Last year, New Jersey continued its expansion of workplace legislation with potentially far-reaching consequences for the state’s employers.
By way of highlight and summary, New Jersey’s 2023 employment-related measures included the following:
- Governor Phil Murphy signed sweeping amendments to the Millville Dallas Airmotive Plant Job Loss Notification Act (the “NJ WARN Act”) into law. The amendments, which had been on hold due to the COVID-19 pandemic, took effect on April 10, 2023. Most notably, the amendments mandate that employers with 100 or more employees (counting both full and part-time) pay one week of severance for each year of service to each employee terminated in a “mass layoff” or “plant closing,” irrespective of whether the employer complied with the state’s WARN Act notice requirements and without conditioning payment on a release from the employee. For a summary of the amendments, see our previous blog post.
- New Jersey enacted a Temporary Workers’ Bill of Rights, which provides a broad range of protections for certain categories of temporary workers engaged by a “third-party client” through a staffing agency. The law requires that covered temporary workers be paid no less than the average rate of pay and the average cost of benefits of the employees of the third-party client performing the same or substantially similar job functions. The law also includes various administrative, notification, and recordkeeping obligations for both the staffing agencies and third-party clients engaging workers. The Temporary Workers’ Bill of Rights became fully effective on August 5, 2023. For a summary of the law and subsequent proposed regulations, see our previous Insight and blog post.
- Amendments to the New Jersey Unemployment Compensation Law (UCL) took effect on July 31, 2023, and, among other things, require employers to complete and electronically submit to the Division of Unemployment and Temporary Disability Insurance (“Division”) the following: (i) a new form, yet to be issued, for providing information that the Division needs to determine whether a departing employee is entitled to unemployment benefits; (ii) the New Jersey Form BC-10, containing instructions for claiming unemployment benefits, which the employer must also provide to the departing employee; and (iii) the email address of the employer’s designated contact. Employers must submit this information immediately upon an employee’s date of separation from employment, regardless of whether the employee resigned, was terminated, or was laid off from employment. For more details on the amendments, see our previous blog post.
Also, as we previously reported, the scheduled change to the state’s minimum wage raised the rate to $15.13 per hour for most employees as of January 1, 2024.
In addition to keeping in mind these recent developments when updating workplace policies and protocols, New Jersey employers should use the start of a new year as an opportunity to ensure that their workplace posters and employee notices remain in compliance.
Satisfying Notice and Posting Requirements
New Jersey mandates that employers display a variety of official posters informing employees of the law relating to employee rights and employer responsibilities. Failure to comply with these requirements may result in monetary fines and other penalties. Generally, to ensure compliance, an employer must post the most recent version of the mandated posters in a conspicuous location, i.e., in locations accessible and easily visible to all employees and applicants for employment, such as in a lunchroom, breakroom, or human resources office. Employers operating in New Jersey must also distribute certain notices to employees. In addition, for some laws, employers must post and/or distribute the notice in English, Spanish, and the language spoken by at least 10 percent of the employer’s workforce.
As a reminder, New Jersey Division on Civil Rights (NJDCR) rules allow New Jersey employers with internet and intranet sites used by their employees to satisfy their display obligations by posting the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination (NJLAD) and New Jersey Family Leave Act (NJFLA) posters on those sites instead of posting them in the physical worksite. Except as noted below, however, the New Jersey Department of Labor & Workforce Development (NJDOL) regulations still do not expressly permit electronic posting. Further, employers should recall that in 2020, the U.S. Department of Labor (USDOL) issued guidance encouraging employers to supplement required hard-copy postings with electronic postings continuously accessible to employees. Although the USDOL guidance applies only to federal notice and posting requirements, considering the NJDCR rules described above and the laws’ intent to make notices easily accessible to employees, we continue to recommend electronic posting as a best practice for all state-mandated notices, in addition to hard-copy posting in “brick and mortar” locations, if any, when required.
Downloading Mandatory Notices and Posters
The NJDOL provides employers with poster packets containing the required notices, which are available for downloading here.
Posters required by the NJDCR are available for downloading here.
Note that, although some of the regulations specify that the notices must be on legal-size paper (81/2 x 14 inches), the posters from the state’s website printout are letter size (81/2 x 11 inches) and considered compliant.
In 2024, New Jersey requires employers to display—and, in some instances, distribute—the following posters and notices to their New Jersey employees:
In addition to the above, New Jersey has posting requirements aimed at specific sectors of the labor force. For example, New Jersey employers associated with the sale, rental, or lease of properties must advise of the NJLAD in housing. Employers that provide services to the public—including, but not limited to, restaurants, hotels, hospitals, movie theaters, and shopping centers—must advise patrons of the NJLAD in public accommodations. These businesses should display posters in areas readily accessible to the public (for example, near cash registers). Those posters are available for downloading here. Health care facilities must post notices apprising employees of mandatory overtime restrictions. A copy of the notice is available here.
Employers should also remember to similarly comply with posting requirements under federal law; workplace posters from the USDOL are available for downloading here. (See also our previous blog post regarding the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s updated “Know Your Rights” poster.)
Employers may meet many of their posting obligations by purchasing New Jersey and federal “all in one” posters from a reputable supplier and subscribing for updates.
What New Jersey Employers Should Do Now
- In advance of any covered mass layoff or closing, review the NJ WARN Act’s employer notification and other obligations, along with any severance plans and separation agreements, to ensure compliance with the amended law.
- If engaging covered temporary workers through a staffing agency, calculate and provide the staffing agency with the average rate of pay and average cost of benefits of employees performing the same or substantially similar job, and otherwise comply with the Temporary Worker Bill of Rights’ administrative, notification, and recordkeeping mandates.
- Ensure that procedures are in place to comply with the new UCL electronic reporting requirements when an employee terminates employment.
- Review and comply with all posting and notice requirements applicable to your organization.
- Update the organization’s notices and posters, as needed, to ensure compliance with current law.
- Keep or take a photo of the posters/notices that are being replaced to maintain a historical record of compliance.
- Review the organization’s new hire materials to ensure that they include the required notices.
- Review USDOL guidance regarding the electronic posting of federally required notices and posters. (For more information on how to comply with these notices and posters, see our blog post.)
- If distributing required notices by email, require employees’ written acknowledgment of receipt.
- Consider subscribing to a reputable supplier of federal and state notices.
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