Holding paycheck until paperwork turned in
dmartenson
51 Posts
[font size="1" color="#FF0000"]LAST EDITED ON 03-06-02 AT 11:04AM (CST)[/font][p]We have an employee who is habitually late turning in his time/expense paperwork. This employee is salary/exempt, however, we use a cost accounting accounting system, so it is important that we have the information to be charged against the projects he works on. This paperwork is supposed to be turned in on a daily basis, (although we let everyone slide now and then due to circumstances). However, reports are generated from this information, and when we do not receive this one "non-compliers" paperwork, it skews the report. His supervisor cannot seem to get this guy to comply (this is another management issue). The employee is usually smart enough to get his paperwork caught up "just in the nick of time" so that his paycheck is not held back. Occasionally he does not turn in his paperwork (which we consider to be part of his job completion)by payday, and we do hold his check until the paperwork is turned in. He is not happy about this, and says that we cannot legally hold his paycheck for work that he has already completed. The Minnesota DOL statute that addresses this issue states that "we must pay an employee within 31 days for the work they have done on a regularly scheduled payroll". We currently pay semi-monthly. We feel that we can "legally" hold his paycheck based on this 31-day law. I would appreciate feedback on how to resolve this issue.
Comments
Margaret Morford
theHRedge
615-371-8200
[email]mmorford@mleesmith.com[/email]
[url]http://www.thehredge.net[/url]
James Sokolowski
Senior Editor
M. Lee Smith Publishers
The "manager" in question has confided in me that he has "really learned a lesson" from this. And going forward he will not allow any of the employees he supervises to disregard company policy without progressive disciplinary measures, no matter how valuable they are to the company.
Downside - we lost some bucks from inappropriate charges. Upside - A Manager has learned why company policy is important to uphold - and understands it is his job to make it happen.