comp time
heights
23 Posts
I'm having a hard time finding information regarding the legality of comp time. It seems that different companies do different things - and I'm not sure what is the "right" thing. Specifically I am thinking of comp time for non-exempt employees. At one point I thought I read that a non-government employer can give comp time (instead of overtime) to non-exempt employees who work over 40 hours in a week, but only if the comp time is taken within the same pay period it was earned. I thought I remembered that if the time could not be taken off in the same pay period, then it had to be paid as overtime. Now I'm not so sure I heard/remembered right. Anyone know the law on this one? The books/web sites I have been referencing on FLSA don't mention comp time at all.
Comments
This same holds true, technically, even if the employee would prefer to have the comp time, strangely enough.
Unless you're a governmental/public employer, your difficulty finding info on comp time is becuz comp time is illegal for private employers. If you've not yet started down that road, I would caution you to not go in that direction. It's fraught with sink holes and pot holes. FLSA simply doesn't permit comp time for any private employer and to do so risks more problems that it's ever going to be worth. Altho I know it's commonly done in some industries, it comes with a sizeable risk.
Unless the federal FLSA laws have changed, private employer's cannot opt for comp time with non-exempts. If the law has changed, somebody please tell me so. Knocking off early on Wednesday and coming in early on Thursday to make up for that hour, or similar scenarios, is not related to overtime. That's merely making an agreed upon accomodation. Unless the law has changed, once the employee reaches 40 in his or her standard work week, anything beyond is due time and a half (unless you use the little known formula)even though the employee might suggest comp time. One of the Bibles I use is put out by Business and Legal Reports and is a 3-inch book on federal and state laws (sorry M. Lee Smith). Quoting from that book's overtime section, "Employees may neither waive their right to be compensated for overtime hours worked nor agree to a lower overtime rate than that required by FLSA, or an alternative arrangement. Even if employees have made such an agreement, they retain their right to recover overtime pay required by FLSA." That quote is dated June 2000. Again, maybe I missed a change in FLSA. Please advise if I did. Thanks.