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A05000 Summary:

BILL NOA05000
 
SAME ASSAME AS S04473
 
SPONSORBronson
 
COSPNSRSimon, McMahon, Raga
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd §§198 & 663, Lab L
 
Clarifies that the statutory damages available for certain wage violations are not punitive in nature and are designed to be liquidated damages rather than penalties or to compensate workers for the employer's failure to prevent wage theft and for the harm to employees that results from such failure.
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A05000 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                          5000
 
                               2025-2026 Regular Sessions
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                    February 10, 2025
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  M.  of A. BRONSON, SIMON, McMAHON, RAGA -- read once and
          referred to the Committee on Labor
 
        AN ACT to amend the labor law, in relation  to  liquidated  damages  for
          labor law violations
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:

     1    Section 1. Short Title. This act shall be known and may  be  cited  as
     2  the "labor law enforcement parity act".
     3    §  2. Legislative Findings. 1. The legislature finds and declares that
     4  it has always been its intention that the remedies  provided  under  the
     5  labor  law  be  fully  and equally enforceable in both state and federal
     6  court. However, some  state  courts  have  misconstrued  the  liquidated
     7  damages  available for violations of the labor law as penalties, despite
     8  the fact that the legislature amended the labor law's liquidated damages
     9  provision in 2009 and 2010 to bring it in  line  with  the  compensatory
    10  purposes of the Fair Labor Standards Act's liquidated damages provision.
    11  As  a  result, while employees have been able to recover the full amount
    12  of compensatory  liquidated  damages  owed  to  them  in  federal  court
    13  actions,  they  are  not  always  able  to do so in state court actions.
    14  Accordingly, the first purpose of this  bill  is  to  clarify  that  all
    15  liquidated  damages available for violations of the labor law, which are
    16  generally an amount equal to the unpaid or underpaid wages, are  compen-
    17  satory in nature and not penalties.
    18    2.    The legislature further finds and declares that both federal and
    19  state courts have recently misconstrued the purposes of New  York  Labor
    20  Law  §  195.  Despite  allowing claims for violations of the labor law's
    21  wage notice and wage statement provisions  to  proceed  for  years,  and
    22  allowing  workers  to  recover the full statutory damages provided under
    23  the labor law for these  violations,  some  federal  courts  have  begun
    24  dismissing  these claims for lack of Article III standing, claiming that
    25  these violations do not cause workers any  concrete  injury.  Meanwhile,
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD06533-01-5

        A. 5000                             2
 
     1  some  state courts have misconstrued the statutory damages available for
     2  violations of the wage notice and wage statement provisions as penalties
     3  and have thus not allowed  workers  to  recover  the  statutory  damages
     4  provided,  even  though  they  have  been  able to do so in many federal
     5  courts. Accordingly, the second purpose of this bill is to clarify  that
     6  the  statutory  damages  available for violations of the wage notice and
     7  statement provisions of the law are not  punitive  in  nature,  and  are
     8  instead  designed  to compensate workers for their employer's failure to
     9  prevent wage theft in the first place, and the harms employees suffer as
    10  a result, including being unable to discover, identify, and remedy  wage
    11  theft  promptly  and possible loss of valid wage theft claims due to the
    12  passage of the statute of limitations, the stress and uncertainty caused
    13  by unclear pay details, which can significantly impact their ability  to
    14  make informed employment choices, effectively manage their finances, and
    15  plan for personal, familial, or social commitments.
    16    §  3.  Subdivision  3  of  section 198 of the labor law, as amended by
    17  chapter 397 of the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
    18    3. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, an  action  to  recover
    19  upon  a  liability  imposed by this article must be commenced within six
    20  years.  The statute of limitations shall be  tolled  from  the  date  an
    21  employee  files  a  complaint  with the commissioner or the commissioner
    22  commences an investigation, whichever is  earlier,  until  an  order  to
    23  comply  issued  by  the commissioner becomes final, or where the commis-
    24  sioner does not issue an order, until the date on which the commissioner
    25  notifies the complainant that the investigation has concluded.  Investi-
    26  gation  by  the  commissioner  shall  not be a prerequisite to nor a bar
    27  against a person bringing a civil action under this section. All employ-
    28  ees shall have the right  to  recover  full  wages,  benefits  and  wage
    29  supplements,  statutory  damages,  and liquidated damages accrued during
    30  the six years previous to the commencing of such  action,  whether  such
    31  action  is  instituted by the employee or by the commissioner, including
    32  in a class action.   There is  no  exception  to  liability  under  this
    33  section  for  the  unauthorized  failure  to pay wages, benefits or wage
    34  supplements.
    35    § 4. Subdivision 1 of section 663 of the  labor  law,  as  amended  by
    36  chapter 564 of the laws of 2010, is amended to read as follows:
    37    1.  By  employee. If any employee is paid by [his or her] such employ-
    38  ee's employer less than the wage to which [he or she] such  employee  is
    39  entitled under the provisions of this article, [he or she] such employee
    40  shall  recover  in  a civil action the amount of any such underpayments,
    41  together with costs all reasonable attorney's fees, prejudgment interest
    42  as required under the civil practice  law  and  rules,  and  unless  the
    43  employer  proves  a good faith basis to believe that its underpayment of
    44  wages was in compliance with the law, an additional amount as liquidated
    45  damages equal to one hundred percent of the total of such  underpayments
    46  found  to be due, including in a class action. Any agreement between the
    47  employee, and the employer to work for less than such wage shall  be  no
    48  defense to such action.
    49    §  5.  This  act  shall take effect immediately and shall apply to all
    50  actions concerning labor law violations that  occurred  within  the  six
    51  years prior to this act's effective date.
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