Alpine County Employment Lawyers
California employment-law representation for Alpine County workers in all cities and unincorporated areas. Free, confidential consultation. We represent employees only - never employers.
Alpine County (~1,200 residents - California's least-populous county; no incorporated cities; communities include Markleeville, Bear Valley, Kirkwood) is anchored by County of Alpine (the largest single employer), Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California (federally-recognized tribe with three bands - Welmelti, Paw La Lu, Hung-a-let-ti - Carson Valley/Markleeville), Alpine County Unified School District, U.S. Forest Service / Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest, Bear Valley Mountain Resort, Kirkwood Mountain Resort (Vail Resorts subsidiary), Grover Hot Springs State Park, and Sierra-Nevada tourism / hospitality employers. Alpine County follows the California state minimum wage of $16.90/hour effective January 1, 2026 - no county-wide local ordinance. Civil employment cases are heard at the Alpine County Superior Court in Markleeville. Free, confidential consultation. We represent employees only.
Why Alpine County Employees Need an Employment Lawyer
Strict deadlines apply to every employment claim: CRD (California Civil Rights Department) requires an administrative complaint within 3 years of the violation and a civil suit within 1 year of the right-to-sue notice; EEOC charges must be filed within 300 days; the Government Claims Act requires presentation of personal-injury, wrongful-death, and personal-property tort claims against public entities within 6 months (Government Code section 911.2); all other claims must be presented within 1 year. California does not cap FEHA emotional-distress or punitive damages - but you must protect the deadlines first. We file the claim, handle the agency or court process, and recover what you're owed. No fee unless we win.
Common Employment Law Violations Across Alpine County
- Hamilton v. Heavenly Valley, Limited Partnership, El Dorado County Superior Court, Case No. SC20210148 (trial court; appellate proceedings at Cal. Ct. App. 3d Dist., Cases C095844 & C097604) and Quint v. Vail Resorts, Inc. (D. Colo. / 10th Cir. No. 23-1404) - $13.1M California wage/labor class settlement framework - In Hamilton, the California state-court action covering tens of thousands of California ski-resort workers (unpaid wages, off-the-clock work, equipment maintenance, meal/rest break violations under Labor Code sections 226.7, 512, 510, 1194), Judge Michael J. McLaughlin granted final approval to a $13.1M settlement on August 19, 2022 (the June 17, 2022 hearing was continued to August 19); the settlement was subsequently reversed on appeal, the California Supreme Court denied Vail's petition for review, and the case was remanded to the trial court on January 29, 2025. The companion federal action Quint v. Vail Resorts (Beaver Creek workers Randy Dean Quint, John Linn, Mark Molina) produced a 10th Circuit opinion on March 27, 2025. The same statutory framework applies to Kirkwood Mountain Resort (Vail Resorts subsidiary) workers in Alpine County. (Source: Vail Daily)
- Lewis v. Clarke, 137 S. Ct. 1285 (2017) - individual-capacity claims against tribal employees - U.S. Supreme Court held tribal sovereign immunity does not bar individual-capacity damages claims against tribal-government employees for torts committed in the scope of employment. The case arose from a Mohegan Tribe limousine accident in Connecticut, but the holding applies to all federally-recognized tribes including the Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California government and enterprise employees in Alpine County. (Source: SHRM)
- California public-sector framework - Skelly + Government Claims Act - With ~1,200 residents and the County as largest employer, Alpine public-sector workers are governed by Skelly v. State Personnel Bd. (1975) 15 Cal.3d 194 (due-process rights for permanent classified employees), the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act (MMBA), and Government Code section 911.2 (6-month claim presentation requirement). (Source: California Legislature)
Alpine County Worker Protections by Industry
We represent employees across all Alpine County industries. Below are the largest employers and the rules that govern wage, harassment, discrimination, retaliation, and wrongful-termination claims in this county.
Largest Alpine County employers
- County of Alpine (largest employer in California's least-populous county) - public-sector; Skelly + 6-month Government Claims Act
- Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California (federally-recognized; three bands; Carson Valley/Markleeville-area land) - tribal sovereign immunity; Lewis v. Clarke individual-capacity off-reservation claims; Indian-hiring preference (25 U.S.C. section 5116 (formerly section 472, recodified))
- Alpine County Unified School District (single-district county) - public-sector; Skelly + 6-month Government Claims Act
- U.S. Forest Service - Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest, Eldorado National Forest (federal civil-service) - federal-sector EEOC; MSPB; WPEA
- Kirkwood Mountain Resort (Vail Resorts subsidiary - major Sierra-Nevada ski resort) - Labor Code sections 226.7, 512, 510, 1194; Cal/OSHA section 6310; subject to the Hamilton v. Heavenly Valley, Limited Partnership $13.1M California wage settlement framework (El Dorado Sup. Ct. SC20210148; appellate proceedings at Cal. Ct. App. C095844 & C097604; remanded January 29, 2025) and the related Quint v. Vail Resorts federal action (D. Colo. / 10th Cir. No. 23-1404)
- Bear Valley Mountain Resort (independent ski area) - Labor Code sections 226.7, 512, 510; Cal/OSHA
- Grover Hot Springs State Park (California State Parks) - public-sector / state civil-service; SPB hearing rights; Skelly; Government Claims Act
- Eastern Alpine Fire-Rescue (volunteer & paid fire) - public-sector; FLSA fire-protection 7(k) overtime exemption
Local wage rules
Alpine County follows the California state minimum wage of $16.90/hour effective January 1, 2026. Alpine has no incorporated cities and no county ordinance is on the UC Berkeley Labor Center 2026 inventory. Sources: DIR 2026 wage notice; UC Berkeley Labor Center
Industry-specific protections
- Public-sector workers (County of Alpine - largest employer; school district; State Parks Grover Hot Springs) - Skelly + 6-month Government Claims Act; MMBA
- Tribal-government workers (Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California) - Lewis v. Clarke individual-capacity claims; Indian-hiring preference (25 U.S.C. section 5116 (formerly section 472, recodified))
- Ski-resort workers (Kirkwood Mountain Resort / Vail Resorts, Bear Valley) - Labor Code sections 226.7, 512, 510, 1194; Cal/OSHA section 6310; NLRA section 7 (concerted activity / union)
- Federal civil-service workers (Humboldt-Toiyabe NF, Eldorado NF) - federal-sector EEOC (45-day informal counseling); MSPB; WPEA
- Fire-protection / public-safety workers - FLSA section 7(k) (29 U.S.C. section 207(k)) overtime; Labor Code sections 1186 et seq.
- All workers - FEHA, Title VII, EFAA, PWFA, CFRA, PDL, Labor Code section 1102.5, Cal/OSHA section 6310
How to File an Employment Claim in Alpine County
Civil employment cases brought by Alpine County workers are heard at the Alpine County Superior Court, 14777 State Route 89, P.O. Box 518, Markleeville, CA 96120. Most California employment claims are filed first as administrative complaints with the California Civil Rights Department (CRD) or the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) before they can be filed as civil lawsuits.
Deadlines: CRD: 3 years to file an administrative complaint and 1 year to sue after right-to-sue; EEOC: 300 days; Government Claims Act (public employees): 6 months; Labor Code section 1102.5 / Tameny / FEHA civil action: 3 years; Labor Code section 510/226/1194 wage claims: 3-4 years; PAGA: 1 year (preceded by LWDA notice).
Government Resources for Alpine County Workers
Alpine County Superior Court
14777 State Route 89, P.O. Box 518, Markleeville, CA 96120
California Civil Rights Department (CRD)
651 Bannon Street, Suite 200, Sacramento, CA 95811 (Sacramento Regional Office serves Alpine County); statewide phone (800) 884-1684
U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
EEOC San Francisco District Office, 450 Golden Gate Avenue, 5 West, San Francisco, CA 94102; phone 1-800-669-4000
California Labor Commissioner (DLSE / DIR)
www.dir.ca.gov/dlse for wage claims, AB 701 warehouse-quotas claims, and retaliation complaints
Cal/OSHA
www.dir.ca.gov/dosh for workplace-safety and section 6310 anti-retaliation reports
U.S. Department of Labor (DOL)
www.dol.gov/agencies/whd for FLSA, FMLA, and federal wage-and-hour claims
Why Alpine County 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
Free Confidential Consultation for Alpine County Workers
If you experienced employment violations in Alpine County, contact Eghbali Law Firm. Free, confidential consultation. 1-800-371-3088. We represent employees only - never employers. 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.