By Paul J. Franzetti
The number of overtime lawsuits has
sharply increased in Texas in the last decade. That employees are seeking
greater compensation should come as no surprise, given the overall stagnation
in take-home pay since the 1980s. But why should you as an employer care?
After all, you are paying market rates for wages and you may believe that
relations with your employees are so good that no one would think of suing.
Many employers may be taken off-guard
regarding:
· The complexity of the Fair Labor
Standards Act (FLSA) and regulations regarding overtime.
· The detail of recordkeeping required
by the FLSA.
· How easy it is to violate the FLSA.
· The availability of collective actions
for all affected employees.
· The recoverability of attorney’s fees
by successful plaintiffs.
The severity is compounded by how
quickly damages can multiply even for minor violations and all it takes is one
disgruntled employee to start the ball rolling. The basic rule under the
FLSA, payment of 1½ times the normal hourly rate for all hours worked over 40
during a week, seems simple enough, but it isn’t.
Consider whether the overtime rule
applies in the following situations:
1. An employee works more than 40 hours a
week even though you have told them not to do so.
2. An employee answers phone calls or
responds to email or other social media outside normal working hours.
3. An employee works 50 hours one week
and you tell them to work 30 hours the following week.
4. An employee reports to a jobsite but
is not paid for work until you give them a particular project to work on.
The illustrative answers by numbered
line are:
1. Compensable. You may be able to
take disciplinary action but overtime is owed.
2. Most likely compensable. The
real issue is the system for tracking employee time in this regard.
3. The extra 10 hours in the 50-hour week
is compensable overtime. Comp time is legal in the public sector, not the
private sector.
4. The wait time is possibly compensable
if it and the time worked on the project are greater than 40 hours in a week.
These answers are not meant as legal
advice but only as illustrations in an overview of complex issues and the
reader should not rely on them in any way to make decisions about their
situation. Different circumstances pertaining to these and seemingly similar
situations may result in different answers.
Many small businesses try to avoid
overtime issues by paying all employees a salary with occasional bonuses paid
for extra time on special projects. The FLSA overtime requirements,
however, have nothing to do with whether the employee is paid on a salaried or
hourly basis. Instead, the overtime provisions apply to ALL employees
unless an exemption applies; thus the references to “exempt” and “non-exempt”
employees. The exemptions from the overtime requirements generally apply
only to executive employees and managerial employees. The burden of
proving that an exemption applies, moreover, is on the employer.
If a non-exempt employee is paid a
salary and works more than 40 hours in a week, the overtime rate is generally
calculated by dividing the regular weekly salary by the hours normally worked
per week (40 or fewer) and applying the 1½ times rate to the portion worked
over 40 hours. In addition, the “salary” rate could include bonuses paid
for additional work that are not properly segregated for the overtime portion
which could actually work against an employer who thinks he or she has already
generously compensated for the overtime.
Focusing on how this article began,
the sharp increase in overtime suits, keep in mind that the FLSA allows
successful plaintiffs to recover attorneys’ fees which means that private
attorneys have an incentive to bring these cases. Plainly, the best way
to navigate wage, hour, and employee classification issues as well as foster a
good working relationship with your employees and minimize risk to the business
is to consult an experienced professional. ________________________________________________________________
Paul J. Franzetti is
the Founder of Paul J. Franzetti, Attorney at Law. He can be contacted by
phone at 713-242-1265, by email at pfranzetti@trustedlawadvisor.com, or visit his website at www.TrustedLawAdvisor.com.
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