Los Angeles Times

New labor laws are coming to California. Here's what to expect

For California businesses, 2020 will be a year of reckoning.

Sweeping new laws curbing longtime employment practices take effect, aimed at reducing economic inequality and giving workers more power in their jobs.

Under one, companies could be forced to reclassify hundreds of thousands of independent contractors as employees with broad labor law protections. Under another, bosses could no longer force workers into closed-door arbitration proceedings, a tactic which protects businesses from costly lawsuits.

The new laws are about "job quality - what it means to work in a just workplace," said California Labor Secretary Julie Su. "California leads the way on labor standards and we're not going to let employers do end runs around those standards. We want to support businesses who look at their role in a holistic and humane sense."

Many new measures, she added, are "not big splashy things, but day-to-day things." She cited a law giving working mothers a place to express breast milk besides a bathroom. And a law making it easier for firefighters and other first responders to gain workers'

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