Stevens, et al v. Safeway
Case Synopsis
For over a decade, assistant store managers at Safeway raised concerns about being misclassified as exempt employeesโworking long hours without overtime pay, all while performing non-managerial duties. Represented by Arias Sanguinetti, these workers alleged that Safeway used their titles to avoid paying legally required wages, in violation of Californiaโs labor laws.
Many managers found themselves working seven days a week, up to 12 hours a day, with no compensation for missed breaks or overtime. They claimed they were filling in for understaffed stores, doing the same work as hourly employees, but without the protections.
After class certification was denied, Arias Sanguinetti pursued justice another wayโby filing the cases individually. In a first-of-its-kind strategy, the firm lined up 42 back-to-back trials on behalf of current and former managers whoโd been denied fair pay.
The firmโs efforts highlight how persistenceโand a courtroomโcan bring accountability where corporate shortcuts have gone unchecked.