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BUSINESS ALERT: NEW
OVERTIME REGULATIONS
The Department of Labor
recently issued sweeping new regulations on the eligibility
of workers, especially “white-collar” employees, for
overtime pay. Federal law requires that overtime be paid for
nonexempt employees at a rate of one and one-half of regular
pay for all hours worked over 40 hours in a week. To be
“exempt” is to be ineligible for overtime. Employers should
update their employee handbooks to reflect the new law on
overtime pay.
Salary Tests
Since 1975, workers paid a salary of less than $155 per week
($8,060 per year) have been eligible for overtime,
regardless of their job duties or how they are paid. Now
that threshold has been raised considerably, to $455 per
week ($23,660 per year). The “highly compensated employee”
test will make workers with an annual salary of at least
$100,000 exempt, if they perform office or nonmanual work
and “customarily and regularly” perform one of the duties of
either an exempt executive, administrative, or professional
employee. The exempt duty need not be the employee's
“primary duty.”
Manual laborers, other
blue-collar workers, licensed practical nurses, and “first
responders,” such as police officers and firefighters, will
be eligible for overtime regardless of salary.
Executive Exemption
In the middle ground of compensation, between $23,660 and
$100,000 per year, individuals will be exempt as executives
if their primary duty is management of the enterprise or one
of its departments or subdivisions, and if they “customarily
and regularly” direct the work of at least two full-time
employees. A new requirement is that would-be executives
must either have the power to hire and fire or at least
their recommendations in such matters must be given
“particular weight.” This tighter focus on hiring and firing
is a change from the former regulations in which employees
could fall within an executive exemption because of their
general managerial authority. The term “particular weight”
invites differing interpretations, but courts can be
expected to look at factors such as whether hiring and
firing recommendations are part of an employee's regular job
duties and how frequently such recommendations are made. An
employee who owns at least 20% of a business and is actively
engaged in managing it will also be exempt, without regard
to salary thresholds.
Administrative Exemption
For employees in the same mid-range of compensation used for
the executive exemption, but whose primary duty is “the
performance of office or nonmanual work directly related to
the management of the general business operations of the
employer or [its] customers,” the administrative exemption
will apply. The employee's primary duty must also include
work that involves the “exercise of discretion and
independent judgment with respect to matters of
significance.” These criteria are too broad to allow an
exhaustive list of “administrative” positions, but some
examples from the new regulations include insurance claims
adjusters, financial service employees, policymaking human
resource managers, and team leaders for major projects.
Professional Exemption
“Learned professionals” earning between $23,660 and $100,000
will continue to be exempt from overtime as long as their
primary duty is the performance of work requiring advanced
knowledge in a field of science or learning that is
customarily acquired by a “prolonged course of specialized
intellectual instruction.” The learned professional's work
must include work “requiring the consistent exercise of
discretion and judgment,” as opposed to routine mental,
manual, mechanical, or physical work.
Safe Harbor
Coming into compliance with the new regulations could be a
daunting task, given their length, complexity, and lack of
specific terminology. Ironclad advice that applies across
the board is also in short supply because applying the new
rules correctly is highly dependent on the facts and
circumstances of each case. But balancing the difficulty of
compliance is some leniency in enforcement. A “safe harbor”
in the new regulations protects employers who make improper
salary deductions. Employers with clear policies and
procedures for addressing salary deduction errors will not
lose an exemption for a class of employees unless the
employer continues to make improper deductions after
receiving complaints.
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