California continues to set the pace for workforce regulation, and the Staffing Agency Fair Employment Act (SAFE Act), introduced as Senate Bill 1032, is a strong indicator of where the staffing industry is headed. The legislation is designed to increase accountability across the contingent workforce ecosystem, not only for staffing providers, but also for the client businesses that engage them.
This is more than a routine regulatory update. It reflects a broader shift in how compliance risk, operational responsibility, and workforce accountability are allocated across the staffing supply chain.
If enacted, SB 1032 would require staffing providers operating in California to:
The proposed legislation would also impose new obligations on client businesses that utilize staffing providers, including requirements to:
Importantly, SB 1032 goes even further by expanding enforcement mechanisms and potential liability exposure. Among its more significant provisions, SB 1032 would:
Taken together, these provisions signal a continued movement toward heightened transparency, shared responsibility, and stricter enforcement across California’s contingent workforce landscape.
SB 1032 reinforces a broader regulatory and business trend in California: compliance is increasingly viewed as a shared responsibility across the entire workforce supply chain. Organizations are no longer expected to focus solely on their internal employment practices. Instead, regulators are placing greater scrutiny on how companies select, manage, and oversee their staffing partners. As a result, businesses are increasingly expected to evaluate not only their own compliance programs, but also the operational, legal, and workforce practices of the staffing agencies they engage.
With a public registry and expanded enforcement mechanisms, vendor selection will become both more transparent and more consequential. Organizations that fail to properly vet or monitor their staffing partners may face:
At the same time, the legislation could significantly reshape California's staffing landscape. Heightened compliance requirements may:
Organizations do not need to wait for the legislation to pass before taking proactive steps. Preparing now can help reduce risk, strengthen vendor oversight, and ensure operational continuity.
Conduct a Staffing Vendor AuditOrganizations should begin by evaluating their current staffing relationships and compliance practices, including:
Companies should consider implementing a more structured approach to staffing vendor management by:
Contracts should be reviewed and updated to address evolving regulatory expectations, including:
Effective workforce compliance requires coordination across departments. Organizations should ensure that Legal, HR, Procurement, and Operations teams are aligned on:
At Eastridge Workforce Solutions, compliance has always been a foundation of our workforce strategy and service model. SB 1032 further reinforces the importance of transparency, accountability, and proactive risk management within the staffing industry.
Our compliance framework includes:
Our commitment to compliance is designed to provide clients with both transparency and confidence. We support our clients by:
We are also actively preparing for the potential implementation of SB 1032 by:
The direction of California workforce regulation is increasingly clear. Staffing is no longer viewed solely as a flexible workforce solution; it is now treated as an extension of an organization’s broader employment and compliance strategy.
Organizations that take a proactive and strategic approach to contingent workforce compliance will be best positioned to navigate this evolving environment successfully. That includes:
Eastridge Workforce Solutions remains committed to helping clients navigate this evolving landscape with confidence by delivering not only access to talent but also the compliance infrastructure and partnership necessary to support long-term workforce success.