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California State Capitol. (Photo: Kevin Sanders for California Globe)

The California Dream is Driving Small Business Away

California’s unemployment insurance debt to the federal government is now on the shoulders of the state’s small business owners

By Diane Dixon, December 17, 2025 2:30 pm

The California Legislature’s high tax, high cost of living, anti-business climate continues to drive businesses large and small and many of their employees out of the state. Shockingly, the Democrat-led supermajority of elected representatives double down on costly regulatory policies and ignore the actual state of economic affairs in California. We have seen the direct negative impact on both large and small businesses, and on the everyday lives of families and workers whose jobs are disappearing, creating the nation’s highest rate of unemployment.

California’s unemployment rate stands at 5.5%, with more than 1 million people claiming unemployment. Orange County is faring slightly better than the state as a whole, with unemployment at 4.6%, but that is still too high. The fiscal cost of unemployment to the state budget is simple: higher unemployment means less State revenue and increased costs through unemployment checks. Welcome to the state’s deficit — projected to be $17.7 billion this year and $35 billion by the 2027-28 fiscal year.

Small business owners across the state are being forced to bear the brunt of our deflating economic future. California’s unemployment insurance debt to the federal government is now on the shoulders of the state’s small business owners. Five years ago, California borrowed $20 billion from the federal government because the state’s Employment Development Department (EDD) didn’t have enough money to pay a large number of claims during the COVID pandemic. With the principal reaching $23.2 billion by the end of this year, and the state making no payments, the burden to pay this unemployment debt silently falls upon employers in the state. Why should employers have to repay the loans plus accrued interest when it was Sacramento that got us into this mess in the first place?

Another key example of the anti-business climate in California is the ongoing challenges posed by the Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) to business owners. The original intent of PAGA was to allow employees to file lawsuits to recover civil penalties for Labor Code violations. However, this system quickly became a predatory tool for unscrupulous plaintiff attorneys filing nuisance suits against businesses. Despite reforms in 2024, I have taken multiple meetings with restaurant and small business owners from all across my district who are still experiencing significant issues with PAGA and who claim that the problem has gotten worse.

The number of lawsuits against employers has actually increased because bad-faith law firms saw that their success rate would drop. In response, plaintiff lawyers responded by filing more cases. What never changed were the penalties themselves, which remain so severe and one-sided that even a single proven allegation can shut down a business by forcing it to pay the full legal costs for an entire class of workers. Avoiding court is not much better; arbitration meetings typically cost these businesses around $150,000 to convene.

Restaurants, exceptionally low-margin businesses, feel this burden more than almost any other sector. Meal break premium penalties have become one of the most common triggers for litigation. State law requires a 30-minute meal break before the sixth hour of work begins. If a break is missed, begins even one minute late, is interrupted for any reason or ends early, the restaurant must pay the worker an additional hour of wages and can still be sued for the violation.

Even when employees voluntarily waive their breaks, the risk remains. Workers may sign a form stating they prefer to continue working instead of taking a meal period, yet lawsuits have been filed claiming these waivers were signed under coercion. Employers must then defend themselves against an allegation that is nearly impossible to disprove.

The most damaging aspect of PAGA, and an issue that Sacramento must address, is the absence of limits on legal fees. The result can be devastating. A restaurant in my district is currently being sued for $100,000 even though video footage shows the employee leaving for lunch on time, but because the employee forgot to clock out, the manager had to manually adjust the timecard and now is being sued. The  choice for the restaurant owner is to settle or go to court and then decide if they can stay in business and provide good jobs or raise prices to cover the cost of doing business in California. Any choice is a bad choice.

If Sacramento truly wants to become business and worker friendly, it must listen to local business owners and cut bureaucratic red tape. Only then will Orange County, and California, be able to fulfill the California dream. Let’s make California affordable again.

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5 thoughts on “The California Dream is Driving Small Business Away

  1. I plugged this into google AI: california unemployment how will the debt be paid down

    “California’s massive unemployment debt, primarily from
    COVID-19 borrowing, is being paid down through a combination of increased federal payroll taxes (FUTA) on employers, state General Fund transfers, and the ongoing pressure for legislative reforms, though most of the burden falls on businesses via higher taxes, potentially costing thousands per employee annually until the loan is cleared.”

    The kicker is the FUTA rate increases annualy, all this after wantabe Labor secretary Julie Su forgave somewhere in the neighborhood of $40 Billion in unemployment fraud and waste that she had a hand in creating.

    1. Geeez… we couldn’t make this stuff up if we tried…. why isn’t Julie Su in PRISON???
      This from a Duck.Ai search :
      “Julie Su is set to join The Century Foundation as a full-time senior fellow in April 2025, focusing on labor rights and worker equity after serving as the acting U.S. Secretary of Labor until January 2025. She has expressed pride in her work during the Biden administration and aims to continue advocating for workers’ rights.
      The Century Foundation
      Current Role of Julie Su
      Position at The Century Foundation
      Julie Su has been hired as a senior fellow at The Century Foundation (TCF), starting in April 2025. In this role, she will focus on issues related to labor rights, worker power, and economic equity.

      Previous Tenure
      Before joining TCF, Su served as the acting United States Secretary of Labor from March 2023 until January 2025. During her time in this position, she was involved in significant labor initiatives and policies under the Biden administration.

      Background
      Su has a strong background in labor rights and civil rights. She previously held roles such as Deputy Secretary of Labor and Secretary of the California Labor and Workforce Development Agency. Her legal career includes notable cases, such as leading the El Monte Thai garment slavery case, which highlighted her commitment to workers’ rights.

      Su’s transition to TCF marks a continuation of her advocacy for labor and economic justice.”

      CALIFORNIA NEEDS TO STOP HIRING “COMMUNITY ORGANIZERS” into political “leadership” roles!!!

  2. “Why should employers have to repay the loans plus accrued interest when it was Sacramento that got us into this mess in the first place?”

    Exactly.

    “If Sacramento truly wants to become business and worker friendly”

    They do not want to become business and worker friendly. That’s not what authoritarian governments do. The Democrat’s goal is to turn California into a Third World state with poverty, crime, shortages of essentials, and lack of jobs, where Democrats have total control over people’s lives. Covid was a warm-up exercise. We are well on our way to being a Third World state.

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