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California SB 294 Emergency Contact Deadline: What Employers Need to Do Before March 30

California loft office desk with SB 294 emergency contact form, highlighter, and compliance checklist for the March 30 deadline
Compliance • California

California SB 294 Emergency Contact Deadline: What Employers Need to Do Before March 30

March 16, 2026 | 7 min read | By VertiSource HR Team • VertiSource HR

A lot of the attention around SB 294 (the Workplace Know Your Rights Act, Labor Code sections 1550–1559) went to the February 1 notice deadline. But that was only the first step. By March 30, 2026, employers also need to give current employees the chance to name an emergency contact and decide whether that person should be notified if the employee is arrested or detained in a covered situation.

If your team handled the annual Workplace Know Your Rights notice and moved on, this is the part that still needs to be finished. It also carries the steeper penalty exposure under section 1555.

Featured Takeaway

SB 294 runs on two timelines. The annual Workplace Know Your Rights notice (February 1, 2026, and annually thereafter) is a distribution and recordkeeping process. The March 30, 2026 deadline under Labor Code section 1555(b) is a separate data-collection obligation: employers must give current employees the chance to (1) designate an emergency contact, and (2) elect whether that contact should be notified in the event of an arrest or detention. Section 1555 violations carry penalties up to $500 per employee per day, capped at $10,000 per employee.

SB 294 Compliance Timeline

February 1, 2026

Annual rights-notice workflow

  • Stand-alone Workplace Know Your Rights notice to current employees
  • Annual thereafter
  • Maintain dated proof of notice delivery

March 30, 2026

Emergency-contact and notification-election workflow

  • Give current employees the opportunity to designate an emergency contact
  • Capture whether the employee wants that contact notified in covered arrest or detention scenarios
  • Allow updates during employment

February 1 vs. March 30: Two Different SB 294 Workflows

February 1 workflow

What it covers
Annual stand-alone workplace rights notice
Who it applies to
Current employees, then annually thereafter
Employer task
Distribute the notice and retain proof
Main recordkeeping point
Dated evidence of delivery
Penalty track
Up to $500 per employee per violation

March 30 workflow

What it covers
Emergency-contact opportunity plus employee notification election
Who it applies to
Current employees by March 30, then new hires at hire
Employer task
Collect contact information plus the employee’s yes/no notification choice
Main workflow point
Actual-knowledge escalation matters for off-site events
Penalty track
Up to $500 per employee per day, up to $10,000 per employee

Review your SB 294 setup before March 30

If you want a clean section 1555 field list, onboarding language, and an actual-knowledge escalation path, we can walk through your current setup and show where the gaps are.

What the SB 294 emergency contact requirement means for employers

Labor Code section 1555(b) sets March 30, 2026 as the deadline for current employees. By that date, every California employer covered by SB 294 must give each existing employee the opportunity to:

  • Designate an emergency contact.
  • Indicate whether that emergency contact should be notified if the employee is arrested or detained during work or on the worksite in a scenario covered by the statute.

For employees hired after March 30, 2026, the same opportunity must be provided at the time of hiring. In addition, employers must allow employees to update their emergency contact information through the duration of employment.

Importantly, this is separate from the February 1 Workplace Know Your Rights notice. The February 1 notice is a written document you distribute annually. By contrast, the March 30 obligation is about collecting a designation and an election from the employee, then storing both so you can act on them later if an incident occurs.

Compliance Note

The February 1 notice and the March 30 section 1555 process are separate requirements. Finishing the annual notice does not finish the emergency-contact and notification-election step.

Why a generic emergency-contact form does not satisfy SB 294

Most HRIS platforms and onboarding packets already collect an emergency contact. That field alone does not satisfy section 1555. The statute requires a separate employee election: does the employee want that designated contact to be notified if the employee is arrested or detained in a covered scenario?

In other words, your compliance record needs at least three data points per employee:

  1. Emergency contact name and information collected under section 1555.
  2. A yes/no election on whether the contact should be notified in arrest or detention situations.
  3. The date the employee was given the opportunity and the date the election was recorded.

A generic “emergency contact” field in your HRIS that stores a name and phone number, with no separate notification-election indicator, leaves you exposed. Specifically, if an incident occurs and you cannot show that the employee made the election, you are missing the documentation section 1555 expects.

System Tip

In most systems, the fix is simple. Add a separate field or form section for the section 1555 contact, a yes/no field for the notification election, and a date stamp showing when it was completed. If your HRIS already has a standard emergency-contact field, leave that alone and create a separate section 1555 record.

Section 1555 record should include

  • Designated contact name
  • Relationship
  • Contact information
  • Employee yes/no notification election
  • Date captured
  • Last update date

When an arrest or detention triggers the SB 294 emergency contact notification

The notice duty depends on three things: whether the employee elected notification, where the arrest or detention happened, and whether the employer actually knows about it.

Why the actual-knowledge standard matters

Operational Reality

This is the part most likely to get missed in real life. The statute does not require employers to monitor what happens off-site. It does mean managers, supervisors, and front-office staff should know to escalate the information right away so HR can decide whether section 1555 has been triggered.

When section 1555 notice is triggered

  1. Did the employee elect notification?
  2. Was the arrest or detention on the worksite?
  3. If off-site, did it happen during work hours or job duties?
  4. Does the employer have actual knowledge?
If yes: Notify the designated emergency contact.
If no: Section 1555 notice is not triggered based on the facts currently known.

How the penalty structure works

SB 294 does not apply a single penalty rate across all violations. The statute splits penalties into two tiers:

SB 294 Penalty Structure
Two tiers based on which obligation is violated
California Labor Code Sections 1550–1559
General Notice Violations Up to $500 per employee per violation
Section 1555 Violations Up to $500 per employee per day, max $10,000 per employee
February 1 Notice Annual distribution + 3-year recordkeeping
March 30 Emergency Contact Designation + notification election + ongoing updates
General violations cover the annual notice, new-hire delivery, and recordkeeping. Section 1555 violations cover the SB 294 emergency contact designation, notification election, and employer notification duties.

What the penalty math looks like in practice

The penalty difference matters. Missing the February 1 notice can mean up to $500 per employee per violation. Section 1555 is different. If that obligation is not handled and daily penalties apply, the ceiling is much higher. For a 200-person California workforce, the statutory maximum under section 1555 could theoretically reach $2,000,000.

HRIS, onboarding, and escalation changes for SB 294 emergency contact compliance

Implementation Checklist

1
Add a section 1555 emergency-contact record in your HRIS:Do not reuse the generic emergency contact field. Create a dedicated section 1555 contact record with the employee’s designated contact, the yes/no notification election, and the date captured.
Red flags: Using the existing “emergency contact” field with no election indicator.
2
Update the California onboarding packet for new hires after March 30:New hires after March 30 must receive the section 1555 opportunity at the time of hiring, in addition to the Workplace Know Your Rights notice.
Red flags: Onboarding template that only includes the annual notice and skips the emergency-contact election.
3
Build an employee-update path:Employers must also allow employees to update their emergency contact information through the duration of employment. Make sure the form or HRIS entry is accessible on an ongoing basis, not locked after onboarding.
Red flags: Emergency contact field that is only editable during onboarding or annual review.
4
Create a manager/front-office escalation workflow for actual-knowledge situations:Managers and supervisors need clear instructions: if you learn that an employee was arrested or detained during work hours or on-site, escalate to HR or the compliance contact immediately. Do not wait, do not decide on your own whether it “counts.”
Red flags: No escalation path documented. Managers unsure whether to report.
5
Maintain the annual February 1 notice workflow:The annual notice distribution is still required. Keep the stand-alone notice, distribution list with delivery dates, and three-year evidence retention in place.
Red flags: “We did it once” with no annual recurrence scheduled.
6
Watch the broader state trend:California is not the only state moving in this direction. Illinois has enacted related workplace notice requirements, and Washington has advanced a comparable bill. More states are likely to follow. If you operate in multiple states, treat SB 294 compliance as a template you can extend rather than an isolated California fix.

California Compliance • HRIS Workflows • Section 1555

How VertiSource HR helps you close both SB 294 workflows

SB 294 asks employers to manage two different tasks on two different timelines. We help clients set up the HRIS fields, onboarding steps, and internal handoff points needed to keep both the annual notice and the section 1555 process on track. Learn more about our full service overview.

Built for employers managing multi-location California workforces

HRIS Field Audit

Close the notification-election data gap

We audit your employee records in your HRIS for missing section 1555 fields, including the emergency-contact designation, the notification election, and the completion date. If the fields do not exist, we configure them.

Worth knowing: A generic emergency contact field does not satisfy section 1555. We set up a separate, auditable record.

Onboarding Packet Updates

Add section 1555 to California new-hire workflows

We update your onboarding templates so every California hire receives the section 1555 emergency-contact opportunity at the time of hiring, alongside the Workplace Know Your Rights notice.

Escalation Workflows

Build the actual-knowledge response path

We help you document a manager and front-office escalation workflow for actual-knowledge arrest or detention scenarios, so the right people know what to do and when to notify. Learn more about our HR support services.

Annual Notice Cycle

Keep the February 1 distribution on track

We configure the annual task, distribution list reconciliation against payroll, and three-year evidence retention so the notice workflow runs as a repeatable close process.

Request a section 1555 readiness review

COMPLIANCE • HRIS • SECTION 1555 • ONBOARDING

If you need the HRIS field list, the onboarding packet update, or the escalation workflow template for section 1555, we can walk through your current setup and close the gaps.

Explore HR support services

Frequently Asked Questions

SB 294 creates two separate employer obligations. First, by February 1, 2026 (and annually thereafter), employers must distribute a stand-alone Workplace Know Your Rights notice to every current employee and provide it to new hires upon hire. Second, by March 30, 2026, under Labor Code section 1555(b), employers must give every current employee the opportunity to designate an emergency contact and indicate whether that contact should be notified if the employee is arrested or detained in a covered scenario.
Yes. Labor Code section 1555(b), created by SB 294, establishes March 30, 2026 as the deadline for employers to provide current employees the opportunity to designate an emergency contact and make the notification election. This is a statutory deadline tied to SB 294, not a separate federal rule or comment period.
Probably not on its own. Section 1555 requires both the emergency-contact designation and a separate employee election about whether that contact should be notified in arrest or detention scenarios. A standard HRIS emergency-contact field typically stores a name and phone number but does not include the yes/no notification-election indicator. You will likely need to add a custom field or form section for the election and the date it was captured.
If an employee is arrested or detained during work hours or during the performance of job duties but not on the worksite, the employer’s notification obligation under section 1555 applies only if the employer has actual knowledge of the event. If a manager, supervisor, or front-office employee learns about the event through normal reporting channels, treat that as something that should be escalated immediately so the employer can evaluate whether section 1555 notice is required.
SB 294 has two penalty tiers. General violations (annual notice, new-hire delivery, recordkeeping) carry penalties up to $500 per employee per violation. Section 1555 violations (emergency-contact designation, notification election, employer notification duties) carry penalties up to $500 per employee per day, capped at $10,000 per employee. Because section 1555 penalties accrue daily, the per-employee exposure adds up faster.
Yes. SB 294 expressly requires keeping records of compliance with the annual written notice for three years, including the date each notice is provided or sent. As a practical compliance matter, employers should also maintain an auditable record of the section 1555 designation, notification election, and update dates.

Two workflows, two penalty tiers, one compliance window

SB 294 does not end when the annual notice goes out. The March 30 section 1555 deadline adds a separate data point, a separate employee election, and a separate escalation step. VertiSource HR helps employers get those pieces in place and keep the records straight.

VertiSource HR Team

VertiSource HR Team

Human Capital & Compliance Advisors, VertiSource HR

We share practical guidance on payroll, benefits, compliance, and HR operations for employers with 15 to 500 employees, based on what we see, solve, and support every day.

Disclaimer — This content is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, accounting, or professional advice. Consult a qualified attorney or licensed advisor before making employment, payroll, or compliance decisions. VertiSource HR disclaims all liability for actions taken or not taken based on this material.

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