On Jan. 8, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine signed the Pay Stub Protection Act, which takes effect on April 9. This act, which the Ohio House and Senate passed unanimously, requires all employers in the state to provide pay statements to employees containing specific information about wages and hours worked.
The new law applies to every employer in Ohio with at least one “employee,” broadly defined as “any person who performs a service for wages or other remuneration for an employer.” The law requires that Ohio employers provide each employee with written or electronic access to a statement of the employee’s earnings and deductions for each pay period on the employer’s regular paydays. The following information must be included on the pay statement:
- The employee’s name.
- The employee’s address.
- The employer’s name.
- The total gross wages earned by the employee during the pay period.
- The total net wages paid to the employee for the pay period.
- A listing of the amount and purpose of each addition to, or deduction from, the wages paid to the employee during the pay period.
- The date the employee was paid and the pay period covered by that payment.
For each employee who is paid on an hourly basis, the pay statement must also include:
While the law does not create a private right of action, it does...
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