Overview:
California
employers do not usually get into trouble because they ignore the law entirely.
More often, the problem starts with ordinary workplace decisions that seem
routine at the time: a manager applies the wrong overtime rule, payroll misses
a pay stub requirement, a final paycheck is not handled correctly, a paid sick
leave notice is outdated, or a worker is treated like an independent contractor
when California law points in another direction. In 2026, those day-to-day
decisions are even more important because employers must navigate new
California developments affecting workplace rights notices, equal pay claim
timelines, paid sick leave use, tip theft enforcement, leave rights, pay data
reporting, Stay or Pay Provisions and
Cal-WARN requirements, all within one of the most demanding wage and hour
environments in the country.
That
is why California wage and hour compliance continues to frustrate even
experienced HR and payroll teams. The rules do not stop at minimum wage and
overtime. Employers also have to understand which wage order applies, when
daily or weekly overtime and double time are triggered, what must appear on the
pay stub, when show-up pay or split-shift pay may apply, how meal and rest
period rules are enforced, what records must be maintained, what notices must
be posted, and how final wages must be paid when employment ends. A business
can believe it is following general federal standards and still create serious
exposure under California’s far more detailed requirements.
This
webinar will help attendees step back and look at California wage and hour
compliance the way employers need to manage it in real life in 2026: as a
system where new laws, payroll practices, manager decisions, notices,
recordkeeping, leave administration, and termination procedures all connect.
Mark Schwartz will explain the latest legal changes affecting employers this
year, while also walking through the core wage and hour rules that continue to
generate confusion, complaints, penalties, and costly disputes. Attendees will
leave with a clearer understanding of what to review, what to update, and where
their biggest compliance risks are likely to be right now.
Areas
covered in the session:
- Wage
orders: How to determine which of the 17
wages orders applies to your company
- Overtime:
CA has daily and weekly overtime and daily and weekly double time. Learn how to
determine when it’s straight time, overtime or double time.
- Alternative
workweeks: Are your employees eligible to have alternative workweeks and are
employers required to offer them?
- Minimum
Wage -How do credits for meals and lodging or tips affect the current minimum
wage
- Reporting
or show up pay: does the employer owe wages to any employee for just showing up
to work? Even if there is no work to be
performed?
- Split
shifts: Is there a monetary requirement
to pay the employee extra if they work a split shift?
- Rules
for compensating piece workers
- What
are the requirements for posters and payday notices?
- What
must be included in the employee's pay stub and what must be excluded?
- What
notices are required to be given to employees upon hire or if they are laid off
or terminated. What if they go on leave of absence?
- How
often must employees be paid in CA? Does
it apply to all categories of employees?
- What
methods are permitted to pay employees?
Are there rules for direct deposit?
Can employees be paid by payroll debit card?
- What
are the rules for paying out the final paycheck if an employee is terminated.
- Are
meal and rest periods required or left up to the employer's policies? If
required what are the penalties if the employee does not receive his or her
meal or rest period
- Recordkeeping
requirements include required time card punches
- Mandatory
Sick Leave Law
Why
should you attend?
California
wage and hour compliance is one of the fastest ways for small errors to become
expensive problems. A missed meal period premium, an incorrect pay stub, a late
final paycheck, or a misunderstanding about overtime, sick leave, or wage
orders can quickly lead to complaints, penalties, audits, or litigation. This
webinar will help attendees better understand where employers most often get
into trouble and what needs closer attention in 2026.
This
session is also valuable because California employers are not dealing only with
long-standing wage and hour rules. They are also expected to keep up with new
legal developments, updated notices, and changing enforcement priorities while
making sure payroll, HR, and frontline managers are all applying the rules
consistently. Attending this webinar can help organizations connect those new
developments to real workplace decisions before compliance gaps widen.
Most
importantly, this webinar is designed to be practical. Instead of looking at
wage and hour law only in theory, it will help attendees think through the
real-world issues that affect everyday operations, from pay practices and
recordkeeping to leave, notices, breaks, and termination-related pay
obligations. For employers trying to reduce risk and strengthen day-to-day
compliance, this is a timely opportunity to get clearer on what must be
reviewed, corrected, and reinforced now.
Handouts:
Attendees
will gain access to exclusive handouts, including presentation materials
provided by the speaker and additional resources developed by Amorit Education
to aid your teams in post-session implementation.
Who
will benefit?
This
webinar will benefit professionals who are directly responsible for California
wage and hour compliance, payroll accuracy, employee classification, leave
administration, pay practices, and day-to-day HR risk management. Those
include:
- HR
Directors/Human Resources Managers
- HR
Business Partners/Employee Relations Managers
- Labor
Relations Managers/Payroll Managers
- Payroll
Administrators/Compensation Managers
- Benefits
and Leave Managers/Compliance Managers
- Employment
Counsel/Labor and Employment Attorneys
- In-House
Counsel/Operations Managers
- Business
Owners/Company Presidents
- Chief
Operating Officers/Controllers
- Finance
Managers/Multi-State HR Managers
- California HR Managers/Workforce Relations Specialists
- Personnel Managers/People Operations Managers/Leave of Absence Administrators
Mark Schwartz in an employment tax specialist with over 25 years of payroll tax experience. He has been an employment tax auditor with the state of California. During that time he managed an audit caseload of over 25 businesses – ranging from home based businesses to large multinational corporations. He understands the full range of employment tax law for both federal and state purposes.
For the last 15 years Mark has helped hundreds of clients sort out confusing details in order to effectively run payroll operations. Mark prides himself on listening attentively to his clients, and not ceasing his consulting duties until the client is fully satisfied with the answers and advice.
Mark’s audio conferences are jam packed with all details applicable to any given topic. He incorporates his experience with the laws and regulations – this gives audiences a leg up on applying the knowledge to their business. Furthermore, mark is generous with this time for anyone who attends a live conference. He will help research anything on the given topic – free of charge.
Enrollment Options
Tags: California Wage and Hour, California Employment Law, HR Compliance, Payroll Compliance, Overtime Rules, Wage Orders, Paid Sick Leave, Meal and Rest Breaks, Final Pay Rules, Pay Stub Compliance, Labor Law Updates, Employer Compliance, Leave Compliance, Recordkeeping, Employee Classification, Mark Schwartz, April 2026,

