California Politician Proposes Bill Making It Illegal To Contact Employees After Working Hours
State Rep. Matt Haney says he wants to attract workers back to California. But his "right to disconnect" legislation would likely scare businesses away.

Establishing an equilibrium between your professional and personal life is no easy task. One California politician would like the government to help.
Assembly Bill 2751, drafted by state Rep. Matt Haney (D–San Francisco), would expand on prevailing California rules restricting overtime work by adding the "right to disconnect" to the state's labor regulations.
Specifically, the legislation would require employers and employees to agree on fixed work hours in contract negotiations so that an employee then has a right to "ignore communications from the employer during nonworking hours." The bill notably deviates from its policies for labor unions, whose collective bargaining agreements would trump the legislation's requirements.
Exceptions to the bill include emergencies; disruption or damage to the public, customers, or the employee; as well as scheduling changes. Otherwise, employees would report violations to the California Labor Commissioner Office, after which companies could be subject to investigations and fines.
"Smartphones have blurred the boundaries between work and home life," Rep. Haney said. "Workers shouldn't be punished for not being available 24/7 if they're not being paid for 24 hours of work."
France became the first country in 2017 to embrace the "right to disconnect," and 12 countries have since followed. But the legislation would be the first of its kind in the U.S. if it passes, and it has elicited a polarizing reaction thus far.
Supporters of the bill point out that the U.S. is supposedly unfriendly to work-life balance. An analysis Haney referenced ranked the U.S. 53rd in the life-work balance index, although it is worth noting that the study holds other factors—not communication outside of work hours—responsible for the low ranking.
Nonetheless, Haney said he believes the bill would advance California as a "forward thinking" state in regard to workers' rights and that businesses would also benefit from less stressed and more productive workers.
Some businesses and employers disagree.
Joshua March, the founder of Conversocial and CEO of SCiFi Foods, wrote for The San Francisco Standard that a right to disconnect would obstruct innovation and slow startup growth, as well as hamstring the operation of other businesses.
Startups are messy work that often require wiggle room to adapt, as per March. "If you need to spend all weekend reworking a deck for an important Monday morning meeting, tending to lab experiments or coding for a product launch, you do it. This kind of dedication is necessary to succeed," he wrote.
A right to disconnect would disincentivize startups from basing in California, according to March, and also discourage employees who desire to work more from joining California-based startups. "The end result will be no actual change in people's lives, just more red tape, more bureaucracy and more busy work," March said.
Other advocacy groups, along with the California Chamber of Commerce, raised concerns that the bill doesn't adequately address how the law would be implemented with employees in different time zones or how salaries of exempt employees would be impacted.
Critics also claimed the bill failed to acknowledge the unique needs of different professions, making it difficult to apply the same one-size-fits-all set of rules across the board.
In his press release, Haney said that California is losing workers to Texas and New York and that his proposal, if it becomes law, would attract workers back to the Golden State. It's very plausible, however, that it would have the opposite effect, encouraging business owners, particularly in the tech industry, to ground themselves elsewhere as the vague regulations threaten to hinder their pace and goals.
This is, after all, a fairly popular phenomenon as of late. Just between January 2018 and December 2021, 352 business headquarters left California. California's overall population has similarly been shrinking.
Correlation isn't causation, but there's certainly a trend here. And while work-life balance is important, future startups are not going to create more jobs in California if new regulations slow down young businesses.
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There is ALREADY a "right to disconnect!" There is nothing requiring you to keep your phone on, answer your phone, or even HAVE a phone in the first place. This is not a right to disconnect law - it's a mandatory "negotiation" edict where no bargaining unit exists, essentially CREATING a bargaining unit for every employer. Every time you see a law with a long list of exceptions and exemptions, be very suspicious about its purpose.
It gets the politician an invitation to kid diddle island for some raping, while they negotiate exemptions and carve outs.
What's worse is - CA is *tyrranical* about enforcement of these sorts of things.
Even if you were willing to be available after hours - its literally illegal to even send you a text without you clocking in.
The government of Kalifornia is totally insane.
Sorry boss, my phone was dead.
I don't understand people.
I was in the military. I was legally obligated to be available 24/7. And when I didn't want to, I just didn't answer calls or texts.
When your boss sends calls you, let it go to voicemail. Have the courtesy to review it and decide if its sufficiently urgent that you'll respond.
If you don't and your boss bitches about it . . . let them. Let them scream and stomp their feet. 'I didn't get the message, sorry.'
Have some balls, set some boundaries.
When you were in the military you knew that you were in a 24/7 job when you signed up. This law simple requires the employer to disclose that information at hiring.
When will CA pass the law that will prevent companies from promoting employees who are more readily available? Because that is going to happen.
These legislators, by and large, have never had real jobs and almost all have never run a business in their lives. They do not know how little they know.
Maybe you should ask about what is expected when applying for the job. If your employer is demanding more of you than you are willing to do, then get a different job.
OK, can I get a law that limits any contact with government to M-F, 9-5?
9 to 5 types dont have to worry about it so much. But getting called nights / weekends is a thing for some salary wage-slaves. And no, it isn't always optional. It's usually spelled out in your contract, so I don't see why we need a law about it. You know ahead of time what could happen.
Why doesn't this sterling business expert start his own business with such restrictions and make a pile of money from his sharp acumen compared to the less-enlightened idiots running current businesses?
Because he makes more money as a corrupt politician, and he knows it, he knows businesses know it, and he likes the power he has over those sneering plods who sneer at his political acumen.
This is hilarious. What attracts workers is jobs. The West Coast keeps coming up with ideas that are as if the employment problem is that workers aren't demanding enough.
I don’t love the government, or the idea of them regulating anything, but this idea is actually fabulous. Leave me alone, I’m off the clock.
I feel certain you will go far in your career.
Why don't you just not answer the phone?
One California politician would like the government to help.
"The nine most terrifying words in the English language are "I'm from the government, and I'm here to help.""
-The Gipper
A right to disconnect would disincentivize startups from basing in California, according to March, and also discourage employees who desire to work more from joining California-based startups.
Pretty sure California regards that as a feature, not a bug.
It is worth noting that the law does not require that your employer not contact you after hours but rather than employee agree to be contacted after hours. In a sense this requires employers to be transparent with employees at the time of hiring. You can still have a startup where employees are expected to be available 24/7 that just has to be noted when the employer hires.
I've worked in tech all my life. Lot of jobs with after-hours stuff cropping up. Any job worth staying at very long will be more then happy to establish reasonable rules around after-hours requests if you just have the balls to stand up for yourself and lay down the law. My personal rule of thumb is that if I get contacted out of hours I will not be responding unless it was urgent and unforeseeable, or it is rare and I have nothing else going on, or it was pre-arranged with me.
Laws like this probably explain why the global conglomerate where I work has a policy against talking about work with management while off the clock. Talking about work is considered work.
When I first started and heard about this policy, I said: "Wow! If talking about work is considered work, I could have stayed home and done it from dawn untIl bedtime and got overtime to boot!"
🙂
😉
"State Rep. Matt Haney says he wants to attract workers back to California."
Unspoken here is why the legislature might feel the need to attract workers "back" to California! Could it have been something the legislature did previously that might have made California UNattractive to workers? Naw ...
It is literally impossible to conduct business as a global tech corporation with a global development and/or sales staff without after-hours communication.
Tech is California's one profitable sector. This is a knife right at the heart of their economy.
Exceptions to the bill include emergencies; disruption or damage to the public, customers, or the employee; as well as scheduling changes.
IOW, *everything* is an exception.