Salaried EE want to make Hourly but.... Need HELP Fast
lnelson
670 Posts
We have a salaried ee who is an estimator. He has been with us for
approx 1 1/2 yrs. Since his hire he has been disciplined both verbal and written by his supervisor regarding his work hours. He rarely works 40hrs a wk and is consistently late. Now the V.P wants to change his status to hourly making same wage as 40 hour salary but, he has just informed her that he is having medical issues that will have him out of the office intermittenly.
My questions are:
1) Can we change his status from salaried exempt to hourly non-exempt?
2) Because we now know of a medical issue does FMLA become a factor?
3) How should I handle this ee?
Any and all advice is greatly appreciated and anticipated.
Thanks,
Lisa
approx 1 1/2 yrs. Since his hire he has been disciplined both verbal and written by his supervisor regarding his work hours. He rarely works 40hrs a wk and is consistently late. Now the V.P wants to change his status to hourly making same wage as 40 hour salary but, he has just informed her that he is having medical issues that will have him out of the office intermittenly.
My questions are:
1) Can we change his status from salaried exempt to hourly non-exempt?
2) Because we now know of a medical issue does FMLA become a factor?
3) How should I handle this ee?
Any and all advice is greatly appreciated and anticipated.
Thanks,
Lisa
Comments
>My questions are:
> 1) Can we change his status from salaried exempt to hourly
>non-exempt?
Yes, but only if the duties of the job do not meet the DOL FLSA test for exempt status. The status should be based on the particular job's duties. In this analysis, his 'attendance' and other behavioral issues are irrelevant.
2) Because we now know of a medical issue does FMLA become a factor?
Yes, anytime a medical issue is brought to the attention of HR, FMLA may become a factor. The employee does not have to raise his hand and alert you that he is requesting FMLA. You must evaluate the information you have and decide whether or not to give him the appropriate paperwork. If he is eligible and you think that a 'serious health condition' definition might be met, you should move forward with the paperwork. It may not turn out to be FMLA or he may not even qualify. But, you must consider the possibility and act accordingly.
> 3) How should I handle this ee?
Treat the attendance and reporting situations as disciplinary issues. You are allowed to establish a work starting time for exempts just as for non-exempts. If he cannot meet those standards, you have a disciplinary 'opportunity'. If he cannot conform to standards set by the company and insists on structuring his own work day, after applying your normal disciplinary policies, terminate him.
I suggest you not consider changing his status to non-exempt. That's not an appropriate way to deal with a disciplinary situation.
First, look at their job description and compare with the DOL criteria for exempt and non exempt employees to determine that this indivdual is classified correctly. If they are classified correctly, they must remain in that classification.
For FMLA purposes, they must be notified that they could qualify for FMLA. If they are approved for FMLA, they cannot be disciplined for their lost time.
Hope this helps.
>
It's done every day. Where do you get the notion that the status cannot be changed if the definition is not met?
As far as the FMLA issue, my opinion is you should be OK, he would have the same job at the same pay. However I have not had this issue come up before.
Deal with the attendance as a discipline action and remember you can always require use of accumulated leave for absences from the office and you can always dock pay for certain other absences. Check the FLSA regs for deductions of pay from exempt employees.
1. The ee isn't fulfilling a job duty (being at work when required) and is committing misconduct (tardiness). You can (and should) discipline exempt ees for this, but it seems your discipline isn't severe enough to get his attention. A one-week unpaid suspension might do the trick.
2. I checked with Anne Williams, the attorney who writes our Benefits & Compensation newsletters, and she said the law definitely allows you to switch him to non-exempt. You can make anyone non-exempt regardless of their duties. But this would be a REWARD for his poor performance, since he'd figure out how to goof off and earn OT in the same pay period. And you'd still need a manager with the guts to discipline him.
3. Don't treat him like FMLA unless he has a doctor's certification. Even if it's not FMLA, I'd require a doctor's note for recurring medical absences, given his poor attendance.
James Sokolowski
HRhero.com
Elizabeth
Compra'
Wow, thank you all for this info. I truly didn't know that! I thought exempt was exempt and non-exempt was non-exempt per duties performed. Thanks all for clarifying.
Elizabeth
Glad we could be of help.
Maybe someday you can do the same for us.
Elizabeth
As far as FMLA I was told that the ee is not sure what he has they are testing and that is why he will be out of the office intermittenly. He has provided us with a schedule for Dr. appts w/out us asking for it.
One more question then I am done for the day, if we change his status to non-exempt would he be entitled to the OT hours he may have worked previous to the change?
Maybe I missed it, but I trust from your passing over the impact of such a change on other positions, that there are no other estimators.
Let me just add, though, make sure you run the change by legal counsel before implement to get "legal" okay.
>One more question then I am done for the day, if we change his status
>to non-exempt would he be entitled to the OT hours he may have worked
>previous to the change?
It has been very informative.
Lisa