Overview:
California
employers do not usually find themselves facing meal and rest break claims
because they ignored the law completely. More often, the problem begins with
ordinary workplace decisions that feel manageable in the moment. A lunch is
pushed a little too late during a rush. A short shift runs longer than
expected. A waiver is used too casually. A manager tells employees to “take
lunch when it slows down.” A remote worker stays reachable during a break.
Payroll pays something, but not at the correct regular rate. Over time, those
small decisions create a pattern, and in California that pattern can become
very expensive.
What
makes this area so difficult is that meal and rest break compliance is not just
an HR policy issue. It is a systems issue. Scheduling, staffing, manager
behavior, timekeeping, payroll setup, waiver handling, and escalation processes
all affect whether breaks are actually provided in practice. A written policy
may look fine, but if the workflow makes compliant breaks unrealistic, the
policy alone will not protect the employer. That is why break claims so often
grow out of the gap between what the company intended and what employees
experienced on the ground.
This
webinar is built to address the real problems employers struggle with now:
meals that drift past the fifth hour, second meals missed when shifts run long,
auto-deduct systems that do not reflect reality, on-duty meals used too
broadly, rest breaks undermined by phones and on-call expectations, premiums
paid at the wrong rate, weak attestation workflows, and paystub or final-pay
mistakes that multiply the exposure. It also takes a practical look at why
these cases are so attractive to plaintiffs’ counsel: the employer’s own time
records, payroll data, manager messages, and system design often become the
evidence used to prove the claim.
Attendees
will leave with a clearer understanding of what California law requires, where
employers most often get tripped up, and what needs to be fixed before a break
issue becomes a wage-statement, final-pay, class, or PAGA problem. Just as
important, this program is designed to help HR, payroll, operations,
compliance, managers, and legal teams work from the same playbook. The focus is
not just on identifying risk, but on building a break-compliance system that is
defensible, workable, and aligned with how the organization actually operates
day to day.
Areas
covered in the session:
- The
California rules for meal periods, rest breaks, waivers, on-duty meals, and the
timing thresholds that create the most exposure
- The
real-world breakdowns that drive claims, including short staffing, schedule
drift, manager instructions, remote-work control, and weak exception handling
- How
Brinker, Augustus, Donohue, Ferra, Naranjo, Huerta, and Bradsbery affect
employers in day-to-day operations
- The
records, rounding, attestation, and auto-deduct problems that can make
violations easier to prove across a workforce
- Premium-pay,
regular-rate, paystub, and final-pay issues that can turn a break problem into
a larger wage-and-hour case
- Practical
action steps for HR, payroll, operations, and compliance teams, including
manager training, self-audits, corrective pay, and a 30-day response framework
Handouts
Included:
- California
Meal & Rest Break Risk Scenarios Workbook
- California
Meal & Rest Break Self-Audit Workbook
Why
should you attend?
California
meal and rest break compliance continues to create serious exposure for
employers because the problem is rarely limited to one missed lunch or one
missed rest period. A late meal, an invalid waiver, an interrupted break, or a
premium paid at the wrong rate can quickly lead to larger wage-and-hour issues
involving paystubs, final pay, and PAGA claims. This webinar will help you
understand where that risk actually begins and why it continues to affect
employers even when written policies appear compliant.
You
should attend if you want more than a surface-level explanation of the rules.
This program is designed to show how California break law plays out in real
workplaces where schedules shift, coverage falls short, managers improvise,
payroll systems apply the wrong logic, and everyday operational decisions
create avoidable liability. It will help you identify the weak points in your
current practices before they become expensive claims built from your own
records.
You
should also attend to learn what practical steps your organization can take now
to improve compliance. Whether you work in HR, payroll, operations, compliance,
management, or legal, this webinar will give you a clearer understanding of the
rules, the common mistakes that drive litigation, and the actions needed to
build a break-compliance process that works in practice, not just on paper.
Who
will benefit?
This
webinar will benefit professionals who are directly responsible for break
compliance, wage-and-hour risk, scheduling, payroll accuracy, manager training,
and employment-law oversight in California workplaces. It is especially
valuable for those who need to prevent meal and rest period mistakes before
they turn into premium-pay, paystub, final-pay, class, or PAGA exposure, and
those include:
- HR
Directors/Human Resources Managers/Employee Relations Managers
- Labor
Relations Managers/HR Compliance Managers/Payroll Managers
- Payroll
Supervisors/Payroll Compliance Specialists/Compensation and Payroll Analysts
- Workforce
Management Managers/Scheduling Managers/Operations Managers
- Multi-Unit
Operations Managers/Retail District Managers
- Store
Managers/Restaurant General Managers
- Hospitality
Operations Managers/Healthcare Operations Managers
- Practice
Administrators/Field Service Managers
- Regional
Managers/Compliance Directors
- Compliance
Managers/Employment Counsel
- In-House
Labor and Employment Attorneys
- Risk
Management Professionals
- Business
Owners
- Employers with California-based employees
- Multistate Employers overseeing California operations
Eric Caldwell is an Employment Law Specialist with over 20 years of experience helping employers address workplace compliance risks and turn legal requirements into workable day-to-day practices.
Over
the course of his career, Eric has advised organizations across a wide range of
industries on some of the most difficult areas of employment law compliance,
including wage and hour obligations, handbook and policy development, employee
relations, leave administration, manager documentation, workplace
investigations, and policy enforcement. He has worked closely with HR, payroll,
operations, and management teams to help them identify where compliance
problems begin in practice and how to correct them before they grow into larger
legal and operational risks.
Eric
is especially known for his ability to explain complex employment law topics in
a clear, practical way that employers can actually use. His programs go beyond
legal rules and focus on how those rules affect scheduling, manager decisions,
payroll processes, policy design, and real workplace execution. That approach
makes his sessions particularly valuable for employers managing California
compliance challenges, multi-location operations, remote and mobile workforces,
and high-risk wage and hour issues such as meal and rest period compliance.
Enrollment Options
Tags: California Compliance, Meal Periods, Rest Breaks, Wage and Hour, Premium Pay, PAGA, HR Compliance, Payroll Compliance, Employment Law, Labor Law, Manager Training, Timekeeping, Wage Statements, Final Pay, Waivers, On-Duty Meals, Rest Break Rules, California Employers, Eric Caldwell, May 2026

