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FLSA Questions and Answers
Q. What is the
FLSA?
A. The
FLSA is the most general federal labor law. It contains the
minimum wage provisions, Equal Pay Act, child labor
restrictions, and a variety of other federal labor and
employment law sections. A key provision of the Act is that most
employees must be paid time and one-half for all overtime "hours
worked."
Q. Is the FLSA
the same as the "Garcia Act?"
A.
Yes, but mostly as a matter of slang. The 1985 Supreme Court
decision in Garcia v. San Antonio held that the FLSA applied to
public sector (government) jobs as well as private sector
employment. The FLSA has often been referred to as the "Garcia
Act" since the Supreme Court decision. As a result of this court
decision, Congress passed some FLSA amendments addressing the
FLSA application to government employment, and these amendments
have sometimes also been called the Garcia Act.
Q. What
activities are considered "work?"
A.
The courts have held that work time under the FLSA includes all
time spent performing job-related activities which (a) genuinely
benefit the employer, (b) which the employer "knows or has
reason to believe" are being performed by an employee, and (c)
which the employer does not prohibit the employee from
performing. These can include activities performed during
"off-the-clock" time, at the job site or elsewhere, whether
"voluntary" or not.
Courts have
awarded FLSA damages for "off-the-clock" time spent by employees
maintaining equipment, staying late after normal shifts without
"putting in" for overtime, doing job-related paperwork "at
home," making and responding to job-related telephone calls,
working through meal periods, and many other activities.
Employees sometimes underestimate the amount of "off the clock"
time they spend performing compensable tasks.
Q. What is
"overtime?"
A.
The word overtime has a technical definition under the FLSA, and
means all time actually worked over a "threshold." The usual
threshold is 40 hours per work week. Some government or medical
jobs may have alternative thresholds.
Q. What is an
FLSA threshold?
A.
The FLSA generally requires overtime for hours worked in excess
of 40 hours per week. In a regular, 40 hour week situation, the
FLSA "threshold" is thus 40 hours per week. Some government
employees, and some medical employees, may have different
thresholds. For FLSA purposes, only "actual" work time counts
toward the overtime threshold. Leave time does not count as work
time under the FLSA, even if the time is paid for and considered
working time for other purposes. For example, suppose an
employee works 4 of his or her 5 regularly scheduled eight-hour
days in a week, and takes leave on the fifth day. The employee
will have worked 32 "regular" hours that week. Any additional
time worked by the employee during that week (whether "on the
clock" or "off the clock") will not "count" for FLSA overtime
until (and to the extent that) the total number of hours worked
that week exceeds 40 -- in the example, the first 8 "extra"
hours need not be paid as overtime under the FLSA.
Q. A labor
practice or contract may provide for overtime for employees
working in excess of 8 hours per day, or 37.5 hours per week, or
some other formula. Must this overtime be paid at time and
one-half the officer's FLSA regular rate?
A.
Not necessarily. The word overtime has a technical and
restricted definition in the FLSA. FLSA requirements typically
apply only when hours worked exceed the applicable FLSA overtime
threshold in a work week or work period. FLSA overtime is due
only for hours worked over the FLSA threshold, even if "contract
overtime" may provide employees with overtime on some other
formula (such as hours worked over 8 per day). Until and unless
the FLSA overtime thresholds are met and exceeded, the FLSA
rules for regular rates or overtime rates are generally
inapplicable (assuming no minimum wage violations). If a
labor-management contract or practice calls for overtime to be
paid for hours worked below the FLSA threshold, neither the FLSA
regular rate nor overtime rate requirements necessarily apply.
Until and unless the FLSA overtime threshold is met and
exceeded, an employee's wage rate can be different from the
FLSA-mandated rate without violating the FLSA (again, assuming
no minimum wage violation).
Q. Does leave
time count as work time?
A.
No. "Hours not worked" need not be counted as "hours worked" for
purposes of FLSA wage computations, even if they are counted as
work time for some other purpose such as pensions or for pay
computations under employment agreements.
Q. At what rate
must FLSA overtime be paid?
A.
Time and one-half the "regular hourly rate." (For employees
whose normal pay is not an "hourly" rate, their regular rate
requires converting pay to an hourly equivalent. There are some
peculiar FLSA arithmetic rules about how to do this.) Longevity
pay, shift differentials, and similar nondiscretionary wage
augments paid for work should generally be included in
calculating the FLSA overtime rate. There are provisions which
may permit arrangements to pay for some work at a different
rate, but only if the work is different from the employee's
regular job, and only by agreement before the work is performed.
Q. Does it
matter that an employee did not "put in for" the time spent
performing work activities?
A.
Probably not. "Failure to ask" is not a defense for an employer
in an FLSA case. Failure to ask might conceivably be relevant on
the question of whether an employer knew or had reason to
believe that an employee was performing off duty work, but even
in this situation failure to ask would be only one factor on the
question.
Q. How does an
employee prove that the employer knew or had reason to believe
that off the clock work was being performed?
A.
An employer will be held to "know" what it "could have found
out" if it had paid attention to what its employees were doing.
The legal standard is whether an employer could have learned of
the handler's activities by making reasonably diligent
inquiries. According to the courts, it is a "rare" case in which
an employer will be found to lack the requisite knowledge when
the activities in question are "part and parcel" of an
employee's job, unless the employee has deliberately hidden the
fact that s/he is performing them.
Q. How do I
prove the amount of time spent doing off-the-clock compensable
activities?
A.
It is up to the employer to control the work of its employees,
and to maintain records of the time spent by employees
performing compensable activities. If an employer does not
maintain the required records, the employee is entitled to
recover based on good faith, reasonable and realistic estimates.
Q. What are
liquidated damages?
A.
The FLSA provides that a successful employee is usually entitled
to double the amount of unpaid back wages, called "liquidated
damages." Essentially, liquidated damages are in lieu of
interest. An employer can avoid paying liquidated damages only
if it shows that it acted in good faith in failing to pay for
off the clock work, and that it had a reasonable basis to
believe that it need not pay for off the clock work. "Good
faith" has a special meaning under the FLSA, and requires that
employers have made specific investigation of the application of
the FLSA to particular types of employees. Liquidated damages
are the rule, not the exception. Employees are normally entitled
to liquidated damages.
Q. What is the
7(k) Exemption?
A.
The FLSA generally requires overtime at time and one-half for
all hours worked over 40 per week. There is, however, a special
rule for government police agencies and fire departments which
allows a different "work period" in some circumstances. If the
employer establishes an alternative work period under section
7(k) of the FLSA, overtime is owed (under the FLSA) only for
hours worked in excess of a threshold number of hours per work
period, which will be different from (and more than) the normal
40 hours per week. For example, a police employer may establish
a 7(k) work period of 14 days. If the employer has complied with
the requirements for establishing such an alternative work
period, FLSA overtime is owed only for hours worked in excess of
86 hours in a 14 day work period.
Q. I already get
overtime. Does the FLSA apply to me?
A.
Maybe. Many employees put in off the clock time for which they
are entitled to be paid. The Act defines "work" very broadly,
and sometimes employers have failed to capture or compensate a
variety of "off the clock" activities which count as work under
the Act.
Q. Does it
matter that I never reported the time or asked for overtime?
A.
Probably not. It is the employer's obligation to control the
work. If an employer does not wish work to be performed it must
prohibit it. "Failure to ask" for overtime is usually not a
defense for an employer in an FLSA case. An exception might be
if the employer has a requirement that generally all time be
reported and actually has enforced it, or if an employee's
failure to report means that the employers did not know the work
was being performed.
Q. I get
"compensatory time" in lieu of cash for overtime. Is this
allowed?
A.
Maybe, but only for public sector (government) employees. Comp.
time in lieu of cash for FLSA overtime is not generally
permitted in the private sector. A public sector employer may
pay (at least some) FLSA overtime with comp. time.
Q. How do I
enforce my FLSA rights?
A.
Either by complaining to the U.S. Department of Labor or
bringing a private lawsuit. Private lawsuits are more common.
Q. How does an
employee start an FLSA case?
A.
Usually by hiring an attorney. The FLSA is not "rocket science,"
but it is also not part of most "regular" lawyers' day to day
practices. As a consequence, many employees will seek out
attorneys with substantial FLSA experience, or local attorneys
will "affiliate" with FLSA lawyers on particular cases (usually
at no additional cost to the employee).
Q. What do I get
if I win?
A.
Money. Successful FLSA plaintiffs are entitled to back pay for
all unpaid overtime, usually beginning two years before the
complaint is filed. In most cases, they are also entitled to
double the amount of back pay. This is called liquidated
damages, and is essentially in lieu of interest on the unpaid
wages. The Act also requires the employer to reimburse out of
pocket litigation expenses and pay an additional attorneys' fee
award. Some pre-tax FLSA recoveries by employees have been quite
substantial. For employees nearing retirement, back pay awards
may increase pension benefits.
Q. Is money
recovered in an FLSA case taxable?
A.
Yes.
Q. What is the
effect of an FLSA recovery on a pension?
A.
This will depend on the pension system's rules. However, at
least some of an FLSA award may be considered "back pay."
Therefore, if pensions are based on a percentage of wages earned
or "average salary," an FLSA recovery may increase the amount of
pension an officer can receive. Thus, in some circumstances an
FLSA award can be "the gift that keeps on giving."
Q. Are employees
obligated to pay the employer's legal fees if they lose the
case?
A.
No (except in the unlikely event a court were to decide the suit
was "frivolous").
Q. How do
employees pay their FLSA lawyers?
A. This is
between the individual employees and the lawyers. Many FLSA
lawyers will take FLSA cases on some variation of a "contingency
fee." This usually means that the employees pay no legal fees
unless and until they win the case, and then fees are based on a
percentage of the amount recovered. Successful FLSA plaintiffs
are entitled to an attorneys' fee award from the employer in
addition to any other recovery (like in civil rights cases).
Q. What actual
financial costs or risks are there for an employee to bring an
FLSA case?
A.
To some extent this is between the individual employee and the
attorney. If the employee hires attorneys on a contingency fee
basis, there are no "up front" expenses for legal fees. However,
employees are responsible for court costs, such as filing fees,
stenographic transcription fees, etc. These may, or may not, be
"fronted" by the attorneys, but employees are ultimately
responsible for paying (or reimbursing) these expenses. (Court
costs are paid by the loser, so employees are actually "on the
hook" for these expenses only if they lose the case.) Individual
arrangements with particular lawyers may also involve the
employees paying some additional expenses directly, or not.
Q. How long does
an FLSA case take?
A.
Who knows? Almost everyone understands that legal proceedings
are often slow. Most FLSA cases are filed in federal courts, and
how fast a case can get to trial varies from district to
district (and judge to judge). Many FLSA cases settle before
trial, but this is unpredictable.
Q. What are the
time limits on FLSA suits?
A.
The FLSA normally permits recovery for work performed beginning
two years before a complaint is filed in court (and continuing
"forward" until the case is resolved). Recovery for this period
is essentially on a "no fault" basis. An additional year's
recovery period is permitted if the employer "knew" that its
employment and pay practices violated the FLSA, but
"disregarded" these obligations. "Third year" cases are rare,
but not unheard of. Nothing but the filing of a legal complaint
in court "stops the clock." (A complaint to the employer, or the
Department of Labor, does not "toll" the FLSA statute of
limitations.)
Q. What are the
"downstream consequences" of an FLSA case?
A.
The FLSA prohibits retaliation or discrimination against an
employee who brings an FLSA case. These provisions have "teeth,"
but do not cover "routine hassling." The FLSA does not prohibit
management from changing working conditions or schedules to
minimize or eliminate FLSA overtime liabilities in the future.
Local laws or collective bargaining agreements may govern and
limit the changes an employer may make.
Q. Do all
"similarly situated" employees have to participate in an FLSA
suit if one employee decides to sue?
A.
No. FLSA cases are not "class actions." No employee need bring
or join an FLSA suit if s/he does not want to. However,
similarly situated employees are permitted to join an existing
FLSA case, and this is a common procedure. If an employee does
not join an existing FLSA suit s/he will not be entitled to
recover any money as a result of the suit. And as a practical
matter, any downstream consequences which may result from one
employee bringing an FLSA action (such as schedule
restructuring) will likely apply equally to all similar
employees in an organization.
Q. What effect
do the provisions of a collective bargaining agreement have on
FLSA overtime rights?
A.
Almost none. FLSA rights cannot be waived, by collective
bargaining or otherwise. (Generally, employees are entitled to
the benefits of the FLSA or their CBA, whichever is more
favorable. However, a violation of a CBA would not itself be a
violation of the FLSA and would not be enforced in an FLSA legal
action.)
Q. I'm a federal
employee. Am I covered by the FLSA?
A.
Yes, with some differences. The FLSA applies to federal
employees, unless some specific federal statute creates
different wage rules. There are some of these (typically in
Title 5). In addition, federal employees FLSA rights are
regulated by OPM, whose regulations are similar but not
identical to the DOL FLSA regulations.
Q. Where do I
get more information?
A.
Good question. There are few general information sources on the
FLSA, and in most cases individual employees will want analysis
and evaluation of their individual circumstances. The statute
itself is at 29 USC §201 et seq. There are many, many
Regulations, administrative interpretations, and judicial
decisions. The U.S. DOL website is linked to this one at
Resources. Your best bet may be to contact an attorney with
experience in FLSA matters.
Employees with
individual questions may contact Chamberlain, Kaufman & Jones
for
free consultations. Send e-Mail to:
ckj@flsa.com. |