An individual owed wages may file a wage payment complaint with the Department of Labor and Industries (L&I) under the Wage Payment Act (WPA). L&I must investigate, and if it finds a violation, must issue a notice and order of assessment, and may order the employer to pay employees all wages owed, including interest. L&I may also order a civil penalty if the violation was willful.
Under L&I rule, an employer must keep records of each employee's name, address, occupation, hours worked on a daily and weekly basis, rate or rates of pay, total wages earned, deductions, and net pay for the pay period.
Federal law recognizes joint labor-management cooperation committees to improve labor and management relations, and for other purposes.
A direct contractor entering into a contract for erecting, constructing, altering, or repairing a building, structure, or other private work is liable for any debt owed to an employee, or a third-party owed benefit contributions on a wage claimant's behalf, incurred by a subcontractor for the employee's work. The direct contractor's liability is for unpaid wages, including interest, and any fringe benefit payments or contributions. The liability does not include any penalties or other damages.
A direct contractor is a contractor having a direct contractual relationship with an owner. Fringe or other benefit payments or contributions are payments made by an employer on behalf of employees for group life insurance, health insurance, disability insurance, sick leave, annual leave, educational benefits, and pensions.
Causes of action are established as follows:
An interested party is a contractor, subcontractor, an employee of a direct contractor or subcontractor, an organization whose members' wages, benefits, and conditions of employment are affected by provisions of the bill, or L&I.
Upon request by a direct contractor to a subcontractor, the subcontractor and any lower tier subcontractors must provide payroll records including the last four digits of the employees' Social Security numbers and contain sufficient information to apprise the direct contractor of the payment status of benefits payments or contributions and specified information regarding the project. If a subcontractor does not timely provide the information requested within ten days of the request, a direct contractor may withhold sums owed.
A one-year statute of limitations is provided, from the date the claimed labor was performed or the contract work was substantially completed or abandoned, whichever occurred first.
The provisions of the bill only apply to projects, or an aggregate of projects under one construction project, of a value greater than $500,000.