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Name: Kish, Kevin
Current Position: Director

Governor Jerry Brown tapped one of the state’s top young labor lawyers, Kevin Richard Kish, 38, to be director of the Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH) in December 2014. He replaces Phyllis Cheng, a 2008 Schwarzenegger appointee who resigned in October.

Kish, who is director of the Bet Tzedek Legal Services' Employment Rights Project in Los Angeles, graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in sociology/anthropology from Swarthmore College and graduated with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School in 2004. He was admitted to the State Bar of California later in the year.

After graduating law school, Kish, a Democrat, joined Bet Tzedek Legal Services in Los Angeles, one of the nation’s premier public interest law firms. He left in 2005 to clerk for U.S. District Myron Thompson for the Middle District of Alabama for a year, but returned to the firm in 2006 after receiving a Skadden Fellowship. The Los Angeles Times described the Skadden Foundation as “a legal Peace Corps.”

Two years later, Kish became director of the firm’s Employment Rights Project, leading its employment litigation, policy and outreach initiatives. He focused on illegal retaliation against low-wage workers and cases involving human trafficking. But the firm handles a broad range of cases involving consumer rights, elder law, housing and public benefits.

In 2011, Kish was co-counsel in a class-action lawsuit that won a $1million settlement for Los Angeles carwash workers over wage theft.  Four carwash company owners agreed to compensate around 400 workers for routinely working 10-hour days for less than half the minimum wage. Some of the workers toiled for just tips.

Kish and lawyers from two other law firms won a $21 million settlement from Walmart contractor Schneider Logistics Transloading and Distribution Inc. in May over the retailer’s alleged abuse of minimum wage and overtime payments to warehouse workers in Eastvale, California. The National Law Review found the settlement amount “staggering” but said its true significance lay in the “courts’ willingness to untangle multi-level business operations and hold all involved entities liable for wage and hour violations.”

Kish has been an adjunct professor of law at Loyola Law School in L.A. since 2012. He developed and teaches a seminar and clinical course for students to “investigate, mediate and recommend outcomes for employment retaliation claims.”

He speaks Spanish, Italian and French.

 

To Learn More:

Kevin Kish (LinkedIn)

Governor Brown Announces Appointments (Office of the Governor)

At Employment Rights Clinic, Practical Training Gets Real (Loyola Law School)

La Carwash Workers Win Payment for Wage Theft (by William Rogers, Left Labor Reporter)

Wal-Mart Contractor Agrees to Pay $21M in Wages Action (by Scott Flaherty, Law 360)

A $21 Million Lesson for Joint Employers (by David Croysdale, National Law Review)

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