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EEO-1 REPORTS DELAYED Possible Repeal Ahead, California Reporting Remains

Employers of all sizes should calendar and comply with applicable federal, state and local government reporting deadlines.For further information, please contact Tim Bowles, Cindy Bamforth or Helena Kobrin.

May 29, 2026

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission regulation requires private employers with more than 100 workers, and federal contractors and first-tier subcontractors with 50 or more employees or with contracts worth more than $50,000, file an annual EEO-1 report addressing demographic data by number of employees, race/ethnicity, sex, and job category.

The required filing date changes annually.  This year, the EEOC has not yet announced the filing window.  However, a “rescission” proposal is pending with the White House’s Office of Management and Budget that reportedly will eliminate the requirement altogether.

If the federal EEO-1 reports go by the boards, California’s pay data reporting law remains, mandating private employers with 100 or more employees (with at least one employee in California) to annually submit detailed, establishment-specific information to the Civil Rights Department.  This year’s deadline was May 13, 2026.  Late filings carry a mandatory $100 penalty for the first offense, $200 subsequently.

Take-Away:

Employers of all sizes should calendar and comply with applicable federal, state and local government reporting deadlines.

For further information, please contact Tim Bowles, Cindy Bamforth or Helena Kobrin.

See also:

Helena Kobrin

May 29, 2026

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CHANNEL THE WATERS Workplace Policy Handbook & Forms for 2026

Clearly written policies and procedures support productivity, reduce confusion, and limit preventable employment disputes. Employers who rely on outdated forms or handbooks risk unnecessary exposure as employment laws continue to change.

May 27, 2026

Clearly written policies and procedures support productivity, reduce confusion, and limit preventable employment disputes. Employers who rely on outdated forms or handbooks risk unnecessary exposure as employment laws continue to change.

Our 2026 workplace policy forms and handbook provide a practical “hire-to-fire” foundation to align workplace operations with current legal requirements.

2026 Model Forms include:

  • Employment application and job description prototype, including key requirements for Americans with Disabilities Act compliance and California’s constitutional privacy protections;
  • Pre-employment protocols, structured to meet current legal standards;
  • Employment agreement, including protection of confidential company data;
  • Alternative dispute resolution agreement, reflecting current arbitration requirements;
  • Meal and rest period acknowledgments, confirming employer provision of required breaks;
  • Termination paperwork, including new separation checklist and updated sample severance release agreement (to be applied as appropriate for full transition and greater protection against later, preventable suits); and
  • Paid sick leave sample policies.

All 2026 forms orders also include sample hiring checklists, providing practical guidance to help ensure consistent, documented compliance throughout the onboarding process.

2026 Model Employee Handbook (80+ Pages) includes:

  • Employment conditions, including mutual “at will” termination rights;
  • Discrimination and harassment prevention and complaint procedures;
  • Employee compensation and benefits;
  • Performance expectations;
  • Limits of employee privacy, including valid management access to employee-maintained databases and social media guidelines;
  • Paid and unpaid leaves;
  • Workplace health and safety;
  • Job-related injury or illness; and
  • Drug and alcohol policy, including testing and violations procedures and standards.

Client Feedback:

“Tim’s office makes HR matters so much easier!  We just have to do what they tell us to do. We order their updated hiring forms and employee handbook each year and it keeps us protected simply with the correct up-to-date wording (since laws are always changing) that we would otherwise not know about.  Just the hiring forms alone have saved us thousands of dollars in one lawsuit.  We also take part in their yearly HR seminar, which keeps us up-to-date on new laws and key points to follow to keep us protected.  I HIGHLY recommend any employer to connect with Tim and his team – especially in these current times!” – LO

CONTACT US TO ORDER NOWTo order or for more information, contact Office Manager Aimee Rosalesat 626.583.6600 or email her at officemgr@tbowleslaw.com

May 27, 2026

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HEAT AHEAD‍ Employee High Temperature‍ Protections are a Priority

May 14, 2026

California’s periodic heat waves began early this year, prompting Cal/OSHA press releases starting in March.  See Releases 2026-24 (“Very Hot Wednesday – Saturday”) and 2026-25 (“Dangerous Heat Wave This Week”). There have been more since, likely to accelerate with Memorial Day approaching.

Heat illnesses range from mild to deadly, with mild to severe heat rash and heat cramps the less extreme reactions.  The two most serious are: heat stroke (e.g., red, hot dry skin, high body temperature, muscle twitching, confusion, fainting, convulsions, unconsciousness); and heat exhaustion (e.g., dizziness, headache, sweaty skin, fast heartbeat, nausea, vomiting, weakness, and/or cramps).

Employers with outdoor workers must have an effective written heat illness prevention plan, following Cal/OSHA’s six protective measures:

  • Observe - Closely observe all employees during a heat wave, especially those newly assigned to a high heat area, and provide lighter work, frequent breaks or shorter hours to help acclimate.
  • Train - Train all employees and supervisors on heat illness prevention.
  • Water - Provide free, cool, fresh, pure drinking water so each worker can drink at least one quart per hour and encourage workers to do so.
  • Rest – Encourage all needed cool-down rests in the shade for at least five minutes to avoid overheating.
  • Shade - Provide proper shade when temperatures exceed 80 degrees and permit workers to cool off in the shade at any time upon request.

Certain industries have additional high-heat requirements: agriculture, construction, landscaping, oil and gas extraction, and transportation of agricultural products, construction materials or other heavy materials.

Cal/OSHA’s Consultation Services Branch has a help line at 800-963-9424 for workplace health and safety questions.

Take-Aways:

Employers must take heat illness prevention obligations seriously, ensuring they provide such protections to all working in high heat conditions, outdoors and indoors.

For further information, please contact Tim Bowles, Cindy Bamforth or Helena Kobrin.

See also:

Helena Kobrin

May 14, 2026

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TECHNO TRAIN WRECK Lawyers v. Artificial Intelligence

While these instances involve lawyers, the cautions of course also apply to business owners, managers, human resources directors and responsible professionals across the boards. On employment issues, management should not rely on AI-generated directives. There is no substitute for experienced competent legal counsel.

May 8, 2026

Honesty and integrity being mainstays of the legal profession – and most, but not necessarily all, others – AI has empowered some not-so-kosher members of the bar to new lows of disrepute. For example:

In Mata v. Avianca, a 2023 case, plaintiff’s counsel filed papers citing cases with plausible names, reporter citations, judges, procedural histories, and quotations. When the opposition could not locate the cases, the lawyers went all in, submitting supposed copies and excerpts of the “opinions”—also generated by ChatGPT.  The judge imposed sanctions on the individual lawyers and their firm, including a $5,000 penalty and notice to the judges whose names had been falsely attached to fabricated opinions.

In Benjamin v. Costco Wholesale Corp. (2025), another lawyer turned late-night to an AI tool to write a reply that contained five fake cases. She later admitted she had not read or cite-checked the authorities and had only skimmed the AI-generated work. “A client expects that her attorney will vigorously pursue her case and make persuasive arguments on her behalf to the court. And she expects that the lawyer will perform the work in an efficient manner. Likewise, courts expect submissions from attorneys to be accurate. They similarly anticipate counsel will identify the appropriate authority supporting a legal position presented to the court. None of that happened here.” Result: $1,000 monetary sanctions.

In ByoPlanet International, LLC v. Johansson (2025) an attorney repeatedly used ChatGPT-generated material across multiple related federal and state cases. The filings included hallucinated cases and fake quotations from real ones.

The judge observed: “During a bygone era when dinosaurs roamed the earth and the undersigned was in law school (1998), to research cases a student often had to hold a volume of a legal reporter in one's hands. To ensure that all cases cited were good law, students and attorneys employed services like Shepard's Citations. But even in that dark, pre-modern age, stars rose in the distance; online legal sources, such as Westlaw and LexisNexis, came forth to aid lawyers in performing legal research…

“Now, another star rises—AI—with the potential to revolutionize the legal field (and much else) once again. From Altman to Zuckerberg, we are told that AI has the potential to perform hours of legal research on nearly any topic in seconds. Large language models like ChatGPT offer the promise to employ AI to perform legal research and even draft legal filings, such as briefs and complaints.

“However, AI is not yet a match for an actual litigator. Employing the euphemism-du-jour, AI regularly ‘hallucinates’ entire cases and ‘hallucinates’ quotations from real cases.”

The judge thus dismissed several of that lawyer’s cases, ordered him to pay the opposing party’s attorney fees and referred the offender to the state bar for discipline.

Take-Away:

While these instances involve lawyers, the cautions of course also apply to business owners, managers, human resources directors and responsible professionals across the boards.  On employment issues, management should not rely on AI-generated directives.  There is no substitute for experienced competent legal counsel.

See also:

Tim Bowles

May 8, 2026

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COMPLIANCE COUNTDOWN California Pay Data Reporting Deadline Nears, May 13, 2026

California private employers should confirm whether they must file 2025 pay data reports with the California Civil Rights Department (CRD), due May 13, 2026. Covered employers submit these through the CRD’s Pay Data Portal. The program aims to identify and deter pay disparities based on sex, race, and ethnicity.

May 7, 2026

California private employers should confirm whether they must file 2025 pay data reports with the California Civil Rights Department (CRD), due May 13, 2026. Covered employers submit these through the CRD’s Pay Data Portal. The program aims to identify and deter pay disparities based on sex, race, and ethnicity.

Private employers with 100 or more payroll employees must file a payroll employee report. Those with 100 or more labor contractor workers must file a separate labor contractor employee report. Reports must include employees based in California or assigned to a California establishment.

Employers must report workforce data by establishment, job category, race, ethnicity, sex, pay band, hours worked, median and mean hourly rate, and NAICS code, using a workforce snapshot from a pay period between October 1 and December 31, 2025. The CRD indicates this year’s pay data reports must also include employees’ overtime pay exemption status, employment type, and weeks worked during the reporting year.

If an employer fails to file, the CRD may seek a compliance order and recover costs. Courts may impose civil penalties of up to $100 per employee for a first violation and up to $200 per employee for subsequent violations. Labor contractors may share penalties for failing to provide required pay data.

Take-Aways:

Covered California employers must verify filing obligations, gather data promptly, and submit pay data reports by May 13, 2026. The process promotes pay equity and reduces penalty risk.

For further information, please contact Tim Bowles, Cindy Bamforth or Helena Kobrin.

See also:

Cindy Bamforth

May 7, 2026

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WEBSITE RIGHTS Disability Access: New Website Rules

Many people with disabilities need special accommodations to use websites. Although the government proposed a web accessibility rule years ago, it never became final. Meanwhile, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), has published Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), and some courts have adopted versions of these standards.

April 23, 2026

Many people with disabilities need special accommodations to use websites.

Although the government proposed a web accessibility rule years ago, it never became final. Meanwhile, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), has published Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), and some courts have adopted versions of these standards.

In 2024, the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice made WCAG Version 2.1, Level AA the official web and mobile app accessibility standard for state and local governments.  This rule does not yet apply to private businesses, but the federal government could adopt a similar rule for them.  Some courts already require it.

Governments with 50,000 or more people must comply by April 26, 2026. Cities, municipalities with fewer than 50,000 people, and special district governments have until April 26, 2027.

A Fact Sheet on ada.gov summarizes the final rule’s main points. Key highlights include:

  • Federal, state and local governments must meet this standard in their mobile apps and websites;
  • The rules apply even if an outside vendor creates and/or maintains the app or website; and
  • Some content is not covered, such as archived materials from before the final rule, older electronic documents, third-party content like posts from the public, individual password-protected documents (like a water bill), and preexisting social media posts.

Take-Away:

Companies with websites or apps should work with knowledgeable IT staff or consultants to ensure their sites meet accessibility standards. WCAG Version 2.1, Level AA is the recommended standard.

For further information, please contact Tim Bowles, Cindy Bamforth or Helena Kobrin.

See also:

Helena KobrinApril 23, 2026

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RETALIATION RED FLAGS Best Practices to Prevent Claims

Retaliation claims remain a major workplace risk for California employers. Retaliation under state law means taking negative action against an employee for engaging in protected activity, i.e., adverse action that could discourage a reasonable person from speaking up or participating in a workplace process.

April 17, 2026

Retaliation claims remain a major workplace risk for California employers. Retaliation under state law means taking negative action against an employee for engaging in protected activity, i.e., adverse action that could discourage a reasonable person from speaking up or participating in a workplace process.

Recognize Protected Activity

Protected activity goes beyond formal complaints. Examples include:

  • reporting discrimination or harassment;
  • complaining about unpaid wages or missed breaks;
  • requesting medical leave or other protected leave;
  • requesting disability, pregnancy, or religious accommodation;
  • raising safety concerns or suspected violations;
  • participating in an internal investigation; or
  • filing a workers’ compensation claim.

Recognize Actions That Create RiskRetaliation claims often involve negative actions after protected activity, such as:

  • termination or layoff;
  • demotion or pay cut;
  • reduced hours or schedule changes;
  • harsher-than-usual discipline;
  • unfavorable transfer;
  • removal of duties;
  • denial of training or promotion; or
  • increased scrutiny or micromanagement

Document Issues in Real Time

Supervisors must document attendance, conduct, or performance issues promptly. Timely records show decisions are based on business reasons, not protected activity.

Review Discipline Carefully

Discipline soon after protected activity may appear retaliatory. For example, an employee receives a poor review after complaining about discrimination; or loses shifts after raising wage concerns. Before acting, employers must confirm facts, review documentation, and ensure consistency with past practices.

Apply Policies Consistently

If similar conduct usually results in coaching or a verbal warning, do not impose harsher discipline on an employee recently engaged in protected activity without clear, documented reasons.

Take-Aways:

When supervisors recognize protected activity, apply policies consistently, and document decisions clearly, employers reduce retaliation risk.

For further information, please contact Tim Bowles, Cindy Bamforth or Helena Kobrin.

See also:

Cindy Bamforth

April 17, 2026

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AHEAD OF THE CURVE‍ Workplace Policy Handbook & Forms for 2026 ‍Rates Increasing May 15, 2026

Clearly written policies and procedures support productivity, reduce confusion and limit preventable employment disputes. Employers who rely on outdated forms or handbooks risk unnecessary exposure as employment laws continue to change.

April 17, 2026

Clearly written policies and procedures support productivity, reduce confusion and limit preventable employment disputes. Employers who rely on outdated forms or handbooks risk unnecessary exposure as employment laws continue to change.

Our 2026 workplace policy forms and handbook provide a practical “hire-to-fire” foundation to align workplace operations with current legal requirements.

Lock in current pricing before rates increase on May 15, 2026.

Contact our Office Manager at 626.583.6600 or email officemgr@tbowleslaw.com to request your order form today.

2026 Model Forms include:

  • Employment application and job description prototype, including key requirements for Americans with Disabilities Act compliance and California’s constitutional privacy protections;
  • Pre-employment protocols, structured to meet current legal standards;
  • Employment agreement, including protection of confidential company data;
  • Alternative dispute resolution agreement, reflecting current arbitration requirements;
  • Meal and rest period acknowledgments, confirming employer provision of required breaks;
  • Termination paperwork, including new separation checklist and updated sample severance release agreement (to be applied as appropriate for full transition and greater protection against later, preventable suits); and
  • Paid sick leave sample policies.

All 2026 forms orders also include sample hiring checklists, providing practical guidance to help ensure consistent, documented compliance throughout the onboarding process.

2026 Model Employee Handbook (80+ Pages) includes:

  • Employment conditions, including mutual “at will” termination rights;
  • Discrimination and harassment prevention and complaint procedures;
  • Employee compensation and benefits;
  • Performance expectations;
  • Limits of employee privacy, including valid management access to employee-maintained databases and social media guidelines;
  • Paid and unpaid leaves;
  • Workplace health and safety;
  • Job-related injury or illness; and
  • Drug and alcohol policy, including testing and violations procedures and standards.

Client Feedback:

“Tim’s office makes HR matters so much easier!  We just have to do what they tell us to do. We order their updated hiring forms and employee handbook each year and it keeps us protected simply with the correct up-to-date wording (since laws are always changing) that we would otherwise not know about.  Just the hiring forms alone have saved us thousands of dollars in one lawsuit.  We also take part in their yearly HR seminar, which keeps us up-to-date on new laws and key points to follow to keep us protected.  I HIGHLY recommend any employer to connect with Tim and his team – especially in these current times!” – LO

CONTACT US TO ORDER NOW

April 17, 2026

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MISTAKING IDENTITY Misclassifying Workers as Independent Contractors Gets Employers in Hot Water

April 10, 2026

Under California’s "ABC" test,  a worker is an employee unless the company can establish that he or she (a) is free from the company’s control and direction; (b) performs work outside the usual course of the company's business; and (c) operates as an independent business of the same nature as the work performed.  For example, if a finance company hires a plumber to fix an office toilet, (a) the company does not tell the plumber how perform repairs; (b) the company does not do plumbing; and (c) the plumber operates an independent plumbing business.

The California legislature created several somewhat arbitrary exceptions to the ABC test that have been approved by federal and California courts.  See Question 4 of Independent contractor versus employee FAQs.

A written agreement is essential to meet any exception.  Most exceptions still require companies to establish that all prongs of a separate multi-factor test are met, including primarily the extent of the company's right to control the manner and means of work performance, and actual control. The company must also satisfy other state and federal criteria, including the IRS factors and the federal Department of Labor's Rule, currently under a revision process, with principal factors being:

  • the economic reality of the relationship, i.e., is the worker dependent on the company or running his/her own business?;
  • what control does the company have over the worker?; and
  • what opportunity does the worker have to make a profit?

California misclassification consequences can include liability for unpaid wages for up to four years including possible overtime and missed breaks; itemized wage statement violations up to $4,000 per worker; waiting time penalties; liability under California's Private Attorneys General Act between $5,000 to $25,000 per violation; and attorneys' fees and court costs.

Indications of misclassification include:

  • Company control over the worker’s performance, including schedule and how the work is done;
  • No written independent contractor agreements;
  • Independent contractor agreements that go on indefinitely or for a long term;
  • Paying someone on 1099 basis to avoid payroll taxes or upon the worker’s request;
  • Requiring contractors to work on an exclusive or full-time basis;
  • Having contractors and employees performing the same job functions;
  • Rehiring former employees as contractors for the same job;
  • Paying contractors by the hour;
  • Not requiring invoices from contractors;
  • Providing contractors "benefits" such as paid vacation and expense reimbursements;
  • Hiring contractors whose main area of expertise or work is in a different field;
  • Having contractors perform central functions; and
  • Hiring contractors who claim to have their own businesses without verifying.

Take-Aways:

A worker’s status is not a matter of personal preference of the company or the worker.  Assume workers are employees unless they unequivocally meet all legal requirements to qualify as independent contractors. Consult with a skilled management-side employment attorney to ensure you are analyzing the issues correctly.

For further information, please contact Tim Bowles, Cindy Bamforth or Helena Kobrin.

See also:

Helena Kobrin

April 10, 2026

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