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California SB 1162 Signed Into Law: Takes Effect Jan. 1

Trusaic

Effective January 1, 2023 , a mere three months from now, organizations around the country will have sweeping new reporting requirements to comply with. The first is that it requires employers with 100 or more employees to report employee mean and median pay data for combinations of gender and race/ethnicity.

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Watch Out California Employers: SB 1162 On Track To Become Law

Trusaic

It’s worth noting that the requirement to publicly disclose pay data reports was removed as part of the recent round of amendments. The Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH), also known as the Civil Rights Department, no longer has to publish organizations’ pay data online and available to the public.

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The Importance of Data Retention as It Relates to Pay Data Reporting

Trusaic

As employee salaries become more visible, employees who feel they’re not being paid fairly are more likely to file pay discrimination lawsuits, which leads to increasing pay data reporting requirements for employers. And yet discrimination in pay practices continues. That can be a daunting challenge.

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California SB 1162: Frequently Asked Questions

Trusaic

Poised to pinpoint patterns of wage discrimination, California SB 1162 may be seen as going further than any pay equity-related bill ever has. Employers with 100 or more employees and/or 100 labor contractors must also provide pay data reporting submissions annually. How does SB 1162 California define “pay scale”?

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The EU Pay Transparency and Pay Data Reporting Directive and What You Need to Know

Trusaic

The EU Pay Transparency and Pay Data Reporting Directive will introduce binding pay-transparency rules across the EU to tackle the gender salary gap. The directive primarily includes measures related to Pay Transparency, Pay Data Reporting, applicable reporting entities, and enforcement and penalty mechanisms.

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Pay Transparency: Court Order Directs OFCCP to Release EEO-1 Reports

Trusaic

A federal court in California has ordered the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) to release the EEO-1 reports of federal contractors. The contractors had filed an objection to the release of their data in response to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request. EEO-1 data is provided by specific job categories.

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California Pay Data Reporting Most Commonly Asked Questions

Trusaic

SB 973 authorizes California’s Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH) to enforce the annual reporting of pay and hours worked data for employers with California employees. Here are a few answers to frequently asked questions regarding California’s new pay data reporting requirement. of the Labor Code.”

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