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Today's Menu. New FLSA White Collar RegulationsWashington Minimum Wage Act RegulationsRegular Rate of Pay HighlightsHours of Work Highlights. White Collar Exemption Overview. Is employee paid on a salaried basis?Does employee have sufficient duties to qualify as an executive, administrative em
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1. Start The DayWith The FLSA
2. Todays Menu New FLSA White Collar Regulations
Washington Minimum Wage Act Regulations
Regular Rate of Pay Highlights
Hours of Work Highlights
3. White CollarExemption Overview Is employee paid on a salaried basis?
Does employee have sufficient duties to qualify as an executive, administrative employee or professional?
4. Summary of FLSA New Regs Eliminates short and long tests
Minimum salary increased to $455 per week
Executive duties test focuses on authority to hire or fire or that suggestions on hiring, firing, advancement, promotion are given particular weight
Final regs toughen exempt status for first responders
5. Summary of FLSA New Regs(continued) Professional exemption allows experience to substitute for degree in learned professions
Streamlined test for those paid more than $100,000 per year
Disciplinary suspensions allowed in full day increments not full week
Relaxed window of correction
6. Definition of Salaried Basis Pre-determined wage, not subject to reduction based on quantity or quality of work
Salary is all or part of compensation received
7. FLSA DevelopmentsRe Salary Basis Increased minimum salary to $455 per week ($23,660 per year)
Computer Professionals either paid salary above or paid hourly at least $27.63 per hour
Disciplinary suspensions in full day increments (however, WMWA still requires full week increments)
8. Disciplinary Suspensions Unpaid suspension for disciplinary reasons generally a problem
OK to suspend if in workweek increments
If suspend for workweek, ensure suspension does not include parts of two workweeks
9. Executive Duties Test Primary duty is management
General Rule is 50%
Exceptions available where management is less than 50%
Regularly supervises 2 or more FTEs
Has authority to hire or fire or whose suggestions as to hiring, firing, advancement, promotion or other change of status given particular weight
10. When are Suggestions Given Particular Weight Is it part of employees job duties
How frequently are suggestions made
How often are suggestions followed
11. AdministrativeEmployee Duties Office or non-manual work
Primary duty requires exercise of discretion and independent judgment with respect to matters of significance
Categories of exemption
executive assistants
human resources staff
purchasing agents
employees performing special assignments
12. Professional Duties Test Categories
Learned Professions
Artists
Teachers
Learned Professions category requires primary duty work requiring knowledge of advanced type in field of science or learning customarily acquired by prolonged course of specialized intellectual instruction
13. Examples of Professional-Exempt Positions Lawyers
Doctors
RNs
CPAs
Physician Assistants
14. Computer Professional Exemption Paid a salary at least $455 per week, or hourly at least $27.63 (note quirky language of WAC)
Higher level computer tasks, not routine installation of hardware or software
15. First Responder Regulation Reg expresses general reluctance to find exempt employees in ranks of first responders in police and fire
Exemption still available for higher ranks in police and fire, but heightened emphasis on actual duties
16. Window of Correction Window of correction available if
Improper deduction was isolated or inadvertent as compared to part of an actual practice; and
Employee is promptly reimbursed
17. Washington Law ChangesRe Salary Basis Adopts FLSA basis definition
Additional compensation above salary, even based on hours, OK
Deductions from comp banks OK
Deductions from leave banks OK for public employers, and OK for private employers in some situations
Partial day absence pay deduction OK for public employers BUT NOT for private employers
Limited window of correction
18. Only the Starting Point-Regular Rate of Pay Basic Rate
Employees paid solely on the basis of a single hourly rate
Employees with multiple forms of compensation
19. Regular Rate of Pay Problems Failure to include add-ons to base pay (e.g., longevity, education incentives)
Only required if employees work more than FLSA threshold
Deceptive contract language
Improper conversion of salary to hourly rate
Handling 2 or more rates of pay
20. Items to Includein Regular Hourly Rate of Pay Commissions
Shift differential
Payments for achieving certain levels of certification
Education incentives
Hazardous duty pay
Special assignment or acting pay
Clothing allowance (only if amount does not approximate actual cost of purchase and cleaning)
On-call pay
Non-discretionary bonuses
Premiums for weekends or holidays worked Contest prizes
Employee lunch or meal expenses paid by employer, unless incurred for the employers benefit
Retroactive pay increases
Travel expenses of employees going to and from work, if paid by employer, unless incurred for the employers benefit
Tool allowances (only if doesnt reasonably approximate actual cost of purchasing and maintaining tool)
21. Questions Surrounding Sick Leave Buy-Back Programs Buy-back vs. Cash-out Programs
FLSA Treatment of Sick Leave Buy-Back Programs
29 CFR 778.218
Payments which are made for occasional periods when the employee is not at work due to vacation, holiday, illness, failure of the employer to provide sufficient work, or other similar cause, where the payments are in amounts approximately equivalent to the employees normal earnings for a similar period of time, are not made as compensation for his hours of employment. Therefore, such payments may be excluded from the regular rate of pay under section 7(e)(2) of the Act and, for the same reason, no part of such payments may be credited toward overtime compensation due under the Act.
22. Acton v. City of Columbia Western District of Missouri. Held sick leave buy-back program was a non-discretionary bonus that should be included in regular rate of pay.
Featsent v. City of Youngstown 6th Circuit. Held that sick leave buy-back program was similar to payments made when no work is performed due to illness thus, it should not be included in regular rate of pay.
The Ninth Circuit has yet to address the issue.
23. WMWA Treatment of Sick Leave Buy-back Programs
Has not addressed the issue
Arguments for including it in the regular rate
Teamsters, Local 117 v. Northwest Beverages, Inc.
Arguments against including it in the regular rate
Washingtons treatment of sick leave under salary basis test
Statutory language
24. Items Excluded From Regular Hourly Rate of Pay Vacation pay
Sick leave
Bereavement leave
Jury duty pay
Discretionary bonuses
Holiday pay, if it is equivalent to regular earnings
Premium pay for work on holiday, weekends, etc.
Idle time beyond the control of the employer
Severance pay
Qualified pension and profit sharing contributions Call-back premium pay
Travel expenses, if business trips are taken by the employee
Show up or reporting pay which exceeds hours actually worked
Weekly overtime pay
Health and welfare fund benefits received by the employee
Death benefits
Employer-paid benefits
Reasonable uniform and clothing allowances
Comp. time use payments
25. Converting Salaryto Hourly Rate Fixed 40 hour workweek
Fixed workweek less than 40 hours
Fixed workweek more than 40 hours
Fluctuating workweek
26. Fluctuating Workweek Option for Non-exempt Salaried Personnel Spreads salary over all actual hours worked in week
Available if nature of job causes fluctuating hours
Requires agreement before work is performed
27. Option For Twoor More Rates Tracing method
Which job caused overtime
Best when lower-paid job causes overtime
Weighted average method
Blend both rates
Best when higher-paid job causes overtime
28. Compensation Overtime Through Comp Bank Mortensen v. County of Sacramento Ninth Circuit.
Employer has the right to schedule the comp time within a reasonable period of the request, not the specific day requested.
29. Hours WorkedGeneral Rule Any time employee is permitted to spend performing the principal activity or activities which such employee is employed to perform is compensable
30. Off-the-Clock Work Definition: work voluntarily performed where agency knew, or should have known
How to control
Pre-approval requirement for overtime
Enforcement of requirement
31. Categories of Time That May Be Designated as Compensable Work Off-the-clock work
Waiting time
Show up, stand-by, or reporting time
Time spent changing clothes, sleep time
Travel time for employees reporting straight to remote sites Time spent in training
Time spent in court proceedings
Union activities
Time spent for caring for a canine
Shuttle travel for split shift employees
On-call Time
32. On-Call Time Is employee primarily free to engage in personal pursuits?
Factors: geographic restrictions, response time, frequency of interruptions, use of cell phones and pagers vs. land-based phones, availability to trade assigned days, reasonableness of response time
What is the nature of understanding with employee?
33. New WashingtonMeal & Break Law Effective 5-20-03, basic meal and break period rules apply to public employers
Basic rule, 10 minutes per 4 hours (either fixed or intermittent) and 30 minutes for lunch
Can opt out or change by union contract or employee agreement
Law recognizes certain pre-existing exemptions before 4-1-03
34. Requirements to Exclude Training Time From Hours Worked Either:
All of the following four requirements must be met:
Attendance outside regular working hours
Attendance voluntary
Not directly related to employees job; and
Employees do not perform productive work during attendance
Or:
Training required by government agencies as condition of profession (e.g., Paramedic re-certification training)
35. Travel Time Maze Commute time not hours of work
Available for readjusted work station
Travel during work hours
Between job sites: compensable
From remote job site to base: compensable
Out of town travel: everything compensable except travel from home to airport, bus depot or train station
Travel outside regular working hours
If employee is driving: compensable
If passenger in auto, bus, plane or train: noncompensable unless doing work
Travel on non-work day:
If during regular work hours: compensable
If outside regular work hours: noncompensable unless employee is driving