Paying exempt's hourly wages?
stretched2thin
15 Posts
Under FLSA, can we pay an exempt employee on an hourly basis? I'd like to guarantee them a minimum salary, but pay them straight hourly pay for hours worked over 40. Is that allowable? Does that jeopardize their exempt status forcing us to pay them time and a half?
Why? The hours they work are billed to the client at a premium. This motivates them to work more hours, thus bill for more hours, therefore the client pays us more.
Why? The hours they work are billed to the client at a premium. This motivates them to work more hours, thus bill for more hours, therefore the client pays us more.
Comments
It is OK to bill clients for hours worked by exempt personnel - even when an upcharge is going on. I am thinking of professional services such as engineers, CPA's, lawyers, and such.
I also know that certain professionals, again using lawyers as an example, can be paid on a straight time basis - no OT involved and no stress on the exempt status.
In most of my experience in these types of situations, the EEs involved are paid salary with discretionary bonus at the end of the year. The bonus calculation can have lots of features, including billable hours, collection of the associated dollars, profitability, etc.
Those features can help with the motivation without damaging exempt status - and yes, you must keep records of billable hours to accurately charge the clients, so timekeeping is not a problem.