home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
So Much Shareware 1
/
SoMuchSharewareV1_1991.iso
/
general
/
guide7-1.exe
/
LHARC1.EXE
/
LABOR.STB
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1991-06-27
|
23KB
|
532 lines
/* The following is the full text of the U.S. Labor Dept.
Publication for Employees on their rights under minimum
wage. */
Handy Reference Guide to the Fair Labor Standards Act
The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) establishes minimum wage,
overtime pay, recordkeeping, and child labor standards affecting
more than 73 million full-time and part-time workers in the
private sector and in Federal, State, and local governments.
The Wage and Hour Division (Wage-Hour) administers and enforces
FLSA with respect to private employment, State and local
government employment, and Federal employees of the Library of
Congress, U.S. Postal Service, Postal Rate Commission, and the
Tennessee Valley Authority. The Office of Personnel Management
is responsible for enforcement with regard to all other Federal
employees.
Special rules apply to State and local government employment
involving fire protection and law enforcement activities,
volunteer services, and compensatory time off in lieu of cash
overtime pay.
Basic Wage Standards
Covered nonexempt workers are entitled to a minimum wage of not
less than $3.35 an hour and overtime pay at a rate of not less
than one and one-half times their regular rates of pay after 40
hours of work in a workweek.
Wages required by FLSA are due on the regular pay day for the pay
period covered. Deductions made from wages for such items as
cash or merchandise shortages, employer-required uniforms, and
tools of the trade, are not legal to the extent that they reduce
the wages of employees below the minimum rate required by FLSA or
reduce the amount of overtime pay due under FLSA.
The FLSA contains some exemptions from these basic standards.
Some apply to specific types of businesses; others apply to
specific kinds of work.
While FLSA does set basic minimum wage and overtime pay standards
and regulates the employment of minors, there are a number of
employment practices which FLSA does not regulate.
For example, FLSA does not require:
(1) vacation, holiday, severance, or sick pay;
(2) meal or rest periods, holidays off, or vacations;
(3) premium pay for weekend or holiday work;
(4) pay raises or fringe benefits;
(5) a discharge notice, reason for discharge, or immediate pay-
ment of final wages to terminated employees; and,
(6) Any limit on the number of hours of work for persons 16 years
of age an over.
These matters are for agreement between the employer and the
employees or their authorized representatives.
Who is Covered?
All employees of certain enterprises having workers engaged in
interstate commerce, producing goods for interstate commerce, or
handling, selling, or otherwise working on goods or materials
that have been moved in or produced for such commerce by any
person are covered by FLSA.
A covered enterprise is the related activities performed through
unified operation or common control by any person or persons for
a common business purpose and is -
(1) engaged in laundering or cleaning or repairing of clothing or
fabrics; or
(2) engaged in the business of construction or reconstruction; or
(3) engaged in the operation of a hospital, an institution
primarily engaged in the care of the sick, the aged, or the
mentally ill or defective who reside on the premises, a
school for mentally or physically handicapped or gifted
children, a preschool, an elementary or secondary school, or
an institution or higher education (whether public or private
or operated for profit or not for profit); or
(4) comprised exclusively of one or more retail or service
establishments (as defined in FLSA) whose annual gross volume
of sales made or business done is not less than $362,500; or
(5) any other type of enterprise having an annual gross volume of
sales made or business done of not less than $250,000; or
(6) an activity of a public agency.
The dollar volume standard mentioned above in (4) and (5)
excludes excise taxes at the retail level which are separately
stated.
Employees of firms which are not covered enterprises under FLSA
may still be subject to its minimum wage, overtime pay, and child
labor provisions if they are individually engaged in interstate
commerce. Such employees include those who: work in
communications or transportation; regularly use the mails;
telephones, or telegraph for interstate communication, or keep
records of interstate transactions; handle, ship, or receive
goods moving in interstate commerce; regularly cross State lines
in the course of employment; or work for independent employers
who contract to do clerical, custodial, maintenance, or other
work for firms engaged in interstate commerce or in the
production of goods for interstate commerce.
Domestic service workers such as day workers, housekeepers,
chauffeurs, cooks, or full-time baby sitters are covered if they
(1) receive at least $50 in cash wages in a calendar quarter from
their employers, or (2) work a total of more than 8 hours a week
for one or more employers.
Tipped Employees
Tipped employees are those who customarily and regularly receive
more than $30 a month in tips.
The employer may consider tips as part of wages, but such a wage
credit must not exceed 40 percent of the minimum wage.
The employer who elects to use the tip credit provision must
inform the employee in advance and must be able to show that the
employee receives at least the minimum wage when direct wages and
the tip credit allowance are combined. Also, employees must
retain all of their tips, except to the extent that they
participate in a valid tip pooling or sharing arrangement.
Employer-Furnished Facilities
The reasonable cost or fair value of board, lodging, and other
facilities customarily furnished by the employer for the
employee's benefit may be considered part of wages.
Subminimum Wage Provisions
The FLSA provides for the employment of certain individuals at
wage rates below the statutory minimum. Such individuals include
student-learners (vocational education students), as well as
full-time students in retail or service establishments,
agriculture, or institutions of higher education. Also included
are individuals whose earning or productive capacity is impaired
by age or physical or mental deficiency or injury. Employment at
less than the minimum wage is provided in order to prevent the
curtailment of opportunities for employment. Such employment is
permitted only under certificates issued by Wage-Hour.
Exemptions
Some employees are excluded from the overtime pay provisions or
both the minimum wage and overtime pay provisions by specific
exemptions.
Because exemptions are generally narrowly defined under FLSA, an
employer should carefully check the exact terms and conditions
for each. Detailed information is available from local Wage-Hour
offices. Following are examples which are illustrative but do
not spell out the conditions for each exemption.
Exemptions from Both Minimum Wage and Overtime Pay
(1) Executive, administrative, and professional employees
(including teachers and academic administrative personnel in
elementary and secondary schools), and outside sales persons
(as defined in Department of Labor regulations);
(2) Employees of certain individually owned and operated small
retail or service establishments not part of a covered
enterprise;
(3) Employees of certain seasonal amusement or recreational
establishments, employees of certain small newspapers,
switchboard operators of small telephone companies, seamen
employed on foreign vessels, and employees engaged in
fishing operations;
(4) Farm workers employed by anyone who used no more than 500
"man-days" of farm labor in the calendar quarter of the
preceding calendar year.
(5) Casual babysitters and persons employed as companions to the
elderly or infirm.
Exemptions from Overtime Pay Provisions Only
(1) Certain highly-paid commissioned employees of retail or
service establishments; auto, truck, trailer, farm
implement, boat, or aircraft salesworkers, or parts-clerks
and mechanics servicing autos, trucks, or farm implements,
and who are employed by nonmanufacturing establishments
primarily engaged in selling these items to ultimate
purchasers;
(2) Employees of railroads and air carriers, taxi drivers,
certain employees of motor carriers, seamen on American
vessels, and local delivery employees paid on approved trip
rate plans;
(3) Announcers, news editors, and chief engineers of certain
nonmetropolitan broadcasting station;
(4) Domestic service workers residing in the employer's
residences;
(5) Employees of motion picture theaters; and
(6) Farmworkers.
Partial Exemptions from Overtime Pay
(1) Partial overtime pay exemptions apply to employees engaged
in certain operations on agricultural commodities and
employees of certain bulk petroleum distributors.
(2) Hospitals and residential care establishments may adopt, by
agreement with their employees, a 14-day work period in lieu
of the usual 7-day workweek, if the employees are paid at
least time and one-half their regular rates for hours worked
over 8 in a day or 80 in a 14-day work period, whichever is
the greater number of overtime hours.
Child Labor Provisions
The FLSA child labor provisions are designed to protect the
educational opportunities of minors and prohibit their employment
in jobs and under conditions detrimental to their health or well-
being. The provisions include restrictions on hours of work for
minors under 16 and lists of hazardous occupations orders for
both farm and nonfarm jobs declared by the Secretary of Labor as
being too dangerous for minors to perform. Further information
on prohibited occupations is available from local Wage-Hour
offices.
Nonagricultural Jobs
Regulations governing youth employment in nonfarm jobs differ
somewhat from those pertaining to agricultural employment. In
nonfarm work, the permissible jobs and hours of work, by age, are
as follows:
(1) Youths 18 years or older may perform any job, whether
hazardous or not, for unlimited hours;
(2) Youths 16 and 17 years old may perform any nonhazardous job,
for unlimited hours; and
(3) Youths 14 and 15 years old may work outside school hours in
various nonmanufacturing, nonmining, nonhazardous jobs under
the following conditions: no more than 3 hours on a school
day, 18 hours in a school week, 8 hours on a nonschool day,
or 40 hours in a nonschool week. Also, work may not begin
before 7 a.m., nor end after 7 p.m. except from June 1
through Labor Day, when evening hours are extended to 9 p.m.
Under a special provision, youths 14 and 15 years old
enrolled in an approved Work Experience and Career
Exploration Program (WECEP) may be employed for up to 23
hours in school weeks and 3 hours on school days (including
during school hours.)
Fourteen is the minimum age for most nonfarm work. However, at
any age, youths may deliver newspapers; perform in radio,
television, movie, or theatrical productions, work for parents in
their solely-owned nonfarm business (except in manufacturing or
on hazardous jobs); or, gather evergreens and make evergreen
wreaths.
Farm Jobs
In farm work, permissible jobs and hours of work, by age, are as
follows:
(1) Youths 16 years and older may perform any job, whether
hazardous or not, for unlimited hours;
(2) Youths 14 and 15 years old may perform any nonhazardous farm
job outside of school hours;
(3) Youths 12 and 13 years old may work outside of schools hours
in nonhazardous jobs, either with parent's written consent
or on the same farm as the parents;
(4) Youths under 12 years old may perform jobs on farms owned or
operated by parents or, with parents' written consent,
outside of school hours in nonhazardous jobs on farms not
covered by minimum wage requirements.
Minors of any age may be employed by their parents at any time in
any occupation on a farm owned or operated by their parents.
Recordkeeping
The FLSA requires employers to keep records on wages, hours, and
other its, as specified in Department of Labor recordkeeping
regulations. Most of the information is of the kind generally
maintained by employers in ordinary business practice and in
compliance with other laws and regulations. The records do not
have to be kept in any particular form and time clocks need not
be used. With respect to an employee subject to both minimum
wage and overtime pay provisions, the following records must be
kept:
(1) personal information, including employee's name, home
address, occupation, sex and birth date (if under 19 years of
age);
(2) hour and day when workweek begins;
(3) total hours worked each workday and each workweek;
(4) total daily or weekly straight-time earnings;
(5) regular hourly pay rate for any week when overtime is
worked;
(6) total overtime pay for the workweek;
(7) deductions from or additions to wages;
(8) total wages paid each pay period; and
(9) date of payment and pay period covered.
Records required for exempt employees differ from those for
nonexempt workers and special information is required for
homeworkers, for employees working under uncommon pay
arrangements, or for employees to whom lodging or other
facilities are furnished.
Terms Used in FLSA
Workweek - A workweek is a period of 168 hours during 7
consecutive 24-hour periods. It may begin on any day of the week
and any hour of the day established by the employer. Generally,
for purposes of minimum wage and overtime payment each workweek
stands alone; there can be no averaging of 2 or more workweeks.
Employee coverage, compliance with wage payment requirements, and
the application of most exemptions are determined on a workweek
basis.
Hours Worked - Covered employees must be paid for all hours
worked in a workweek. In general, "hours worked" includes all
time an employee must be on duty, or on the employer's premises
or at any other prescribed place of work. Also included is any
additional time the employee is suffered or permitted to work.
Computing Overtime Pay
Overtime must be paid at a rate of at least one and one-half
times the employee's regular rate of pay for each hour worked in
a workweek in excess of the maximum allowable in a given type of
employment. Generally, the regular rate includes all payments
made by the employer to or on behalf of the employee (excluding
certain statutory exemptions). The following examples are based
on a maximum 40-hour workweek.
(1) Hourly rate - (regular pay rate for an employee paid by the
hour). If more than 40 hours are worked, at least one and one-
half times the regular rate for each hour over 40 is due.
Example: An employee paid $3.80 an hour works 44 hours in a
workweek. The employee is entitled to at least one and one-half
times $3.80, or $5.70, for each hour over 40. Pay for the week
would be $152 for the first 40 hours, plus $22.80 for the four
hours of overtime - a total of $174.80.
(2) Piece rate - The regular rate of pay for an employee paid on
a piecework basis is obtained by dividing the total weekly
earnings by the total number of hours worked in the same week.
The employee is entitled to an additional one-half times this
regular rate for each hour over 40, plus the full piecework
earnings.
Example: An employee paid on a piecework basis works 45 hours in
a week and earns $162. The regular rate of pay for that week is
$162 divided by 45, or $3.60 an hour. In addition to the
straight-time pay, the employee is entitled to $1.80 (half the
regular rate) for each hour over 40.
Another way to compensate pieceworkers for overtime, if agreed to
before the work is performed, is to pay one and one-half times
the piece rate for each piece produced during overtime hours.
The piece rate must be the one actually paid during nonovertime
hours and must be enough to yield at least the minimum wage per
hour.
(3) Salary - the regular rate for an employee paid a salary for a
regular or specified number of hours a week is obtained by
dividing the salary by the number of hours for which the salary
is intended to compensate.
If, under the employment agreement, a salary sufficient to meet
the minimum wage requirement in every workweek is paid as
straight time for whatever number of hours are worked in a
workweek, the regular rate is obtained by dividing the salary by
the number of hours worked each week. To illustrate, suppose an
employee's hours of work vary each week and the agreement with
the employer is that the employee will be paid $200 a week for
whatever number of hours of work are required. Under this
agreement, the regular rate will vary in overtime weeks. If the
employee works 50 hours, the regular rate is $4 ($200 divided by
50 hours). In addition to the salary, half the regular rate, or
$2 is due for each of the 10 overtime hours, for a total of $220
for the week. If the employee works 54 hours, the regular rate
will be $3.70 ($200 divided by 54). In that case, an additional
$1.85 is due for each of the 14 overtime hours, for a total of
$225.90 for the week.
In no case may the regular rate be less than the minimum wage
required by FLSA.
If a salary is paid on other than a weekly basis, the weekly pay
must be determined in order to compute the regular rate and
overtime. If the salary is for a half month, it must be
multiplied by 24 and the product divided by two weeks to get the
weekly equivalent. A monthly salary should be multiplied by 12
and the product divided by 52.
Enforcement
Wage-Hour's enforcement of FLSA is carried out by compliance
officers stationed across the U.S. As Wage-Hour's authorized
representatives, they have the authority to conduct
investigations and gather data on wages, hours, and other
employment conditions or practices, in order to determine
compliance with FLSA. Where violations are found, they also may
recommend changes in employment practices, in order to bring an
employer into compliance with FLSA.
It is a violation of FLSA to fire or in any other manner
discriminate against an employee for filing a complaint or for
participating in a legal proceeding under FLSA.
Willful violations may be prosecuted criminally and the violator
fined up to $10,000. A second conviction may result in
imprisonment.
Violators of the child labor provisions are subject to a civil
money penalty of up to $1,000 for each violation.
Recovery of Back Wages
Listed below are methods which FLSA provides for recovering
unpaid minimum and/or overtime wages.
(1) Wage-Hour may supervise payment of back wages.
(2) The Secretary of Labor may bring suit for back wages and an
equal amount as liquidated damages.
(3) An employee may file a private suit for back pay and an
equal amount as liquidated damages, plus attorney's fees and
court costs.
(4) The Secretary of Labor may obtain an injunction to restrain
any person from violating FLSA, including the unlawful
withholding of proper minimum wage and overtime pay.
An employee may not bring suit if he or she has been paid back
wages under the supervision of Wage-Hour or if the Secretary of
Labor has already filed suit to recover the wages.
A 2-year statute of limitations applies to the recovery of back
pay, except in the case of willful violations, in which case a 3-
year statute applies.
Other Labor Laws
In addition to FLSA, Wage-Hour enforces and administers a number
of other labor laws. Among these are:
(1) the Davis-Bacon and Related Acts (require payment of
prevailing wage rates and fringe benefits on federally-
financed or assisted construction);
(2) the Walsh-Healey Public Contracts Act (requires payment of
minimum wage rates and overtime pay on contracts to provide
goods to the Federal government);
(3) the Service Contract Act (requires payment of prevailing
wage rates and fringe benefits on contracts to provide
services to the Federal government0;
(4) the Contract Work Hours and Safety Standards Act (sets
overtime standards for Federal service and construction
contracts);
(5) the Immigration Reform and Control Act (Wage-Hour is
authorized to review the Immigration and Naturalization
Service forms (I-9) required under the Immigration Reform
and Control Act; employers must verify the employment
eligibility of all individuals hired after November 6, 1986,
and must keep I-9s on file for at least 3 years and for one
year after an employee is terminated);
(6) the Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection Act
(protects farm workers by imposing certain requirements on
agricultural employers and associations; and by requiring
the registration of crewleaders who must also provide the
same worker protections); and
(7) the Wage Garnishment Law (limits amount of an individual's
income that may be legally garnisheed and prohibits the
firing of an employee whose pay is garnisheed for payment of
a single debt).
More detailed information on FLSA and other laws administered by
Wage-Hour is available from local Wage-Hour offices, which are
listed in most telephone directors under U.S. Government,
Department of Labor, Employment Standards Administration, Wage
and Hour Division.
Equal Pay Provisions
The equal pay provisions of FLSA prohibit wage differentials
based on sex, between men and women employed in the same
establishment, on jobs that require equal skill, effort, and
responsibility and which are performed under similar working
conditions. These provisions, as well as other statutes
prohibiting discrimination in employment, are enforced by the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. More detailed
information is available from its offices which are listed in
most telephone directors under U.S. Government.