I think you fell for another lying tweet posted by Cal88oski003 said:dajo9 said:Well then, by all means, in the absence of actual information, let's continue to spread conjectureoski003 said:sycasey said:From what I can tell, the intent of the bill is to prevent companies from REQUIRING employees to physically confront shoplifters (security guards excepted). I haven't read the text extensively, but seems like the company would be fined (or open to lawsuit) if it violated this law, not the employees themselves.82gradDLSdad said:sycasey said:Or maybe the law doesn't actually say what Cheong claims it does.oski003 said:Cal88 said:
^Right, cheap partisan grandstanding. As if you have to be a right winger to mock the carnival of narcissism and vanities that is Burning Man...
Meanwhile in California - this is unreal!California is passing Bill 553, which makes it illegal to confront or fight back against looters, burglars and shoplifters. You’ll be fined $18,000 if you intervene. It puts every employee at the mercy of criminals. pic.twitter.com/9f9VbEFfKr
— Ian Miles Cheong (@stillgray) September 5, 2023
Whoever drafted this law is is the most mentally sick, insane, criminally deranged individual I have ever been on planet earth with at the same time.
https://kmph.com/news/local/enough-is-enough-ca-business-owners-and-lawmakers-held-rally-against-dangerous-policies-at-capitolQuote:
In a statement provided by Cortese says, "Under my SB 553, employers would be prohibited from forcing their rank and file, non-security workers to confront active shoplifters, and all retail employees would be trained on how to react to active shoplifting. The legislation has other provisions that keep people safe at work. Let's take every reasonable step to prevent another workplace assault or shooting."
You still might disagree with the bill, and that's fine! But it doesn't actually fine employees who confront shoplifters. I'm honestly not sure where Cheong got that from, but I think there's a reason he just took a picture of the article and didn't actually link to it.
You're right, I think, but the bill apparently states this (according to the article): "It would establish new workplace standards, that would prohibit store employees from fighting back against thieves."
How will companies prohibit anything? Will they be made to give offending employees a stern talking to?
There could be indirect effects on employees' ability to keep their jobs, of course.
It is hard to tell. I cannot find the amendment that Senator Cortese proposed Monday.
So, you think the news story is wrong? By all means, in the absence of actual information, keep fighting your fight.