160.12999.
(a) On or before September 30, 2019, and on or before September 30 each year thereafter, a private employer that has 100 or more employees and who is required to file an annual Employer Information Report (EEO-1) pursuant to federal law shall submit a pay data report to the department. The department shall make the reports available to the Department of Fair Employment and
Housing upon request.(b) The pay data report shall include the following information:
(1) The number of employees by race, ethnicity, and sex in each of the following job categories:
(A) Executive or senior level officials and managers.
(B) First or mid level mid-level officials and managers.
(C) Professionals.
(D) Technicians.
(E) Sales workers.
(F) Administrative support workers.
(G) Craft workers.
(H) Operatives.
(I) Laborers and helpers.
(J) Service workers.
(2) The number of employees by race, ethnicity, and sex, whose annual earnings fall within each of the pay bands used by the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics in the Occupation Occupational Employment
Statistics survey. For purposes of establishing these numbers, an employer shall use each employee’s total earnings as shown on the Internal Revenue Service Form W-2 for a 12-month period looking back from any pay period between July 1 and September 30 of each calendar year. Employers shall tabulate and report the number of employees whose W-2 earnings for the prior 12 months fell within each pay band.
(c) For part-time and partial-year employment, the employer shall include the total number of hours worked by each employee counted in each pay band over the last 12 months.
(d) For employers with multiple establishments, the employer shall submit a report for each establishment and a consolidated report that includes all employees.
(e) The report shall include a section for employers to provide clarifying remarks regarding any of the information provided. An employer is not required to provide clarifying remarks.
(f) If an employer is required to file an Employer Information Report, otherwise known as the EEO-1 Report, with the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission or other federal agency that includes the same or substantially similar pay data information required under this section, the employer may satisfy compliance with this section by submitting the Employer Information Report to the department.
(g)(1)An employer who does not comply with this section is subject to a civil penalty of five hundred dollars ($500) for the initial violation and five thousand dollars ($5,000) for a subsequent violation.
(2)If, upon inspection or investigation, the Labor Commissioner determines that a violation of this section has occurred, the commissioner may issue a citation. The procedures for issuing, contesting, and enforcing citations and judgments for civil penalties issued by the commissioner for violations of this section shall be the same as set forth in Section 1197.1.
(3)Any civil penalties collected pursuant to this section shall be deposited into the Labor Enforcement and Compliance Fund, created pursuant to subdivision (e) of Section 62.5, and upon appropriation by the Legislature, shall be allocated to the Division
of Labor Standards Enforcement to enforce Section 1197.5.
(g) If the department does not receive the required report from an employer, the department may seek an order requiring the employer to comply with these requirements and shall be entitled to recover the costs associated with seeking the order for compliance.
(h) For purposes of this section, both of the following definitions shall apply:
(1) “Employee” means an individual on an employer’s payroll, including a part-time individual, for whom the employer is required to withhold federal social security taxes from that individual’s wages.
(2) “Establishment” means an economic unit producing goods or services.
(i) It shall be unlawful for any officer or employee of the department or the Department of Fair Employment and Housing to make public in any manner whatever any individually identifiable information obtained pursuant to their authority under this section prior to the institution of any proceeding investigation or enforcement proceeding by the department under Section 1197.5 of this code
the Labor Code or Section 12940 of the Government Code this code involving such information. information, and only to the extent necessary for purposes of the enforcement proceeding. For the purposes of this subdivision, “individually identifiable information” includes data that is associated with a specific person or business.
(j) Any information disclosed to the department pursuant to
this section shall be considered confidential information and not subject to disclosure pursuant to the California Public Records Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 6250) of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code). 1).
(k) Notwithstanding subdivision (i), the department or the Department of Fair Employment and Housing may develop and publicize aggregate reports based on the data obtained pursuant
to their authority under this section, provided that the aggregate reports are reasonably calculated to prevent the association of any data with any individual business or person.
(l) The department shall maintain pay data reports for not less than 10 years.