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San Francisco Employment Law Firm Blog

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For California Employers: How being too nice to your employees can backfire

You are a manager or a director at a manufacturing plant or a sophisticated technology company in San Francisco, Sillicon Valley, or elsewhere in California. You take great pride in your work, and you are rewarded with generous compensation and real prospects for promotion. One of your duties is supervising…

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May Employer force an Employee to make Purchases

Yesterday, I have been approached by a long-time employee of the local manufacturing company in the Sacramento area. The employer had a side business (running poker gaming facility) which the employee also regularly attended. When the employee decided to play poker elsewhere, his employer terminated him, telling him that “they…

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Another Arbitration Agreement is Struck Down

On January 7, 2009, the Contra Costa Superior Court issued an order in a race discrimination and whistleblower retaliation case, finding unconscionable and unenforceable the arbitration agreement that Countrywide Home Loans company requires its employees to sign as a condition of employment. The court found two unconscionable provision in the…

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California Law on Reimbursement of Expenses by Employer

It is a common practice for employers to condition reimbursement of expenses incurred by employees on timely submission of those expenses to the employer’s accounting department. A typical expenses reimbursement policy might state that an employee must submit his claim for expense reimbursement within 90 days of incurring that expense,…

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Discrimination and Injured Workers Rights

The California Labor Code section 132(a) is yet another device prohibition discrimination against injured workers (in addition to California Fair Employment and Housing Act or “FEHA”). This section prohibits employer discrimination against an employee based on: * Applying or intending to apply for workers’ compensation benefits; or * Receiving a…

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Failure to hire after criminal background investigation

California Labor Code section 432.7 generally prohibits California employers from using as a factor in hiring, or asking an applicant to disclose, an arrest or detention that did not result in conviction or participation in pre- or post-trial diversion programs. However, the above general rule is subject to various exceptions.…

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