Amended in Assembly May 1, 2014

Amended in Senate January 6, 2014

Senate BillNo. 477


Introduced by Senator Steinberg

February 21, 2013


An act to amend Sections 9998.1, 9998.6, and 9998.8 of, to add Sections 9998.1.5, 9998.2.5, 9998.10, and 9998.11 to, and to repeal and add Section 9998.2 of, the Business and Professions Code, relating to foreign labor contractors.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SB 477, as amended, Steinberg. Foreign labor contractors: registration.

Existing federal law permits certain aliens to engage in employment in the United States under specified conditions. Existing state law regulates the services of foreign labor contractors, as defined, with regard to contracts, recruitment procedures and representations, and information as to terms and conditions of employment. Existing law provides that any person who violates or induces a violation of the latter provisions is guilty of a misdemeanor. Existing law also permits any person aggrieved by a violation of these provisions to bring an action for injunctive relief or damages, or both, and authorizes recovery of damages, costs, and reasonable attorney’s fees, in an amount not less than $500, if the aggrieved person prevails on the action.

Under existing state law, the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement in the Department of Industrial Relations, under the direction of the Labor Commissioner, enforces and administers the licensing and supervision of farm labor contractors, as defined.

This bill would change the definition of a foreign labor contractor to mean a person who performs foreign labor contracting activity, asbegin delete defined, andend deletebegin insert defined. The bill, on and after July 1, 2016,end insert would require a foreign labor contractor to register with the Labor Commissioner and would impose certain conditions for registration, including payment of specified fees. The bill would require the commissioner to enforce and administer the registration and supervision of foreign labor contractors, and would authorize the commissioner to adopt regulations or policies and procedures to implement these provisions. The bill would prohibit a person from knowingly entering into an agreement for the services of a foreign labor contractor that is not registered with the commissioner. The bill would also require foreign labor contractors to disclose specified information and deposit with the commissioner a surety bond in a specified amount, for payment of any amount adjudicated against the foreign labor contractor, as a condition of registration, as specified. The bill would further require persons knowingly using the services of foreign labor contractors to obtain foreign workers to disclose specified information to the commissioner.

The bill would require a foreign labor contractor to disclose in writing to each foreign worker who is recruited for employment certain information, as specified. The bill would prohibit a foreign labor contractor and its agent from assessing a fee or cost to a foreign worker for foreign labor contracting activities. The bill would also prohibit charging a foreign worker with any costs or expenses not customarily assessed against similarly situated workers, and would limit the amount of housing costs charged to the foreign worker to the market rate for similar housing. The bill would prohibit requiring a foreign worker to pay any costs or expenses prior to commencement of work. The bill would prohibit additional requirements or changes to the terms of the contract originally provided to and signed by the foreign worker, unless the foreign worker is provided at least 48 hours to review and consider the additional requirements or changes, and would require the specific consent of the foreign worker, as provided, to each additional requirement or change.

The bill would authorize a civil penalty for violations of these provisions, would authorize the commissioner or a person aggrieved by a violation of these provisions to bring an action for injunctive relief or damages, or both, and would authorize recovery of damages, costs, and reasonable attorney’s fees, as specified, including enforcement of liability against the bond deposited with the commissioner. The bill would exempt a person from joint and several liability for an act or omission by a foreign labor contractor if the person is using a registered foreign labor contractor’s services. The bill would also exempt a person who uses the services of a registered foreign labor contractor from misdemeanor liability for an act or omission by the foreign labor contractor. Because this bill would expand the scope of the provisions regulating foreign labor contractors, a violation of which is a misdemeanor, this bill would impose a state-mandated local program.

The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.

This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.

Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.

The people of the State of California do enact as follows:

P3    1

SECTION 1.  

The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:

3(a) Foreign labor contractors are increasingly relied upon to
4facilitate the movement of labor from one country to another.
5California is the leading destination state in the United States for
6temporary foreign workers. As of January 2011, there were 130,000
7temporary foreign workers in California.

8(b) While many foreign labor contractors behave ethically and
9are engaged in lawful conduct, some foreign labor contractors are
10often complicit with, or are directly involved in, the illegal
11trafficking of foreign workers.

12(c) Unscrupulous foreign labor contractors often charge
13exorbitant fees for their services, force foreign workers into debt
14bondage, falsify documents, and deceive foreign workers about
15the terms and conditions of work, thereby increasing their
16vulnerability to human trafficking.

17(d) The incidence of known human trafficking cases involving
18foreign labor recruiters is increasing dramatically in the United
19States. Stricter regulation of foreign labor contractors will ensure
20the integrity of the Californian economy, which is undermined
21when unregulated persons conspire to fraudulently deceive foreign
22workers about the terms and conditions of work.

P4    1(e) California already regulates farm labor contractors through
2a comprehensive licensing system and provides some oversight
3of the activities of foreign labor contractors. This bill expands
4regulation of the activities of foreign labor contractors by the
5following:

6(1) Requiring foreign labor contractors to register with the
7appropriate state agency.

8(2) Requiring disclosure of the use of foreign labor contractors,
9and their agents, by persons seeking to employ foreign workers.

10(3) Imposing penalties on a person using an unregistered foreign
11labor contractor to obtain foreign workers or employees.

12(4) Expanding the remedies available to foreign workers
13aggrieved by the actions of foreign labor contractors and those
14acting in concert with them.

15(f) It is the intent of the Legislature that the Labor Commissioner
16proceed as expediently as possible in reviewing applications for
17foreign labor contractor registration to ensure that workers may
18come to the United States for legitimate employment without undue
19delay.

20

SEC. 2.  

Section 9998.1 of the Business and Professions Code
21 is amended to read:

22

9998.1.  

The following definitions are applicable to this chapter:

23(a) “Person” includes any natural person, company, firm,
24partnership or joint venture, association, corporation, limited
25liability company, or sole proprietorship.

26(b)  “Foreign labor contracting activity” means recruiting or
27soliciting for compensation a foreign worker who resides outside
28of the United States in furtherance of that worker’s employment
29in California, including when that activity occurs wholly outside
30the United States. “Foreign labor contracting activity” does not
31include the services of an employer, or employee of an employer,
32if those services are provided directly to foreign workers solely to
33find workers for the employer’s own use.

34(c) “Foreign worker” means any person seeking employment
35who is not a United States citizen or permanent resident but who
36is authorized by the federal government to work in the United
37States, including a person who engages in temporary
38nonagricultural labor pursuant to Section 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(b) of
39the federal Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. Sec.
401101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(b)).

P5    1(d) “Foreign labor contractor” means any person who performs
2foreign labor contracting activity, including any person who
3performs foreign labor contracting activity wholly outside the
4United States, except that the term does not include any entity of
5federal, state, or local government. “Foreign labor contractor” does
6not include a person licensed by the Labor Commissioner as a
7talent agency under Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 1700)
8of Part 6 of Division 2 of the Labor Code, or a person who obtained
9and maintains full written designation from the United States
10Department of State under Part 62 of Title 22 of the Code of
11Federal Regulations.

12

SEC. 3.  

Section 9998.1.5 is added to the Business and
13Professions Code
, to read:

14

9998.1.5.  

(a) On and after July 1,begin delete 2015,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert a person acting
15as a foreign labor contractor shall register with the Labor
16Commissioner in accordance with the terms and procedures for
17registration established by the commissioner by January 1,begin delete 2015.end delete
18begin insert 2016.end insert On and after August 1,begin delete 2015,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert the commissioner shall
19post on its Internet Web site the names and contact information
20for all registered foreign labor contractors and a list of the names
21and contact information for any foreign labor contractors denied
22renewal or registration.

23(b) The Labor Commissioner may not register a person to act
24as a foreign labor contractor, and may not renew a registration,
25until all of the following conditions are satisfied:

26(1) The person has executed a written application in a form
27prescribed by the commissioner, subscribed and sworn to by the
28person, and containing all of the following:

29(A) A statement by the person of all facts required by the
30commissioner concerning the applicant’s character, competency,
31responsibility, and the manner and means by which the person
32proposes to conduct operations as a foreign labor contractor if
33registered.

34(B) The names and addresses of all persons, except bona fide
35employees on stated salaries, financially interested, either as
36partners, associates, or profit sharers, in the proposed operation as
37a foreign labor contractor, together with the amount of their
38respective interests.

39(C) A declaration consenting to the designation by a court or
40the commissioner as an agent available to accept service of
P6    1summons in any action against the registrant, if the registrant has
2left the jurisdiction in which the action is commenced or otherwise
3has become unavailable to accept service.

4(2) The commissioner, after investigation, is satisfied as to the
5character, competency, and responsibility of the person.

6(3) (A) The person has deposited with the commissioner a
7surety bond in an amount based on the size of the person’s annual
8gross receipts from operations as a foreign labor contractor, as
9follows:

10(i) For gross receipts up to five hundred thousand dollars
11($500,000), a fifty-thousand-dollar ($50,000) bond.

12(ii) For gross receipts of five hundred thousand dollars
13($500,000) to two million dollars ($2,000,000), a
14one-hundred-thousand-dollar ($100,000) bond.

15(iii) For gross receipts greater than two million dollars
16($2,000,000), a one-hundred-fifty-thousand-dollar ($150,000)
17bond.

18(B) If the foreign labor contractor has been the subject of a final
19judgment in a year in an amount equal to that of the bond required,
20that contractor shall be required to deposit an additional bond
21within 60 days. The bond shall be payable to the people of the
22State of California and shall be conditioned on the foreign labor
23contractor complying with all the terms and provisions of this
24chapter and paying all damages occasioned to any person by failure
25to do so, or by any violation of this chapter, or false statements or
26misrepresentations made in the registration process. The bond shall
27also be payable for interest on wages and for any damages arising
28from violation of applicable orders of the Industrial Welfare
29Commission, and for any other monetary relief awarded to a
30foreign worker as a result of a violation of law by the foreign labor
31contractor.

32(4) The person has paid to the commissioner a registration fee
33and a filing fee in a total amount the commissioner determines is
34sufficient to support the ongoing costs of the program.

35(c) The commissioner may not register a person as a foreign
36labor contractor, if the person was found by a court, the Secretary
37of Labor, or the commissioner to have violated any of the following
38provisions:

39(1) The federal Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000
40 (Division A, Public Law 106-386), as amended.

P7    1(2) Sections 1682 to 1699, inclusive, of the Labor Code.

2(3) Section 236.1 of the Penal Code.

3(4) An applicable guest worker program.

4

SEC. 4.  

Section 9998.2 of the Business and Professions Code
5 is repealed.

6

SEC. 5.  

Section 9998.2 is added to the Business and Professions
7Code
, to read:

8

9998.2.  

(a) On and after July 1,begin delete 2015,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert a person who
9knows or should have known that the person is using the services
10of a foreign labor contractor to procure foreign workers or
11employees pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 9998.1 shall
12disclose this information to the Labor Commissioner in accordance
13with the terms and procedures established by the commissioner
14by January 1,begin delete 2015.end deletebegin insert 2016.end insert

15(b) The disclosure shall include, but is not limited to, the
16following:

17(1) The name, address, and contact information of the person
18designated by the employer to work with a foreign labor contractor.

19(2) A declaration consenting to the designation by a court of
20the commissioner as an agent available to accept service of
21summons in any action against the person, if the person has left
22the jurisdiction in which the action is commenced or otherwise
23has become unavailable to accept service.

24 (c) A person may not knowingly enter into an agreement for
25the services of a foreign labor contractor that is not registered under
26this chapter.

27

SEC. 6.  

Section 9998.2.5 is added to the Business and
28Professions Code
, to read:

29

9998.2.5.  

(a) A foreign labor contractor shall ascertain and
30disclose in writing to each foreign worker who is recruited for
31employment in English and in the primary language of the foreign
32worker being recruited, at the time of the foreign worker’s
33recruitment, the following information:

34(1) The identity of the employer and the identity of the person
35conducting the recruiting on behalf of the employer, including any
36subcontractor or agent involved in the recruiting.

37(2) A signed copy of the work contract, including all assurances
38and terms and conditions of employment, from the prospective
39employer for whom the foreign worker is being recruited, including
40the compensation to be paid, the place and period of employment,
P8    1a description of the type and nature of employment activities, any
2withholdings or deductions from compensation, and any penalties
3for terminating employment.

4(3) The type of visa under which the foreign worker is to be
5employed, the length of time the visa is valid, and the terms and
6conditions under which the visa will be renewed with a clear
7statement of whether the employer will secure renewal of the visa
8or if renewal must be obtained by the foreign worker, and any
9expenses associated with securing or renewing the visa.

10(4) An itemized list of any costs or expenses to be charged to
11the foreign worker, including, but not limited to, the costs of
12housing or accommodation, transportation to and from the worksite,
13meals, medical examinations, health care or safety equipment
14costs, and any other costs, expenses, or deductions to be charged
15the foreign worker.

16(5) A statement, in a form specified by the Labor Commissioner,
17that does each of the following:

18(A) States that no foreign labor contractor, or agent or employee
19of a foreign labor contractor, can lawfully assess any fee, including
20visa fees, processing fees, transportation fees, legal expenses,
21placement fees, and other costs to a foreign worker for foreign
22labor contracting activities, and that the employer may bear the
23costs or fees for the foreign labor contractor, but that these fees
24cannot be assessed to the foreign worker.

25(B) Explains that no additional requirements or changes may
26be made to the terms of the contract originally provided by the
27foreign labor contractor and signed by the foreign worker, unless
28the foreign worker is provided at least 48 hours to review and
29consider the additional requirements or changes and the foreign
30worker gives specific consent, voluntarily and without threat of
31penalty, to each additional requirement or change.

32(C) Describes the protections afforded the foreign worker by
33this chapter and by the federal Trafficking Victims Protection Act
34of 2000 (Division A, Public Law 106-386), as amended, and any
35applicable guest worker program, including relevant information
36about the procedure for filing a complaint under this chapter, and
37the telephone number for the national human trafficking resource
38center hotline.

39(6) Any education or training to be provided or required,
40including the nature, timing, and cost of training and the person
P9    1who will pay training costs, whether the training is a condition of
2employment, continued employment, or future employment, and
3whether the foreign worker will be paid or remunerated during the
4training period, including the rate of pay or remuneration.

5(b) The foreign labor contractor shall file the disclosure required
6under subdivision (a) with the Labor Commissioner within seven
7business days of providing it to the foreign worker.

8(c) A foreign labor contractor, or the agent, subcontractor, or
9employee of a foreign labor contractor, or a person using the
10services of a foreign labor contractor to obtain foreign workers or
11employees, may not assess any fee, including, but not limited to,
12visa fees, processing fees, transportation fees, legal expenses,
13placement fees, and other costs, to a foreign worker for foreign
14labor contracting activities.

15(d) A foreign worker may not be required to pay any costs or
16expenses that are not customarily assessed against all workers
17similarly employed in the United States. No costs or expenses shall
18be required to be paid by the foreign worker prior to the
19commencement of work. The amount charged for providing
20housing to the foreign worker shall be limited to market rate for
21similar housing.

22(e) Additional requirements or changes shall not be made to the
23terms of the contract originally provided by the foreign labor
24contractor and signed by the foreign worker, unless the foreign
25worker is provided at least 48 hours to review and consider the
26additional requirements or changes and the foreign worker gives
27specific consent, voluntarily and without threat of penalty, to each
28additional requirement or change.

29

SEC. 7.  

Section 9998.6 of the Business and Professions Code
30 is amended to read:

31

9998.6.  

A person may not intimidate, threaten, restrain, coerce,
32discharge, or in any manner discriminate against a foreign worker
33or a member of his or her family in retaliation for the foreign
34worker’s exercise of any right under this chapter.

35

SEC. 8.  

Section 9998.8 of the Business and Professions Code
36 is amended to read:

37

9998.8.  

(a) A person who violates this chapter or who causes
38or induces another to violate this chapter is guilty of a misdemeanor
39punishable by a fine of not more than one thousand dollars
40($1,000), or imprisonment in the county jail for not more than six
P10   1months, or both. A person shall not be liable under this subdivision
2for any act or omission by a foreign labor contractor engaged by
3the person if the foreign labor contractor was registered with the
4Labor Commissioner pursuant to Section 9998.1.5 no later than
5the first day of engagement.

6(b) A person who violates any provision of this chapter shall
7be subject to a civil penalty of no less than one thousand dollars
8($1,000) and no more than twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000)
9per violation, in addition to any other civil remedies available to
10the Labor Commissioner or an aggrieved person.

11(c) The commissioner or a person aggrieved by a violation of
12this chapter may do all of the following:

13 (1) Bring an action for injunctive relief against a person who
14violates this chapter and, upon prevailing, recover costs and
15reasonable attorney’s fees.

16(2) Bring an action for damages, against a person who violates
17this chapter to recover the greater of all of his or her actual damages
18or five hundred dollars ($500) per employee per violation for an
19initial violation, and one thousand dollars ($1,000) per employee
20for each subsequent violation, and, upon prevailing in an action
21brought pursuant to this section, recover costs and reasonable
22attorney’s fees.

23(3) Enforce the liability on the bonds required under Section
249998.1.5.

25(d) A person shall not be jointly and severally liable for any act
26or omission by a foreign labor contractor engaged by the person
27if the foreign labor contractor was registered with the Labor
28Commissioner pursuant to Section 9998.1.5 no later than the first
29day of engagement.

30(e) Nothing in this section shall be construed to preempt or alter
31any other rights or remedies, including any causes of action,
32available under any other federal or state law.

33

SEC. 9.  

Section 9998.10 is added to the Business and
34Professions Code
, to read:

35

9998.10.  

The Labor Commissioner and the deputies and
36representatives authorized by the commissioner in writing may
37take assignments of actions on the bonds required under Section
389998.1.5 by aggrieved persons and may prosecute the actions on
39behalf of persons who, in the judgment of the commissioner, are
P11   1financially unable to employ counsel, in the same manner that
2claims are prosecuted under Section 98 of the Labor Code.

3

SEC. 10.  

Section 9998.11 is added to the Business and
4Professions Code
, to read:

5

9998.11.  

The Labor Commissioner may adopt regulations or
6policies and procedures to implement the provisions of this chapter.

7

SEC. 11.  

No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant
8to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
9the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
10district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
11infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
12for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
13the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
14the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
15 Constitution.



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