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Bill > SF147


IA SF147

A bill for an act relating to wage payment collection issues arising between employers and employees, providing penalties and remedies, and including effective date provisions.


summary

Introduced
01/28/2025
In Committee
01/28/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

91st General Assembly

Bill Summary

This bill relates to the collection of wages from employers by employees under Code chapter 91A, the “Iowa Wage Payment Collection Law”. The bill provides that an employer has the burden to establish that a deduction from employees’ wages is lawful and that the employer must obtain written authorization for the deduction from the employee in advance. The bill removes the requirement that an employer be notified by the director of the department of inspections, appeals, and licensing before the employer is required to fulfill requirements relating to employee wage and benefit information. The bill requires an employer to notify employees in writing whose wages are determined based on a task, piece, mile, or load basis about the method used to calculate wages and when wages are earned. The bill establishes a rebuttable presumption that an employer did not pay the minimum wage if the employer does not maintain proper payroll records. The bill requires an employer to provide to each employee a statement of the employee’s earnings, deductions made, and as applicable the following: for an employee paid hourly, the number of hours worked during the pay period; for an employee paid on a percentage of sales or revenue generated, a list of sales or amount of revenue during the pay period; and for an employee paid based on the number of miles or loads performed, the applicable number performed during the pay period. The bill provides that when any specified violation of Code chapter 91A occurs, even if unintentional, an employer shall be liable for unpaid wages or expenses plus liquidated damages, court costs, and attorney fees incurred in recovering wages. The bill requires the director to employ wage investigators for the enforcement of Code chapter 91A. The bill requires the director, upon the written complaint of the employee involved, to determine whether wages have not been paid and may constitute an enforceable claim. Under current law, making such a determination is discretionary. The bill increases the period after which the director is prohibited from accepting complaints for unpaid wages and liquidated damages to three years from the date the wages became due and payable. Under current law, the period is one year from that date. Prohibitions on retaliatory actions by employers or others are expanded to cover persons other than employees who act under Code chapter 91A with respect to an employee. A 90-day period is established during which any action against an employee or other person is rebuttably presumed to be retaliatory. The bill allows the director or any injured party to maintain a civil action in any court of proper jurisdiction. An employer who retaliates against an employee or other person shall compensate the injured party an amount set by the director or the court, but not less than $150 for each day of the violation. The bill modifies language relating to procedures for the director to impose civil penalties on an employer for violations of Code chapter 91A by making certain actions by the director mandatory. The bill provides that if an employer inadvertently violates the provisions of Code chapter 91A or the rules adopted pursuant to Code chapter 91A, the employer shall not be subject to certain penalty provisions provided in Code chapter 91A if certain conditions are met. The first condition is that the director determines that the violation was inadvertent and that the employer attempted in good faith to comply with the provisions of Code chapter 91A and the rules adopted pursuant to Code chapter 91A. The second condition is that the director, after considering any history of violations by the employer, determines that the violation was isolated in nature. The third condition is that the employer corrects the violation to the satisfaction of the director within 14 days of the occurrence of the violation. The bill prohibits an employer from requiring an individual to be a current employee to be paid an earned commission. The bill stipulates that a provision of Code chapter 91A shall not apply to any employer or employee if such provision would conflict with federal law or regulation. The bill requires the director to provide for the notification of each employer in Iowa of the requirements for employers provided in the bill by September 1, 2025. Such notification shall include suggested forms and procedures that employers may use for purposes of compliance with the notice and recordkeeping requirements of Code chapter 91A as amended by the bill. An employer who violates Code chapter 91A is subject to a civil penalty of not more than $500 per pay period for each violation. The bill, except for the provision providing for notification of employees in Iowa by the director, takes effect January 1, 2026.

AI Summary

This bill strengthens Iowa's Wage Payment Collection Law by introducing several key protections for employees. The bill shifts the burden to employers to prove that wage deductions are lawful and requires employers to obtain written authorization from employees before making any deductions. Employers must now provide detailed wage statements to employees, including specific information about hours worked, sales, or miles/loads performed, depending on how their wages are calculated. The bill establishes a rebuttable presumption that an employer did not pay minimum wage if proper payroll records are not maintained. It expands protections against employer retaliation, creating a 90-day window during which adverse actions against employees are presumed retaliatory. The bill increases the timeframe for filing wage complaints from one to three years and mandates that employers can be held liable for unpaid wages, liquidated damages, court costs, and attorney fees, even for unintentional violations. Additionally, the bill introduces a provision allowing employees to be paid commissions earned, even if they are no longer employed, and provides some leniency for inadvertent violations if employers act in good faith and quickly correct the issue. The bill will take effect on January 1, 2026, with notification requirements for employers to be implemented by September 1, 2025.

Committee Categories

Labor and Employment

Sponsors (15)

Last Action

Subcommittee: Driscoll, Lofgren, and Wahls. S.J. 170. (on 01/30/2025)

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