California Employment Law

Napa County Employment Lawyers

Benjamin Eghbali, Esq.Reviewed by Benjamin Eghbali, Esq.·Updated

Eghbali Law Firm represents employees across Napa County — including workers in every city and unincorporated community in the county — in cases of harassment, discrimination, retaliation, wrongful termination, and unpaid wages. Claims by Napa County employees are typically filed in the Superior Court of California, County of Napa. Consultations are free and confidential, and we represent employees only — never employers.

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Why Napa 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. Free, confidential consultation.

Common Employment Law Violations Across Napa County

  • Foley Family Farms ALRB retaliation settlement (October 24, 2024 settlement; November 1, 2024 announcement) - Foley Family Farms, LLC (located in Sonoma County) agreed to pay 8 farmworkers $17,945 in lost wages to settle ALRB unfair-labor-practice charges. Workers were hired through Dos Viñas Vineyard Management LLC, a Calistoga (Napa County)-based farm labor contractor and co-respondent, to grow and harvest wine grapes for the 2023 season; the workers were fired after requesting a $1/hour raise and using paid sick leave. (Source: Agricultural Labor Relations Board)
  • Treasury Wine Estates Americas Co. Napa labor-code class action - Former employee filed a class-action lawsuit in Napa County alleging Labor Code violations (wage statements, off-the-clock work, missed meal/rest premiums) per Wine Business reporting. (Source: Wine Business)
  • Napa Valley wineries / Vineyard Management Group labor lawsuits - Multiple class actions filed against Napa Valley vineyard-management companies for alleged failure to pay all hours worked (minimum, straight, overtime) and missed meal/rest break premiums. (Source: Wine Business)

Why Napa County Workers Choose Eghbali Law Firm

  • Employees only

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

  • Free, confidential consultation.

    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.

Napa County Worker Protections by Industry

We represent employees across all Napa County industries. Below are the largest employers and the rules that govern wage, harassment, discrimination, retaliation, and wrongful-termination claims in this county.

Largest Napa County employers

  • Treasury Wine Estates Americas Co. - multinational wine company (Penfolds, Beringer, Stags' Leap); defendant in a Napa-filed labor-code class action (per Wine Business)
  • Foley Family Wines - defendant in 2024 Agricultural Labor Relations Board retaliation settlement (~$17,945 lost wages to 8 farmworkers; ALRB News Release, November 2024)
  • The Doctors Company (Napa) - physician malpractice insurer; FEHA + Title VII + ERISA
  • Adventist Health St. Helena - section 1278.5 hospital-whistleblower; religious-affiliated employer (Title VII ministerial exception applies to clergy roles only)
  • Queen of the Valley Medical Center (Providence - Napa) - section 1278.5 hospital-whistleblower
  • County of Napa - public-sector; Skelly + 6-month Government Claims Act
  • Napa Valley wineries (Mondavi, Beringer, Opus One, Stags' Leap, hundreds more) - agricultural workers covered by AB 1066 overtime parity (Labor Code sections 857-864), Cal/OSHA outdoor heat-illness standard (8 CCR section 3395), Labor Code sections 1682-1699 (Farm Labor Contractor Law), and Agricultural Labor Relations Act jurisdiction
  • Napa State Hospital (DSH) - state public-sector psychiatric hospital; CDPH/DSH personnel rules + Skelly + Government Code section 8547 state-employee whistleblower

Local wage rules

Napa County follows the California state minimum wage of $16.90/hour effective January 1, 2026. Napa County has no county-wide local ordinance and no Napa city is on the UC Berkeley Labor Center 2026 city/county minimum-wage inventory. Agricultural workers are protected by AB 1066 (Labor Code sections 857-864) - full overtime parity (1.5×/2×) phased in by employer size as of January 1, 2022 (large employers, 26+) and January 1, 2025 (small, ≤25). Fast-food workers at chains with 60+ national locations earn $20.00/hour under AB 1228 (Labor Code section 1474+). Sources: UC Berkeley Labor Center · CA DIR

Industry-specific protections

  • Agricultural / vineyard workers - AB 1066 overtime parity (1.5× over 8/40, 2× over 12; phased-in by employer size); Cal/OSHA outdoor heat-illness (8 CCR section 3395 - shade, water, rest breaks, high-heat procedures over 95°F); Labor Code sections 1682-1699 (Farm Labor Contractor Law); Agricultural Labor Relations Act (Labor Code section 1140+) collective-bargaining rights; pesticide-exposure remedies enforced by Cal/OSHA + California Department of Pesticide Regulation + Napa County Agricultural Commissioner
  • Hospital workers (Adventist St. Helena, Queen of the Valley) - Cal. Health & Safety Code section 1278.5
  • Hospitality / tasting-room workers - Labor Code section 351 tip-pooling rules; Labor Code section 226.7 missed meal/rest break premiums
  • Indigenous-language ag workers (Mixteco, Triqui, Zapotec, Spanish) - FEHA reasonable-accommodation rules support translation of training and key communications; Labor Code section 1171.5 makes immigration status irrelevant to wage-and-hour rights
  • State public-sector workers (Napa State Hospital / DSH) - Skelly + Government Code section 8547 state-employee whistleblower
  • All workers - FEHA, Title VII, EFAA, PWFA, CFRA, PDL, Labor Code section 1102.5 whistleblower, Cal/OSHA section 6310 anti-retaliation

How to File an Employment Claim in Napa County

Civil employment cases brought by Napa County workers are heard at the Napa County Superior Court - Historic Courthouse, 825 Brown Street, Napa, CA 94559. 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 Napa County Workers

Free Confidential Consultation for Napa County Workers

If you experienced employment violations in Napa County, contact Eghbali Law Firm. Free, confidential consultation. 1-800-371-3088. We represent employees only - never employers. Free, confidential consultation.

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