California's New Wage Disclosure Notice and the Wage Theft Prevention Act of 2011

UPDATE: On January 3, 2012, the Labor Commissioner changed the FAQs on this notice requirement to clarify that the notice does not need to be given to current employees except under certain circumstances. The Labor Commissioner did so by simply deleting the following sentence formerly in the answer to FAQ 2: “The notice should be given to all current employees and then to all new employees at the time of hire.”

California's Wage Theft Prevention Act of 2011 ("WTPA" or "Act") 1 takes effect on the first day of next year – January 1, 2012. The WTPA is one of half a dozen new laws that affect an employer's wage payment obligations. The WTPA amended five existing statutes within the California Labor Code, and created five new statutes in the same code. 2 All are discussed below.

Labor Code Section 2810.5 – Wage Notice for Certain Non-exempt Employees

The most important of the Act's new statutes is Labor Code section 2810.5, which requires employers to give new employees and, in other circumstances, current employees a particularized notice about their wages and other employment-related information. The wage notice requirement, which will take effect on January 1, 2012, will affect most of the more than eight million California employees who are entitled to receive overtime.

Which Employees Must Receive A Wage Notice?

The new statute specifically requires that all employees hired on or after January 1, 2012, receive the notice except: