Semi-Monthly Payroll and non-exempt
Rob S
65 Posts
Help!!!!
I posted this question in another area a while back, but the issue is getting bigger at our office and I really need to get an answer I can back up with regulation if possible.
I recently moved from HR to assistant controller, and my replacement and I are having a major debate about how do our payroll.
For many many years our company has been semi monthly on payroll (15th and last day of month), and all non exempt people have been paid 86.667 hours per check. If someone worked under or over, then we would adjust the 86.667 up our down. We are handling overtime correctly, so that is not an issue.
My replacement feels that what we do is illegal, and we would be fined "over a million dollars" if we were audited by the DOL.
I have done several searches on the internet to get an answer for this but I can't find anything concrete to back up either side of this discussion. I did however find one state government that pays exactly the way we do.
Can anyone tell me if we are legal or not on this?
Thanks for any help,
Rob S
I posted this question in another area a while back, but the issue is getting bigger at our office and I really need to get an answer I can back up with regulation if possible.
I recently moved from HR to assistant controller, and my replacement and I are having a major debate about how do our payroll.
For many many years our company has been semi monthly on payroll (15th and last day of month), and all non exempt people have been paid 86.667 hours per check. If someone worked under or over, then we would adjust the 86.667 up our down. We are handling overtime correctly, so that is not an issue.
My replacement feels that what we do is illegal, and we would be fined "over a million dollars" if we were audited by the DOL.
I have done several searches on the internet to get an answer for this but I can't find anything concrete to back up either side of this discussion. I did however find one state government that pays exactly the way we do.
Can anyone tell me if we are legal or not on this?
Thanks for any help,
Rob S
Comments
Even though we pay semimonthly, hourly employees are actually paid by the week. So some paydays are for two weeks and some are for 3 weeks depending on weeks in the month, the way payday falls, etc. You can't treat hourly employees like salaried. This will be a violation.
I think I understand what you are trying say (after I read this a few times).
One of us has the term non-exempt and exempt reversed, and I think I have it right (but I know some one will chime to to correct me if I am wrong).
I really need a statute that says this is acceptable or not.
Rob
Some states require paychecks to be every two weeks or every week, but I don't know about yours.
James Sokolowski
HRhero.com
The big question is, can we pay non-exempt people 86.667 per pay period, and then just make adjustments if they did not work the normal 40 hours per week? They of course did not work exactly 86.667 each period, but in the end it is correct (24 pay periods X 86.667 = 2080 hours per year).
Is it a DOL violation if each pay period does not match exactly what hours were worked that specific pay period, but it is correct in the long term?
Rob
The June 30 payroll was for June 16 - June 30. There were 11 work days that period, so hourly (non-exempt) employees worked 88 hours, but were paid for 86.667 hours. If some one was short a half day (4 hours), then they were paid for 82.667 hours, not the 84 hours actually worked. There are often pay periods of 80 or even 72 hours, but we still pay 86.667 hours for those periods too.
The point is that for an individual pay period, we are not paying actual hours, but for the long term, it works out to be the actual hours. As I said before, any hours over 40 in a week are paid overtime on that check, so that is not an issue.
The employees like having a consistant amount for their checks and do not want to change to actual hours worked.
I hope this explains this a little better.
Rob
Employee's full name and social security number.
Address, including zip code.
Birth date, if younger than 19.
Sex and occupation.
Time and day of week when employee's workweek begins.
Hours worked each day.
Total hours worked each workweek.
Basis on which employee's wages are paid (e.g., "$6 an hour", "$220 a week", "piecework")
Regular hourly pay rate.
Total daily or weekly straight-time earnings.
Total overtime earnings for the workweek.
All additions to or deductions from the employee's wages.
Total wages paid each pay period.
Date of payment and the pay period covered by the paymentpayroll you should be in compliance.
Employees on Fixed Schedules: Many employees work on a fixed schedule from which they seldom vary. The employer may keep a record showing the exact schedule of daily and weekly hours and merely indicate that the worker did follow the schedule. When a worker is on a job for a longer or shorter period of time than the schedule shows, the employer must record the number of hours the worker actually worked, on an exception basis.
Again, it depends on whether you are doing this to hourly or salary employees. You are saying non-exempt but what you are doing may or may not be correct depending on whether you are talking about paying hourly or salary employees. Hourly pay reflects actual hours worked, but salary wages should not be reduced because an employee has worked less than 86.67. Non-exempts must be paid overtime (whether hourly or salary) but exempts do not get paid overtime (nor have their wages reduced). Hourly non-exempts get paid for actual hours worked; salary non-exempts get paid for their salary whether they work 86.67 or less, but must be paid overtime. Exempts always get paid the same each payday and never get overtime nor have their hours reduced.
If I am told I will be paid $6.00 per hour, then I am hourly. If I am told I will have a salary of $25,000 per year then I am salary. Both of these postions can be non-exempt, but the salaried employee will not make less than 86.67 hours per semimonthly pay period. He may work only 82.25 but must still be paid 86.67. The hourly employee is different - he must be paid actual hours worked.
Good luck,
Dutch2
It makes no difference whether you pay a non-exempt employee on an hourly or salary basis, except you must pay them overtime. A Salaried employee will be paid the salary amount regardless of the exact hours (40 or less) and OT for anything over that. Hourly employees will be paid for the exact hours worked plus any OT.
Exempt employees (those not eligble for OT) are another baliwick all together.
Nonexempt/exempt and hourly/salaried are two SEPERATE catagories to be determined seperately.
BTW, you can pay exempt employees OT if you WANT to, but you are not REQUIRED to. The FLSA is protection for non-exempts - it prevents an employer from NOT paying OT, it does not prohibit the payment of OT.
Sounds like you have an entire shop full of non-exempt salaried employees - if that is not the case, (and deciding the case is soley up to the employer) you do need to pay actual hours worked in the pay period. Also, abide by the laws of your state on OT, some states pay OT over 8 hrs in a day (like California, of course) - Virginia is over 40 in the work week.
Tammy