Gutierrez v. Brand Energy Services of California
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Gutierrez, a former Brand employee, sued Brand in a proposed class action for nonpayment of pre-shift employer-mandated travel time, citing Labor Code and Business and Professions Code provisions. The trial court granted Brand summary judgment before class certification, finding that a complete defense existed under California Industrial Welfare Commission Wage Order 16-2001, section 5(D). According to the court, the provision permitted union-represented employees and their employers to enter into collective bargaining agreements (CBAs) that waived the right to all compensation for employer-mandated travel time. The court found that the applicable CBAs, as amended by a 2017 letter of understanding, confirmed a bargained-for practice wherein Brand compensated its employees for post-shift but not pre-shift mandatory travel time.
The court of appeal reversed. Wage Order 16 does not state that union-represented employees and employers can avoid paying any compensation whatsoever for employer-mandated travel time. Section 5(A) identifies two rates of pay, the employee’s regular rate and, if applicable, the premium rate and provides that it applies to any employees covered by a valid CBA “unless the [CBA] expressly provides otherwise.” Section 5 does not mention, much less override, the separate requirement under section 4(B) that employees receive compensation “not less than the applicable minimum wage for all hours worked.”
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