The Mistake That Nearly Cost $14,000 to This CA-based Firm

And How They Turned It Around

Company Snapshot

For years, HR wasn’t a pain point at a 45-person architectural firm in Southern California—just another task handled by Sarah, the Office Manager. Onboarding, payroll, benefits? All got done. The team was collaborative, projects ran smoothly, and everyone seemed happy.

Until one Tuesday morning in March.

 

The Email That Changed Everything

The company founder opened an email from a former employee’s attorney: Notice of PAGAClaim – Meal Break Violations.
The employee alleged that the company failed to enforce California’s meal break laws.


The Wake-Up Call: Meal Break Law 101

In California, employers must:

✔ Provide a 30-minute uninterrupted meal break by the fifth hour of work
✔ Ensure breaks are actually taken—not just “available”
✔ Pay one additional hour of wages for every violation
✔ Each day of non-compliance counts

Source: California Labor Code §226.7


The Diagnosis

Timecard review showed:
● 23% of employees skipped or shortened breaks
● Breaks were rarely tracked
● Managers weren’t trained on enforcement
● Payroll didn’t flag missed breaks
● No signed acknowledgments on file

Estimated exposure:
● $35/hour avg. wage
● 400+ violations over two years
● $14,000+ in penalties—not including attorney fees

Source: SHRM – Meal Break Lawsuits in California

 

Three Options on the Table, The Best Decision

With penalties stacking by the day, the team had to act fast.

Options About the option The outcome
DIY Fix Send a policy email.
Ask employees to track breaks manually. Quick.

– No enforcement 

– No documentation

– High risk.

Upgrade Payroll Software Set alerts for missed breaks.

– No HR training

– Policy structure

Bring an expert Build a real compliance system—with help. Call Optima Office

 

The Turnaround Plan

Partnering with Optima’s HR team, the company took immediate action:

Week 1–2:
● Payroll system upgraded with meal/rest break alerts
● Emergency policy rollout to all staff
● Signed acknowledgments collected
● Manager dashboard launched for tracking and alerts

Month 1–3:

● Full meal/rest break policy rewrite
● Training delivered to all employees
● Managers coached on break enforcement & documentation
● Weekly compliance monitoring put in place

 

Results (6 Months Later)

98.5% break compliance across the company
● Zero new claims or complaints
● Legal issue resolved with minimal penalty, thanks to documented remediation
● Managers felt more confident—and employees appreciated the clarity

 

Takeaways

1. Compliance isn’t optional.
Whether your company has 10 or 100 employees, the rules still apply.

Source: California PAGA Settlement Tracker

2. One complaint can reveal everything.
Regulators rarely stop at one issue. It’s your entire system that gets reviewed.

3. Systems matter: technology + expertise.
You need both. Tools without guidance won’t keep your company audit-ready