Joining a growing list of states, Massachusetts Governor Maura Healy signed the Pay Transparency Act into law in July which will impose new salary disclosure requirements on Massachusetts employers. This expands onto the current Massachusetts Equal Pay Act’s commitment to closing the wage gap by providing applicants and employees with more wage information.
Who: This impacts private and public employers with 25 or more Massachusetts employees.
What: Disclosing salary and pay ranges to candidates and existing employees for an advertised position or promotion.
When: The new law requirements will be phased in starting in February 2025 and be fully implemented by July 31, 2025.
The Details
For employers with 25+ Massachusetts employees:
Additional items for employers with 100+ Massachusetts employees:
Since the EEO-1 report does not currently require wage data reporting, the Massachusetts state reporting requirement appears to be on hold, unless the EEOC begins to require wage data reporting on the federal EEO-1 report again.
What counts as a pay range? A pay range can either be an annual salary range or an hourly salary range. Either one should be what an employer reasonably and in good faith would expect to pay for a position.
What about bonuses and benefits? Bonuses and benefits are considered supplemental compensation and disclosure is not required.
Where does this information need to be posted? The law applies to advertisements or job postings intended to recruit applicants. This includes third parties or staffing companies that post positions for your company.
What about remote employees? The law does not address whether it applies to positions that could be filled by an employee working remotely, either part time or full time, in Massachusetts.
Compliance
According to the anti-retaliation mandate, employers are prohibited from retaliating against any individual, both employee or applicant, who:
The Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office holds exclusive jurisdiction for enforcement, with penalties for non-compliance increasing with each offense. There is no private cause of action available to applicants and employees.
Next Steps
While February (for pay data reporting) and July (for pay reporting requirements) may seem far off, employers should begin comprehensively reviewing their compensation strategies now to ensure compliance. Businesses can begin by taking these steps:
With the focus of this law on pay transparency, now would be a good time to ensure you have developed a sound compensation philosophy. Conducting external market data benchmarking, creating or reviewing pay grades, evaluating your job architecture, and conducting a pay equity audit are all important steps you can take.
Developing a compensation structure can help you:
As always, Berkshire’s Compensation Services team is here to support you as you begin to chart a path toward compliance and pay equity. We can help you design or refine a compensation structure, benchmark your roles against market data to evaluate external equity, and conduct a pay audit to root out and help you resolve any pay inequities. You can learn more about our services here.
Stay tuned – and sign up for Berkshire’s Compensation Newsletter – as we continue to report on the federal and state-level developments as they relate to pay transparency and the evolving landscape of pay compliance.