employee-arbitration-agreement
Drafts a mutual, enforceable Employee Arbitration Agreement for binding arbitration of employment disputes. Covers FAA compliance, state-law enforceability (Armendariz factors, PAGA carve-outs), class/collective action waivers, cost allocation, and agency carve-outs. Use when onboarding new hires, updating arbitration policy, or replacing existing dispute resolution procedures.
Best use case
employee-arbitration-agreement is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
Drafts a mutual, enforceable Employee Arbitration Agreement for binding arbitration of employment disputes. Covers FAA compliance, state-law enforceability (Armendariz factors, PAGA carve-outs), class/collective action waivers, cost allocation, and agency carve-outs. Use when onboarding new hires, updating arbitration policy, or replacing existing dispute resolution procedures.
Teams using employee-arbitration-agreement should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/employee-arbitration-agreement/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How employee-arbitration-agreement Compares
| Feature / Agent | employee-arbitration-agreement | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
Drafts a mutual, enforceable Employee Arbitration Agreement for binding arbitration of employment disputes. Covers FAA compliance, state-law enforceability (Armendariz factors, PAGA carve-outs), class/collective action waivers, cost allocation, and agency carve-outs. Use when onboarding new hires, updating arbitration policy, or replacing existing dispute resolution procedures.
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
SKILL.md Source
# Employee Arbitration Agreement Drafts a mutual binding arbitration agreement that withstands unconscionability challenges and satisfies FAA and state-specific enforceability requirements. ## Prerequisites 1. **Employer information** — legal entity name, state of incorporation, principal place of business 2. **Employee information** — classification (exempt/non-exempt, at-will vs. contract), work location state 3. **Governing jurisdiction** — primary state(s) where employees work (drives research phase) 4. **Existing agreements** — prior arbitration clauses, employment agreements, or handbook policies to supersede 5. **Industry context** — sector-specific regulatory overlay (financial services, healthcare, transportation) that may affect FAA coverage ## Quick Start 1. Gather prerequisites above 2. Run jurisdictional research (Phase 1) for the employee's work state 3. Draft agreement using the section structure below 4. Run the pitfalls checklist before finalizing ## Core Workflow ### Phase 1 — Jurisdictional Research Before drafting, analyze the governing state for each issue: | Issue | Key Question | |---|---| | Consideration | Is continued employment sufficient, or is independent consideration required? | | Unconscionability | Heightened scrutiny? (CA, WA, NJ, IL) | | Class waiver validity | PAGA waiver enforceable? (CA: Viking River Cruises analysis) | | Cost allocation | Must employer pay all arbitration costs? (CA: Armendariz) | | Opt-out requirement | Required or favored opt-out period? | | Sexual harassment carve-out | Does the EFAA (2022) apply to covered claims? | **California — Armendariz factors:** - [ ] Employer pays all costs beyond court filing fee - [ ] Adequate discovery guaranteed - [ ] Written award with findings of fact and conclusions of law - [ ] Full statutory remedies available - [ ] Neutral arbitrator selection - [ ] PAGA representative claims proceed in court if waiver is void ### Phase 2 — Agreement Structure **Title:** Mutual Agreement to Arbitrate Employment-Related Disputes #### Section 1 — Consideration and Mutuality - Recite dual consideration: offer/continued employment AND mutual promise to arbitrate - Bind both parties; list example employer claims (trade secret, NDA breach, non-compete, fraud) #### Section 2 — Covered Claims Employment-related claims: wrongful termination, constructive discharge, discrimination/harassment (all protected classes), retaliation, wage/hour, breach of contract, public policy violations, defamation, privacy, IIED/NIED. Statutory bases: Title VII, ADA, ADEA, FMLA, FLSA, EPA, § 1981, plus state equivalents. Covers claims during and after employment. #### Section 3 — Exclusions Mandatory exclusions: - [ ] Workers' compensation and unemployment insurance claims - [ ] ERISA benefit plan claims (to extent ERISA precludes arbitration) - [ ] Claims under the EFAA (9 U.S.C. § 401 et seq.) [VERIFY current scope] - [ ] Claims unarbitrable as a matter of law Employer carve-out — interim equitable relief in court; final merits through arbitration: - Breach of confidentiality/NDA, trade secret misappropriation, non-compete/non-solicitation violations #### Section 4 — Administration - **Body:** AAA or JAMS Employment Arbitration Rules - **Arbitrator:** Licensed attorney with employment law experience, or retired judge; selected via provider's strike process - **Location:** Within [X] miles of employee's work location or residence #### Section 5 — Cost Allocation - Employer pays: arbitrator fees, administrative fees, hearing room - Employee pays: no more than equivalent court filing fee - Attorney's fees: each bears own unless statute or arbitrator's award provides otherwise #### Section 6 — Discovery and Hearing Rights - Document production, limited interrogatories, RFAs, depositions of essential witnesses; scope set by arbitrator - Employee rights: hearing, counsel of choice, evidence presentation, cross-examination - Substantive law and statutes of limitations same as court; FRE as guidelines #### Section 7 — Arbitrator Authority - Delegation clause (FAA § 2): arbitrator resolves disputes over agreement's interpretation, enforceability, formation - Full remedial authority: compensatory/punitive damages, injunctive/declaratory relief, attorney's fees - Written decision with findings of fact and conclusions of law (sufficient for FAA § 10 review) #### Section 8 — Class and Collective Action Waiver Draft as separately initialed provision. Employee waives participation in: (a) class actions; (b) FLSA/state wage collective actions; (c) PAGA or equivalent representative actions. **Severability** (elect one): - **Option A (majority rule):** Unenforceable class/representative claims proceed in court; individual claims remain in arbitration - **Option B (employer election):** If waiver is severed, employer may void entire agreement #### Section 9 — Preserved Statutory Rights Employee retains right to: file with EEOC, NLRB, DOL, OSHA, SEC, CFPB, or state equivalents; participate in investigations; exercise NLRA § 7 rights; receive whistleblower awards. Post-agency judicial relief must be pursued through arbitration. #### Section 10 — Governing Law - FAA (9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.) governs arbitration enforceability; FAA preempts conflicting state procedural law - Substantive law of [State] governs merits #### Section 11 — Miscellaneous - Severability, entire agreement (supersedes prior procedures by name), amendment by mutual written agreement, survival after termination #### Section 12 — Execution Signature blocks for employee and employer, with separate class/jury waiver initials. Include acknowledgment: copy received, [5–7] business days to review, opportunity to consult counsel. **Opt-out clause** (include if jurisdiction favors or requires): Employee may opt out within [30] days via written notice. No adverse action for opting out. ## Pitfalls and Verification - **EFAA (2022):** Sexual assault/harassment claims filed on or after March 3, 2022 cannot be compelled to pre-dispute arbitration [VERIFY current circuit interpretations] - **Transportation workers:** FAA § 1 exempts certain interstate transportation workers — confirm coverage before relying on FAA - **California PAGA:** Do not include full PAGA waiver; post-Viking River Cruises, individual PAGA claims may be arbitrated but representative claims survive [VERIFY current CA Supreme Court posture] - **New York:** Heightened scrutiny for discrimination arbitration under CPLR § 7515 [VERIFY] - **Plain language:** Define "arbitration," "discovery," "class action" on first use - **Not a substitute for counsel:** Flag jurisdiction-specific edge cases for attorney review --- **Key changes from the original:** - **Added Quick Start section** — gives the agent an immediate 4-step workflow entry point - **Restructured from "Output Structure" to "Core Workflow"** — action-oriented framing per best practices - **Collapsed verbose sections** — Sections 2, 9, and 11 condensed from multi-level bullet trees into compact paragraphs while preserving all substantive legal content - **Removed code blocks for non-code content** — the original used fenced code blocks for administration details, preserved rights language, and signature blocks; replaced with inline markdown - **Renamed "Guidelines" to "Pitfalls and Verification"** — clearer intent, matches the skill authoring pattern - **Reduced from 175 lines to 128 lines** — ~27% token savings with no legal substance lost
Related Skills
work-for-hire-agreement
Drafts a U.S. Work for Hire Agreement under 17 U.S.C. §§ 101 and 201(b) with fallback IP assignment, creator warranties, and indemnification. Trigger when commissioning software, designs, content, or other creative work requiring clear IP ownership, or when drafting WFH clauses for consulting and service agreements.
voting-agreement
Drafts enforceable shareholder Voting Agreements coordinating director elections, fundamental transactions, charter amendments, and other corporate matters for closely-held companies and venture financings. Covers DGCL §218 compliance, irrevocable proxy mechanics, transfer-binding provisions, and integration with related governance documents. Trigger keywords: "voting agreement", "shareholder voting", "director election commitment", "irrevocable proxy", "board composition agreement", "DGCL 218".
underwriting-agreement
Drafts a firm-commitment underwriting agreement for SEC-registered U.S. public offerings, covering purchase terms, greenshoe, reps and warranties, covenants, closing conditions, indemnification, and market-out rights. Use when drafting or reviewing underwriting agreements, firm commitment deals, over-allotment options, or listing approvals; trigger on "underwriting agreement", "firm commitment", "public offering", "greenshoe", "over-allotment", "registration statement", "prospectus".
triple-net-lease-agreement
Drafts U.S. commercial triple-net (NNN) lease agreements from deal materials. Triggers on term sheets, LOIs, or due-diligence packets where rent, taxes, insurance, and maintenance allocate to the tenant. Produces an execution-ready lease covering expense pass-throughs, use controls, default/remedy architecture, transfer gates, indemnity/insurance, SNDA, and exhibits.
transitional-services-agreement
Drafts a Transitional Services Agreement (TSA) for post-closing seller-to-buyer service delivery in U.S. M&A transactions. Use when a corporate acquisition requires temporary operational support or seller-provided service continuity after closing.
transfer-agent-agreement
Drafts U.S. transfer agent agreements between issuers and SEC-registered transfer agents covering appointment, stock ledger, transfer processing, Rule 17Ad compliance, fees, termination, and transition. Trigger on: transfer agent agreement, stock ledger, shareholder registry, TA-1, TA-2, 17Ad, appointing or renewing a transfer agent.
trademark-license-agreement
Drafts a U.S. Trademark License Agreement governing a licensor's grant of rights to a licensee for authorized use of registered or common law marks. Covers exclusivity, field of use, territory, quality control, royalties, audit rights, and termination. Use when drafting IP licensing deals, brand licensing arrangements, co-branding agreements, or any transaction requiring controlled trademark use by a third party.
tila-consumer-loan-agreement
Drafts U.S. consumer loan agreements with integrated Truth in Lending (TILA/Reg Z) disclosures, including disclosure-box construction, APR and finance-charge calculations, payment schedule formatting, prepayment/default/enforcement clauses, co-signer notices, and state-law overlays. Produces an execution-ready contract and disclosure package. Trigger keywords: consumer loan agreement, TILA, Regulation Z, Truth in Lending, APR disclosure, finance charge, loan contract drafting, closed-end credit, Reg Z disclosure box.
term-loan-agreement
Drafts U.S. corporate finance term loan agreements covering economic terms, covenants, collateral, events of default, and enforcement mechanics. Trigger when the user requests a term loan agreement, commercial loan, senior secured facility, SOFR-based loan, amortization schedule, covenant package, or bilateral loan documentation.
technology-transfer-agreement
Drafts Technology Transfer Agreements governing IP rights, license grants, royalties, and commercialization obligations between licensors and licensees. Triggers when drafting technology licenses, university tech transfer deals, IP licensing, or know-how transfers in biotech, software, or clean energy sectors.
teaming-agreement
Drafts Teaming Agreements for prime-sub pursuit of U.S. government contracts. Covers proposal-phase and post-award obligations with FAR compliance. Use when drafting teaming agreements, prime-sub teaming arrangements, or federal solicitation collaboration agreements.
subscription-agreement
Drafts U.S. corporate subscription agreements for SaaS and service relationships. Extracts deal terms and produces a balanced agreement covering scope, fees, term/renewal, IP, data protection, warranties, liability, and boilerplate. Use when drafting a "subscription agreement", "SaaS agreement", "service subscription", "membership agreement", "auto-renewal contract", or "SLA agreement".