45 Hour Exempt Workweek - Legal?
Mercy
6 Posts
Our Exempt staff was hired with the understanding their normal workweek is 45 hours. They are paid their straight salary by FLSA law - regardless of hours worked under or over. (We do pay comp time for occasional special projects). It is my understanding the company can set the workweek.
I have searched to validate this policy. Can you help me?
Hot issue at the moment.
Thanks!
I have searched to validate this policy. Can you help me?
Hot issue at the moment.
Thanks!
Comments
I had a job in a Colorado Ski Resort in an administrative capacity. All exempt personnel were expected to work 6 days a week during the ski season. It was in the handbook and part of the deal. During the shoulder seasons, lots of lattitude allowed because of the seasonal commitments, but even that is not necessary.
As an exempt employee, management level, I have always just expected that a 45 to 50 hour week was going to happen. Often less, and sometimes more - it just comes with the territory.
Our attorney told us that he just represented a group of loan officers in a class action against a nation wide bank that classified them as exempt & worked them 50-60 hours/wk. The bank lost & had to settle up on all their back overtime pay. Its worth having an attorney review those positions if you have any doubts.
Kathi
Gary D. Jiles
Editor, Arkansas Employment Law Letter
[email]gjiles@jlj.com[/email]
This post cannot be relied on or construed as legal advice. You should contact your attorney of choice for legal advice or for legal assistance.
>Our Exempt staff was hired with the
>understanding their normal workweek is 45 hours.
> They are paid their straight salary by FLSA law
>- regardless of hours worked under or over. (We
>do pay comp time for occasional special
>projects). It is my understanding the company
>can set the workweek.
>
>I have searched to validate this policy. Can
>you help me?
>
>Hot issue at the moment.
>
>Thanks!
The speaker, an HR pro himself, stated that if this salaried person can complete his/her assigned work and assure that his/her dept is running as it should, and they can do it all in 25 hours a week, there's nothing you can do about it. 25 hours is an exaggeration obviously, or they lose their health benefits here.
We used to require exempts to work 45 - 60 hours per week. Now we state they are required to work during 'normal business hours'. Our business is such that their presence is usually required while everyone else is here also. Flex hours will not work in our company.
Legal counsel sounds like a good idea no matter what. Every state is different.
>mentioned: if you mention number of hours to be
>worked in any way, shape or form, you have just
>changed the classification to non-exempt.
>
That's quite a stretch Durango. Mentioning or even requiring presence during set time periods doesn't destroy the exemption. In your scenario it's OK to tell someone they must be here during normal business hours, but if I'm a new exempt employee and ask you what are those normal business hours, you can't tell me. (Don't forget; your moderator said 'any way, shape or form). We tell our engineers and other office exempts that their normal business hours are 7:30-4:30 with a lunch break. But, we certainly don't monitor that to the absurd or penalize for non-worked hours.
Like all of the other posters EXEMPTS VS NON-EXEMPTS get companies in to trouble because the senior leadership and owners don't know the law and edict how things are done and before you know it the HR is fired for letting something so stupid happen. Of course, walk softly with the facts of the law because you could be walking on the senior leadership and owners EGO's.MAY WE ALL HAVE A BLESSED HR WEEK WITH LOTS OF PLUSES FOR US ALL!
PORK
Great response!
Comp time not paid - hour for hour off.
Appreciate each of you!