Law New California Law Imposes Massive Fines on Employers Who Refuse to Pay Stolen Wages

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New California Law Imposes Massive Fines on Employers Who Refuse to Pay Stolen Wages

By Ayah Ali-Ahmad | Oct 20, 2025

California has raised the stakes for businesses that steal wages and tripled the price of wage theft.

On Oct. 13, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed SB 261, a bill championed by Santa Clara County officials and labor leaders. The new law imposes severe financial penalties on unpaid wage judgments, with the aim of addressing the systemic failure of collection that has cost the state billions.

“Employers need to pay their employees what they are owed,” bill author and state Sen. Aisha Wahab, D-Fremont, said at a press conference on Monday. “These employees work hard. They deserve every single dollar they work for. And the fact that employers are circumventing pay is a crime.”

State and local officials said that employers have historically been able to ignore court-ordered wage judgments with impunity, leaving tens of thousands of workers uncompensated.

“There has not been any repercussion for employers that refuse to pay on wage theft judgment. This law changes that,” said Tony LoPresti, county counsel for Santa Clara County. He noted that the monetary loss from wage theft nationwide is “five times what the monetary loss is for burglary and larceny and robbery combined.”

Starting Jan. 1, 2026, employers who refuse to pay a wage theft judgment for 180 days will face a civil penalty of up to three times the outstanding judgment amount, plus interest.

Half of the resulting penalty will go directly to the affected workers, while the other half supports increased enforcement efforts by the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.

The bill also requires courts award workers and county prosecutors reasonable attorney fees and costs, making efforts towards enforcement of the law more sustainable, LoPresti said.

Furthermore, the law will help prevent companies from simply closing and reorganizing to erase their debt, according to Ruth Silver Taube, supervising attorney of the Worker’s Rights Clinic at Santa Clara University School of Law.

“This collaboration is a model for everybody in our communities to recognize that the economy, that workers, that government, and leaders can come together and say we demand better for working families,” said Jean Cohen, executive officer of the South Bay AFL-CIO Labor Council. “This legislation is a perfect example of the outcome of that commitment.”

Wage theft is a particularly serious problem in Santa Clara County. Supervisor Betty Duong noted that since 2010, the Labor Commissioner’s Office has issued over $35 million in unpaid wage theft judgments in the county alone.

“Wage theft isn’t a victimless crime. It’s the theft of rent money, grocery money and child care money,” Duong said.

The failure to collect disproportionately impacts vulnerable groups. According to Wahab, workers in industries like construction — many of whom are immigrants and English language learners — are highly susceptible to wage theft and rarely see payments after winning their claims. Collection statistics underscore this crisis: a 2023 California State Auditor report found that the Labor Commission only fully collected on 12% of judgments between 2018 and 2023.

“Some days at the Law Center’s clinic and on the advice line, I will get five or six clients coming in, or callers calling, that have not got wage theft judgment paid for years and years,” Taube said. “And it’s a huge problem, and it’s heartbreaking to hear their stories because they’ve actually done the work, went through a hearing, and a judgment was recorded.”

Santa Clara County’s own programs served as a model for SB 261. The county’s Food Permit Enforcement Program leverages health permits to compel food retailers with unpaid wage judgments to comply, or risk losing their authorization to operate.

Duong confirmed that the county’s permits are contingent on following all applicable workplace laws, meaning that employers with unpaid judgments should now expect issues with permits.

Since 2019, this program has helped collect more than $110,000 for workers.

Now, LoPresti said the state can ensure that justice for workers no longer “ends with a piece of paper. It ends with a paycheck”.

 
Duff Man!

the-simpsons-duff-man.gif
 
I see no problem with this as long as its not used as a scam. If someone if found trying to scam an employer with this they should have the same penalty payment back to the employer.
 
I see no problem with this as long as its not used as a scam. If someone if found trying to scam an employer with this they should have the same penalty payment back to the employer.
This happens with trades.

I've known people that had a job quoted, finished, and then the contractor turned around and doubled the price at the end, and put a lien on the property. At that point, it's a huge amount of effort to argue against the contractor.
 

New California Law Imposes Massive Fines on Employers Who Refuse to Pay Stolen Wages

By Ayah Ali-Ahmad | Oct 20, 2025

California has raised the stakes for businesses that steal wages and tripled the price of wage theft.

On Oct. 13, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed SB 261, a bill championed by Santa Clara County officials and labor leaders. The new law imposes severe financial penalties on unpaid wage judgments, with the aim of addressing the systemic failure of collection that has cost the state billions.

“Employers need to pay their employees what they are owed,” bill author and state Sen. Aisha Wahab, D-Fremont, said at a press conference on Monday. “These employees work hard. They deserve every single dollar they work for. And the fact that employers are circumventing pay is a crime.”

State and local officials said that employers have historically been able to ignore court-ordered wage judgments with impunity, leaving tens of thousands of workers uncompensated.

“There has not been any repercussion for employers that refuse to pay on wage theft judgment. This law changes that,” said Tony LoPresti, county counsel for Santa Clara County. He noted that the monetary loss from wage theft nationwide is “five times what the monetary loss is for burglary and larceny and robbery combined.”

Starting Jan. 1, 2026, employers who refuse to pay a wage theft judgment for 180 days will face a civil penalty of up to three times the outstanding judgment amount, plus interest.

Half of the resulting penalty will go directly to the affected workers, while the other half supports increased enforcement efforts by the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.

The bill also requires courts award workers and county prosecutors reasonable attorney fees and costs, making efforts towards enforcement of the law more sustainable, LoPresti said.

Furthermore, the law will help prevent companies from simply closing and reorganizing to erase their debt, according to Ruth Silver Taube, supervising attorney of the Worker’s Rights Clinic at Santa Clara University School of Law.

“This collaboration is a model for everybody in our communities to recognize that the economy, that workers, that government, and leaders can come together and say we demand better for working families,” said Jean Cohen, executive officer of the South Bay AFL-CIO Labor Council. “This legislation is a perfect example of the outcome of that commitment.”

Wage theft is a particularly serious problem in Santa Clara County. Supervisor Betty Duong noted that since 2010, the Labor Commissioner’s Office has issued over $35 million in unpaid wage theft judgments in the county alone.

“Wage theft isn’t a victimless crime. It’s the theft of rent money, grocery money and child care money,” Duong said.

The failure to collect disproportionately impacts vulnerable groups. According to Wahab, workers in industries like construction — many of whom are immigrants and English language learners — are highly susceptible to wage theft and rarely see payments after winning their claims. Collection statistics underscore this crisis: a 2023 California State Auditor report found that the Labor Commission only fully collected on 12% of judgments between 2018 and 2023.

“Some days at the Law Center’s clinic and on the advice line, I will get five or six clients coming in, or callers calling, that have not got wage theft judgment paid for years and years,” Taube said. “And it’s a huge problem, and it’s heartbreaking to hear their stories because they’ve actually done the work, went through a hearing, and a judgment was recorded.”

Santa Clara County’s own programs served as a model for SB 261. The county’s Food Permit Enforcement Program leverages health permits to compel food retailers with unpaid wage judgments to comply, or risk losing their authorization to operate.

Duong confirmed that the county’s permits are contingent on following all applicable workplace laws, meaning that employers with unpaid judgments should now expect issues with permits.

Since 2019, this program has helped collect more than $110,000 for workers.

Now, LoPresti said the state can ensure that justice for workers no longer “ends with a piece of paper. It ends with a paycheck”.


Wage theft is a particularly serious problem in Santa Clara County. Supervisor Betty Duong noted that since 2010, the Labor Commissioner’s Office has issued over $35 million in unpaid wage theft judgments in the county alone.

Since 2019, this program has helped collect more than $110,000 for workers.

Wow.. only $34.9 million to go...

Who are these companies? Any of us would have wages garnished
 
Devil is in the detail but sounds like a great policy.

Too often corporate malfeasance results in a slightly tarnished brand name and them having to give back their ill-gotten gains.

It like stealing something getting caught and after a long trial being told to just give it back.

The punishment for it should be significant enough to make it a bad financial decision.
 
Wage theft is a particularly serious problem in Santa Clara County. Supervisor Betty Duong noted that since 2010, the Labor Commissioner’s Office has issued over $35 million in unpaid wage theft judgments in the county alone.

Since 2019, this program has helped collect more than $110,000 for workers.

Wow.. only $34.9 million to go...

Who are these companies? Any of us would have wages garnished

This is your industry, right?

How big a problem is this, in your experience?
 
I don't even know how this isn't a thing across the US.

If an employer refuses to pay an employee's wages, it should be mandatory prison time. Fucking dumbass oligarchy.
It's something called the oopsie exemption. Once you steal enough money, and if you're rich enough, you can claim it was an accident and not actual theft. And then just pay a fine and not go to jail like normal thieves.
 
Back in 2007 I worked at Circuit City, and at one point a bunch of us employees just stopped getting paychecks. We were supposed to be paid every two weeks, but management kept stalling. This went on for about two months before most of us were eventually let go. After enough of us started threatening action, we finally got paid what we were owed but it shouldn’t have taken that. The store I worked at ended up closing down later that same year, and not long after that, Circuit City as a whole went under.
 
This happens with trades.

I've known people that had a job quoted, finished, and then the contractor turned around and doubled the price at the end, and put a lien on the property. At that point, it's a huge amount of effort to argue against the contractor.
- Happened to me and my friend more than a decade ago.:D
 
Did you guys manage to take it to court and win?
- Never. It's was years before i course my degre, so i was also ingenous like him. A 200 m apartament almost entire painted, dude, we were so ingenous aka dumb, that he taught the guy that stole our work, how to lift a brick wall:D
 
I don't even know how this isn't a thing across the US.

If an employer refuses to pay an employee's wages, it should be mandatory prison time. Fucking dumbass oligarchy.
I do. Look at the current administration. These people have convinced their base that any attempt to make companies behave is socialism and will ruin the economy.

When people are supporting a president that is now just openly grifting them and stealing money from the country, is this a real surprise that they also let this happen?
 
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