New Fangled HR Management
Rockie
2,136 Posts
My CEO went to a conference and came back and was telling me about companies that evidently operate without any policies or procedures. Example: No employee handbook, no disciplinary procedures, etc. Also, all employees are exempt. I'm all for streamlining the process and allowing me to spend my time on more worthwhile pursuits than disciplining and writing procedures, but I surely don't see how an organization can operate like this. One of these companies specifically named was in North Carolina.
I am especially concerned with how all employees in an organization can be made exempt and how the DOL would look upon this.
Do any of you operate like this or have you heard of any such thing?
Just curious.
I am especially concerned with how all employees in an organization can be made exempt and how the DOL would look upon this.
Do any of you operate like this or have you heard of any such thing?
Just curious.
Comments
Second, I cannot imagine a company where everyone would be exempt in the true DOL sense. Maybe this company treats their non-exempts like exempts and pays them full wages even if they miss a portion of the day. (Some companies use a category called salaried-nonexempt for this) However, this does not relieve the company of its obligation to pay overtime when these employees put in more than 40 hours. This sounds like the "radical business idea du jour".
Margaret Morford
theHRedge
615-371-8200
[email]mmorford@mleesmith.com[/email]
[url]http://www.thehredge.net[/url]
Policies exist to safeguard the company and the employees. They are guidelines for a uniformity of treatment that will never be there without them. Even if only one person ever determines everything that is done at that company, chances are extremely slim that he or she will be consistent over time. (Just think about how hard it is to be consistent with and between your children when you are raising a family!)
As far as the exempt issue is concerned, I guess if the company can ignore laws relevant to Sexual Harassment policies, etc. they can try to ignore the FLSA as well. Non-exempt means that employees are subject to the FLSA. To be exempt, the position must meet certain criteria that are spelled out within the law. It is NOT the employer's choice, but rather the law which determines exemption status.
Can they get by with it? Maybe, for a time, anyway. But the risks they are taking by not complying with HR-related laws and not having consistent procedures in place are extreme, and consequences can be very severe, both from governmental agencies and the courts.
I can see getting by without performance appraisals, but I certainly can't see making everyone exempt and not having any policies and procedures.
Ah...but only if it were so....
Thanks for all your comments. I just wanted to see if I was missing something.