(a) (1) The Chief of the Division of Occupational Safety and Health, or a representative of the chief, shall convene an advisory committee for the purposes of creating voluntary guidance and making recommendations to the Department of Industrial Relations and the Legislature on policies the state may adopt to protect the health and safety of privately funded household domestic service employees. (2) This section shall not apply to: (A) Household domestic service that is publicly funded, including publicly funded household domestic service provided to a recipient, client, or beneficiary with a share of cost in that service, unless subject to Section 3342 or 5199 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations. (B) Family daycare homes as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 1596.78 of the Health and Safety Code and subdivisions (d) and (f) of Section 1596.792 of the Health and Safety Code. (b) The advisory committee shall be geographically and demographically diverse, shall include an equal number of representatives of domestic workers and employers, and shall be comprised of no fewer than 13 and no more than 18 individuals. (c) The advisory committee shall include, but not be limited to, a representative from all of the following groups: (1) Domestic work employees who have worked as a housecleaner in private homes for at least five years. (2) Domestic work employees who have worked as a nanny in private homes for at least five years. (3) Domestic work employees who have worked as a caregiver or attendant in private homes for at least five years. (4) Domestic work employees who have worked as a day laborer at private homes for at least five years. âDay laborerâ includes, but is not limited to, exterior maintenance workers, gardeners, and landscapers. (5) Domestic work employers who have employed housecleaners in their private homes for at least five years. (6) Domestic work employers who have employed nannies in their private homes for at least five years. (7) Domestic work employers who have employed caregivers or attendants in their private homes for at least five years. (8) Domestic work employers who have employed a day laborer at their private homes for at least five years. (9) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience advocating for day laborers and connecting them with private household employers. (10) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience advocating on behalf of domestic work employees. (11) A nonprofit organization with a minimum of five years of experience advocating on behalf of domestic work employers. (d) The advisory committee shall include, but not be limited to, two experts in the prevention of work-related injury and illness most commonly suffered by domestic work employees. (e) The Speaker of the Assembly and the Senate President pro Tempore may each appoint one individual to the advisory committee. (f) The advisory committee shall develop voluntary industry-specific occupational health and safety guidance for the purpose of the following: (1) Educating household domestic service employees on how, to the extent possible, they may identify and evaluate workplace hazards and prevent or minimize work-related injuries and illnesses. (2) Educating household domestic service employers on how they may create safer workplaces by identifying and evaluating workplace hazards and how to prevent or minimize work-related injuries and illnesses for their employees. (g) The advisory committee shall make recommendations, in consultation with the divisions and entities within the Department of Industrial Relations, and applicable state agencies and departments, on what additional policies may be adopted by the Department of Industrial Relations or the Legislature to protect the health and safety of household domestic service employees. In making these recommendations, the advisory group shall consider the following: (1) How to protect the privacy of individuals who
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