Hourly Travel Compensation
JM in ATL
305 Posts
According to the FLSA we need to compensate an employee who spends his time traveling "within normal business hours". I have an hourly employee who will be traveling for work on a Sunday. This is outside of his normal business hours.
Can anyone point to a specific document which states that we are required to pay him? I believe we are b/c he is traveling on his day off for business purposes, but I want to support this with documentation.
Thanks!
Can anyone point to a specific document which states that we are required to pay him? I believe we are b/c he is traveling on his day off for business purposes, but I want to support this with documentation.
Thanks!
Comments
Travel Away from Home
Travel that keeps an employee away from home overnight is travel away from home. Travel away from home is clearly work time when it cuts across the employee’s workday. The employee is simply substituting travel for other duties.
This rule applies not only to hours worked on regular working days during normal working hours; it also applies during the corresponding hours on nonworking days. Thus if an employee regularly works from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. from Monday through Friday, the travel time during these hours is work time on Saturday and Sunday as well as on the other days. Regular meal period time is not counted.
So, you pay him for the time he travels during his regular work hours on Sunday. Now if he is a passenger in a train, plane, etc. I believe that changes things.
[url]http://www.dol.gov/esa/regs/compliance/whd/whdfs22.htm[/url]
Scroll down to travel outside the community. It clearly says travel time that occurs even on non-work days but during normal working hours is compensable.
This is one situation where I believe the law sets the minimum, and it is good business practice to go beyond that.