AB 1669, as amended, Roger Hernández. Displaced employees: service contracts: collection and transportation of solid waste.
Existing law requires a local government agency letting a public transit service contract out to bid to give a bidding preference for contractors and subcontractors who agree to retain for a specified period certain employees who were employed to perform essentially the same services by the previous contractor or subcontractor. Such a contractor or subcontractor is required to offer employment to those employees, except for reasonable and substantiated cause. Existing law requires a successor contractor or subcontractor that determines that fewer employees are needed than under the prior contract to retain qualified employees by seniority within the job classification. The existing contractor is required to provide prescribed information regarding employment under the existing service contract to the awarding authority, any entity that the awarding authority identifies as a bona fide bidder, and the successor contractor. Existing law authorizes an employee who was not offered employment or who has been discharged in violation of existing law, or his or her agent, to bring an action against the successor contractor or subcontractor in any superior court having jurisdiction over the successor contractor or subcontractor. Existing law authorizes an awarding authority to terminate a service contract under prescribed circumstances.
This bill would expand the application of these provisions to exclusive contracts for the collection and transportation of solid waste. The bill would require the information provided to a bona fide bidder to be made available in writing at least 30 days before bids for the service contract are due. The bill would establish certain provisions applicable only to service contracts for the collection and transportation of solid waste, including limits on the requirement to retain employees and specified requirements for notice and opportunity to cure in the context of civil action or termination.begin insert The bill would not apply to contracts awarded before January 1, 2017, or to contracts for which the bid process has been completed before January 1, 2017.end insert By requiring local agencies to give a bidding preference under these provisions to those contractors and subcontractors for the collection and transportation of solid waste, 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, if the Commission on State Mandates determines that the bill contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement for those costs shall be made pursuant to these statutory provisions.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The heading of Chapter 4.6 (commencing with
2Section 1070) of Part 3 of Division 2 of the Labor Code is amended
3to read:
4
Section 1070 of the Labor Code is amended to read:
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
3(a) That when public agencies with jurisdiction over public
4transit services or the collection and transportation of solid waste
5award contracts to operate bus and rail services, or to provide for
6the collection and transportation of solid waste to a new contractor,
7qualified employees of the prior contractor who are not reemployed
8by the successor contractor face significant economic dislocation
9as a result.
10(b) That those displaced employees rely unnecessarily upon the
11unemployment insurance system, public social services, and health
12programs,
increasing costs to these vital government programs
13and placing a significant burden upon both the government and
14the taxpayers.
15(c) That it serves an important social purpose to establish
16incentives for contractors who bid on public transit service
17contracts or contracts for the collection and transportation of solid
18waste to retain qualified employees of the prior contractor to
19perform the same or similar work.
Section 1071 of the Labor Code is amended to read:
The following definitions apply to this chapter:
22(a) “Awarding authority” means any local government agency,
23including any city, county, special district, transit district, joint
24powers authority, or nonprofit corporation that awards or otherwise
25enters into contracts for public transit services or for the collection
26and transportation of solid waste performed within the State of
27California.
28(b) “Bidder” means any person who submits a bid to an
29awarding authority for a public transit service contract, an exclusive
30contract for the collection and transportation of solid waste, or a
31subcontract.
32(c) “Contractor” means any person who enters into a public
33transit service contract or an exclusive contract for the collection
34and transportation of solid waste with an awarding authority.
35(d) “Employee” means any individual who works for a
36contractor or subcontractor under a contract. “Employee” does not
37include an executive, administrative, or professional employee
38exempt from the payment of overtime compensation within the
39meaning of subdivision (a) of Section 515 or any person who is
P4 1not an “employee” as defined under Section 2(3) of the National
2Labor Relations Act (29 U.S.C. Sec. 152(3)).
3(e) “Person” means any individual, proprietorship, partnership,
4joint venture, corporation, limited liability company, trust,
5association,
or other entity that may employ individuals or enter
6into contracts.
7(f) “Public transit services” means the provision of passenger
8transportation services to the general public, including paratransit
9service.
10(g) “Service contract” means any contract the principal purpose
11of which is to provide public transit services or the exclusive right
12to provide collection and transportation of solid waste through the
13use of employees.
14(h) “Solid waste” has the same meaning as defined in Section
1540191 of the Public Resources Code.
16(i) “Subcontractor” means any person who is not an employee
17who enters into a contract with a contractor to perform a portion
18of the
contractor’s express obligations under a service contract.
19“Subcontractor” does not include a contractor’s vendors, suppliers,
20insurers, or other service providers.
Section 1072 of the Labor Code is amended to read:
(a) A bidder shall declare as part of the bid for a service
23contract whether or not the bidder will retain the employees of the
24prior contractor or subcontractor for a period of not less than 90
25days, as provided in this chapter, if awarded the service contract.
26(b) An awarding authority letting a service contract out to bid
27shall give a 10 percent preference to any bidder who agrees to
28retain the employees of the prior contractor or subcontractor
29pursuant to subdivision (a).
30(c) (1) If the awarding authority announces that it intends to
31let a service contract out
to bid, the existing service contractor,
32within a reasonable time, shall provide to the awarding authority
33the number of employees who are performing services under the
34service contract and the wage rates, benefits, and job classifications
35of those employees. In addition, the existing service contractor
36shall make this information available to any entity that the awarding
37authority has identified as a bona fide bidder. This information
38shall be made available to each bona fide bidder in writing at least
3930 days before bids for the service contract are due, whether by
40inclusion of the information in the request for bids or otherwise.
P5 1If the successor service contract is awarded to a new contractor,
2the existing contractor shall provide the names, addresses, dates
3of hire, wages, benefit levels, and job classifications of employees
4to the successor contractor. The duties imposed by this subdivision
5
shall be contained in all service contracts.
6(2) A successor contractor or subcontractor who agrees to retain
7employees pursuant to subdivision (a) shall retain employees who
8have been employed by the prior contractor or subcontractors,
9except for reasonable and substantiated cause. That cause is limited
10to the particular employee’s performance or conduct while working
11under the prior contract or the employee’s failure of any controlled
12substances and alcohol test, physical examination, criminal
13background check required by law as a condition of employment,
14or other standard hiring qualification lawfully required by the
15successor contractor or subcontractor.
16(3) The successor contractor or subcontractor shall make a
17written offer of employment to each employee to be retained
18
pursuant to subdivision (a). That offer shall state the time within
19which the employee must accept that offer, but in no case less than
2010 days. Nothing in this section requires the successor contractor
21or subcontractor to pay the same wages or offer the same benefits
22provided by the prior contractor or subcontractor.
23(4) If, at any time, the successor contractor or subcontractor
24determines that fewer employees are required than were required
25under the prior contract or subcontract, the successor contractor
26or subcontractor shall retain qualified employees by seniority
27within the job classification. In determining those employees who
28are qualified, the successor contractor or subcontractor may require
29an employee to possess any license that is required by law to
30operate the equipment that the employee will operate as an
31employee of the
successor contractor or subcontractor.
Section 1075 is added to the Labor Code, to read:
Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, the
34following shall apply to service contracts for the collection and
35transportation of solid waste:
36(a) A successor contractor or subcontractor shall be required to
37retain only employees of a contractor or subcontractor under a
38prior service contract whose employment would be terminated if
39the service contract were awarded to anotherbegin delete contractor.end deletebegin insert contractor
40or subcontractor.end insert
P6 1(b) A successor contractor or
subcontractor shall not be required
2to retain an employee of a contractor or subcontractor under a prior
3service contract under any of the following circumstances:
4(1) If the employee of the prior contractor or subcontractor does
5not meet any standard hiring qualification lawfully required by
6the successor contractor or subcontractor for the position.
7(2) If the successor contractor or subcontractor would be
8required to terminate or reassign an existing employee covered
9under a collective bargaining agreement with the successor
10contractor or subcontractor in order to hire the employee of the
11prior contractor or subcontractor.
12(3) If, and to the extent, the actual number of employees meeting
13the requirements of this chapter
exceeds the number of those
14employees communicated to bona fide bidders in accordance with
15paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 1072.
16(c) An employee or his or her agent shall not bring an action
17against a successor contractor or subcontractor under subdivision
18(a) of Section 1073 without first giving the successor contractor
19or subcontractor written notice of the violation or breach and 30
20days to cure the violation or breach. An awarding authority shall
21not terminate a service contract under subdivision (a) of Section
221074 without first giving the successor contractor or subcontractor
23written notice of the violation or breach and 30 days to cure the
24violation or breach.
begin insertSection 1076 is added to the end insertbegin insertLabor Codeend insertbegin insert, to read:end insert
begin insertThe amendments and additions to this chapter made by
27the act adding this section shall not apply to contracts awarded
28before January 1, 2017, or to contracts for which the bid process
29has been completed before January 1, 2017.
If the Commission on State Mandates determines that
32this act contains costs mandated by the state, reimbursement to
33local agencies and school districts for those costs shall be made
34pursuant to Part 7 (commencing with Section 17500) of Division
354 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
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