Archive for the 'Wage and Hour Law' Category
by Mark I. Schickman
The National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) lists as one of its purposes the creation of a uniform national labor policy. That might have been the thought nearly 80 years ago when the NLRA was enacted, but it is the furthest thing from the truth today — as state-to-state conflicts in employment philosophy [...]
Posted in Minimum Wage, NLRA, NLRB by: California Employment Law Letter
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by Craig L. Olivo
Q: An exempt employee was out for a week. He had eight hours of accrued sick time, which he used before coming in and working two unauthorized hours at the end of the week. Are we required to pay him for the whole week?
Posted in Exempt Employees, FLSA, FMLA, FMLA, FMLA Leave, New York, Sick Leave, Wage and Hour by: New York Employment Law Letter
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The story of a Chicago woman fired from her job after she was caught working on her lunch break made national news earlier this year. It struck a chord with the general public because people were questioning why an employer would fire an employee for seemingly going the extra mile. If an employee is punished [...]
Posted in Break Time, Discipline, FLSA, Illinois, Non-exempt Employee, Policies, Termination, Terminations, Unemployment, Wage and Hour Law by: Tammy Binford
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by Kara E. Shea
Independent contractors, by definition, are self-employed. Because they aren’t employees, they aren’t covered by employment, labor, and related tax laws. As a result, some employers may be tempted to reclassify employees as independent contractors to avoid taxes, benefits, record-keeping requirements, overtime, and other expenses.
Posted in Classifying Workers, DOL, FLSA, Independent Contractors, Tennessee, Wage and Hour Law by: Tennessee Employment Law Letter
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The new year is off and running, but it’s not too late for human resources professionals to make a few employment law-related resolutions that should make their lives easier in 2012.
Sexual harassment policies
Boyd Byers a partner with Foulston Siefkin LLP in Wichita, Kansas, says attention to sexual harassment policies should top the list of resolutions [...]
Posted in ADA, ADA, ADA Accommodation, ADA Amendments Act, Affirmative Action, Classifying Workers, Disability Discrimination, Documentation, Documentation, FMLA, FMLA, Genetic Discrimination, Handbooks, Kansas, Louisiana, Ohio, Sexual Harassment by: Tammy Binford
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The U.S. Department of Labor’s (DOL) Wage and Hour Division’s (WHD) recent enforcement efforts represent a flawed approach that assumes incorrectly that employers are deliberately violating the law, according to David Fortney, cofounder of Fortney & Scott, LLC, in Washington, D.C., who testified before a U. S. House of Representatives subcommittee November 3.
Fortney, editor of [...]
Posted in Classifying Workers, DOL, FLSA, WHD, Washington D.C. by: HR Hero Line
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by Sylmarie Arizmendi of Arizmendi & Sanfilippo
Often U.S. employers doing business in Puerto Rico assume that certain basic elements of the employment relationship are the same in Puerto Rico as they are stateside. That leads employers to expose themselves to liability because of differences in the employment laws. This article highlights four essential differences for [...]
Posted in Discrimination and Harassment, Employee Leave, Overtime, Sick Leave, Termination, Terminations, Vacation, Wage and Hour Law, Workplace Discrimination by: HR Hero Line
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by Gary S. Fealk
Businesses often find it advantageous to hire independent contractors to perform a variety of duties in place of employees. Using independent contractors can reduce expenses for payroll taxes and benefits, avoid the impact of laws like the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), and arguably [...]
Posted in Classifying Workers, FLSA, IRS, Independent Contractors, Michigan, Wage and Hour Law by: Michigan Employment Law Letter
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Unlimited vacation is a growing trend that may be a good way for organizations to provide an incentive or bonus to employees to reward them for good work without increasing salaries or providing bonuses or other kinds of incentives. The concept of unlimited vacation is very simple: Employees can take vacation, personal, and sick time [...]
Posted in Absenteeism, Alternative Work Schedule, Benefits, Benefits, Classifying Workers, Discrimination and Harassment, Employee Engagement and Retention, Employee Leave, Employee Leave, Employee Morale, Employee Retention, Exempt Employees, FLSA, Non-exempt Employee, Overtime, Paid Time Off, Rhode Island, Sick Leave, Telecommuting, Vacation, Wage and Hour Law, Work-Life Balance, Workplace Discrimination by: Colorado Employment Law Letter
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by Vaughn Burkholder and Tara Eberline
What do the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), and Congress have in common? Sound like a setup for a bad joke? The punch line is that each of those federal entities has announced its intention to focus on employers’ misclassification of employees as independent contractors. [...]
Posted in Classifying Workers, DOL, FLSA, IRS, Independent Contractors, Kansas, Minimum Wage, Overtime, Uncategorized, Wage and Hour, Wage and Hour Law by: Kansas Employment Law Letter
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