Senate Committee to Consider 3 Cost Driver Bills Today

Affordability AgendaThree bills identified by the California Chamber of Commerce as Cost Drivers are scheduled to be considered today by the Senate Labor, Public Employment and Retirement Committee.

Joining the CalChamber in opposing the bills as Cost Drivers that ultimately will lead to higher costs for consumers and further increase the cost of living in California are coalitions of employer groups and local chambers of commerce.

On the committee’s agenda are:

  • SB 7 (McNerney; D-Pleasanton): Restricts Use of Automated Decision Systems in Employment. The bill imposes impractical requirements on employers of every size related to automated decision systems, which will discourage the use of such tools and subject employers to costly litigation and onerous new compliance procedures.
  • SB 310 (Wiener; D-San Francisco): Expands Private Right of Action for Penalties. SB 310 creates a new private right of action for wage and hour penalties that will be manipulated by trial attorneys, undermining the 2024 Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) reform, which sought to reduce avenues for litigation abuse.
  • SB 632 (Arreguín; D-Berkeley): Expands Costly Presumption of Injury. SB 632 significantly increases workers’ compensation costs for public and private hospitals by presuming certain diseases and injuries are caused by the workplace and establishes an extremely concerning precedent for expanding presumptions into the private sector. Both similar and much narrower versions of this bill have been tried nine times before and failed every time.

Staff Contact: Ashley Hoffman

Ashley Hoffman
Ashley Hoffman joined the California Chamber of Commerce in August 2020 as a policy advocate specializing in labor and employment and workers’ compensation issues. She was named a senior policy advocate starting January 1, 2024 in recognition of her efforts on behalf of members. Hoffman holds a B.A. with high honors in political science from the University of California, Santa Barbara, and earned her J.D. from the UCLA School of Law where she was a Michael T. Masin scholar, an editor at the UCLA Law Review, and staff member for the Women’s Law Journal. See full bio.