• Posts by Gretel Zumwalt
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    Gretel Zumwalt applies her focused and resolute approach to assist employers with effective and dependable solutions for their employment law challenges.

    Employers value Gretel's assistance on intricate federal, state, and ...

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New York State Senator Sean Ryan recently introduced Senate Bill 4641 (the “Bill”) that proposes to ban noncompete agreements for most New York employees. If passed, the Bill would prospectively prohibit employers from enforcing noncompetes, except for highly compensated individuals who make an average of $500,000 or more per year and in the context of the sale of a business.  The Bill would not apply retroactively, so if passed, existing noncompetes would remain enforceable consistent with New York common law.

The Bill follows Governor Hochul’s December 2023 veto of Senate Bill 3100-A, also sponsored by Senator Sean Ryan, that sought to broadly ban noncompetes for all employees regardless of income. As we reported in December 2023, Governor Hochul stated that she would not sign an outright noncompete ban, but instead preferred a “balance” with a compensation threshold and a carveout for noncompetes entered into in connection with the sale of a business. The new Bill does just that.

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At the end of March, Governor Glenn Youngkin signed SB 1218, which amends Virginia’s non-compete ban for “low-wage” workers (the “Act”) to include non-exempt employees under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (the “FLSA”). The expanded restrictions take effect July 1, 2025.

What’s New?

As we discussed in more detail here, since July 2020, the Act has prohibited Virginia employers from entering into, or enforcing, non-competes with low-wage employees. Prior to the amendment, the Act defined “low-wage employees” as workers whose average weekly earnings were less than the average weekly wage of Virginia, which fluctuates annually and is determined by the Virginia Employment Commission. In 2025, Virginia’s average weekly wage is $1,463.10 per week, or approximately $76,081 annually. “Low-wage employees” also include interns, students, apprentices, trainees, and independent contractors compensated at an hourly rate that is less than Virginia’s median hourly wage for all occupations for the preceding year, as reported by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. However, employees whose compensation is derived “in whole or in predominant part” from sales commissions, incentives or bonuses are not covered by the law.

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