The Bay Area Commuter Benefits Program (“CBP”) is a pilot program that affects any public, private, or non-profit entity for which an average of 50 or more full-time employees per week perform work for monetary compensation within the geographic boundaries of the Bay Area Air Quality Management District (“BAAQMD”).  (Seasonal/temporary employees are excluded.)

Employers that

Summary of Program

Join the attorneys from Weintraub Tobin’s Labor and Employment Group as they discuss important legal developments from 2013 and review the complexities of a number of new laws facing employers in 2014.

Program Highlights

  • New Federal and State Legislation and Regulatory Requirements
  • Updates in the World of Harassment, Discrimination and Retaliation Law

Employers may begin to see an increase in whistleblower litigation.

Effective January 1, 2014, the Legislature, through Senate Bill 496, amended Section 1102.5, California’s “whistleblower protection” statute.  We covered this in our “year in review” seminar, but given the scope of the changes in the law, we wanted to make sure to get the word

Summary of Program

Join the attorneys from Weintraub Tobin’s Labor and Employment Group as they discuss important legal developments from 2013 and review the complexities of a number of new laws facing employers in 2014.

Program Highlights

  • New Federal and State Legislation and Regulatory Requirements
  • Updates in the World of Harassment, Discrimination and Retaliation Law

Summary of Program

Employers continue to grapple with this very difficult area of employment law. It is not enough to focus on just one law when an employee is unable to work or is absent from the workplace due to some medical condition or injury suffered by the employee or his or her family member.