Plain English Breakdown
The candidate explanation included a statement about employers not being able to secure an exemption from this provision, which is implied by the bill text but not directly stated.
Changes to Employee Compensation Rules
This bill changes when employers must pay piece-work or commission employees for their work.
What This Bill Does
- It says that if an employee is paid based on how much they produce (piece-work) or a percentage of sales (commission), the employer must pay them by the end of the month after they earn it, instead of earlier in the month.
- If such employees leave their job, the bill requires employers to pay them within one month from when they left.
Who It Names or Affects
- Employees who are paid based on how much they produce (piece-work) or a percentage of sales (commission).
- Employers who have these types of workers.
Terms To Know
- Piece-work
- A way to pay employees based on the number of items they make or tasks they complete, rather than by hours worked.
- Commission
- Money earned as a percentage of sales made; often used for salespeople.
Limits and Unknowns
- The bill only applies to employees in private jobs where five or more people work.
- It does not apply to government workers or those working directly for the state, counties, cities, towns, or other local governments.