WorkForce West Virginia is the state agency responsible for overseeing workforce development and unemployment services in the state of West Virginia. They provide resources and support to help individuals find employment opportunities and navigate the state's labor market.
Nevada’s minimum wage requirements have changed significantly since July 1, 2024. The state’s two-tiered minimum pay structure has been replaced with a single, uniform rate of $12 per hour for all employees, regardless of whether they have qualified health benefits from their employers.
This change, approved by voters in November 2022, represents the outcome of Ballot Question 2 and is now reflected in the Nevada Constitution under Article 15 § 16.
In recent years, remote work has transitioned from a niche option to a mainstream work mode, supercharged by the COVID-19 pandemic. This shift has changed where we work and how states collect taxes, introducing new challenges for employers and employees.
Enter the “convenience of the employer” rule, a regulation that, while aiming to simplify tax issues, has introduced the potential for double taxation for remote workers. Let’s discuss this rule’s impact and what it means for the modern workplace.
California employers face a multi-billion dollar question in 2025. The estimated annual cost of the new California minimum wage is massive and rippling across the state. And if you’re operating in multiple jurisdictions, your compliance complexity just multiplied exponentially.
The statewide minimum wage hit $16.50 per hour on January 1, 2025, but that’s just the baseline. Factor in industry-specific rates reaching $24 per hour, plus over 30 cities and counties with their own requirements, and you’re looking at a compliance maze that can trigger significant penalties per employee per pay period for mistakes.
Paul Boynton |Aug 8, 2025
Ready to get started?
Schedule a free consultation to see how Mosey transforms business compliance.