AB 2744, as amended, Committee on Labor and Employment. Public works: apprenticeship program.
Existing law provides that when a contractor or subcontractor performing a public works project is found by the Labor Commissioner to be in violation of the requirements relating to public works contracts, except with regard to the employment of apprentices, with intent to defraud, or within a 3-year period of having committed 2 or more separate willful violations of these provisions, the contractor or subcontractor or a firm, corporation, partnership, or association in which the contractor or subcontractor has any interest is ineligible to bid on, be awarded, or perform work as a subcontractor on a public works contract for specified periods of time.
This bill would make these provisions applicable to violations of provisions related to the employment of apprentices.
Existing law, among other things, imposes a civil penalty on contractors or subcontractors who are determined to have knowingly violated specified provisions regulating the employment of apprentices on public works projects, provides that a contractor or subcontractor who is determined to have knowingly committed a serious violation of the apprentice employment provisions may additionally be denied the right to bid on or be awarded or perform work as a subcontractor on any public works contract for a specified period of time, provides for a review of the civil penalty or debarment by the Labor Commissioner, and provides for a process to collect the civil penalty.
This bill would revise and recast these provisions by, among other things, making the civil penalty applicable to the contractor and any subcontractor responsible for the violation, requiring the Labor Commissioner or his or her designee to issue a civil wage and penalty assessment in accordance with a specified provision, and providing for notice by the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement to the contractor within 15 days of receipt of a complaint that their subcontractor knowingly violated the apprentice employment provisions.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Section 1777.1 of the Labor Code is amended to
2read:
(a) Whenever a contractor or subcontractor performing
4a public works project pursuant to this chapter is found by the
5Labor Commissioner to be in violation of this chapter with intent
6to defraud, the contractor or subcontractor or a firm, corporation,
7partnership, or association in which the contractor or subcontractor
8has any interest is ineligible for a period of not less than one year
9or more than three years to do either of the following:
10(1) Bid on or be awarded a contract for a public works project.
11(2) Perform work as a subcontractor on a public works project.
12(b) Whenever a contractor or subcontractor performing a public
13works
project pursuant to this chapter is found by the Labor
14Commissioner to have committed two or more separate willful
15violations of this chapter within a three-year period, the contractor
16or subcontractor or a firm, corporation, partnership, or association
17in which the contractor or subcontractor has any interest is
18ineligible for a period up to three years to do either of the
19following:
20(1) Bid on or be awarded a contract for a public works project.
21(2) Perform work as a subcontractor on a public works project.
P3 1(c) Whenever a contractor or subcontractor performing a public
2works project has failed to provide a timely response to a request
3by the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement, the Division of
4Apprenticeship Standards, or the awarding body to produce
5certified payroll records pursuant to Section 1776, the Labor
6
Commissioner shall notify the contractor or subcontractor that, in
7addition to any other penalties provided by law, the contractor or
8subcontractor will be subject to debarment under this section if
9the certified payroll records are not produced within 30 days after
10receipt of the written notice. If the commissioner finds that the
11contractor or subcontractor has failed to comply with Section 1776
12by that deadline, unless the commissioner finds that the failure to
13comply was due to circumstances outside the contractor’s or
14subcontractor’s control, the contractor or subcontractor or a firm,
15corporation, partnership, or association in which the contractor or
16subcontractor has any interest is ineligible for a period of not less
17than one year and not more than three years to do either of the
18following:
19(1) Bid on or be awarded a contract for a public works project.
20(2) Perform work as a subcontractor on a public works project.
begin insert
21(d) (1) In the event a contractor or subcontractor is determined
22by the Labor Commissioner to have knowingly committed a serious
23violation of any provision of Section 1777.5, the Labor
24Commissioner may also deny to the contractor or subcontractor,
25and to its responsible officers, the right to bid on or to be awarded
26or perform work as a subcontractor on any public works contract
27for a period of up to one year for the first violation and for a period
28of up to three years for a second or subsequent violation. Each
29period of debarment shall run from the date the determination of
30noncompliance by the Labor Commissioner becomes a final order.
31(2) The Labor Commissioner shall consider, in determining
32whether a violation is serious, and in determining whether and
33for how long a party should be debarred for violating Section
341777.5, all of the following circumstances:
35(A) Whether the violation was intentional.
end insertbegin insert
36(B) Whether the party has committed other violations of Section
371777.5.
38(C) Whether, upon notice of the violation, the party took steps
39to voluntarily remedy the violation.
P4 1(D) Whether, and to what extent, the violation resulted in lost
2training opportunities for apprentices.
3(E) Whether, and to what extent, the violation otherwise harmed
4apprentices or apprenticeship programs.
5(d)
end delete
6begin insert(e)end insert A willful violation occurs when the contractor or
7subcontractor knew or reasonably should have known of his or
8her obligations under the public works law and deliberately fails
9orbegin insert
deliberatelyend insert refuses to comply with its provisions.
10(e)
end delete
11begin insert(f)end insert The Labor Commissioner shall publish on the commissioner’s
12Internet Web site a list of contractors who are ineligible to bid on
13or be awarded a public works contract, or to perform work as a
14subcontractor on a public works project pursuant to this chapter.
15The list shall contain the name of the contractor, the Contractors’
16State License Board license number of the contractor, and the
17effective period of debarment of the contractor. Contractors shall
18be added to the list upon issuance of a debarment order and the
19commissioner shall also notify the Contractors’ State License
20Board when the
list is updated. At least annually, the commissioner
21shall notify awarding bodies of the availability of the list of
22debarred contractors. The commissioner shall also place
23advertisements in construction industry publications targeted to
24the contractors and subcontractors, chosen by the commissioner,
25that state the effective period of the debarment and the reason for
26debarment. The advertisements shall appear one time for each
27debarment of a contractor in each publication chosen by the
28commissioner. The debarred contractor or subcontractor shall be
29liable to the commissioner for the reasonable cost of the
30advertisements, not to exceed five thousand dollars ($5,000). The
31amount paid to the commissioner for the advertisements shall be
32credited against the contractor’s or subcontractor’s obligation to
33pay civil fines or penalties for the same willful violation of this
34chapter.
35(f)
end delete
36begin insert(g)end insert For purposes of this section, “contractor or subcontractor”
37means a firm, corporation, partnership, or association and its
38responsible managing officer, as well as any supervisors, managers,
39and officers found by the Labor Commissioner to be personally
P5 1and substantially responsible for the willful violation of this
2chapter.
3(g)
end delete
4begin insert(h)end insert For the purposes of this section, the term “any interest”
5means an interest in the entity bidding or performing work on the
6public works project, whether as an owner, partner,
officer,
7manager, employee, agent, consultant, or representative. “Any
8interest” includes, but is not limited to, all instances where the
9debarred contractor or subcontractor receives payments, whether
10cash or any other form of compensation, from any entity bidding
11or performing work on the public works project, or enters into any
12contracts or agreements with the entity bidding or performing work
13on the public works project for services performed or to be
14performed for contracts that have been or will be assigned or sublet,
15or for vehicles, tools, equipment, or supplies that have been or will
16be sold, rented, or leased during the period from the initiation of
17the debarment proceedings until the end of the term of the
18debarment period. “Any interest” does not include shares held in
19a publicly traded corporation if the shares were not received as
20compensation after the initiation of debarment from an entity
21bidding or performing work on a public works project.
22(h)
end delete
23begin insert(i)end insert For the purposes of this section, the term “entity” is defined
24as a company, limited liability company, association, partnership,
25sole proprietorship, limited liability partnership, corporation,
26business trust, or organization.
27(i)
end delete
28begin insert(j)end insert The Labor Commissioner shall adopt rules and regulations
29for the administration and enforcement of this section.
Section 1777.7 of the Labor Code is repealed.
Section 1777.7 is added to the Labor Code, to read:
(a) (1) If the Labor Commissioner or his or her
33designee determines after an investigation that a contractor or
34subcontractor knowingly violated Section 1777.5, the contractor
35and any subcontractor responsible for the violation shall forfeit,
36as a civil penalty to the state or political subdivision on whose
37behalf the contract is made or awarded, not more than one hundred
38dollars ($100) for each full calendar day of noncompliance. The
39amount of this penalty may be reduced by the Labor Commissioner
40if the amount of the penalty would be disproportionate to the
P6 1severity of the violation. A contractor or subcontractor that
2knowingly commits a second or subsequent violation within a
3three-year period, if the noncompliance results in apprenticeship
4training not being provided as required by
this chapter, shall forfeit
5as a civil penalty the sum of not more than three hundred dollars
6($300) for each full calendar day of noncompliance.
7(2) In lieu of the penalty provided for in this subdivision, the
8Labor Commissioner may, for a first-time violation and with the
9concurrence of an apprenticeship program described in subdivision
10(d) of Section 1777.5, order the contractor or subcontractor to
11provide apprentice employment equivalent to the work hours that
12would have been provided for apprentices during the period of
13noncompliance.
14(b) The Labor Commissioner shall consider, in setting the
15amount of a monetary penalty, all of the following circumstances:
16(1) Whether the violation was intentional.
17(2) Whether the party has committed other
violations of Section
181777.5.
19(3) Whether, upon notice of the violation, the party took steps
20to voluntarily remedy the violation.
21(4) Whether, and to what extent, the violation resulted in lost
22training opportunities for apprentices.
23(5) Whether, and to what extent, the violation otherwise harmed
24apprentices or apprenticeship programs.
25(c) (1) The Labor Commissioner or his or her designee shall
26issue a civil wage and penalty assessment, in accordance with the
27provisions of Section 1741, upon determination of penalties
28assessed under subdivisions (a) and (b). Review of a civil wage
29and penalty assessment issued under this subdivision may be
30requested in accordance with the provisions of Section 1742. The
31regulations of the Director
of Industrial Relations, which govern
32proceedings for review of civil wage and penalty assessments and
33the withholding of contract payments under Article 1 (commencing
34with Section 1720) and Article 2 (commencing with Section 1770),
35shall apply.
36(2) For purposes of this section, a determination issued pursuant
37to subdivision (a) or (b) includes a determination that has been
38approved by the Labor Commissioner and issued by an awarding
39body that has been authorized to assist the director in the
40enforcement of Section 1777.5 pursuant to subdivision (p) of that
P7 1section. The Labor Commissioner may intervene in any proceeding
2for review of a determination issued by an awarding body. If the
3involvement of the Labor Commissioner in a labor compliance
4program enforcement action is limited to a review of the
5determination and the matter is resolved without litigation by or
6against the Labor Commissioner or the department, the awarding
7body shall enforce
any applicable penalties, as specified in this
8section, and shall deposit any penalties and forfeitures collected
9in the General Fund.
10(d) The determination of the Labor Commissioner as to the
11amount of the penalty imposed under subdivisions (a) and (b) shall
12be reviewable only for an abuse of discretion.
13(e) If a subcontractor is found to have violated Section 1777.5,
14the prime contractor of the project is not liable for any penalties
15under subdivision (a) unless the prime contractor had knowledge
16of the subcontractor’s failure to comply with the provisions of
17Section 1777.5 or unless the prime contractor fails to comply with
18any of the following requirements:
19(1) The contract executed between the contractor and the
20subcontractor for the performance of work on the public works
21project shall include a copy of the
provisions of Sections 1771,
221775, 1776, 1777.5, 1813, and 1815.
23(2) The contractor shall continually monitor a subcontractor’s
24use of apprentices required to be employed on the public works
25project pursuant to subdivision (d) of Section 1777.5, including,
26but not limited to, periodic review of the certified payroll of the
27subcontractor.
28(3) Upon becoming aware of a failure of the subcontractor to
29employ the required number of apprentices, the contractor shall
30take corrective action, including, but not limited to, retaining funds
31due to the subcontractor for work performed on the public works
32project until the failure is corrected.
33(4) Prior to making the final payment to the subcontractor for
34work performed on the public works project, the contractor shall
35obtain a declaration signed under penalty of perjury from
the
36subcontractor that the subcontractor has employed the required
37number of apprentices on the public works project.
38(f) The Division of Labor Standards Enforcement shall notify
39the contractor on a public works project within 15 days of the
P8 1receipt by the division of a complaint that a subcontractor on that
2public works project knowingly violated Section 1777.5.
3(g) begin delete(1)end deletebegin delete end deleteThe interpretation of Section 1777.5 and the substantive
4requirements of this section applicable to contractors or
5subcontractors shall be in accordance with the regulations of the
6California Apprenticeship Council.
7(2) A contractor knowingly violates Section 1777.5 if the
8contractor knew or should have known of the requirements of that
9section and fails to comply, unless the failure to comply was due
10to circumstances beyond
the contractor’s control.
11(3) There is an irrebuttable presumption that a contractor knew
12or should have known of the requirements of Section 1777.5 if the
13contractor had previously been found to have violated that section,
14the contract or bid documents, or both, notified the contractor of
15the obligation to comply with this code’s provisions applicable to
16public works projects, or the contractor had previously employed
17apprentices on a public works project.
18(h) The Director of Industrial Relations may adopt regulations
19to establish guidelines for the imposition of monetary penalties.
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