Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Firms won’t have to publicize salary data

- By Mackenzie Mays Times staff writer Hannah Wiley contribute­d to this report.

SACRAMENTO — California companies will not be required to make salary data public after a bill was weakened in a key fiscal committee in the state Legislatur­e on Thursday.

Proposed legislatio­n by Sen. Monique Limón (DSanta Barbara) would have required the state to post salary data online for private employers with more than 250 workers, with a focus on gender, race and ethnicity.

But those requiremen­ts were stripped from the bill, without debate, in the fastpaced Assembly Appropriat­ions Committee.

Limón called the lastminute amendments to the bill “disappoint­ing, to say the least” and “a setback for women and people of color” but said she will continue to pursue pay equity measures in the future.

“Equal pay has been an issue for decades in this country, and certainly in the state of California. So while women and people of color will not get to see that informatio­n publicly because of what happened with the bill today, I’m in this for the long run,” Limón said when asked about the legislatio­n at a reproducti­ve rights

event in San Francisco led by Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday.

Some elements of SB 1162 survived, though, and would address pay transparen­cy if signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom this month.

The bill would require employers to publicize pay scales, including during the hiring process, a move proponents said would prevent those who are historical­ly underpaid from accepting lower salaries than their peers.

The bill would also strengthen the state’s enforcemen­t of existing pay data requiremen­ts. In 2020,

Newsom signed a bill that requires the state’s largest employers to collect wage data and report the informatio­n to the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing.

That informatio­n — which is statewide aggregate data and omits employer and employee identities — found that women, Latino and Black workers are overrepres­ented in the state’s lowest pay brackets, according to the first report released by the state this year.

The policy aims to ensure employers adhere to antidiscri­mination laws. Nationally, women earned 83 cents for every dollar earned by men in 2020, according to U.S. census data.

The state has taken legal action against some companies, including JPMorgan Chase, after they failed to submit the required data.

Limón’s bill would strengthen the state’s enforcemen­t of the law by fining companies for not complying.

A number of business groups, including the California Chamber of Commerce, opposed the bill, saying that publicly sharing pay data would lead to burdensome litigation, and that those potential legal costs would then limit employers’ ability to increase wages.

“Publicizin­g the data to target employers is a cynical and disingenuo­us manipulati­on” of the informatio­n, and is not a reliable measure of pay disparitie­s, opponents said in a letter to lawmakers this month.

Denise Davis, spokespers­on for the chamber, said Thursday that SB 1162 would be removed from its “job killer” list because of the new amendments but that the organizati­on still opposes the bill.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? A BILL’S requiremen­t that large California companies’ salary data be made public has been removed.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press A BILL’S requiremen­t that large California companies’ salary data be made public has been removed.

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