Building Owners and Managers Association

Improving the Performance of the Commercial Real Estate Industry
Flexible Workweek Bill Set
Support
Tuesday, June 21, 2016
by: Matthew Hargrove, BOMA California

Section: Association Business




BOMA joins with our friends at the California Chamber of Commerce to support a bill providing employers with the flexibility to accommodate employees’ needs that is scheduled to be considered by the Senate Labor and Industrial Relations Committee on June 22.
 

SB 985 (Berryhill; R-Twain Harte), the 15th “job creator” bill identified this year, provides employers with the opportunity to accommodate employees’ needs as well as business demands by allowing employees to request a voluntary, flexible workweek agreement that can be repealed by the employee at any time with proper notice.
We are supporting SB 985 because it seeks to eliminate the burdensome alternative workweek election process and allows the employee the opportunity to request a four, 10-hour day workweek schedule that will address the needs of both the employer and employee.

According to the CalChamber, California is one of only three states that require employers to pay daily overtime after eight hours of work and weekly overtime after 40 hours of work. Even the other two states that impose daily overtime requirements allow the employer and employee to essentially waive the daily eight-hour overtime requirement through a written agreement.

California, however, provides no such common-sense alternative. Rather, California requires employers to navigate through a multi-step process to have employees elect an alternative workweek schedule that, once adopted, must be “regularly” scheduled.

This process is filled with potential traps for costly litigation, as one misstep may render the entire alternative workweek schedule invalid and leave the employer on the hook for claims of unpaid overtime wages.

SB 985 would relieve employers, especially smaller employers, from the administrative cost and burden of adopting an alternative workweek schedule.

Pursuant to SB 985, at the request of the employee, an employer would be able to implement a flexible work schedule that allows the employee to work up to 10 hours in a day or 40 hours in a week, without the payment of overtime. Employers should be able to negotiate through a written agreement, revocable by either party, the daily/weekly schedule that satisfies the needs of both the employee(s) and the employer.

You can weigh in by contacting senators and members of Senate Labor and Industrial Relations to ask them to support SB 985 through this
easy-to-edit sample letter.  We thank the CalChamber for its continued leadership on the important employment issues.
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