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Employment laws and Wage and Hour laws help protect employees from discrimination or unlawful treatment. TWC can investigate if you are owed wages or if you believe an employer is not following child labor laws. TWC also investigates complaints about employment discrimination and housing discrimination.

The Payday law helps employees who were not paid their wages correctly. If you believe you are owed wages, you can file a wage claim. Go to the Texas Payday Law page to learn how to file a claim for unpaid wages, how to appeal a wage claim determination, and to find more about the Payday law. 

Go to Payday Law page.

If you disagree with a decision on a Texas Payday Law Wage Claim, you can appeal. An appeal is your written notice that you disagree with a TWC decision and want your case decided through the appeal process. State law gives TWC sole authority in disputed wage claims. No other state agency or official can affect the outcome of an appeal. To participate in an appeal, you must meet appeal deadlines.

Go to Payday Appeals page.

Employment discrimination is against a job applicant or an employee because of the person's protected class.

The laws apply to work situations such as hiring, firing, promotions, harassment, training, wages, and benefits.

Go to Employment Discrimination page.

The Fair Housing Act protects people from discrimination when they are renting or buying a home, getting a mortgage, seeking housing assistance, or engaging in other housing-related activities because of the person’s protected class.

Go to Housing Discrimination page.

The Texas Child Labor Laws make sure a child is not working in a job or way that could harm the child's safety, health, or well-being. Learn about the child labor laws and how to file a complaint.

TWC also has rules to make sure a job does not interfere with a child’s education. It is illegal to employ a child under 14 except under specific circumstances. All businesses in Texas are subject to the Texas Child Labor Law. If a business is covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act, then they must also follow federal child labor laws. 

Go to Child Labor page.

If TWC issued a decision that an employer violated child labor laws, that employer can file an appeal. Only the employer can appeal a TWC child labor decision. The employer may appeal the occurrence of the violation, the amount of the penalty, or both. State law gives TWC sole authority in disputed child labor complaints. No other state agency or official can affect the outcome of an appeal. To participate in an appeal, you must meet appeal deadlines.

Go to Child Labor Appeals page.

TWC provides information for employers and employees about the Texas Minimum Wage Act. Go to the Texas Minimum Wage Law page to get information about minimum wage requirements in Texas.

Go to Minimum Wage page.

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