Bakersfield, California

Wage Hour Lawyer in Bakersfield

California wage hour lawyer representation for Bakersfield workers. Free, confidential consultation. We represent employees only.

If you experienced wage theft at a Bakersfield workplace, you have strong protections under California law. We represent employees only, never employers, and offer a free, confidential consultation. 1-800-371-3088.

What Are Wage and Hour Claims in Bakersfield

Bakersfield workers are entitled to the highest of: federal minimum wage ($7.25/hour), California state minimum wage ($16.90/hour effective January 1, 2026 under California Labor Code section 1182.12), or any applicable local minimum wage. Bakersfield has no separate citywide minimum-wage ordinance; the California state minimum wage of $16.90/hour applies. Fast-food workers at chains with 60 or more national locations earn at least $20.00/hour under AB 1228 (California Labor Code section 1474) since April 1, 2024. Healthcare workers at covered facilities earn tiered rates under SB 525 (California Labor Code sections 1182.14, 1182.15, 1182.16) reaching $25/hour at large hospital systems on July 1, 2026.

Bakersfield Industries Where Wage and Hour Violations Are Most Common

  • Oil and gas extraction workers at Chevron, CRC, and Berry Petroleum - at Chevron Corporation (NYSE: CVX) Central California operations headquartered in Bakersfield, which employ more than 750 workers (engineers, environmental scientists, geologists, and field staff) serving the Kern River Oil Field and other San Joaquin Valley operations; at California Resources Corporation / CRC (NYSE: CRC); and at Berry Corporation / Berry Petroleum (NASDAQ: BRY). Kern County is one of the nation's leading energy producers. Oil and gas workers are covered by Cal/OSHA Process Safety Management standards (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, section 5189), the federal OSH Act section 11(c) (29 U.S.C. section 660), the Clean Air Act whistleblower provision (42 U.S.C. section 7622), and California Labor Code section 6310 (retaliation for safety reporting). Public-company employees of Chevron (NYSE: CVX), CRC (NYSE: CRC), and Berry Corporation (NASDAQ: BRY) are also protected by Sarbanes-Oxley (18 U.S.C. section 1514A) and Dodd-Frank section 922 (15 U.S.C. section 78u-6). Heavy-equipment operators and field workers are non-exempt employees entitled to overtime under Cal. Labor Code section 510.
  • Agricultural and farmworker employees - in the carrot, mandarin, citrus, almond, pistachio, grape, and row-crop fields and packing houses surrounding Bakersfield. Major Kern County agricultural employers include Grimmway Farms (headquartered in Bakersfield - one of the largest carrot producers in the world), Sun Pacific (Cuties mandarin oranges - on the EDD Major Employer list for Kern County), Bolthouse Farms, Wonderful Citrus (Wonderful Pistachios / Wonderful Halos parent), and many smaller grower-shippers. Agricultural workers are covered by: (1) the Agricultural Labor Relations Act (ALRA, Cal. Labor Code section 1140 et seq.) with the Agricultural Labor Relations Board (ALRB) handling unfair labor practice claims; (2) AB 1066 (Cal. Labor Code section 857) daily/weekly overtime for farmworkers (8 hours per day, 40 hours per week threshold phased in by 2022); (3) Cal/OSHA heat illness prevention regulations (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8, section 3395) - especially critical in the hot San Joaquin Valley summer; and (4) protections for migrant and seasonal agricultural workers under MSPA (29 U.S.C. section 1801 et seq.).
  • Manufacturing workers at Frito-Lay - at the Frito-Lay (PepsiCo / NASDAQ: PEP) Bakersfield manufacturing plant. Manufacturing workers are covered by Cal/OSHA standards (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 8), California Labor Code section 6310 (retaliation for safety reporting), and federal OSH Act section 11(c) (29 U.S.C. section 660). Production-line workers are non-exempt employees entitled to overtime under Cal. Labor Code section 510. Public-company employees of PepsiCo (NASDAQ: PEP) are also protected by Sarbanes-Oxley (18 U.S.C. section 1514A) and Dodd-Frank section 922 (15 U.S.C. section 78u-6).
  • Healthcare workers - at Kern Medical (1700 Mount Vernon Avenue, Bakersfield, CA 93306 - 222-bed acute-care teaching hospital; the only advanced trauma care between Fresno and Los Angeles; Kern County's safety-net hospital, governed by the Kern County Hospital Authority), Adventist Health Bakersfield (2615 Chester Avenue - 253-bed non-profit hospital that has served Kern County for more than 100 years; legal name "San Joaquin Community Hospital dba Adventist Health Bakersfield"), Bakersfield Memorial Hospital / Dignity Health (420 34th Street - more than 385 licensed beds; founded 1956), Mercy Hospital Downtown (2215 Truxtun Avenue, Dignity Health), and Mercy Hospital Southwest (Dignity Health - the only acute-care hospital west of Highway 99, recently expanded with a 106-bed tower including 16 orthopedic + 24 ICU + 18 NICU beds - the first Kern County NICU with private family suites). Covered by SB 525 healthcare-worker minimum-wage schedule (Cal. Labor Code sections 1182.14, 1182.15, 1182.16), California Health and Safety Code section 1278.5 ($25,000-per-violation civil penalty for patient-safety retaliation), and CNA / SEIU-UHW collective bargaining agreements. Kern Medical employees, as workers of a Kern County Hospital Authority public agency, may have public-sector protections including the 6-month government-claim deadline.
  • Education workers at KHSD, BCSD, CSUB, and Bakersfield College - at the Kern High School District / KHSD (California's LARGEST grades 9-12 high school district with over 42,000 students and 3,500 employees across 19 comprehensive high schools plus 5 alternative and magnet schools; district office at 5801 Sundale Avenue, Bakersfield, CA 93309-2924; (661) 827-3100; founded 1893), the Bakersfield City School District / BCSD (K-8 with approximately 3,674 staff at 1300 Baker Street, (661) 631-4600), the Panama-Buena Vista Union School District, California State University, Bakersfield / CSUB (9001 Stockdale Highway, Bakersfield, CA 93311; part of the CSU system), and Bakersfield College (1801 Panorama Drive, Bakersfield, CA 93305; part of the Kern Community College District / KCCD - one of California's oldest community colleges, serving Kern County for over 100 years). K-12 teachers are covered by the California Education Code sections 44930-44987 (permanent teacher tenure, dismissal procedures, and Skelly hearings). CSUB faculty are covered by the CSU collective bargaining agreement (CFA contract). All public-school, community-college, and CSU employees are subject to the 6-month government-claim deadline.
  • Retail and consumer-services workers - at the Valley Plaza Mall, The Marketplace, Outlets at Tejon (in nearby Tejon Ranch), and chain retailers along Stockdale Highway, Rosedale Highway, Ming Avenue, and California Avenue, including Costco, Target, Walmart, Home Depot, and many fast-food and restaurant chains. Fast-food workers at chains with 60+ national locations earn the $20.00/hour AB 1228 floor (Cal. Labor Code section 1474).
  • Government and public-sector workers - at the City of Bakersfield (1600 Truxtun Avenue - charter city since 1915 with a council-manager form of government), the Bakersfield Police Department (officers subject to POBR / Cal. Gov. Code section 3300 et seq.), the Bakersfield Fire Department, Kern County government, and Edwards Air Force Base (in eastern Kern County - federal civilian employees covered by the Civil Service Reform Act / CSRA, 5 U.S.C. section 2302, and the Whistleblower Protection Act / WPA and WPEA, 5 U.S.C. section 2302(b)(8); federal contractors covered by NDAA section 4712 / 41 U.S.C. section 4712 and the False Claims Act anti-retaliation provision, 31 U.S.C. section 3730(h)). Subject to the 6-month Government Claims Act deadline for state and local public employers.
  • Warehouse and logistics workers - along the State Route 99 / Interstate 5 corridor. Warehouse workers are protected by the Warehouse Quotas Act (AB 701, Cal. Labor Code sections 2100-2112) - which requires written quota disclosures, prohibits undisclosed quotas, and prohibits quotas that prevent compliance with meal/rest breaks or OSHA. Workers may also have client-employer joint liability claims under Cal. Labor Code section 2810.3 if working through staffing agencies.

Bakersfield Local Protections

Bakersfield has no separate citywide minimum-wage, hotel-worker, fair-workweek, healthcare-worker, or paid-sick-leave ordinance beyond California state law. Bakersfield is a charter city (1915 charter) - one of the oldest big-city charters in California (along with Sacramento 1921 and Long Beach 1921) - operating under the council-manager form of government. Bakersfield workers 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), SB 525 (healthcare-worker tiered schedule - directly relevant to Kern Medical, Adventist Health Bakersfield, Bakersfield Memorial, and Mercy Hospitals workers), and AB 1066 (farmworker overtime - directly relevant to Bakersfield's massive carrot, citrus, almond, pistachio, and grape farmworker population).

California Paid Sick Leave (Labor Code sections 245-249) requires at least 40 hours (5 days) of paid sick leave per year, effective January 1, 2024. The 2026 exempt-salary floor is $70,304/year (twice the state minimum wage, per DIR News 2025-118).

California Law

For the full California wage-and-hour framework, including overtime (Labor Code section 510), meal and rest breaks (sections 512 and 226.7), wage statements (section 226), waiting-time penalties (section 203), expense reimbursement (section 2802), and PAGA (sections 2698 et seq.), see our California employment law page.

What Compensation Can You Recover

Unpaid wages, overtime, missed meal/rest premiums (one hour of pay per missed break), wage-statement penalties (up to $4,000 per employee under Labor Code section 226(e)), waiting-time penalties (up to 30 days of pay under Labor Code section 203), interest, liquidated damages on minimum-wage shortfalls, and attorneys' fees and costs (Labor Code section 1194). For details, see our California employment law page.

How to File a Wage Claim in Bakersfield

Wage claims can be filed with the California Labor Commissioner (DLSE Bakersfield Office, 7718 Meany Avenue, Bakersfield, CA 93308). Civil suits are heard at the Kern County Superior Court, Metropolitan Division, 1415 Truxtun Avenue, Bakersfield, CA 93301. Call us at 1-800-371-3088 before any deadline.

Frequently Asked Questions

A worker worked unpaid on-call shifts at an oilfield/refining job in Kern County. Can a worker recover? +
Yes, and the *Marathon Petroleum* class settlement confirmed the pattern. The $9M settlement at Marathon's Los Angeles Refinery (final approval March 23, 2026) covered 748 California operators / lab workers for unpaid on-call shift time and shows the wage exposure pattern that applies to Kern oilfield workers. Labor Code section 510 (overtime), section 226 (wage statements), section 203 (waiting-time penalties up to 30 days).
A worker works outdoors picking carrots at a Kern County farm. What overtime applies? +
Under AB 1066 (Labor Code sections 857 to 864), agricultural employers must pay overtime on a phased-in schedule: large employers (26 or more) became fully phased in on January 1, 2022, and small employers (25 or fewer) became fully phased in on January 1, 2025. Both rates are now fully effective: 1.5× over 8 hours/day or 40/week, 2× over 12 hours/day. Wage-statement (section 226) violations support penalties up to $4,000.
If Mercy Hospital makes the worker chart for free off the clock. Is that illegal? +
Yes. All work time must be paid (Labor Code section 510 and the IWC Wage Orders). Labor Code section 226.7 entitles a worker to a 1-hour premium per missed meal/rest break. section 1278.5 also protects against retaliation for reporting unsafe staffing.
How long does a worker have to file a Bakersfield wage claim? +
Labor Code section 1194: 3 years; UCL section 17200: 4 years.

Free Confidential Consultation

Speak with a California wage theft lawyer today. Free confidential consultation. No fee unless you 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.