Reminder: Getting a salary doesn’t preclude OT entitlement
We realize this is Payroll 101, but you’d be surprised by how many companies run afoul of this basic rule: Just because an employee receives a salary doesn’t mean he or she isn’t entitled to overtime payments.
That’s a lesson learned the hard way by a Tampa business. Workers for La Bella Vida Assisted Living Facility were paid a set salary for their scheduled shifts.
The problem: These workers often worked more than their scheduled hours – in some cases, 100 hours or more in a week. That caused their hourly rate to dip well below minimum wage, at times to the equivalent of $3 to $5 an hour.
A Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) investigation resulted in La Bella Vida being required to pay $287,087 in back wages and damages to 20 employees, the Dept. of Labor (DOL) recently said.
Salaried doesn’t mean exempt
Companies can choose to pay nonexempt employees a flat salary – but that doesn’t mean they’re exempt.
You still need to track every hour for these employees. That’s because you need to know when they work more than 40 hours in a workweek so you can pay overtime, and you can’t let their pay rate dip below the federal minimum wage, the FLSA states.
Free Training & Resources
White Papers
Provided by Anaplan
White Papers
Provided by UJET
Further Reading
In March and April, some of your peers will receive CP2100/CP2100A notices from IRS that will require them to mail out B notices notifying ...
New Jersey’s highest court has ruled that commissions are always wages under the state’s Wage Payment Law, reviving a sales employee’...
The Department of Labor (DOL) has been planning for over a year to revise its overtime exemption regs, with May as its latest deadline. So ...
A federal appeals court could weaken a 50-year-old muzzle on companies and individuals that settle securities fraud allegations. And there&...
Employers in states that have paid family and medical leave programs will be relieved to know the IRS has extended its reporting deadline. ...
In a final rule, the Department of Homeland Security increased the penalties for violations of federal immigration law. With enforcement...