$1.2M Wage Theft Settlement Signals Rising Accrual Risks
A California carwash has agreed to a $1.2M settlement to resolve wage theft allegations, according to the California Labor Commissioner’s Office (LCO).
The seven-figure payout averages $52,174 per affected employee across 23 workers, with individual settlements ranging from $8,500 to $92,800 – illustrating per-worker liability exposure for finance teams modeling reserves.
Finance Risk: Wage Theft Accrual Exposure
Newport Auto Spa, Inc. is a luxury carwash in California. An investigation by the LCO’s Bureau of Field Enforcement found Newport Auto Spa denied full payment of straight time, overtime and off-the-clock work to employees. Workers were also required to remain on-site without pay during slow business hours and routinely prevented from taking uninterrupted meal breaks and rest breaks in violation of California law.
Some affected employees had worked at Newport Auto Spa for up to 20 years and were “consistently underpaid and expected to work off the clock,” the LCO said in a press release.
“Employers who deny workers their full pay exploit their workforce and hurt honest businesses that follow the law,” said California Labor Commissioner Lilia García-Brower. “This settlement ensures these workers finally receive the wages they earned and sends a clear message that wage theft will not be tolerated.”
California’s one-hour premium pay per missed meal or rest break adds to back wages. Over multiple years, these premiums can significantly increase accrual obligations, often exceeding standard FLSA exposure – especially now that the DOL has limited when the agency can seek liquidated damages.
For finance teams, this underscores the need to accrue estimated liabilities quarterly – 20-year patterns like this one trigger state agency claims far exceeding initial cost savings.
State Premiums: California’s Liability Multiplier
FLSA sets the minimum wage/hour compliance floor, but some states, like California, layer on premium pay requirements that multiply total liability exposure for controllers accruing contingencies.
California requires an additional hour of premium pay per missed meal or rest break – adding to back wages and sharply increasing total liability, as demonstrated in this wage theft settlement.
Finance Action Items:
To help prevent costly settlements like this one, finance controllers should:
- Audit historical payroll and timekeeping data to identify off‑the‑clock work, missed breaks, and other compliance gaps before state or DOL audits arise
- Reassess accrual reserves for long‑tenured hourly employees, applying state‑specific premium pay multipliers to estimate potential liabilities, and
- Model wage violation exposure by employee tenure and location to stress‑test quarterly contingencies and ensure adequate financial coverage.
Free Training & Resources
White Papers
Provided by Anaplan
White Papers
Provided by Personify Health
Further Reading
Which Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) provision cost employers the most in back wages, according to the latest stats? If you guessed ove...
Hospitality employers in California take note: Several cities in The Golden State have minimum wage increases for hotel employees soon taki...
For most employers nationwide, the new salary threshold for who’s exempt from the federal overtime and minimum wage requirements took eff...
The Department of Labor’s independent contractor (IC) rule that went into effect on March 11 is forcing many businesses to triple-che...
A limited-time use of educational assistance programs is scheduled to expire soon. IRS recently provided details about this fringe benefit....
Thinking about adding tips and overtime compensation to box 14 of Form W-2 for TY 2025? Two recent IRS notices have provided insight. Th...