Changing from salary to hourly.
EJennieS
4 Posts
[font size="1" color="#FF0000"]LAST EDITED ON 08-09-02 AT 01:01PM (CST)[/font][p]If we decide to change all non-managers in a department from salary to hourly, are we at risk with the wage and hour people?
Comments
Switching positions which qualify as exempt back and forth between exempt and exempt, should be avoided. So, once you make this change, don't plan on switching employees back to exempt status merely because there is "dissatisfaction." And changes in status shouldn't be random. Make sure that all positions that are doing the exact same duties, regardless of their functional or payroll titles, are treated in the same manner under FLSA. Make sure also that minimum wage is met or exceeded, now that you are going to base the employee's compensation on actual hours worked.
I lost my position as HR because I pointed out to the owners that computer operators doing computer drawings from the multitudes of copywrited patterns were not considered as professional artist creating new designs and new patterns and would therefore be catagories as non-professionals and entitled to overtime pay. Additionally, that there would be a good chance for one or all to realize they had been working under this exempt status for years and could very easily make a call and ask for an audiance and investigation on site. All of which could cost these owners a good sum of money!!! Needless to say I should have kept my mouth shut and found a new company to work for and then quietly leave verses getting pushed out the door, hollowing "but sir, but sir" and no one hearing. By the way the department was audited and it cost them just like I told them it would. So verify that this group is properly coded as exempt. If not watch how you handle it! Good Luck
Of course, explain the changes to the employees.
I don't know what that "window" is, but it obviously closed on our company. We recently settled a class action suit because we had classified our lower level store management as exempt. It did not take a rocket scientist to realize that the majority of their job functions were clerical and, therefore, non-exempt. I was not privy to the reasoning to wait until a class action was initiated rather than settle it on our own, but I believe that either way the cost was going to be exhorbitant - and it was.
Sometimes an employer will correctly determne a position to be exempt but for some reason, through most likely inadvertency or poor policies or procedures, docking takes place. The window of correction allows an employer to reimburse the employee for the docked money and correct any procedures or policies that created the dock. In this way, if DOL comes a knockin' it is quite possible that it won't find that the employer's original docking actions resulted in the exempt employee being deemed non-exempt. Take a look at 29CFR541.118(a)(6). This obviously wouldn't apply in situations where the exempt status was incorrect from the beginning.