LA Workplace Mental Health Accommodations: Your 2025 Rights
New California labor rules give Los Angeles employees legal grounds to request mental health accommodations. Discover your rights, local resources, and how to file complaints with DFEH.
New California labor rules give Los Angeles employees legal grounds to request mental health accommodations. Discover your rights, local resources, and how to file complaints with DFEH.

California Labor Code provisions now require employers with five or more workers to provide reasonable accommodations for mental health conditions starting this January. The rule applies across Downtown offices and entertainment industry soundstages alike.
Workplace stress reports climbed 12 percent in Los Angeles County between 2024 and 2025 according to the county health department. Many residents juggle long commutes along the 405 and unpredictable gig schedules in Hollywood, leaving little room for recovery time. Local advocates say the new accommodations standard gives employees clearer grounds to request schedule changes or remote options without fear of retaliation.
Workers can file complaints through the Department of Fair Employment and Housing office on Wilshire Boulevard. The process covers requests for leave under the California Family Rights Act when anxiety or depression interferes with daily tasks. A 2025 state audit found that 68 percent of claims filed in the first quarter involved mental health accommodations, up from 41 percent two years earlier.
Employers must post updated notices in break rooms and on internal portals. Failure to respond within 10 business days can trigger penalties that start at $100 per violation. Union representatives at several studios near Sunset Boulevard have begun offering free clinics to walk employees through paperwork.
The Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health runs drop-in counseling at its Metro South site on South San Pedro Street every Tuesday and Thursday. Sessions cost $20 for those without insurance and focus on stress tools tailored to shift workers. A second option sits inside the Venice Beach Recreation Center, where the county partners with a nonprofit to deliver weekly mindfulness groups aimed at creative-industry freelancers.
Participants can also join the free peer-support network operated by Mental Health America of Los Angeles at its Boyle Heights location. The group schedules evening calls for people who cannot leave jobs during daylight hours. Registration opened July 1 and fills within days each month.
Employees who document their requests and follow up in writing stand the best chance of securing adjustments before stress escalates. Checking with a supervisor first, then contacting the county office if needed, keeps the process moving forward.
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Published by The Daily Los Angeles
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