Cal. Code Regs. tit. 8, § 13874
(b) The disclosure to be provided to a worker when conducting a recruiting activity shall include:
(2) Employer information pertaining to the prospective employment opportunity for which the labor contractor is recruiting.
(3) Foreign labor contractor information pertaining to each person (each contractor and, if any, each subcontractor or agent) who is performing solicitation and/or recruitment activities.
(6) Attach to the disclosure a copy of an employer signed work contract detailing all assurances and terms and conditions of employment. The work contract shall contain the following required information and the contractor shall indicate on the form whether the item is included in the contract. If a particular category of information does not apply, it must be so stated in the contract. A job order signed by the employer and submitted to the U.S. Department of Labor for purposes of obtaining foreign labor certification which contains all of the information in this subsection may be used to satisfy this requirement if it contains the same information as the actual work contract with the foreign worker.
(7) A statement that no additional requirements may be added or any other changes made to the work contract unless the worker is:
(8) Prohibited costs, expenses, or fees.
(10) Contains the following statements regarding rights of a prospective or hired foreign worker, enforcement instructions which substantially state the following, and includes as an attachment the Department of Industrial Relations flyer, All Workers in California Have Rights (or a subsequent worker rights flyer with updated information):
• You are protected by both California and federal law (California Business and Professions Code Division 3, Chapter 21.5, the federal Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 (Division A, Public Law 106-386), and federal H-2B regulations at 20 C.F.R. Part 655 and 29 C.F.R. Part 503).
• The foreign labor contractor who recruited you must register and post a surety bond with the state, and must comply with all of the prohibitions and requirements detailed above.
• Your employer may only use registered foreign labor contractors to recruit foreign guest workers, and must notify the California Labor Commissioner that it is employing foreign guest workers.
• Your employer must comply with all applicable state laws, including minimum wage and all of the prohibitions and requirements detailed above. The attached flyer describes your rights as a worker under California law.
• The foreign labor contractor and the employer may not intimidate, threaten, restrain, coerce, fire, demote, or discriminate against you or your family in retaliation for you exercising any of your rights as a foreign guest worker.
• If a foreign labor contractor violates the registration law, the foreign labor contractor may be fined by the state, and you or the state may sue the foreign labor contractor for injunctive relief (to stop the violation) or damages (money).
• If a foreign labor contractor violates the registration law, or your employer does not comply with requirements or prohibitions stated in this disclosure, including workplace laws, you may call toll free number 1-844 LABOR-DIR (or 1-844-522-6734) or contact the nearest office of the California Labor Commissioner (list attached) to report the violation. Spanish-speaking workers may call 1-877-552-9832 (1-877-55AYUDA) for assistance.
• If you feel you are being forced to perform labor against your will, contact the National Human Trafficking Resource Center: Call 1-888-373-7888 -or- Text HELP to 233733.
Note: Authority cited: Section 9998.11, Business and Professions Code; Reference: Sections 9998.1, 9998.1.5, 9998.2.5, 9998.3, 9998.6, 9998.7 and 9998.11, Business and Professions Code.
1. New section filed 10-8-2018; operative 1-1-2019 (Register 2018, No. 41).