New
overtime pay rules went
into effect on August 23, 2004. The changes mark the
first major overhaul of the
federal overtime law
in more than 50 years.
Under the new overtime wages rules, workers earning
less than $23,660 per year - or $455 per week - are
guaranteed overtime protection. This will strengthen
overtime rights for 6.7 million American workers,
including 1.3 million low-wage workers who were denied
overtime under the old rules. It also will benefit
whitecollar workers.
The most important change made by the new federal
rules is the increase in the minimum salary level
for exempt employees. Workers earning less than the
minimum are not exempt from the rules, regardless
of what duties or responsibilities they might have.
Under the old law, that minimum was only $8,060 a
year. The new rules increase this to $23,660. If an
employee’s annual salary falls below that figure,
it doesn’t matter how the employee’s position
would otherwise be classified; he/she must be paid
overtime.
The old law identified four categories of workers
who could be exempt: executive, administrative, professional,
and outside sales. The new law retains these four
and adds two more: computer professionals and highly-compensated
employees.
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The new overtime
law will not affect blue-collar workers; they
will continue to get overtime. |
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The new federal law also eliminates
the restriction on the number of hours a sales
employee can spend on duties unrelated to outside
sales and still be exempt. |
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In a change from the original
proposal, police, firefighters and other "first
responders" are explicitly guaranteed overtime,
along with factory and construction workers. |
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Salaried employees paid between
$23,660 and $100,000 a year may or may not be
automatically 28 eligible for overtime, depending
on certain criteria regarding job duties. (But
employers are free to pay it if they choose.) |
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The final Part 541 rules explicitly
protect union members covered by collective bargaining
agreements. Final §541.4 states that “nothing
in the Act or the regulations in this part relieves
employers from their contractual obligations under
collective bargaining agreements.” Union
members who work under collective bargaining agreements
that incorporate FLSA eligibility by reference
also stand to benefit. |
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The new federal rules also provide
that a person who owns at least 20% of a company
can be exempt if he/she is actively engaged in
management of the company. |
Determination
of exempt Status
Employees are classified as exempt or non-exempt on
the basis of the work they normally and actually perform,
not merely according to job title or position. Job
title is irrelevant under the new law. Also, the fact
that the employer pays an employee a salary has no
impact on whether the employee is exempt. If the employee
has a variety of duties, and spends more than half
of his/her time on those that are exempt, the employee
probably will be considered exempt.
Executive Exemption
To qualify for the executive employee exemption, all
of the following tests must be met:
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The employee must
be compensated on a salary basis (as defined in
the regulations) at a rate not less than $455
per week. |
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The employee's primary duty
must be managing the enterprise, or managing a
customarily-recognized department or subdivision
of the enterprise. |
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The employee must customarily
and regularly direct the work of at least two
or more other full-time employees or their equivalent. |
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The employee must have the authority
to hire or fire other employees, or his/her suggestions
and recommendations as to the hiring, firing,
advancement, promotion, or any other change of
status of other employees must be given particular
weight. |
Administrative
Exemption
To qualify for the administrative employee exemption,
all of the following tests must be met:
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The employee must
be compensated on a salary or fee basis (as defined
in the regulations) at a rate not less than $455
per week. |
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The employee's primary duty
must be the performance of office or non-manual
work directly related to the management or general
business operations of the employer or the employer's
customers. |
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The employee's primary duty
includes the exercise of discretion and independent
judgment with respect to matters of significance. |
Professional
Exemption
To qualify for the learned professional employee exemption,
all of the following tests must be met:
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The employee must
be compensated on a salary or fee basis (as defined
in the regulations) at a rate not less than $455
per week. |
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The employee's primary duty
must be the performance of work requiring advanced
knowledge, defined as work which is predominantly
intellectual in character and which includes work
requiring the consistent exercise of discretion
and judgment. |
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The advanced knowledge must
be in a field of science or learning. |
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The advanced knowledge must
be customarily acquired by a prolonged course
of specialized intellectual instruction. |
To qualify for the
creative professional employee exemption, all of the
following tests must be met:
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The employee must
be compensated on a salary or fee basis (as defined
in the regulations) at a rate not less than $455
per week. |
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The employee's primary duty
must be the performance of work requiring invention,
imagination, originality or talent in a recognized
field of artistic or creative endeavor. |
Outside
Sales Exemption
To qualify for the outside sales employee exemption,
all of the following tests must be met:
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The employee's primary
duty must be making sales (as defined in the FLSA),
or obtaining orders or contracts for services
or for the use of facilities for which a consideration
will be paid by the client or customer. |
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The employee must be customarily
and regularly engaged away from the employer's
place(s) of business. |
Workers not Exempt:
These exemptions do not apply to:
1. Manual laborers or other blue-collar workers who
perform work involving repetitive operations with
their hands, physical skill and energy - such as production,
maintenance, construction and similar occupations
( e.g., carpenters, electricians, mechanics, plumbers,
iron workers, craftsmen, operating engineers, construction
workers and laborers), no matter how highly-paid they
might be.
2. Police, firefighters, paramedics, detectives, deputy
sheriffs, state troopers, highway patrol officers,
investigators, inspectors, correctional officers,
parole or probation officers, park rangers, emergency
medical technicians, ambulance personnel, rescue workers,
hazardous materials workers, and similar employees,
regardless of rank or pay level, who perform work
such as preventing, controlling or extinguishing fires
of any type; rescuing fire, crime or accident victims;
preventing or detecting crimes; conducting investigations
or inspections for violations of law; performing surveillance;
pursuing, restraining and apprehending suspects; detaining
or supervising suspected and convicted criminals,
including those on probation or parole; interviewing
witnesses; interrogating and fingerprinting suspects;
preparing investigative reports; or other similar
work.
New overtime rules
and fear factor
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The new overtime
rules may strip overtime pay from at least 6 million
workers, many of whom may suddenly become professionals
or take on supervisory roles in name only. |
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Anyone who makes more than $100,000
a year and has whitecollar duties, such as administrative
or executive work, will most likely not be entitled
to overtime. Workers earning between $23,660 and
$100,000 who had received overtime pay can lose
the right for the extra pay if their employers
reclassify them as professionals, administrators
or executives. |
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New regulations could cause
inconsistency at the workplace. One company might
decide to keep paying overtime, while other similar
businesses might eliminate overtime to the same
type of employees if they no longer have to pay
them premium wages. |
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Nurses, computer workers, chefs,
insurance claims adjusters, journalists, funeral
directors, and salespeople are among workers who
could lose overtime rights. |
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Some employees may find themselves
forced to work overtime, instead of volunteering
for it, because their employers can now have them
put in extra hours without premium pay. Employees
may end up working longer hours at less pay. |