LOL. U.S. Corporations HATE California Labor Laws. I worked for several national corporations, where the employee handbook for us, as the only California location, included an appendix for things that did not apply to us. Or in some cases, where corporate policy was a felony in California
Things like:
1) If you get vacation, it can't be taken away. You have to be allowed to use it or be paid for it.
2) Salaried employees have to be paid a base pay at least $68,640 a year. If their wage is lower than that, you HAVE to be an hourly employee, and HAVE to be paid overtime.
3) Employees HAVE to get an unpaid meal break. And that meal break HAS to happen no sooner than 3 hours after the start of your shift, and no later than 5 hours after. No tacking onto the beginning or end of your shift. If you do not get your meal break in that time, they have to pay you a penalty equal to one hour's pay, plus overtime pay for the length of your meal break. I have to admit I hated that, because I worked 8 straight without a meal break for the first 30 years of my working lift by choice. The law prohibits an employee from waiving a meal break