Home > Resources > HR compliance > Employment discrimination > California captive audience meeting ban signed by Gov. Newsom
Employees discussing whether they'll attend the captive audience meeting at their work.

California captive audience meeting ban signed by Gov. Newsom

California has joined the ranks of states barring employers from requiring employees to attend meetings intended to communicate the employer’s opinions on unions.

Share this:

by Robert S. Teachout, Legal Editor at Brightmine

California has joined the ranks of states barring employers from requiring employees to attend meetings intended to communicate the employer’s opinions on unions. Signing S.B. 399 into law, Gov. Gavin Newsom has made California the largest state to prohibit so-called “captive audience” meetings.

The California Worker Freedom From Employer Intimidation Act, effective January 1, 2025, prohibits employers from discharging, disciplining or otherwise penalizing or taking an adverse employment action against an employee — or threatening to do so — for declining to attend or participate in a meeting or to listen to communication from the employer conveying its opinion on political matters. Political matters are defined as matters relating to elections for political office, political parties, legislation, regulation, and the decision to join or support any political party or political or labor organization.

Unlike such laws in other states, the California law requires an employer to continue to pay an employee who is working at the time of a captive audience meeting and elects not to attend.

An employer that violates the law is subject to a civil penalty of $500 per employee for each violation. The Labor Commissioner may enforce the law, or an employee who has suffered a violation of may bring a civil action in a court for damages caused by that adverse action, including punitive damages.

The law does not prohibit communication with employees that are required by law or that are necessary for employees to perform their jobs.

Similar captive audience laws have been enacted by Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Minnesota, Vermont and Washington in the past year. The legislation has followed calls by National Labor Relations Board General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo to ban the practice as a violation of employees’ free speech rights. Such meetings are permitted under the National Labor Relations Act.

Navigate HR complexity with confidence

With Brightmine, you can build powerful people strategies, implement best practices and set your organization up for a brighter future.

Learn how our tools, resources and automation can empower you and your team.

You may also be interested in…

Blogs

The role of HR in preventing discrimination

Learn why HR is essential in preventing discrimination and how proactive practices help protect employees and reduce legal …

Blogs

What is employment discrimination?

Learn what employment discrimination is, how it appears in the workplace, and what employers must do to stay …

Charts

EEO protected classes by state

Explore state‑by‑state EEO protected classes to help HR teams understand discrimination laws and maintain compliant employment practices.

About the author

Sign up to receive expert HR insights from Brightmine

Join our community and stay updated with industry trends, expert insights, valuable resources, webinar invites… and much more.

Sign up now and receive regular updates straight to your inbox!

    *Brightmine is a tradename of LexisNexis Risk Solutions. By registering your details, you understand that your personal data will be handled according to our Privacy Policy.