Business lunch
![HRinNH](http://blr-hrforums.elasticbeanstalk.com/plugins/DefaultAvatars/design/OrangeAvatar.jpg)
Our purchasing administrator is an hourly employee. If she goes to lunch with a vendor, should she get paid for this time out of the office? I say yes, boss says no.
Cheryl C.
Cheryl C.
Comments
Oh, the lunches are definitely business related. The Purchasing Admin. doesn't like going on them but occasionally does and gets pissed when we don't pay her for promoting our company.
I'll have to contact the DOL next.
Cheryl C.
We are making an assumption here that the employee comes back from these luncheon situations with some proof of a business action obtained or provided in the form of a Purchase Order or or a sales order for the company.
Just spending association time overlunch is nothing more than "social intercourse", the transfer of verbal conversation and this time is not chargeable as work and I would be concerned that the IRS/State TAX Auditors would seek to look into these events very closely as the company would have to discribe this time in some catagory as an expense if paid to the employee as a business expense.
PORK
I tried to put a stop to the practice when I became aware, but was unable. Then one day one of the secretaries decided to turn the time in as "time worked" to acquire the sale of merchandise to the company and she was denied by her boss the shoe buyer. Guess what, DOL and IRS both came to audit the situation and it cost plenty to get beyond the fear of a law suite. Not only did we have to generate how many hours were owed to the employees, but the IRS both put punishment fees on the case and we paid. thus my experience with this arena came home to haunt me and the company.
It was stupid things like this that drove the business "out of business"! Not bought off the street but liquidation of assets was the outcome.
In my current company, We do not deal with any situation where a labor person is involved with business lunches and expenses and I am happy for it.
PORK