California employers face constant pressure to make personnel decisions quickly. Terminations, separations, performance issues, and new hires often cannot wait for a lawyer’s calendar. The most effective way to handle these routine but high-risk situations is to have a core set of documents drafted, reviewed, and approved by employment counsel in advance. When the situation

After more than twenty years defending California employers, I have seen a consistent pattern: even companies with sophisticated systems struggle with one of the most fundamental compliance obligations in California employment law—maintaining, accessing, and analyzing employee time records. These challenges are not merely operational inconveniences. They routinely lead to unnecessary legal exposure, inflated PAGA penalties

This article continues our Friday’s Five series highlighting the major new California employment laws taking effect in 2026. In recent weeks, we’ve covered several significant bills impacting employers — from expanded employee rights and new recordkeeping requirements to pay transparency updates and workplace enforcement changes.

This week, we turn to Assembly Bill 692 (Kalra)