ATTENTION CALIFORNIA EMPLOYERS: NEW LAW ALLOWS EMPLOYERS TO SEEK WORKPLACE VIOLENCE RESTRAINING ORDERS BASED ON HARASSMENT

California employers will no longer have to wait until harassment escalates into unlawful violence or a credible threat of violence to protect their employees. Thanks to a new law, effective as of January 1, 2025, employers may now seek a temporary restraining order (TRO) on behalf of an employee based solely on the act of harassment. The relevant law amends the California Code of Civil Procedure to add “harassment” as an additional standalone basis for employers to seek a TRO and injunction on behalf of an employee and, if appropriate, other employees at the workplace (see HERE).

Before January 1, 2025, employers could seek a TRO only if an individual (1) “assaulted, battered, or stalked” the employee, or (2) “made a credible threat of violence against the employee” by making knowing and willful statements, or engaging in a course of conduct, that would cause a reasonable person to fear for their safety or their family’s safety. 

As of January 1, 2025, employers may seek a TRO based solely on the occurrence of “harassment,” defined as “a knowing and willful course of conduct directed at a specific person that seriously alarms, annoys, or harasses the person, and that serves no legitimate purpose.” The law specifies that such conduct must “cause a reasonable person to suffer substantial emotional distress and must actually cause substantial emotional distress.”

Under the law, employees for whom a TRO is sought have the right to remain anonymous. The law also prohibits courts from issuing TROs that infringe on speech or activities protected by the Constitution, the National Labor Relations Act, or other applicable laws. 

Employer Takeaways

Among the benefits offered, the law allows employers to take proactive steps to protect their workforce based on harassment alone, simplifies the legal process to obtain a TRO, and improves workplace safety and morale. To leverage these benefits, employers should:

  • Inform employees about the expanded protections under the law;
  • Update workplace policies to reflect these new protections;
  • Explore whether a TRO is appropriate when addressing complaints of harassment; and
  • Train appropriate personnel on new protections and considerations under the law.

SIGN UP

SIGN UP NOW to receive time sensitive employment law alerts and invitations to complimentary informational webinars and seminars.

"*" indicates required fields

By clicking this button and submitting information to us, you will be submitting certain personally identifiable information, or information which used together with other information, can be used to identify you and/or identify information about you, to Nukk-Freeman & Cerra, PC (“NFC”). Such information may be used by NFC to contact or identify you. Personally identifiable information may include, but is not limited to, your [name, phone number, address and/or] email address. We collect this information for the purpose of providing services, identifying and communicating with you, responding to your requests/inquiries, and improving our services. We may use your personally identifiable Information to contact you with time sensitive employment law e-alerts, marketing or promotional offers, invitations to complimentary and informational webinars and seminars, and other information that may be of interest to you. However, by providing any of the foregoing information to you, we are not creating an attorney-client relationship between you and NFC: nor are we providing legal advice to you. You may opt out of receiving any, or all, of these communications from us by following the unsubscribe link in any email we send. However, this will not unsubscribe you from receiving future communications from us which are based upon an independent request, relationship or act by you.