Can I have an exempt hourly attorney in CA?
Carey
143 Posts
Hatchetman, Gillian, and my other CA compadres helped me out in March, but I'm still having some trouble with reclassifying some of our PT exempt employees to non-exempt. Our legal group (of course) is having a problem with reclassing it's PT attorneys to non-exempt. HR is reluctant to treat them differently than other PT employees, so of course, I keep going back to Hatchetman's posts that some jobs may be exempt and still be paid hourly without jeopardizing exempt status - doctors, teachers, domestic servants - and hopefuly attorneys - under FLSA regulations.
Does anybody in CA know if this is allowed by the DLSE? I think it is because Hatchetman mentioned he has pscyhiatrists paid on an hourly basis. He quoted the federal regulation and I have checked the DLSE Enforcement Manual but can't find anything specific to CA.
I need to find it somewhere in writing that it is okay to pay exempt attorneys hourly.
Thanks for your help!
Does anybody in CA know if this is allowed by the DLSE? I think it is because Hatchetman mentioned he has pscyhiatrists paid on an hourly basis. He quoted the federal regulation and I have checked the DLSE Enforcement Manual but can't find anything specific to CA.
I need to find it somewhere in writing that it is okay to pay exempt attorneys hourly.
Thanks for your help!
Comments
The IWC Orders establish a criteria that do require salary payment to professionals and the Order does not identify that teachers and lawyers can be paid an hourly rate and still be exempt as it does for practicing physicians.
Thus, it seems to me, unless you are in the public sector and can implement 541.5d of the federal regulations, attorneys need to be salaried in order to be exempt in California.
Of course to make double sure, since I am only offering a lay person's view, contact DLSE and ask for clarification.