicuously post in the workplace and only the division can remove it when the workplace is safe with the required safeguards in place. However, workplace entry is permitted, so long as with the division’s knowledge and permission, to eliminate the dangerous conditions. This COVID-19 imminent hazard provision is repealed on January 1, 2023.
Employers that receive a notice of potential COVID-19 exposure must notify their employees (including subcontracted employees and exclusive representatives) within one day that they may have been exposed to COVID-19. Employers must also provide these employees with information regarding COVID-19-related benefits and options, along with its federal Centers for Disease Control compliant disinfection and safety plan. These notice requirements do not apply to employees who, as part of their duties, conduct COVID-19 testing or screening or provide direct patient care or treatment to individuals who are known to have tested positive for COVID-19, are persons under investigation, or are in quarantine or isolation related to COVID-19, unless they are an employee at the same worksite. Employers must maintain records of these notifications for at least three years.
Additionally, and within 48 hours, employers that are notified of a COVID-19 outbreak must report this information to the public health agency in their workplace’s jurisdiction and must continue to give notice to the local health department of any subsequent laboratory-confirmed cases of COVID-19 at its worksite. Employers may not retaliate against a worker for disclosing a positive COVID-19 test or diagnosis or order to quarantine or isolate.
The law is effective September 17, 2020.
On September 17, 2020, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed legislation (SB 1159) expanding access to workers’ compensation by defining an injury under the law to include a COVID-19 related illness or death when police officers, firefighters, and healthcare workers were on the job, on or after March 19, 2020 and on or before July 5, 2020, and tested positive for, or were diagnosed with, COVID-19 within 14 days thereafter. This injury, which is presumed to arise out of and in the course of employment, is compensated with full hospital, surgical, medical treatment, disability indemnity, and death benefits.
The law also provides the same definition of injury (and thus medical care and wage replacement benefits) for workers of employers with five or more employees (there’s no requirement that they be critical workers) when they test positive due to a workplace COVID-19 outbreak if within 14 calendar days:
Employees must exhaust their COVID-19 specific paid sick leave benefits before receiving any temporary disability or workers’ compensation benefits. There is no waiting period for temporary disability benefits and employees must satisfy either of the following to qualify for them:
The law also requires that employers notify their claims administrator when it knows, or reasonably should know, that an employee tested positive for COVID-19. This written notice, sent via email or fax within three business days, must include all the following:
The law took effect on September 17, 2020, and repeals on January 1, 2023.
On September 17, 2020, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed legislation (SB 1383) expanding the state’s Family Rights Act (CFRA) to cover Californians who work for an employer with five or more (previously 50 or more) employees to:
This aligns the employer size threshold under the CFRA with the employer size threshold in the state’s Pregnancy Disability Leave law. The law also requires an employer who employs both parents of a child to grant leave to each employee.
The law is effective January 1, 2021.
On September 11, 2020, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed legislation (AB 2143) regulating settlement agreements in employment disputes involving an aggrieved person and their employer. The law bars agreement provisions restricting the settling aggrieved person from future employment with the settling employer or any parent company, subsidiary, division, affiliate, or contractor of the employer. Any agreement made in violation of this protection on or after January 1, 2020, is void. However, the law does not:
On September 9, 2020, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed legislation (AB 1867) codifying Executive Order N-51-20, as detailed in our California Law Alerts - April 2020, which:
The law also creates a new entitlement to COVID-19 supplemental paid sick leave for persons employed as health care providers or emergency responders. This new entitlement is also effective until December 31, 2020, or when any extension of the EPSLA expires, whichever occurs later. According to the Governor’s message, the law closes the gaps between paid sick days provided in federal law and the Governor's Executive Order. The law now includes employers with over 500 employees as well as all employers of first responders and health care employees who opted not to offer coverage under federal law. The Labor Commissioner can cite workplaces for a lack of paid sick days under the expanded law.
Read more on the Department of Industrial Relations FAQs page.
On September 4, 2020, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed legislation (AB 2257) expanding the exemptions to the state’s ABC test, which is used to determine whether an individual is an employee or an independent contractor (worker classification) under the California Labor Code, Unemployment Insurance code, and Industrial Welfare Commission wage orders.
Under the ABC test, paid workers must be classified as employees — not independent contractors — unless the hiring entity can demonstrate all of the following:
Additionally, the law now exempts certain occupations from the ABC test and instead applies the multifactor Borello test (see question #5), which considers several independent factors in determining employment status. Workers exempt from ABC but considered under Borello include:
The law also:
The ABC test and the Borello test both assume that the worker is an employee. The hiring entity must prove that the worker is an independent contractor to make that classification. Under the ABC test, if a hiring entity cannot demonstrate any part of the three-part test then the worker is not an independent contractor. Under the Borello test, no single factor determines whether a worker is an employee or an independent contractor. Instead, courts consider all potentially relevant factors on a case-by-case basis according to the nature of the work, the overall arrangement between the parties, and the purpose of the law.
The law took effect September 4, 2020.