By Roger M. Mason, Esq., Rachael E. Brown, Esq., Caitlin E. Kaufman, Esq.
Arbitration agreements are the single most effective way for California employers to mitigate class action litigation. While an enforceable arbitration agreement may bar an employee from maintaining a class action, it cannot prevent employees from filing representative actions under the Private Attorneys General Act (“PAGA”) or from recovering penalties under PAGA. An arbitration agreement can, however, require employees to arbitrate their individual PAGA claims, halting the litigation and, if the employer successfully defends those claims in arbitration, the employee will no longer be permitted to pursue the PAGA representative action in court. For these reasons, arbitration agreements can potentially save employers hundreds of thousands of dollars in litigation costs.
Here are 10 tips designed to ensure that arbitration agreements are enforceable:
What Employers Should Do Now: Contact counsel to draft arbitration agreements for all your employees. If you already have agreements in place, have them immediately reviewed to ensure compliance with the requirements highlighted above.
For more information about any of these employment legal updates, including information about conducting an HR Compliance Audit and/or Management Training, please contact our employment team at 408-356-3000 or via email: Roger Mason at rmason@smllp.com, Rachael Brown at reb@smllp.com, or Caitlin Kaufman at ckaufman@smllp.com.
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