Search results
Minimum Wage (for Employers with 26 Employees or More) Minimum Wage (for Employers with 25 Employees or Less) Percentage of Increase Over Previous Wage (26 Employees or More) Percentage of Increase Over Previous Wage (25 employees or Less) January 1, 2018: $11.00/hour: $10.50/hour: 4.76 percent: 5 percent: January 1, 2017: $10.50/hour: $10.00 ...
- Find a Wage Order
The minimum wage order may be printed from this website on...
- IWC
IWC - History of California Minimum Wage - California...
- Forms
Forms - History of California Minimum Wage - California...
- Publications
Opinion letters. DLSE opinion letters (all): by subject; by...
- Make an Online Payment
Make an Online Payment - History of California Minimum Wage...
- Boards
Boards - History of California Minimum Wage - California...
- Find a Wage Order
21 wrz 2016 · California’s minimum wage is currently $10.00, which has been in effect since January 2016. The minimum wage is set to increase now that Governor Brown signed Senate Bill (“SB”) 3.
30 gru 2015 · IWC Minimum Wage Order, MW-2014 – California’s Minimum Wage Increases to $10.00 Per Hour. Effective Jan. 1, 2016, California’s minimum wage will increase from $9.00 per hour to $10.00 per hour, which in turn will increase the minimum salary that must be paid to exempt employees.
23 paź 2015 · As a reminder, the minimum wage in California is increasing to $10 per hour on January 1, 2016 based on previous legislation signed by Governor Brown in 2013. AB 622 – E-Verify System...
4 kwi 2016 · Governor Brown signed AB 10 in September 2013 to raise California’s minimum wage 25 percent, from $8 to $10 per hour, effective January 1, 2016. There are approximately 7 million hourly workers in California, of which about 2.2 million earn the minimum wage.
16 gru 2015 · Minimum Wage Increase. California's minimum wage increases to $10 per hour, effective January 1, 2016. Many cities also have local minimum wage ordinances that exceed the state minimum.
1 maj 2015 · On April 4, 2016, California jumped on the “living wage” bandwagon when Governor Brown signed Senate Bill-3 (SB-3) making California one of the first two states in the country to enact a $15 minimum wage. The other was New York, the measure signed into law by Governor Cuomo on that same day.