Alaska has not enacted a statewide predictive or fair scheduling law, and the state does not preempt municipalities from adopting their own scheduling, on-call, or rest-period rules.
AS 23.10 establishes wage, overtime, and rest break rules but does not address advance schedule notice, predictability pay, or right-to-rest between shifts. There is no statutory preemption of local scheduling laws, so cities and boroughs may adopt fair workweek or predictive scheduling ordinances. Employers must continue to follow the Alaska Wage and Hour Act and federal FLSA. Reporting time pay is not required by Alaska statute, leaving room for local action in retail, food, and hospitality industries.
Where local rules apply, violations may include predictability pay, civil penalties, and back pay obligations.
See how Fairbanks's worker scheduling preemption rules stack up against other locations.
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