FLSA Question
Melanie
37 Posts
I understand that exemption means that you pay staff their set salary regardless of the number of hours they work each day/week. You can't deduct their pay and you don't pay overtime, etc.
Here's the dilemma: We have an automated time clock system that records in/out punches. We are looking to implement a form that requires staff to fill out the reason they missed a punch and what the correct time punch should be. I believe that only the non-exempt staff should fill out the form explaining the reason for the missing punch, because I fear that if we had the exempt staff fill out the form that it could appear to be tracking their hours which is a violation of FLSA exemption. The executive team here believes that the exempt staff should fill out the form as well as the non-exempt staff, and they feel like as long as we continue to pay their set salary and not deduct or pay overtime based on their punches, asking them to fill out their time punches and the reason they missed their punch is not a violation of the FLSA rules.
Any suggestions?
Here's the dilemma: We have an automated time clock system that records in/out punches. We are looking to implement a form that requires staff to fill out the reason they missed a punch and what the correct time punch should be. I believe that only the non-exempt staff should fill out the form explaining the reason for the missing punch, because I fear that if we had the exempt staff fill out the form that it could appear to be tracking their hours which is a violation of FLSA exemption. The executive team here believes that the exempt staff should fill out the form as well as the non-exempt staff, and they feel like as long as we continue to pay their set salary and not deduct or pay overtime based on their punches, asking them to fill out their time punches and the reason they missed their punch is not a violation of the FLSA rules.
Any suggestions?
Comments
Filling out a form seems a bit anal. I would prefer the supervisor of the employees keep mental and pencil notes if people go missing for periods of time and deal with that as a discipline issue. What you may have is yet another example of executive management having not a clue, and wanting none, about exemptions and what that means regarding guaranteed salaries and work weeks.