For the past 20 years, the Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) has been a thorn to employer’s side in California. In 2004, PAGA, a California state law, was enacted to create a private right of action for workers to file representative actions on behalf of themselves and other workers based on specific labor code violations. The purpose behind enacting such legislation was to give authority to “aggrieved employees” to enforce the law, thereby alleviating the strain on California’s Labor and Workforce Development Agency (LWDA). This private right of action empowered workers with the authority to enforce California’s numerous labor laws that the LWDA purportedly did not have resources to pursue. Successful PAGA litigants recover 25 percent of monetary penalties for state labor law violations, while the remaining 75 percent of penalties go to the LWDA. The statute also allows plaintiffs’ lawyers to recover attorneys’ fees if they prevail on a PAGA lawsuit. Continue Reading Is this the end of PAGA?
Victoria Shin
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