Alhambra, California

Alhambra Employment Lawyer

California employment-law representation for Alhambra workers. Free, confidential consultation. We represent employees only, never employers.

Alhambra employment law representation for workers in Los Angeles. Free, confidential consultation. We represent employees only, never employers. Phone or video, no office visit needed.

Why Alhambra Workers Need a Lawyer Who Knows the Local Industries

Alhambra is one of the largest cities in the San Gabriel Valley of Los Angeles County, with a 2020 census population of 82,868. The city was incorporated on July 11, 1903 and operates as a charter city. City Hall is at 111 South First Street, Alhambra, CA 91801. The workforce concentrates around Alhambra Hospital Medical Center at 100 South Raymond Avenue, Alhambra, CA 91801, (626) 570-1606 (a 144-bed general acute care hospital with 501-1,000 employees per LinkedIn; part of the AHMC Healthcare system), the Alhambra Unified School District (AUSD) headquartered at 1515 West Mission Road, Alhambra, CA 91803, (626) 943-3000, and major retail and service employers including the Costco Wholesale warehouse at 2207 West Commonwealth Avenue (the Costco corporate global headquarters is in Issaquah, WA, but the Alhambra warehouse is a significant local employer). Alhambra benefits from its own LA County Superior Court branch - the Alhambra Courthouse (Northeast District) at 150 West Commonwealth Avenue. Alhambra is also home to LA County Department of Public Social Services (DPSS) regional offices that employ hundreds of county social workers and case carriers. None of these protections matter if you do not assert them on time. Public-employer claims (City of Alhambra, AUSD, Los Angeles County including DPSS) carry a strict 6-month government-claim deadline under Cal. Government Code section 911.2. We file the claim, take it through the agency or court, and recover what you are owed. No fee unless we win.

Alhambra Industries Where Employment Violations Are Common

Alhambra employment cases tend to fall into five industry concentrations. Each one has its own legal framework and its own recurring fact patterns.

Healthcare

Alhambra Hospital Medical Center, 100 South Raymond Avenue, Alhambra, CA 91801, (626) 570-1606, is a 144-bed general acute care hospital fully accredited by The Joint Commission, with 501-1,000 employees per LinkedIn. It is part of the AHMC Healthcare system, which also operates Anaheim Regional Medical Center, Garfield Medical Center (Monterey Park), Greater El Monte Community Hospital, Monterey Park Hospital, San Gabriel Valley Medical Center, and Whittier Hospital Medical Center. Healthcare workers at Alhambra Hospital and other AHMC facilities are covered by SB 525 (California Labor Code sections 1182.14, 1182.15, 1182.16), which phases healthcare-worker minimum wages upward on a hospital-category schedule, and by California Health and Safety Code section 1278.5 ($25,000-per-violation civil penalty for patient-safety retaliation). Common claims: wage and hour (off-the-clock charting and missed meal periods under California Labor Code sections 226.7 and 512), nurse-to-patient ratio retaliation, and FEHA discrimination and harassment under Cal. Government Code section 12940.

Education

The Alhambra Unified School District (AUSD), 1515 West Mission Road, Alhambra, CA 91803, (626) 943-3000, serves K-12 students across Alhambra, Monterey Park, Rosemead, and San Gabriel. AUSD is one of the largest employers in the city. The East Los Angeles College (part of the Los Angeles Community College District) is in nearby Monterey Park. Public-school workers have pre-deprivation due-process rights under Skelly v. State Personnel Board (1975) 15 Cal.3d 194 and California Whistleblower Protection Act coverage under Cal. Government Code section 8547. The 6-month Government Claims Act deadline (Cal. Government Code section 911.2) applies to most parallel tort claims against AUSD.

Retail and consumer services

Major retail employers in Alhambra include Costco Wholesale at 2207 West Commonwealth Avenue (the Costco corporate global headquarters is in Issaquah, Washington; the Alhambra warehouse is a major local-employment center), the Alhambra Place shopping district, and chain retailers along Main Street, Valley Boulevard, and Garfield Avenue. Alhambra's commercial corridor along Main Street and Garfield Avenue is one of the most active in the San Gabriel Valley. Common claims: wage and hour (off-the-clock and rounding violations under California Labor Code sections 226.7, 510, 512), commission disputes (Labor Code section 2751), and sexual harassment under FEHA Cal. Government Code section 12940(j). Fast-food workers at chains with 60 or more national locations earn the $20.00/hour state fast-food minimum wage under AB 1228 (California Labor Code section 1474), effective April 1, 2024.

Public sector and county social services

The City of Alhambra, 111 South First Street, Alhambra, CA 91801, is a charter city (incorporated July 11, 1903) and one of the city's largest employers. The Alhambra Police Department is the primary law-enforcement agency. Los Angeles County Department of Public Social Services (DPSS) operates regional offices in and near Alhambra, employing hundreds of social workers and case carriers; LA County offices in Alhambra also include various Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) and Public Health functions. The Alhambra Courthouse at 150 West Commonwealth Avenue is the LA County Superior Court's Northeast District branch and employs court clerks and security staff. Public-sector workers' parallel tort claims are subject to the 6-month Government Claims Act deadline under Cal. Government Code section 911.2.

Restaurant and small-business workers

Alhambra has one of the densest concentrations of restaurants in the San Gabriel Valley, particularly along Main Street and Valley Boulevard, including many Asian-cuisine restaurants and bakeries. Common claims: wage and hour (off-the-clock and tip-pooling violations under California Labor Code sections 226.7, 512, and 351), exempt-misclassification for assistant managers and shift leads, and sexual harassment under FEHA Cal. Government Code section 12940(j). Fast-food workers at chains with 60 or more national locations earn the $20.00/hour AB 1228 minimum wage; non-chain restaurants are subject to the California state minimum wage of $16.90/hour effective January 1, 2026.

Alhambra Worker Protections

The City of Alhambra follows California state law for minimum wage, paid sick leave, and worker protections. Alhambra has no separate citywide minimum-wage, hotel-worker, fair-workweek, healthcare-worker, or paid-sick-leave ordinance beyond California state law. Alhambra is a charter city (incorporated July 11, 1903) and reserves the right to enact local labor ordinances in the future under its police power. Alhambra workers currently rely on the state-level floor under California Labor Code section 1182.12 ($16.90/hour effective January 1, 2026) plus industry-specific state rules including AB 1228 ($20/hour fast-food) and SB 525 (healthcare-worker tiered schedule).

  • California minimum wage (2026) - $16.90/hour for most employers, effective January 1, 2026 (California Labor Code section 1182.12).
  • Fast-food minimum wage - $20.00/hour for covered fast-food restaurant employees at chains with 60 or more national locations, effective April 1, 2024 (AB 1228, California Labor Code section 1474 et seq.).
  • Healthcare worker minimum wage - SB 525 (California Labor Code sections 1182.14, 1182.15, 1182.16). Directly relevant to Alhambra Hospital Medical Center workers. SB 525 controls statewide and field-preempts new local healthcare-worker minimum-wage ordinances through 2034.
  • California Paid Sick Leave - California Labor Code sections 245-249. At least 40 hours (5 days) per year of paid sick leave for most workers, effective January 1, 2024.
  • Exempt salary floor (2026) - $70,304/year (approximately $1,352/week) for executive, administrative, and professional exempt classifications (twice the state minimum wage at $16.90/hour, per DIR News 2025-118).
  • Cal-WARN Act - California Labor Code sections 1400 et seq. Covered employers with 75 or more workers must give 60 days' advance written notice of a mass layoff (50 or more employees in any 30-day period), plant closing, or relocation.
  • Public-employer government-claim deadline - Cal. Government Code section 911.2. Claims against the City of Alhambra, AUSD, or Los Angeles County must be presented in writing within 6 months of the accrual of the cause of action.

California Law That Applies in Alhambra

Most Alhambra employment cases are decided under California state law. The statutes below cover the issues that come up in almost every case.

  • FEHA, Cal. Government Code section 12940 et seq. Discrimination, harassment, and retaliation in employment. Covers race, color, ancestry, national origin, religion, age (40+), sex, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, marital status, medical condition, mental and physical disability, military and veteran status, genetic information, and pregnancy. 5+ employees for discrimination (Cal. Government Code section 12926); 1+ employee for harassment (Cal. Government Code section 12940(j)(4)).
  • Overtime and breaks, California Labor Code sections 510, 226.7, 512. Daily overtime above 8 hours and weekly overtime above 40 hours at 1.5x; double time after 12 hours in a day or after 8 hours on the 7th consecutive workday. Meal-period premium of one hour of pay if the employer fails to provide a duty-free 30-minute meal period; rest-period premium of one hour of pay if the employer fails to authorize a 10-minute rest period for every 4 hours worked.
  • Wage statements and waiting-time penalties, California Labor Code sections 226 and 203. Itemized pay stubs are required; missing or inaccurate stubs trigger statutory penalties. Final wages must be paid at termination (or within 72 hours of resignation without notice); waiting-time penalties run up to 30 days of pay if the employer fails.
  • Whistleblower retaliation, California Labor Code section 1102.5. Lawson v. PPG Architectural Finishes, Inc. (2022) 12 Cal.5th 703 sets the burden-shifting framework. SB 497 (effective January 1, 2024) added a 90-day rebuttable presumption.
  • Wrongful termination in violation of public policy - Tameny v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (1980) 27 Cal.3d 167.
  • Hostile work environment - Jones v. The Lodge at Torrey Pines Partnership (2008) 42 Cal.4th 1158.
  • California Equal Pay Act, California Labor Code section 1197.5. Equal pay for substantially similar work. SB 642 (effective January 1, 2026) broadened the definition of "wages."
  • Tip protections, California Labor Code section 351. Relevant to Alhambra hospitality and restaurant workers.
  • Commission protections, California Labor Code section 2751. Relevant to Alhambra retail workers.
  • Lactation accommodation, California Labor Code sections 1030-1034 and the federal PUMP Act, 29 U.S.C. section 218d.
  • California WARN Act, California Labor Code sections 1400 et seq. 75+ employees; 60-day notice; 50+ in any 30-day period. SB 617 (effective January 1, 2026) expanded the required notice content.
  • Independent-contractor classification, California Labor Code section 2775. ABC test from Dynamex Operations West, Inc. v. Superior Court (2018) 4 Cal.5th 903; codified by AB 5 and recodified by AB 2257.
  • Client-employer liability, California Labor Code section 2810.3.
  • Healthcare worker minimum wage, California Labor Code sections 1182.14, 1182.15, 1182.16 (SB 525).
  • Fast-food restaurant minimum wage, California Labor Code section 1474 (AB 1228). $20.00/hour for covered employees as of April 1, 2024.
  • Non-competes void, California Business and Professions Code section 16600. Reinforced by SB 699 and AB 1076 (both effective January 1, 2024).
  • Stay-or-pay clauses void, California Labor Code section 926 (AB 692). Effective January 1, 2026.
  • Silenced No More Act, California Code of Civil Procedure section 1001 and Cal. Government Code section 12964.5 (SB 331).
  • Hospital-worker whistleblower, California Health and Safety Code section 1278.5. Directly relevant to Alhambra Hospital Medical Center workers - $25,000-per-violation civil penalty.
  • PAGA, California Labor Code sections 2698 et seq. Reformed by AB 2288 and SB 92 (effective July 1, 2024).
  • Government-claim deadline, Cal. Government Code section 911.2. Claims against the City of Alhambra, AUSD, or Los Angeles County (including DPSS, DCFS, and Department of Public Health Alhambra offices) must be presented within 6 months.

The 2026 exempt-salary threshold is $70,304 per year (twice the state minimum wage at $16.90/hour, per DIR News 2025-118). An Alhambra worker paid less than that, no matter what title is on the door, is almost certainly a non-exempt employee entitled to overtime and meal/rest premiums.

How to File a Claim in Alhambra

Where and how you file depends on the kind of claim and who the employer is. The wrong filing or a missed deadline can permanently bar your case. Call us before any deadline at 1-800-371-3088 and we will handle the filing for you.

Court

Civil employment lawsuits filed by Alhambra workers are heard at the Los Angeles County Superior Court, Alhambra Courthouse (Northeast District), 150 West Commonwealth Avenue, Alhambra, CA 91801. Unlimited civil cases may also be filed at the Stanley Mosk Courthouse, 111 North Hill Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012, or the Spring Street Courthouse, 312 North Spring Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012. Federal employment claims are heard at the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, First Street U.S. Courthouse, 350 West 1st Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012.

State and federal agencies

  • California Civil Rights Department (CRD), Los Angeles Office - 320 W. 4th Street, Suite 1000, 10th Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90013. Statewide intake (800) 884-1684.
  • U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), Los Angeles District Office - Roybal Federal Building, 255 East Temple Street, 4th Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90012. (213) 785-3090; national intake 1-800-669-4000.
  • California Labor Commissioner (DLSE), Los Angeles Office - 320 W. 4th Street, Suite 450, Los Angeles, CA 90013.
  • Cal/OSHA - statewide complaint line (833) 579-0927.
  • City of Alhambra - 111 South First Street, Alhambra, CA 91801. For any claim against the City of Alhambra, AUSD, or Los Angeles County, a written government claim must be presented under Cal. Government Code section 911.2 within 6 months.

Deadlines that matter most

  • 6-month government-claim deadline - Cal. Government Code section 911.2.
  • 1-year right-to-sue deadline - once CRD issues a right-to-sue notice, Cal. Government Code section 12965 gives 1 year to file the lawsuit.
  • 300-day EEOC charge deadline - federal Title VII, ADA, and ADEA charges; 90 days to file a federal lawsuit after the EEOC right-to-sue notice.
  • 3-year wage-claim statute - most unpaid-wage claims; extendable to 4 under Bus. & Prof. Code section 17200 when applicable.

Why Alhambra Workers Choose Eghbali Law Firm

  • Employees only

    We never represent employers. Every resource goes toward winning your case.

  • No fee unless we win

    You pay nothing unless we recover for you. No upfront costs. No hidden fees.

  • Free confidential consultation

    No cost to speak with us. Everything you share is protected by attorney-client privilege.

  • Statewide California practice

    We serve workers across all of California regardless of where you live or work.

  • Phone or video, no office visit needed

    Most consultations happen by phone or video. You only attend if your testimony is required.

  • Multilingual staff available

    We serve clients in multiple languages. Contact us to discuss your case in your preferred language.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where are employment lawsuits heard for workers employed in Alhambra? +
Civil employment cases for Alhambra workers are typically filed at the Alhambra Courthouse, 150 W. Commonwealth Ave., Alhambra, CA 91801 or the Stanley Mosk Courthouse, 111 N. Hill Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012. The Los Angeles Superior Court is the largest unified trial court in the United States. Source: lacourt.org.
Does Alhambra have its own minimum wage? +
No. Alhambra follows the California state minimum wage of $16.90/hour effective January 1, 2026 (AB 1228 fast-food $20/hour statewide). For work performed in an unincorporated area of Los Angeles County, the Los Angeles County minimum wage applies - $17.81/hour (eff. 7/1/2025), rising to $18.47/hour (eff. 7/1/2026). Source: Los Angeles County DCBA.
Is it legal for an Alhambra restaurant employer to enforce an English-only rule and discipline a worker for speaking Mandarin? +
Generally no. Cal. Government Code section 12951 prohibits English-only workplace policies unless justified by business necessity (e.g., safety-critical communication) and is narrowly tailored. Pretextual or overbroad English-only rules constitute national-origin discrimination under FEHA Government Code section 12940. Title VII / EEOC guidance imposes parallel federal protection. CRD complaint within 3 years; EEOC charge within 300 days.
What's the deadline for filing an employment-discrimination claim in Alhambra? +
CRD (FEHA) administrative complaint within 3 years of the violation; 1 year to sue after the right-to-sue notice. EEOC charge within 300 days for Title VII, ADA, ADEA. Government Claims Act 6 months for public-employee tort claims. Labor Code section 1102.5: 3 years. Labor Code section 6310 (Cal/OSHA retaliation): 6 months.
Can a worker be fired in Alhambra for filing a workers' compensation claim? +
No. Labor Code section 132a makes it unlawful for employers to retaliate against workers because they filed or are about to file a workers' compensation claim. Remedies include reinstatement, back pay, and increased compensation. FEHA disability-discrimination protections (Government Code section 12940) may also apply if the workplace condition rendered the worker disabled.
Does immigration status affect an Alhambra employment claim? +
No. California Labor Code section 1171.5 and the California Supreme Court's decision in Salas v. Sierra Chemical Co. (2014) 59 Cal.4th 407 confirm that all California employees, regardless of immigration status, are protected by FEHA, wage-and-hour laws, retaliation statutes, and Cal/OSHA. Alhambra restaurant, retail, and hospital workers, including Mandarin/Cantonese/Vietnamese-speaking employees, are protected regardless of immigration status under Labor Code section 1171.5.

Need an Alhambra Employment Lawyer?

If you were harassed, discriminated against, fired in retaliation, or shorted on wages in an Alhambra workplace, we want to hear about it. Free confidential consultation. No fee unless we win.

Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Employment law is complex and fact-specific. The information on this page reflects California law as of 2026 and may change. If you believe your rights have been violated, please consult a licensed California employment attorney to evaluate your specific situation.