HR Consulting News–Working 7 Consecutive Days

We are all familiar with the classic 40 hours per week and Monday through Friday scheduling. But there are situations, from an HR consulting point of view, in which the employer can legitimately ask for work seven days in a row if there is a bona fide business reason.

California Labor Code Section 551 states: “Every person employed in any occupation of labor is entitled to one days’ rest therefrom in seven.” In turn, Labor Code Section 552 states: “No employer of labor shall cause his employees to work more than six days in seven.”

Those sections do not apply “when the nature of employment reasonably requires that the employee works seven or more consecutive days, if in any each calendar month the employee receives days of rest equivalent to one day’s rest in seven (LC 554)”. For example, this would apply to retail employees who have to work longer consecutive days during the Christmas holidays.

From an HR standpoint, these provisions do not apply “to any employer or employee when the total hours of employment do not exceed 30 hours in any week or six hours in any one day thereof (LC 556).”

Two employees of Nordstrom sought to enforce these provisions in the California Supreme Court case of Mendoza v. Nordstrom (2017). For example, one of them claimed that they were forced to work 11 straight days. But in that time period, there were periods in which the work was less than six hours/day.

The court noted that the labor code sections above did not have a specification of civil penalties. This means the plaintiffs sought their penalties under the Private Attorney General’s Act (PAGA), which requires $200 per employee for each pay period, together with attorney’s fees and court costs, in which the labor code violation occurs.

For these reasons, HR consultants should be aware of these exceptions.

National Lien Law can act as your virtual Independent HR Consultant–either replace your existing HR Department or augment it with our ongoing HR consultation. And, we are equipped to prepare any documents required (for example, termination notices, warnings, employment agreements/confidentiality/noncompete, employee handbooks, write-ups, responses to claims, wage and hour disputes, legal memos to management, response to attorney demands, legal investigations, help with arbitrations or language used in your emails and communications with employees). Services can be on a retainer basis, hourly or flat fee. Our independent HR consultants have law degrees and 20+ years’ experience in HR consulting. Or, simply give us a call for a free initial consultation. (800) 995-9434. Info.NationalLienLaw@gmail.com.