Santa Clara County and its cities have not enacted hotel worker retention ordinances similar to Los Angeles or Long Beach. Hotel workers in SCC rely on California Labor Code protections and union contracts rather than mandatory retention rules during ownership transitions.
Hotel worker retention ordinances mandating that new hotel owners retain incumbent staff for a transition period (typically 90 days) operate in Los Angeles, Long Beach, Glendale, and Santa Monica. Santa Clara County and SCC cities including San Jose, Santa Clara (home to Levi's Stadium hotels), and Sunnyvale have not adopted similar measures despite significant hotel inventory. Hotel workers depend on California Labor Code Β§Β§1400-1408 (Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification) for mass-layoff notice rights, plus union collective-bargaining agreements at organized properties like the Hyatt Regency Santa Clara. Successor employers may terminate or rehire workers freely except where collective bargaining or implied-contract theories apply. State minimum wage and paid-leave laws apply uniformly.
No SCC retention-specific penalties exist. CalWARN Β§1402 violations expose employers to back pay up to 60 days, benefits, and civil penalties of $500 per day. Workers may file private actions for wrongful termination tied to ownership transitions.
See how Sunnyvale's hotel worker retention rules stack up against other locations.
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