On July 1, 2024, the New Jersey Domestic Workers Bill of Rights went into effect, extending employee protections to more than 50,000 domestic workers throughout the state of New Jersey. Here is what household employers need to know.
A “domestic worker” is an employee who works in a residence providing services such as childcare; companionship or caretaker for a sick, convalescing, elderly or disabled individual; housekeeping or house cleaning; cooking; providing food or butler service; parking cars; cleaning laundry; gardening; personal organizing; or any other domestic service purpose. Expressly excluded from the definition of domestic workers include those who care for their own family members, pet or house sitters, home day-care businesses, and household maintenance contractors. The Bill of Rights covers all domestic workers, regardless of immigration status.
Whether a worker is an independent contractor or an employee requires a fact-sensitive analysis under New Jersey’s “ABC” test. Household employers should know that most domestic workers do not meet the test to be an Independent Contractor and therefore, are employees. For the first time, domestic workers are now protected under the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination (NJLAD) and the New Jersey Wage and Hour Law. As a result, domestic workers are now protected from discrimination and are entitled to receive minimum wage and overtime.
Additionally, under the new (and preexisting) law, employers must:
These requirements are not an exhaustive list.
Moreover, household employers must provide domestic workers with 10 minute rest-periods for every four (4) hours worked, 30 minute paid lunch breaks after five (5) consecutive hours of work, and requiring that live-in domestic workers receive an unpaid 24 hour rest period after six (6) consecutive days of work.
Employees who work fewer than five (5) hours per month or whose work for the household employer is casual, irregular and different from paid work in which they normally undertake, are exempt from the new law.
Domestic workers can pursue claims through the Department of Labor, Division of Civil Rights, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission or through a lawsuit filed in a court of law.
If you're a domestic worker who has been denied fair wages, leave, or faced discrimination, you may have legal recourse under New Jersey's new Domestic Workers Bill of Rights. The employment attorneys at Wilentz, Goldman & Spitzer P.A. are here to help you assert your rights and seek justice. Contact us today for a confidential consultation.
Maureen S. Binetti
Co-Chair, Employment Law Team
Shareholder
Meghan Chrisner-Keefe
Counsel
Stephanie D. Gironda
Counsel