
WINTER 2004/2005 ISSUE
FLSA OVERTIME UPDATE
Unless an employee falls within an exempt category of
workers, the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)
requires the employer to pay the employee overtime at
a rate of one and one-half times the regular rate of
pay, for hours worked in excess of 40 hours per week.
To be exempt is to be ineligible for overtime. The exemption
commonly called the "white collar" exemption
is for professional employees.
Federal regulations in place since August 2004 have
simplified the test for determining which employees
come within the white collar exemption. An employee
is a professional if each of the following elements
is present:
(1) The employee has the primary duty of performing
work requiring advanced knowledge, that is, work that
is mainly intellectual in nature and which includes
the consistent exercise of discretion and judgment;
(2) The employee has advanced knowledge in a field
of science or learning; and
(3) The employee has advanced knowledge that is customarily
acquired by a prolonged course of specialized intellectual
instruction.
Recent Cases
In one recent case, a company refused to pay overtime
to some of its employees who were licensed pharmacists.
Much to the dismay of the employees, the company's reliance
on the white collar exemption held up in federal court.
All of the parties agreed that the second and third
parts of the exemption test were met by the pharmacists,
leaving a dispute only over whether the pharmacists'
work required the consistent exercise of discretion
and judgment. The court found that this element also
was present.
The pharmacists, with little supervision, routinely
made discretionary decisions about dispensing prescribed
drugs to patients, and sometimes the process required
consultation with the physicians who prescribed the
drugs. The only factor suggesting a lack of discretion
was the fact that the employees, as a rule, were expected
to follow standard operating procedures from their employer.
But this argument by the pharmacists was undermined
by the fact that they regularly were asked to consult
with the employer about the standard procedures and
to review them for any suggested improvements. The pharmacists
also had the employer's blessing to stray from the procedures
if, in their judgment, it was necessary for a patient's
health.
Assuming an employee is eligible for overtime pay,
questions can arise as to what comprises an employee's
regular rate of pay for purposes of calculating the
overtime obligation. It is not always as simple as using
an employee's base hourly rate or salary. For example,
in another recent case, a federal court ruled that the
regular pay of municipal firefighters included payments
made to them under a city's sick leave buy-back program.
A firefighter who had built up a certain amount of sick
leave had the right to "sell" it back to the
city for a lump-sum payment. Whenever this happened,
the employer effectively was paying the firefighters
a bonus for good attendance and for work they had already
done. It was as much a part of the firefighters' regular
compensation as their base hourly wage, so it had to
be taken into account in calculating overtime wages.
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