Showing posts with label FLSA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FLSA. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Apple Employees Win Suit



A quick post to relay the results of a California court ruling.  
The California Supreme Court recently ruled in favor of Apple employees allowing them to be paid for after shift security searches. Apple requires employees of their product stores to be searched after their shift, checking for stolen company products. Employees filed a class action suit claiming that they should be compensated for the time required to complete the searches. Failure to comply with the search policy can lead to being fired.

A federal district court had earlier ruled in favor of Apple. Stating that the employees had to prove that they were being restrained from leaving. The case then went to the U.S. 9th Circuit Court, who returned the case to state court for an interpretation of state law regarding compensation. The California Supreme ruled in favor of employees and the case now returns to the U.S. 9th Circuit Court. The ruling, as of now, does not affect other states as it was not a federal court decision. However, once the U.S. Circuit Court considers California's Supreme Court decision it may rule in favor of employees. Compensation for requirements after an employee is "off duty" may be interpreted differently and cause a ripple effect through the U.S. regarding employee pay and overtime.

This is not the first time a California ruling has affected employee compensation. In 2018, The California Supreme Ruled that employers must pay employees for "off the clock" activities such as locking up, setting alarms, and other administrative duties. There is a federal rule called the de minimis rule that says that employees can be required to work small amounts of time, less than ten minutes say, that would be difficult to track administratively. However, California courts ruled that the federal rule had not been adopted under California wage laws and, therefore, did not apply.

De minimis Rule

The "de minimis" rule came from the Supreme Court in 1946, stating that employers, when considering amount of time worked, may disregard time worked over shift when it amounted to seconds or minutes. The U.S. Department of Labor adopted a similar rule under 29 C.F.R. § 785.47, which states, insubstantial or insignificant periods of time beyond the scheduled working hours may be disregarded. 

Under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) regulations, 29 C.F.R. § 785.11, if an “employer knows or has reason to believe that the work is being performed, he must count the time as hours worked.” The Portal-to-Portal Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 251-62, amended the FLSA and relieves employers of the obligation to compensate an employee for activities such as: traveling to and from the actual place of performance of the principal activity and activities which are preliminary to or postliminary to the principal activity, which occur either prior to the time on any particular workday or subsequent to the time on any particular workday. 

This is a just a small sampling of the laws and precedents that would go into any court’s decision on compensation of employees after hours. There have been too many cases to cite here regarding compensation beyond work hours. Cases involving employee’s loading/unloading/resupplying company vehicles at home, answering phone calls, emails and texts. If California is the test, then the trend would lean towards the employee.

Small business owners have to take this into consideration as they apply policy. Whether for breaks, meal times, or after work communications, how employers pay employees may be changing.


Monday, March 19, 2018

History of leave


With the passing of mandatory paid sick leave by the Maryland legislature in January 2018 the idea for this post began as a look at the history of sick leave in the American workplace. Research revealed the reason why there are paid leave advocates. Leave from work, whether for sick or personal, is a relatively new concept as it applies to the American workplace. Still, this is probably a good topic for a little background.

During the agriculture phase of the America people worked as the farm dictated. Once the Industrial Revolution arrived factories sprung up with no shortage of workers. People lined up waiting for jobs. Employers could set wages and hours are they saw fit. There was little to no regulation. People worked six days a week for pennies an hour in deplorable conditions. If you missed work you weren’t paid or lost your job. These conditions continued well into the 20th century until a president floated a new concept.

Starting a conversation

The idea of employee paid leave in the United States started with President William Taft in 1910 who thought that workers should have three months of vacation per year. Congress never bought into it but the conversation was started. Sixteen years later the work schedule began to change. The Ford Motor Company was one of the first, if not the biggest, company to offer employees a five day, 40 hour workweek. The policy went into effect in may 1926 at the urging of Henry Ford’s son, Edsel, who thought every man needed more than one a day a week for rest.

By the 1930’s, countries around the world had begun adopting paid time off for employees. The U.S. Department of Labor took up the fight again creating the Committee of Vacations with Pay to study why the U.S was so far behind the rest of the industrialized world. Nothing came from this committee.

It would be sixty some years later before the U.S government made significant changes. In 1993 the passage of the Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA) mandated twelve weeks of unpaid time off for workers to attend to their own or a family members medical issues. Leave from work agreements were, and still are, between employer and employee with no mandate for payment. While FMLA provided for leave without retribution from employers, the leave was still unpaid.  

There is not a statutory requirement for paid vacation in the U.S. Individual employers decide on what leave and type of leave to offer employees. Employer’s decisions on leave run the spectrum. A few companies are experimenting with unlimited leave while the majority offer some sort of paid time off. There are still small percentages that offer no leave.

Regarding statutory paid sick leave, currently nine U.S. states mandate it (Arizona, California, Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington). Expect that number to grow in the coming years.


Please share this and any post. See the blog archive for other posts about employee benefits.

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Overtime history

Last week there was a lot of news about the Department of Labor raising the salary threshold. Here’s a brief history of overtime pay.

Overtime or time and a half began with the Fair Labor and Standards Act of 1938. The FLSA established the eight hour a day/forty hours a week work standard, a national minimum wage, restricted employment of minors, and guaranteed time and a half pay for work over forty hours. Overtime pay was initially looked upon as a fine for employers and not a bonus for workers. 

Salaried or white collar workers (executive, administrative, professional) have been neglected overtime more so than hourly workers as employers can designate who is exempt from overtime by assigning “managerial” titles or paying a salary slightly above the established threshold. Since 1940, the Department of Labor regulations have required three tests to establish exemption from overtime under the FLSA- (1) the employee must be paid a predetermined and fixed salary that is not subject to reduction because of variations in the work performed (2) the salary paid must meet a minimum specified amount (3) the employee’s job duties must primarily involve executive, administrative, or professional duties. Any employee below the salary threshold and not meeting the test requirements is eligible to be paid overtime.

The current standard for eligibility dates to the 1950’s. If an employee’s job duties or salary fell below the standard then they were eligible for overtime. The Department of Labor has the power to define who is eligible through the FLSA. Since the passing of the FLSA, the Department of Labor has changed the definition six times. The minimum salary threshold for overtime by salaried workers was last changed by the Department of Labor in 2004 when it was raised to $23,660 annually. The previous adjustment was 1975.


On May 18, 2016, the Department of Labor announced new overtime rules and threshold that will take effect December 1, 2016. The new rule focuses on updating salary compensation for employees designated executive, administrative and professional. The threshold for overtime pay was raised to $47,476 annually or $913 per week.