
3 minute read
Poole & Shaffery
Meal and Rest Period Premiums are Wages and Must Appear on Pay Stubs
BY NADER S. SABAWI, ESQ.
Advertisement
Poole & Shaffery
The California Supreme Court made a number of impactful employment law decisions in 2022, but perhaps the most widely applicable was its decision in Naranjo v. Spectrum Security Services, Inc. The decision in that case made clear the potentially costly consequences of an employee’s missed meal or rest breaks without proper reimbursement, and it affects virtually all employers in the state.
California’s meal and rest break laws require employers to provide a thirty-minute uninterrupted meal break before the fifth hour of work and a ten-minute uninterrupted rest break for every four hours worked or a major fraction thereof. In the event an employee is unable to take a complete uninterrupted meal break as required by law, that employee must be provided with an additional hour of pay, otherwise referred to as a “meal period premium.” Likewise, if an employee is unable to take a complete uninterrupted rest break as required by law, that employee must be provided with an additional hour of pay, or a “rest period premium.”
In Naranjo, a class action case involving the payment and reporting of missed meal breaks by security officers, the Court established two significant rules. First, the Court held that meal and rest period premiums are “wages” because they compensate for work the employee performed during the missed break. Since the premiums constitute wages, they must also be reported on employee pay stubs. Second, all owed premiums must be timely paid in full when an employee departs from a job. If not timely paid at the end of an employee’s employment, unpaid premiums can result in up to thirty (30) days of wages owed to the employee, at the employee’s daily rate of pay, otherwise known as “waiting time penalties.”
California employers should adopt policies and practices to minimize the impact of this ruling. The simplest and most cost-effective approach would be to avoid missed meal and rest breaks altogether. Employers should implement and strictly enforce a comprehensive meal and rest break policy to ensure that employees are receiving all breaks to which they are legally entitled. Employee meal breaks should also be documented with meticulous precision. If an employer can avoid missed meal or rest breaks, it eliminates the need to pay or track meal or rest period premiums.
For more information, contact the employment lawyers at Poole Shaffery at (661) 2902991.
WILLIAMS
Continued from page 6 clubhouse as the central gathering place.
“The impression so far has been, ‘Wow, we’ve never seen this before in the Santa Clarita Valley’,” Faina says.
“You’re getting homes that are actually set on spacious lots and surrounded by parks that are designed to interact with your neighbors. You’re not doing the ‘wave-by’ as you’re going into the garage and closing the door behind you. Williams Ranch is designed for neighborhood connectivity, neighborhood walkability, and neighborhood interaction.”
Bottom line, Faina says. “This is an opportunity for us to create a place and also create a truly great neighborhood – this is not just another sub-division.”
The First Homes
Williams Homes bet that buyers would be more discerning and since the model home grand opening in September this has proven to be true. Attendance across the opening weekend was estimated at more than 3,000 people. Attendees had the first opportunity to tour the 15 decorated and landscaped model homes that comprise four residential collections. The community’s first homeowners moved in this October and chose from a range of home designs for various reasons. While all 15 plans are single-family homes, the square footage ranges from approximately 1,736 to 4,522 of interior living space, with prices ranging from the $800,000s to the high $1 millions.
Homes are set on spacious, poolsized lots with breathtaking views, and many situated behind a gated entry. All homes incorporate the latest, advanced technology for green living with conveniences including Tesla Solar, Ring video doorbell, Honeywell Wi-Fi thermostat, dimmable LED task lighting throughout, tankless water heater, and more.
“Every home comes with standard Tesla solar panels,” adds Faina. “Homebuyers do have the option to go all-electric with our Net Zero Living by Williams Homes™ which is powered by Tesla solar roof tile systems. We demonstrate our Net Zero Living with our Plan 3 and Plan 14 model homes and invite buyers to learn more about the benefits of making the move to all-electric living.”