Requires covered employers to provide notice to certain affected employees prior to any technological displacement; requires reporting; requires a workforce transition period; makes related provisions.
Impact
The bill establishes a mandatory transition period of ninety days during which affected employees must be offered continued employment, equivalent wages, or retraining opportunities funded by their employer. This provision not only seeks to cushion the impact of automation but also encourages companies to be proactive in retraining their workforce, thus potentially reducing unemployment rates linked to rapid technological changes. Additionally, it imposes civil penalties on employers who fail to comply with these notice and transition requirements, including up to sixty days of back pay for each impacted employee.
Summary
Assembly Bill A09533, known as the 'Automation Displacement Protection Act', aims to protect workers from job losses caused by the implementation of artificial intelligence (AI) and other automated technologies. The bill requires covered employers—those with fifty or more full-time employees—to provide at least ninety days' prior written notice before any technological displacement affecting a significant number of employees takes place. This notice must detail the nature of the technological change and the expected impact on the workforce, ensuring transparency and communication between employers and employees.
Contention
Throughout the discussions surrounding A09533, key points of contention revolved around the potential burden it places on businesses, especially in terms of compliance costs and operational limitations. Proponents argue that this bill is necessary to safeguard workers' rights and to ensure that the workforce can adapt to evolving technological landscapes. Critics, however, express concerns that imposing strict regulations may hinder business innovation and discourage companies from adopting new technologies due to fear of liability or operational disruptions.
Same As
Requires covered employers to provide notice to certain affected employees prior to any technological displacement; requires reporting; requires a workforce transition period; makes related provisions.
Requires covered employers to provide notice to certain affected employees prior to any technological displacement; requires reporting; requires a workforce transition period; makes related provisions.
Prohibits employers from requiring low-wage employees to enter into covenants not to compete; requires employers to notify potential employees of any requirement to enter into a covenant not to compete.
Removes certain provisions regarding public hearing and notice requirements prior to issuing safety and health rules, and notice requirements after issuing safety and health rules.
Removes the exclusion of part-time employees from certain definitions relating to employment and expanding the definition of employer; removes certain exclusions for employer notice requirements for the closing of a facility; removes the discretionary reduction of penalties for employers for certain acts or omissions concerning notice requirements for mass layoffs, relocations or employment loss; removes the maximum time period for determining back pay and other liabilities for certain employees who experience employment loss; allows the attorney general to take certain action to assist certain employees in receiving back pay and other liabilities; requires employers to pay severance to employees when there is a plant closing, relocation, or mass layoff.