What constitutes full time employee for benefits? 30 hours? 35 hours?
turbo
78 Posts
I am in Texas, new to this job (11 months worth) and am questioning part time status vs. full time status.
Isn't 30 generally considered full time in order offer benefits that are offered to all other 'full-time' 40 hour plus employees?
If 30 hours is the marker, isn't it unethical to have an employee work 29 hours in order to not be eligible for benefits?
I am being told that 35 hours or more is considered full time here. I understand that FSLA doesn't define what is part-time and what is full time, however, is 35 hours now standard as full-time?
I've worked for employers over the past 22 years who all used 30 hours as the benefits marker. It must come from somewhere.
Help?
Isn't 30 generally considered full time in order offer benefits that are offered to all other 'full-time' 40 hour plus employees?
If 30 hours is the marker, isn't it unethical to have an employee work 29 hours in order to not be eligible for benefits?
I am being told that 35 hours or more is considered full time here. I understand that FSLA doesn't define what is part-time and what is full time, however, is 35 hours now standard as full-time?
I've worked for employers over the past 22 years who all used 30 hours as the benefits marker. It must come from somewhere.
Help?
Comments
Also, I can't recall exactly what it is, but you can have them work over that benefits marker but with certain restriction, or limits. This happens in cases of high staff demand/change as in call centers.
By the way, my experiance is that the benefits marker and what's considered part time do not always match. You can have part time ee's that are eligible to receive bene's.
As far as FMLA (I think that's what you mean) I'm stratching my head because I think I've used up my thinking power for today......
not FMLA
so the company can make a benefits marker of 35 hours? it is not regualted by law at 30 hours somewhere?
Other than the overtime regulations imposed by FSLA and the full-time/part-time cut-offs recoginized by your insurance carriers, your company can designate other hourly work weeks that you can follow. You can be more generous than the FSLA (but who would want to?), but not less generous.
Good luck,
Dutch2
It is not a written rule, but at that time it was a guideline for the wage and hour auditors.
I have not had, in my vast opportunities, the privilege to support another "audit" by these fine folks, but I have installed that rule in the companies in which I have been employed without complaint or question.
I have never heard any other time, but then, I have not been questioned and I have not asked. Call your local Fed folks and ask them for guidance. Some states like CA have state laws that might also set a standard.