NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A9742
SPONSOR: Moya
 
TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the general business law, in relation
to employment agencies
 
PURPOSE OR GENERAL IDEA OF BILL: To provide new provisions to prevent
fraud in employment agencies by modifying license procedures, general
practice procedures, and enforcement.
 
SUMMARY OF SPECIFIC PROVISIONS: Section 1- amends Section 171 of the
general business law to add a new subdivision 12 to require a "bona fide
order", as defined in the bill, be maintained on a 45 day basis between
an employer and an employment agency that clearly defines the details of
the position available and other criteria.
Section 2- Paragraph b of subdivision 2 of section 173 of the general
business law is amended to include a contract, statement of terms and
conditions, and receipt be approved by the commissioner before a license
is granted.
Section 3- Subdivisions 1 and 2 of section 174 of the general business
law are amended to require that certain license information be posted on
the commissioner's website and that any criminal history be disclosed to
the applicant.
Section 4- Section 179 of the general business law is amended to add
bona fide order to documents that agencies are required to keep on file.
Section 5- Section 181 of the general business law is amended to require
statements of terms and conditions be given to each applicant for
employment, clarifies required information to be included in contracts
with employment applicants, requires the commissioner to prepare
templates that comply with those requirements in dual languages,
requires contracts and receipts be kept on file for three years, and
provide that receipts must state that job applicants cannot be charged a
fee prior to being referred to a job they accept.
Section 6- Subdivisions 1 and 3 of section 185 of the general business
law are amended and a new subdivision 1-a is added to change advance fee
charges and to require reimbursement of past advanced fees charged to
class A and A-1 workers who were not hired by the agency.
Section 7- Subdivision 2 of section 186 of the general business law is
amended to cap fees when a job applicant fails to report to work.
Section 8- Subdivision 3 of section 187 of the general business law is
amended to require employment agencies include their license number in
any advertisements.
Section 9- Section 189 of the general business law is amended to grant
the commissioner and the attorney general the power to enforce this
article, explains what inspections can be made to ensure compliance with
this article, allows charges to be made against licensed and unlicensed
agencies. This section also explains the penalties for violating the
article and allows for aggrieved persons to pursue civil action.
Section 10- Section 190 of the general business law is amended to
explain the criminal penalties for violating the article.
Section 11- Adds a new section 195 to the general business law to
provide job applicants protection from retaliation from employment agen-
cies.
 
JUSTIFICATION: This legislation brings existing provisions regulating
employment agencies up-to-date and strengthens protections for job seek-
ers. In order to accomplish these goals, the legislation: 1) amends the
General Business Law to more effectively deter employment agency abuse;
2) facilitates enforcement of the General Business Law; 3) empowers job
seekers to hold employment agencies accountable; and 4) improves the job
market for low-wage workers.
The current employment agency laws offer insufficient protection for job
seekers, especially low-wage workers. For example, the current law
contains an advance fee exception that exposes the most vulnerable job
seekers to employment agency fraud. Under Section 185 of Article 11 of
the General Business Law, employment agencies may charge fees to low-
wage workers (i.e. domestic workers and manual workers) before placing
workers in a job. All other classes of worker pay agencies only after
securing a job. Agencies routinely profit from the advance fee exception
by accepting fees from low-wage workers and failing to provide a service
in return. In addition, inadequate penalties under the current General
Business Law fail to deter employment agency abuse. Article 11 allows
the New York City Department of Consumer Affairs or the New York State
Department of Labor to impose a penalty of no more than $500 for each
violation of the employment agency laws. This small and optional penalty
has proved ineffective.
The existing General Business Law also makes it exceedingly difficult
for job seekers to hold employment agencies accountable. Job seekers
cannot defend their rights if they do not understand them. This legis-
lation requires employment agencies to provide basic and important
information to job seekers about their rights. In addition, under the
current law, job seekers cannot hold employment agencies accountable
through civil actions. Workers must rely on overburdened government
agencies to address all abuse. This legislation will permit job seekers
to bring civil actions against employment agencies that violate the law.
A recent study in Queens, New York conducted by New Immigrant Community
Empowerment (NICE) and the Urban Justice Center (UJC) found that: 1) 81%
of survey respondents who did not find a job through an agency were
still charged a fee (average, $122); 2) Agencies do not inform job seek-
ers that fees are refundable and, in violation of existing provisions,
refuse to refund excess fees; 3) One third of survey respondents were
offered jobs paying below the state minimum wage by agencies in
violation of the New York Labor Law and the General Business Law; and 4)
Job seekers who receive written contracts from agencies are more likely
to secure jobs and less likely to experience fraud. However, among immi-
grant job seekers surveyed, two thirds were not given a written
contract.
Employment agency abuse affects job seekers throughout the entire state.
There exist approximately 300 licensed employment agencies in New York
City. Approximately 100 licensed employment agencies operate outside of
the five boroughs, with many of those concentrated on Long Island and in
Westchester. However, as the study cited above noted, many more unli-
censed agencies operate throughout the state. It is time to provide
adequate and meaningful protections to low-wage workers as they look for
work across the state of New York.
 
PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: This is a new bill
 
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS:
 
EFFECTIVE DATE: Immediately
STATE OF NEW YORK
________________________________________________________________________
9742
IN ASSEMBLY
May 20, 2014
___________
Introduced by M. of A. MOYA -- read once and referred to the Committee
on Consumer Affairs and Protection
AN ACT to amend the general business law, in relation to employment
agencies
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-bly, do enact as follows:
1 Section 1. Section 171 of the general business law is amended by
2 adding a new subdivision 12 to read as follows:
3 12. "Bona fide order" means a written order from an employer directed
4 to an employment agency stating that the employer requests that the
5 employment agency refer one or more job applicants for a specific posi-
6 tion or positions within a specified and limited application period. An
7 employment agency must renew a bona fide order after forty-five days if
8 it intends to refer an applicant for the position described in such bona
9 fide order, and the employment agency must specify on the bona fide
10 order the name of the representative of the prospective employer who
11 authorized the renewal and the date on which the renewal was authorized.
12 The bona fide order shall also include a written statement setting forth
13 the terms and conditions of employment for the position described in the
14 order; such written statement shall include, at a minimum, the following
15 information:
16 a. the name of the employer, any "doing business as" names used by the
17 employer, the physical address of the employer's main office or princi-
18 pal place of business, and a mailing address if different, the telephone
19 number of the employer, plus such other information as the commissioner
20 deems material and necessary;
21 b. the place or places of employment;
22 c. the hours of work per day and number of days per week to be worked;
23 d. the rate or rates of pay and basis thereof, whether paid by the
24 hour, shift, day, week, salary, piece, commission, or other, allowances,
25 if any, claimed as part of the minimum wage, including tip, meal, or
26 lodging allowances;
EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
[] is old law to be omitted.
LBD13485-05-4
A. 9742 2
1 e. the circumstances under which the employee will be paid a premium
2 for working in excess of an established number of hours per day, week,
3 or month, or for working on designated nights, weekends, or holidays;
4 f. the anticipated period of employment;
5 g. any provision to the employee, and how long the provision will be
6 provided by the employer, and any costs to the employee associated with
7 the provision, including but not limited to, transportation to and from
8 work, housing, health insurance or health care, paid sick or annual
9 leave and holiday or holidays, pension or retirement benefits, personal
10 protective equipment required for work, workers' compensation and infor-
11 mation about the insurance policy and rules regarding reporting of acci-
12 dents or injuries, and unemployment compensation; and
13 h. the nature of the work to be performed by the employee.
14 § 2. Paragraph b of subdivision 2 of section 173 of the general busi-
15 ness law, as added by chapter 632 of the laws of 1975, is amended to
16 read as follows:
17 b. The application for a license shall be accompanied by samples or
18 accurate facsimiles of each and every form [which the applicant for a
19 license will require applicants for employment to execute], contract,
20 statement of terms and conditions, and receipt, as required under
21 section one hundred eighty-one of this article, and such forms,
22 contracts, statements of terms and conditions, and receipts must be
23 approved by the commissioner before a license may be issued. The commis-
24 sioner shall approve any such forms which fairly and clearly represent
25 contractual terms and conditions between the proposed employment agency
26 and applicants for employment, such as are permitted by this article.
27 § 3. Subdivisions 1 and 2 of section 174 of the general business law,
28 subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 164 of the laws of 2003, subdivision
29 2 as amended by chapter 632 of the laws of 1975, are amended to read as
30 follows:
31 1. Upon the receipt of an application for a license, the commissioner
32 shall cause the name and address of the applicant, the name under which
33 the employment agency is to be conducted, and the street and number of
34 the place where the agency is to be conducted, to be posted on the
35 commissioner's website, as well as in a conspicuous place in his public
36 office. Such agency shall be used exclusively as an employment agency
37 and for no other purpose, except as hereinafter provided. The commis-
38 sioner shall investigate or cause to be investigated the character and
39 responsibility of the applicant and agency manager and shall examine or
40 cause to be examined the premises designated in such application as the
41 place in which it is proposed to conduct such agency.
42 The commissioner shall require all applicants for licenses and agency
43 managers to be fingerprinted. Such fingerprints shall be submitted to
44 the division of criminal justice services for a state criminal history
45 record check, as defined in subdivision one of section three thousand
46 thirty-five of the education law, and may be submitted to the federal
47 bureau of investigation for a national criminal history record check.
48 The criminal history information, if any, received by the department of
49 labor shall be considered in accordance with the provisions of article
50 twenty-three-A of the correction law and subdivisions fifteen and
51 sixteen of section two hundred ninety-six of the executive law. A
52 reasonable time before making a determination on the application pursu-
53 ant to this subdivision, the department shall provide the applicant
54 criminal history information, if any. Where such criminal history infor-
55 mation is provided, the department shall also provide a copy of article
56 twenty-three-A of the correction law, and inform such applicant of his
A. 9742 3
1 or her right to seek correction of any incorrect information contained
2 in such criminal history information pursuant to the regulations and
3 procedures established by the division of criminal justice services.
4 2. Any person may file, within one week after such application is so
5 posted [in the said office], a written protest against the issuance of
6 such license. Such protest shall be in writing and signed by the person
7 filing the same or his authorized agent or attorney, and shall state
8 reasons why the said license should not be granted. Upon the filing of
9 such protest the commissioner shall appoint a time and place for the
10 hearing of such application, and shall give at least five days' notice
11 of such time and place to the applicant and the person filing such
12 protest. The commissioner may administer oaths, subpoena witnesses and
13 take testimony in respect to the matters contained in such application
14 and protests or complaints of any character for violation of this arti-
15 cle, and may receive evidence in the form of affidavits pertaining to
16 such matters. If it shall appear upon such hearing or from the
17 inspection, examination or investigation made by the commissioner that
18 the applicant or agency manager is not a person of good character or
19 responsibility; or that he or the agency manager has not had at least
20 two years experience as a placement employee, vocational counsellor or
21 in related activities, or other satisfactory business experience which
22 similarly tend to establish the competence of such individual to direct
23 and operate the placement activities of the agency; or that the place
24 where such agency is to be conducted is not a suitable place therefor;
25 or that the applicant has not complied with the provisions of this arti-
26 cle; the said application shall be denied and a license shall not be
27 granted. Each application should be granted or refused within thirty
28 days from the date of its filing.
29 § 4. Section 179 of the general business law, as amended by chapter
30 632 of the laws of 1975, is amended to read as follows:
31 § 179. Registers and other records to be kept. It shall be the duty of
32 every licensed person to keep a register, approved by the commissioner,
33 in which shall be entered, in the English language, the date of the
34 application for employment, the date the applicant started work and the
35 name and address of every applicant from whom a fee or deposit is
36 charged, the amount of the fee or deposit and the service for which it
37 is received or charged. Such licensed person shall also enter in the
38 same or in a separate register, approved by the commissioner, in the
39 English language, the name and address of every employer from whom a fee
40 is received or charged or to whom the licensed person refers an appli-
41 cant who has paid or is charged a fee, the date of such employer's
42 request or assent that applicants be furnished, the kind of position for
43 which applicants are requested, the names of the applicants sent from
44 whom a fee or deposit is received or charged with the designation of the
45 one employed, the amount of the fee or deposit charged, and the rate of
46 salary or wages agreed upon. It shall also be the duty of every licensed
47 person to keep complete and accurate written records in the English
48 language of all receipts and income received or derived directly from
49 the operation of his employment agency, and to keep records concerning
50 [job] bona fide orders. No such licensed person, his agent or employees,
51 shall make any false entry in such records. It shall be the duty of
52 every licensed person to communicate orally or in writing with at least
53 one of the persons mentioned as references for every applicant for work
54 in private families, or employed in a fiduciary capacity, and the result
55 of such investigation shall be kept on file in such agency for a period
56 of at least three years. Every register and all records, including bona
A. 9742 4
1 fide orders, kept pursuant to the requirements of this article shall be
2 retained on the premises of the agency concerned for three years follow-
3 ing the date on which the last entry thereon was made [except a job
4 order which shall be retained for one year following the date on which
5 it was received].
6 § 5. Section 181 of the general business law, as added by chapter 893
7 of the laws of 1958, subdivision 1 as added and subdivision 2 as amended
8 by chapter 632 of the laws of 1975, subdivision 3 as separately amended
9 by chapters 1010 and 1083 of the laws of 1960, and subdivision 4 as
10 amended by chapter 479 of the laws of 1963, is amended to read as
11 follows:
12 § 181. Contracts, statements of terms and conditions, and receipts. It
13 shall be the duty of every employment agency to give to each applicant
14 for employment:
15 1. A true copy of every contract executed between such agency and such
16 applicant, which shall have printed on it or attached to it a statement
17 setting forth in a clear and concise manner the provisions of sections
18 one hundred eighty-five, and one hundred eighty-six of this article.
19 2. [Information as to the name and address of the person to whom the
20 applicant is to apply for such employment, the kind of service to be
21 performed, the anticipated rate of wages or compensation, the agency's
22 fee for the applicant based on such anticipated wages or compensation,
23 whether such employment is permanent or temporary, the name and address
24 of the person authorizing the hiring of such applicant, and the cost of
25 transportation if the services are required outside of the city, town or
26 village where such agency is located. If the job is a conditionally
27 fee-paid job, the conditions under which the applicant will be required
28 to pay a fee shall be clearly set forth in a separate agreement in ten-
29 point type signed by the job applicant.] (a) An employment agency shall
30 issue a written statement of terms and conditions to each job applicant
31 on each occasion that the agency refers the applicant to a potential
32 employer. The written statement of terms and conditions shall be in
33 English and in the language identified by the applicant as the primary
34 language of such applicant. Every employment agency shall keep on file
35 in its principal place of business for a period of three years a copy of
36 each written statement of terms and conditions issued to each applicant
37 that is signed and dated by the applicant. The statement of terms and
38 conditions shall include, at a minimum, the following information: (i)
39 the name of the employer, any "doing business as" names used by the
40 employer, the physical address of the employer's main office or princi-
41 pal place of business, and a mailing address if different, the telephone
42 number of the employer, plus such other information as the commissioner
43 deems material and necessary; (ii) the place or places of employment;
44 (iii) the hours of work per day and number of days per week to be
45 worked; (iv) the rate or rates of pay and basis thereof, whether paid by
46 the hour, shift, day, week, salary, piece, commission, or other, allow-
47 ances, if any, claimed as part of the minimum wage, including tip, meal,
48 or lodging allowances; (v) the circumstances under which the employee
49 will be paid a premium for working in excess of an established number of
50 hours per day, week, or month, or for working on designated nights,
51 weekends, or holidays; (vi) the anticipated period of employment; (vii)
52 any provision to the employee, and how long the provision will be
53 provided by the employer, and any costs to the employee associated with
54 the provision, including but not limited to, transportation to and from
55 work, housing, health insurance or health care, paid sick or annual
56 leave and holiday or holidays, pension or retirement benefits, personal
A. 9742 5
1 protective equipment required for work, workers' compensation and infor-
2 mation about the insurance policy and rules regarding reporting of acci-
3 dents or injuries, and unemployment compensation; and (viii) the nature
4 of the work to be performed by the employee.
5 (b) The commissioner shall prepare templates that comply with the
6 requirements of paragraph (a) of this subdivision. Each such template
7 shall be dual-language, including English and one additional language.
8 The commissioner shall determine, in his or her discretion, which
9 languages to provide in addition to English, based on the size of the
10 New York state population that speaks each language and any other factor
11 that the commissioner shall deem relevant. All such templates shall be
12 made available to employment agencies in such manner as determined by
13 the commissioner.
14 (c) When a job applicant identifies as his or her primary language a
15 language for which a template is not available from the commissioner,
16 the employment agency shall comply with this subdivision by providing
17 that employee an English-language statement.
18 (d) An employment agency shall not be penalized for errors or omis-
19 sions in the non-English portions of any notice provided by the commis-
20 sioner.
21 3. [A receipt for any fee, deposit, consideration, or payment which
22 such agency receives from such applicant, which shall have printed or
23 written on it the name of the applicant, the name and address of the
24 employment agency, the date and amount of such fee, deposit, consider-
25 ation or payment or portion thereof for which the receipt is given, the
26 purpose for which it was paid, and the signature of the person receiving
27 such payment. If the applicant for employment has been recruited from
28 outside the state for domestic or household employment the receipt shall
29 have printed on it, or attached to it, a copy of section one hundred
30 eighty-four of this article.] Every employment agency shall keep on file
31 in its principal place of business for a period of three years a state-
32 ment, signed by the employer of every applicant whom the employment
33 agency has placed, indicating that the employer has read and understood
34 the statement of terms and conditions required by subdivision two of
35 this section and that the employer has received a copy of that state-
36 ment.
37 4. [The original or duplicate-original copy of each such contract and
38 receipt shall be retained by every employment agency for three years
39 following the date on which the contract is executed or the payment is
40 made, and shall be made available for inspection by the commissioner or
41 his duly authorized agent or inspector, upon his request. Notwithstand-
42 ing the other provisions of such contracts, the monetary consideration
43 to be paid by the applicant shall not exceed the fee ceiling provided in
44 subdivision eight of section one hundred eighty-five.] A receipt for any
45 fee, consideration, or payment which an agency receives from an appli-
46 cant. The receipt shall have printed or written on it the name of the
47 applicant, the name and address of the employment agency, the date and
48 amount of such fee, consideration or payment or portion thereof for
49 which the receipt is given, the purpose for which it was paid, and the
50 signature of the person receiving such payment. The receipt shall also
51 include immediately above the place for signature of the person receiv-
52 ing payment, set off in a box and printed in bold and in caps, the
53 following statement: "An employment agency may not charge you, the job
54 applicant, a fee before referring you to a job that you accept. If you
55 pay a fee before accepting a job or pay a fee that otherwise violates
56 the law, you may demand a refund, which shall be repaid within seven (7)
A. 9742 6
1 days." The text contained in this box shall also be in English and in
2 the language identified by each applicant as the primary language of
3 such applicant.
4 5. The original or duplicate-original copy of each written contract,
5 each statement of terms and conditions required by subdivision two of
6 this section, and each receipt required by subdivision four of this
7 section shall be retained by every employment agency for three years
8 following the date on which the contract is executed. The records
9 required under this subdivision shall be made available for inspection
10 by the commissioner or his or her duly authorized agent or inspector,
11 upon such request.
12 § 6. Subdivisions 1 and 3 of section 185 of the general business law,
13 subdivision 1 as amended by chapter 460 of the laws of 2012 and subdivi-
14 sion 3 as amended by chapter 1010 of the laws of 1960, are amended and a
15 new subdivision 1-a is added to read as follows:
16 1. Circumstances permitting fee. An employment agency shall not charge
17 or accept a fee or other consideration unless in accordance with the
18 terms of a written contract with a job applicant[, except:
19 (a) for class "A" and "A-1" employment, and except] and after such
20 agency has been responsible for referring such job applicant to an
21 employer or such employer to a job applicant and where as a result ther-
22 eof such job applicant has been employed by such employer[; and
23 (b)], except for class "C" employment: [(i)] (a) after an agency has
24 been responsible for referring an artist to an employer or such employer
25 to an artist and where as a result thereof such artist has been employed
26 by such employer; or [(ii)] (b) after an agency represents an artist in
27 the negotiation or renegotiation of an original or pre-existing employ-
28 ment contract and where as a result thereof the artist enters into a
29 negotiated or renegotiated employment contract. For class "C" employment
30 pursuant to this paragraph, an employment agency shall provide an artist
31 with a statement setting forth in a clear and concise manner the
32 provisions of this section and section one hundred eighty-six of this
33 article.
34 The maximum fees provided for herein for all types of placements or
35 employment may be charged to the job applicant and a similar fee may be
36 charged to the employer provided, however, that with regard to place-
37 ments in class "B" employment, a fee of up to one and one-half times the
38 fee charged to the job applicant may be charged to the employer. By
39 agreement with an employment agency, the employer may voluntarily assume
40 payment of the job applicant's fee. The fees charged to employers by any
41 licensed person conducting an employment agency for rendering services
42 in connection with, or for providing employment in classes "A", "A-1"
43 and "B", as hereinafter defined in subdivision four of this section
44 where the applicant is not charged a fee shall be determined by agree-
45 ment between the employer and the employment agency. No fee shall be
46 charged or accepted for the registration of applicants for employees or
47 employment.
48 1-a. Fee refund. An employment agency who has charged or accepted a
49 fee or other consideration for classes "A" and "A-1" employment without
50 a contract prior to October first, two thousand fourteen, shall refund
51 the full amount to the job applicant by November first, two thousand
52 fifteen, if: (a) such fee or consideration did not lead to the job
53 applicant obtaining employment through the employment agency; or (b) the
54 fee or consideration was not applied to the job applicant's account for
55 services rendered by the employment agency.
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1 3. Deposits, advance fees. Notwithstanding any other provisions of
2 this section, an employment agency [may] shall not require or accept a
3 deposit or advance fee from any applicant [except an applicant for class
4 "A" or class "A1" employment, and only to the extent of the maximum fees
5 hereinafter provided. Such deposit or advance fee shall be offset
6 against any fee charged or accepted when such employment is obtained.
7 Any excess above the lawful fee shall be returned without demand there-
8 for, immediately after the employment agency has been notified that such
9 employment has been obtained; and all of such deposit or advance fee
10 shall be returned immediately upon demand therefor, if at the time of
11 the demand such employment has not been obtained]. Any deposit or
12 advance fee collected by an employment agency prior to October first,
13 two thousand fourteen, must be refunded to the applicant by November
14 first, two thousand fifteen, if: (a) such deposit or advance fee did not
15 lead to the job applicant obtaining employment through the employment
16 agency or (b) the deposit or advance fee was not applied to the job
17 applicant's account for services rendered by the employment agency.
18 § 7. Subdivision 2 of section 186 of the general business law, as
19 amended by chapter 1010 of the laws of 1960, is amended to read as
20 follows:
21 2. Failure to report: If a job applicant accepts employment and there-
22 after fails to report for work, the gross fee charged to such applicant
23 shall not exceed twenty-five per cent of the maximum fee allowed by
24 section one hundred eighty-five of this article[, provided however, if
25 the applicant remains with his same employer, the fee shall not exceed
26 fifty per cent]. If a job applicant accepts employment and fails to
27 report for work, no fee shall be charged to the employer.
28 § 8. Subdivision 3 of section 187 of the general business law, as
29 added by chapter 893 of the laws of 1958, is amended to read as follows:
30 (3) Advertise in newspapers or otherwise, or use letterheads or
31 receipts or other written or printed matter, unless such advertising or
32 other matter contains the name and address of the employment agency
33 [and] the word "agency", and the agency's license number.
34 § 9. Section 189 of the general business law, as amended by chapter
35 479 of the laws of 1963, subdivisions 1 and 2 as amended by chapter 721
36 of the laws of 2004, subdivisions 4 and 5 as amended by chapter 632 of
37 the laws of 1975, is amended to read as follows:
38 § 189. Enforcement of provisions of this article. 1. This article,
39 article nineteen-B of the labor law and sections 37.01, 37.03 and 37.05
40 of the arts and cultural affairs law shall be enforced by the commis-
41 sioner of labor, except that in the city of New York this article and
42 such sections shall be enforced by the commissioner of consumer affairs
43 of such city. In addition to the powers of the commissioner, the attor-
44 ney general shall have the power to enforce this article; such powers
45 include, but are not limited to, actions to restrain or enjoin such
46 violation. Nothing in this section shall in any way limit the rights or
47 remedies which are otherwise available to a person under any other law.
48 2. To effectuate the purposes of this article, article nineteen-B of
49 the labor law and sections 37.01, 37.03 and 37.05 of the arts and
50 cultural affairs law, the commissioner or any duly authorized agent or
51 inspector designated by such commissioner, shall have authority to
52 inspect [the premises, registers, contract forms, receipt books, appli-
53 cation forms, referral forms, reference forms, reference reports and
54 financial records of fees charged and refunds made of each employment
55 agency, which are essential to the operation of such agency, and of each
56 applicant for an employment agency license, as frequently as necessary
A. 9742 8
1 to ensure compliance with this article and such sections; but in]
2 employment agencies and applicants for an employment agency license as
3 frequently as necessary to ensure compliance with this article. The
4 following shall be subject to inspection: the premises; registers;
5 contracts signed by job applicants; statements of terms and conditions;
6 receipts; application forms; referral forms; bona fide orders from
7 prospective employers; written notifications from employers required by
8 section one hundred eighty-seven of this article; reference forms;
9 reference reports; records of fees charged; records of refunds made; and
10 any other record that an employment agency must maintain pursuant to
11 this article. In no event shall any employment agency be inspected less
12 frequently than once every eighteen months. Inspections may consist of
13 in-person visits to employment agencies. The commissioner shall also
14 have authority to subpoena records and witnesses or otherwise to conduct
15 investigations of any employer or other person where he or she has
16 reasonable grounds for believing that such employer or person is violat-
17 ing or has conspired or is conspiring with an employment agency to
18 violate this article or such sections.
19 3. To effectuate the purposes of this article, the commissioner may
20 make reasonable administrative rules within the standards set in this
21 article. Before such rules shall be issued, the commissioner shall
22 conduct a public hearing, giving due notice thereof to all interested
23 parties. No rule shall become effective until fifteen days after it has
24 been filed in the office of the department of state, if it is a rule of
25 the industrial commissioner, or in the office of the clerk of the city
26 of New York, if it is a rule of the commissioner of licenses of such
27 city, and copies thereof shall be furnished to all employment agencies
28 affected at least fifteen days prior to the effective date of such rule.
29 4. Complaints against any such licensed or unlicensed person [shall]
30 may be made orally or in writing to the commissioner, or be sent in an
31 affidavit form without appearing in person, and may be made by recog-
32 nized employment agencies, trade associations, or others. The commis-
33 sioner may hold a hearing on a complaint with the powers provided by
34 section one hundred seventy-four of this article. If a hearing is held,
35 reasonable notice thereof, not less than five days, shall be given in
36 writing to said [licensed] person by serving upon the [licensed] person
37 either personally, by mail, or by leaving the same with the person in
38 charge of his office, a concise statement of the facts constituting the
39 complaint, and the hearing shall commence before the commissioner with
40 reasonable speed but in no event later than two weeks from the date of
41 the filing of the complaint. The commissioner when investigating any
42 matters pertaining to the granting, issuing, transferring, renewing,
43 revoking, suspending or cancelling of any license is authorized in his
44 discretion to take such testimony as may be necessary on which to base
45 official action. When taking such testimony he may subpoena witnesses
46 and also direct the production before him of necessary and material
47 books and papers. A daily calendar of all hearings shall be kept by the
48 commissioner and shall be posted in a conspicuous place in his public
49 office for at least one day before the date of such hearings. The
50 commissioner shall render his decision within thirty days from the time
51 the matter is finally submitted to him. The commissioner shall keep a
52 record of all such complaints and hearings. In addition to the powers
53 of the commissioner, the attorney general may bring an action against
54 anyone who is alleged to have violated this article.
55 5. [Following such hearing if it has been shown] Upon a finding that
56 the licensed person or his agent, employee or anyone acting on his
A. 9742 9
1 behalf is guilty of violating any provision of this article or is not a
2 person of good character and responsibility, the commissioner may
3 suspend or revoke the license of such licensed person [and/or levy a
4 fine against such licensed person for each violation not to exceed five
5 hundred dollars]. Any employment agency found to have violated any
6 provision of this article shall be subject, for the first offense, to a
7 civil penalty not to exceed one thousand dollars per violation, and, for
8 each subsequent offense within six years of such previous offense, to a
9 civil penalty, not to exceed five thousand dollars per violation. If the
10 person subject to this article fails to pay the damages, fines, attor-
11 ney's fees, costs, or penalties awarded, the amount awarded may be
12 satisfied out of the bond amount required by this article. Whenever such
13 commissioner shall suspend or revoke the license of any employment agen-
14 cy, or shall levy a fine against [such] any agency, said determination
15 shall be subject to judicial review in proceedings brought pursuant to
16 article seventy-eight of the civil practice law and rules. Whenever
17 [such] an employment agency's license is revoked, another license or
18 agency manager permit shall not be issued within three years from the
19 date of such revocation to said licensed person or his agency manager or
20 to any person with whom the licensee has been associated in the business
21 of furnishing employment or engagements. Deputy commissioners, or other
22 officials designated to act on behalf of the commissioner, may conduct
23 hearings and act upon applications for licenses, and revoke or suspend
24 such licenses, or levy fines against an employment agency.
25 6. If any person uses any untrue or misleading statement, information,
26 or advertisement to sell its employment agency services or fails to
27 comply with the applicable provisions of this article, or the contract
28 does not comply with the applicable provisions of this article, then the
29 contract shall be void and unenforceable as contrary to public policy.
30 7. Any person aggrieved by a violation of this article may bring a
31 civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against any employment
32 agency or persons alleged to have violated the provisions of this arti-
33 cle. The court shall have jurisdiction to restrain violations of this
34 section and to order all appropriate relief, including enjoining the
35 conduct of any person or employment agency; ordering payment of damages,
36 costs and reasonable attorneys' fees to the aggrieved individual by the
37 person or entity found to be in violation of this article.
38 8. The remedies provided in this article are not exclusive and shall
39 be in addition to any other remedies or procedures provided in any other
40 law.
41 9. If any provisions of this article or the application thereof to any
42 person or circumstances is held unconstitutional, the remainder of the
43 article and the application of that provision to other persons and
44 circumstances shall not be affected thereby.
45 10. If an employment agency fails to maintain records as required
46 under this article, the credible testimony of an applicant shall form
47 the proper basis for the calculation of unpaid wages and/or unlawful
48 fees.
49 § 10. Section 190 of the general business law, as amended by chapter
50 632 of the laws of 1975, is amended to read as follows:
51 § 190. Penalties for violations. Any person who violates and the offi-
52 cers of a corporation and stockholders holding ten percent or more of
53 the stock of a corporation which is not publicly traded, who knowingly
54 permit the corporation to violate sections one hundred seventy-two, one
55 hundred seventy-three, one hundred seventy-six, one hundred eighty-four,
56 one hundred eighty-four-a, one hundred eighty-five, one hundred eighty-
A. 9742 10
1 five-a, one hundred eighty-six, or one hundred eighty-seven of this
2 article shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be
3 subject to a fine not to exceed [one thousand] two thousand five hundred
4 dollars per violation, or imprisonment for not more than one year, or
5 both, by any court of competent jurisdiction. The violation of any other
6 provision of this article shall be punishable by a fine not to exceed
7 [one] five hundred dollars or imprisonment for not more than thirty
8 days. Criminal proceedings based upon violations of these sections shall
9 be instituted by the commissioner, the attorney general, or a district
10 attorney and may be instituted by any persons aggrieved by such
11 violations.
12 § 11. The general business law is amended by adding a new section 195
13 to read as follows:
14 § 195. Protection from retaliation. It shall be unlawful for any
15 employment agency to retaliate or discriminate against any person
16 because he or she has opposed any practice or practices forbidden under
17 this article or because that person has filed a complaint, testified or
18 assisted in any proceeding under this article.
19 § 12. This act shall take effect immediately.