Archive for the 'FLSA' Category
by Leslie Stout-Tabackman and David Fortney, Fortney & Scott, LLC
This article arises from comments on the “Bridge to Justice” program by U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) Solicitor Patricia Smith during the panel discussion “The Obama Administration’s Enforcement of the Wage and Hour Laws” at the Practicing Law Institute’s (PLI) “Managing Wage & Hour Risks 2011″ [...]
Posted in DOL, FLSA, FMLA, FMLA, WHD, Wage and Hour, Wage and Hour Law, Washington D.C. by: Federal Employment Law Insider
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Almost every employer has policies. The question is, where do they come from? They come from HR, right? But where does HR get them? They must get them from somewhere. And what if you don’t have an HR department? Then someone must have to — gasp — write them. We’re talking about your employment policies [...]
Posted in ADA, ADA, ADA Accommodation, Absenteeism, Alabama, Break Time, Discipline, Discipline and Employee Misconduct, Documentation, Documentation, Employee Misconduct, Employment At Will, Employment Contracts, FLSA, FMLA, FMLA, Handbooks, Handbooks and Policies, Performance Evaluation, Policies, Wage and Hour Law by: Alabama Employment Law Letter
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An enthusiastic and energetic individual approaches you with a proposal to volunteer his time to gain valuable experience in your industry. “After all,” reasons the prospective volunteer, “how can I get my first job if I have no experience in the field of my choice?” Sounds like a win-win situation, doesn’t it?
Like many win-win situations [...]
Posted in Classifying Workers, DOL, Exempt Employees, FLSA, Handbooks, Handbooks and Policies, Hiring, Hiring, Interns and Trainees, Minimum Wage, Overtime, Rhode Island, Temporary Employess, WHD, Wage and Hour, Wage and Hour Law by: Rhode Island Employment Law Letter
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by Kara E. Shea
I recently participated in hosting a Wage and Hour Virtual Summit webinar. Wage and hour compliance — overtime, work-time issues, exempt status — is always a lively topic and typically results in lots of questions and feedback. This time around, most of the feedback surrounded remarks I made about individual liability under [...]
Posted in Break Time, Child Labor, Classifying Workers, Comp Time, DOL, Exempt Employees, FLSA, FMLA, FMLA, Furloughs, Independent Contractors, Interns and Trainees, Minimum Wage, Non-exempt Employee, On-call Time, Overtime, Supervisor Training, Temporary Employess, Tennessee, Title VII, Travel Time, Wage and Hour, Wage and Hour Law by: Tennessee Employment Law Letter
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by Joseph C. Pettygrove
Employers are increasingly looking at the feasibility of scanning hard copies of various types of employment documents and retaining only the electronic copies in the routine course of business. Generally speaking, you are allowed to do that if you ensure that your electronic record maintenance systems are secure, accurate, reliable, and accessible [...]
Posted in Absenteeism, Background Checks, Benefits, COBRA, DOL, Discipline, Document Retention, Documentation, E-Discovery, EEOC, Electronic Workplace, FLSA, FMLA, FMLA, Handbooks, Handbooks and Policies, Hiring, Hiring, I-9, IRS, Indiana, Interviewing, Job Descriptions, OSHA, Performance Evaluation, Recruiting, Wage and Hour Law, Workers Compensation, Workplace Technology by: Indiana Employment Law Letter
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The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), the federal law that governs wages and overtime pay, has been the topic of numerous articles in state Employment Law Letters. We’ve reported on the rise of wage and hour lawsuits filed state courts and we highlighted what federal courts consider “acceptable terms” for an FLSA settlement agreement What [...]
Posted in Exempt Employees, FLSA, Florida, Minimum Wage, Non-exempt Employee, Overtime, Wage and Hour by: Florida Employment Law Letter
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by Robert C. Nagle
Employers can expect increased enforcement efforts from federal and state labor and tax authorities over what’s believed to be a rising tide of misclassification of employees as “independent contractors.”
Posted in Benefits, Classifying Workers, DOL, FLSA, IRS, Independent Contractors, Minimum Wage, Overtime, Pennsylvania, Title VII, Wage and Hour by: Pennsylvania Employment Law Letter
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This year’s “perfect storm” of events — from terrorism in Times Square to the dreaded 1,000-year flood in Tennessee to the devastating oil spill off the Gulf Coast — should again remind employers of the need to establish a crisis management and business continuity plan (CMBCP). The time for corporate complacency is long gone.
Workplace [...]
Posted in COBRA, Crisis Management, FLSA, Louisiana, OSH Act, Safety in the Workplace, Sarbanes-Oxley Act, Workplace Violence by: Louisiana Employment Law Letter
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by Chris McFadden
Under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), employees may be entitled to compensation for time spent donning and doffing uniforms if they are required to do so at work. A recent ruling by the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals addresses the compensability of time spent donning and doffing uniforms and gear when [...]
Posted in Arizona, FLSA, Wage and Hour by: Arizona Employment Law Letter
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by Jonathan C. Sterling
Because one of the most difficult tasks HR professionals face is determining whether their employees are exempt, each time a decision is issued on the topic by an appeals court, it’s worth noting and taking guidance from. The latest decision from the Second Circuit relates to the administrative exemption, which applies to [...]
Posted in Connecticut, Exempt Employees, FLSA, Non-exempt Employee, Overtime, Wage and Hour, Wage and Hour Law by: Connecticut Employment Law Letter
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