Who
Would Be Covered
- City service
contractors with contracts over $25,000,
recipients of city financial assistance of $1
million or more in a one-year period, lessees or
licensees on City property.
- Businesses within
the defined Coastal Zone with annual receipts of
$43 million or more; the Coastal Zone is defined
as the area within the City specified in the
California Coastal Act, but including both sides
of 4th Street.
- Contractors or
subcontractors of all covered businesses.
- Non-profit
corporations under 501 (c)(3) of the Internal
Revenue Code are exempt from coverage.
Wages and
Benefits
- We propose that
covered employers pay a wage of no less than the
hourly rates set in the Ordinance; initial rates
shall be $10.69 per hour with health benefits,
$13.19 without health benefits.
The wage should be adjusted annually to
correspond with increases to the rate of the
Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers,
published by the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau
of Labor Statistics.
- We propose that
employers provide at least fifteen compensated
days off per year for sick leave, vacation, or
other personal necessity leave.
- Health benefits
required for an employer to pay the lower hourly
wage should be $2.50 per hour toward the provision
of health care benefits for employees and
dependents. This
rate reflects the cost of basic family benefit
plans from insurance carriers in the Los Angeles
metropolitan area.
- Employers should be
required to inform their employees of their
possible right to the federal Earned Income Tax
Credit.
Administration
- We propose that the
City establish a Living Wage Enforcement Section
in the City Manager’s Office to oversee
compliance with the Ordinance, including, but not
limited to, maintaining records of employers
required to comply with the Ordinance, taking and
investigating complaints and issuing findings on
those complaints, and receiving and processing
applications for waivers for economic hardship.
- We also propose
that the City Council appoint an Advisory
Committee on Living Wage Enforcement to develop
rules and regulations for implementation of this
ordinance. Members
of the Commission would include city staff and
members of the public including at least one
worker affected by the Ordinance.
Rules and regulations would be approved and
adopted by the City Council.
The Commission would oversee implementation
of the Ordinance, but would have no direct
enforcement power.
Enforcement and
Implementation
- All employers
should be required to post forms in all work sites
covered by the Ordinance which include information
on the minimum wage, time off, EITC, and
enforcement provisions of the Ordinance.
The form, developed by the City, must be
translated into Spanish and any other dominant
language in the workplace.
- An employee
claiming violation of the Ordinance would fill out
a complaint form with the Living Wage Enforcement
Section, which shall conduct an investigation.
A finding by the Enforcement Section could
be appealed to a hearing officer; hearings before
a hearing officer must be held within 30 days of
the request for hearing.
- If the City or a
court finds an employer has violated the
Ordinance, the City may disqualify the employer
from receiving a city contract or financial
assistance for up to two years and/or may
disqualify the employer from participating in all
Santa Monica Convention and Visitors Bureau
advertising and activities for up to two years.
Specific
Prohibitions – Retaliation and Harassment
- Retaliation would
be specifically prohibited by the Ordinance for
anyone who asserts any rights under the Ordinance,
whether or not the complaint is actually covered
by the Ordinance. Where
an employer takes an adverse action against an
employee within 60 days of the employee’s
assertion of rights under this ordinance, the
adverse action will be assumed to be retaliation.
- Harassment of
employees by employers would be a separate
prohibited violation of this Ordinance.
Employers and their agents may not
threaten, harass, intimidate or in any way impede
employees who exercise their rights under this
Ordinance; harassment includes confinement of
employees by any form of duress without the
employee’s consent where the duress or
confinement is not a normal part of the employee’s
employment.
Waivers for
Economic Hardship
- The Commission on
Living Wage Enforcement and Implementation shall
develop criteria for granting waivers for Economic
Hardship. Criteria may include, but not be limited
to, the Applicant’s assets, liabilities,
revenues and wages and benefits paid to employees
and whether the waiver will further the interests
of the City in enabling employees to advance into
permanent living wage jobs.
- Employers who
contend that compliance with this Ordinance would
create an economic hardship may apply for a waiver
from all or part of this Ordinance.
Waiver applications must be filed with the
Living Wage Enforcement Section and must set out
the reasons for granting the waiver.
Supersession by
Collective Agreement
- The parties to a
collective bargaining agreement may, by that
agreement supersede all or some of the provisions
of this Ordinance.
This is similar to provisions in most city
and county Living Wage Ordinances and a provision
in proposed Measure KK.
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