AB 2227

(CONNOLLY)

FARMWORKER WAGE THEFT REFORM ACT

California farmworkers are often denied wages they’ve earned. Farm Labor Contractors (FLCs)—who hire and manage workers for growers—are responsible for paying wages and upholding labor rights, yet the system meant to protect workers is failing.

Every worker deserves to be paid for the work they do. AB 2227 helps turn existing protections into real outcomes for working families by strengthening the systems designed to protect farmworkers from wage theft. Supporting AB 2227 is a step toward ensuring that farmworkers can recover earned wages and that labor protections are meaningful, accessible, and effective.

CALIFORNIA AG | OUR WORK HAS VALUE

$61.2 BILLION CA AG IINDUSTRY

CA is the world’s 4th largest econony, driven by agriculture. CDFA | CA GOV

885,500 CA FARM WORKERS

Farmworkers in California (averaged over 2018–2021) Hooker

$15,000 CA FARMWORKER ANNUAL MEDIAN INCOME

Over the past 20 years, farmworker income has shown little increase. UCM CLC

CALIFORNIA FARMWORKERS DESERVE FAIR PAY

THE PROBLEM

CURRENT BOND SYSTEM

Farmworkers report high levels of abuse and labor violations, especially wage theft, from farm labor contractors.

FARM LABOR CONTRACTOR BOND

CA requires contractors to carry a bond to be licensed by the Labor Comissioner, which acts like insurance to cover unpaid wages or penalties.

ACCESSIBILITY

Despite this safeguard, many workers are unable to recover stolen wages due to limited access to information, barriers in proving claims, company bankruptcy, and insufficient funds when multiple workers are affected.

NO FUNDS

Contractors carry bonds but pay only a small annual premium--often as little as $250. Low bond amounts run out quickly, leaving workers unpaid.

“I ask for your support for Bill 2227 so that we have a guarantee fund. If a contractor steals our salary, we have a way to recover what he steals from us. Thank you.”

(Farmworker from Santa Barbara County)

AB2227 STRENGHTENS THE EXISTING SYSTEM

SOLUTION

AB 2227

The current bond system is failing to protect farmworkers. AB 2227 strengthens the system so workers can recover stolen wages by:

Improving transparency:

Making information about contractor bonds publicly accessible.

Increasing access:

Helping workers obtain the documentation needed to prove wage theft.

Expanding protections:

Ensuring more funds are available for workers are fully compensated, particularly when multiple workers are impacted.

“It’s not enough for us,  for rent or food. The nanny. And because I’m a single mom. Gasoline. Here, life is very expensive and it is not fair that this company continues to steal from us…with a lot of sacrifice we get up every day to go to work regardless of the cold or the hot weather, so that in the end they steal our salary.

(Farmworker from Santa Barbara County)

MAKE EVERY HOUR COUNT

FARMWORKER wage theft experiences

Grassroots members of the California Farmworker Coalition working directly with farmworkers, were given permission from farmworkers to share their stories, and the hardships created and compounded by experiences of lost wages. As a group of people that experience not just wage lost, but discrimination, and often language a d legal barriers, their stories are invaluable. (MICOP, TODEC, CBDIO, CCEJN) 

“The company changed its name three times. I only have one check stub, and he told me he’d changed the name because of a problem. I have copies of checks with different company names.” (Farmworker from Coachella Valley)

“I worked for him night and day, and I’d sleep for an hour, two hours, then go back, order some burritos, eat, and sleep in my pickup.” [...] I feel terrible. Sometimes I cry so much. I worked nights just so they wouldn’t pay me—it’s not fair. Someone has to help me.”(Farmworker from Fresno County)

“I felt humiliated. They took advantage of us and said we couldn’t do anything because we didn’t have papers. They said that if we spoke up, no one would believe us because “we didn’t exist here.” (Farmworker from Coachella Valley)

“We’ve already submitted a claim to the Labor Commissioner’s office, and we’ve been waiting for two years without receiving payment for minimum wage or overtime.” (Farmworker from Fresno County)

FARMWORKER WAGE THEFT REFORM ACT

AB 2227 helps ensure that existing protections work as intended. By improving access and accountability, the bill supports:

  • Fair compensation for work already performed
  • Greater accountability within the farm labor system
  • Stronger, more reliable protections for working families
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