2024 FLSA Checklist for Employers in the Manufacturing Industry

Wage and hour issues continue to challenge most employers, especially those in the manufacturing industry. The manufacturing industry tends to be more process- and systems-oriented and generally employ many hourly workers who are not exempt from overtime pay under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).

It is imperative manufacturers ensure they are on the right side of legal compliance. Indeed, non-compliance can trigger audits, investigations, and litigation — all of which can be disruptive, time-consuming, and costly for manufacturers. The U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), which is charged with investigating alleged violations under the FLSA, assesses hundreds of millions of dollars each year in penalties to employers.

With the new year, we offer this short (by no means exhaustive) checklist of common pay issues the manufacturing industry:

1. Donning and Doffing

The FLSA requires employers to compensate non-exempt employees for all time worked, as well as pay the minimum wage and overtime compensation. Whether pre-shift (donning) and post-shift (doffing) activities are included as compensable time is not always clear. Activities including putting on or taking off protective gear, work clothes, or equipment could be compensable time under the FLSA depending on the unique facts of the situation. At bottom, to be compensable, such activities must be found to be integral and indispensable to the “principal activity” of the employer’s work under the FLSA and the Portal-to-Portal Act of 1947.

Courts differ on whether time spent donning and doffing is compensable because these issues often implicate mixed questions of law and fact. Moreover, collective bargaining agreements can affect whether time spent changing clothes and washing is compensable for the purposes of determining hours worked for minimum wage and overtime calculations under the FLSA. Employers should carefully review their policies to ensure the compensability of pre-shift or post-shift activities being performed by non-exempt employees.

2. Rounding Time

Accurately keeping up with time worked by non-exempt employees is critical to compliance with the FLSA. Further, employees forgetting to clock-in and clock-out timely is a persistent issue. While the FLSA allows employers to round employees’ clock-in and clock-out times rather than pay by the minute, it is generally unnecessary (and not recommended) with today’s sophisticated time clocking systems. If employers choose to round time, they must ensure that any rounding policy is neutral on its face and neutral in practice — that is, the policy rounds both in the favor of the employer and the employee at roughly an equal weight. For employers engaging in rounding, audits are crucial as even a facially neutral rounding policy that, in practice, has disproportionately benefited the employer and cumulatively underpays the employees can be found to violate the FLSA.

3. Meal Breaks

Under the FLSA, employers must compensate for short rest breaks that last 20 minutes or less. However, employers do not have to compensate employees for a bona fide meal break, which ordinarily lasts at least 30 minutes. Importantly, an employee must be completely relieved from work duties during this uncompensated time and cannot be interrupted by work (even for a short time). Indeed, some courts have held that, where a meal break has been interrupted by work, the entire meal break (not just the time when work was performed) becomes compensable.

To ensure compliance under these rules, employers should have policies and practices in place so that employees can take an uninterrupted meal break. Employers should also have a well-communicated reporting system in place for employees to record any interrupted meal break to ensure the employee is compensated for the meal break or, when possible, a new meal break is scheduled.

4. Regular Rate

A common and incorrect assumption many employers make is that overtime pay under the FLSA is calculated at one-and-a-half times a non-exempt employee’s hourly rate when they work more than 40 hours in a workweek. In fact, the FLSA states overtime is calculated based on the non-exempt employee’s “regular rate” of pay. The FLSA requires that all payments to employees for hours worked, services rendered, or performance be included in the “regular rate” unless the payment is specifically excluded in the law. Thus, any non-discretionary bonuses, shift differential pay, and other incentive payments such as commissions should be included in the regular rate of pay calculation for purposes of calculating overtime under the FLSA.
This is relatively easy when a bonus is paid during a week where the non-exempt employees work more than 40 hours, but it can become complicated when the additional pay is paid on a monthly or quarterly basis. In this scenario, the payment must be averaged out over that longer time period to determine the regular rate such that overtime can be properly calculated. Thus, employers should review their payment processes on the front end to ensure compliance before any small errors or omissions (quite literally) multiply out of control.

Finally, state wage laws should always be top of mind as well. Employers should work with their employment counsel to ensure compliance with all state wage requirements.

New Year, New Wages : Minimum Wage Rates Around the States

After ringing in 2016, employers may want to skip the eggnog and check their wages to make sure they are properly paying their employees.  On Jan. 1, the minimum wage rates in 14 states went up and all are higher than the federal minimum wage.  These states and rate increases include:

Alaska

$9.75 per hour

Arkansas

$8.00 per hour

California

$10.00 per hour

Connecticut

$9.60 per hour

Hawaii

$8.50 per hour

Massachusetts

$10.00 per hour

Michigan

$8.50 per hour

Nebraska

$9.00 per hour

New York

$9.00 per hour

Rhode Island

$9.60 per hour

Vermont

$9.60 per hour

West Virginia

$8.75 per hour

The minimum wage rates in both Colorado and South Dakota will increase due to a cost of living adjustment tied to inflation.  For 2016, Colorado’s minimum wage is $8.31 per hour and South Dakota’s minimum wage now is $8.55 per hour.

Other notable minimum wage increases that will occur throughout 2016 include:

District of Columbia

$11.50 per hour, effective July 1, 2016

Maryland

$8.75 per hour, effective July 1, 2016

Minnesota

$9.50 per hour for large employers, effective August 1, 2016

$7.75 per hour for small employers, effective August 1, 2016

Finally, for employers who have federal service contracts, the minimum wage for employees has increased to $10.15 per hour.  These employers should pay close attention to the hourly rates in effect for the applicable contract as some rates will be higher than the minimum wage rate.

© 2015 BARNES & THORNBURG LLP

Wage Deductions in West Virginia

Steptoe Johnson PLLC Law Firm

Most West Virginia employers must comply with two wage and hour laws: the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) and the West Virginia Wage Payment and Collection Act (“WPCA”).  Both laws restrict the ability of employers to make deductions from employees’ wages.

The FLSA

When an employer makes impermissible deductions from an exempt employee’s pay, the employer risks losing the exemption from the FLSA’s overtime requirement.  Generally, to be exempt, the employee must perform certain exempt duties and must be paid at least $455 per week on a salary basis.  A salary is a predetermined, fixed amount of compensation that does not fluctuate because of changes in the amount of hours worked from week to week.  The general rule is that employers must pay exempt employees the full salary amount for any week in which the employee performs any work regardless of the number of hours worked.

However, there are some exceptions that allow for an employer to make deductions:

  1. If the employee is absent from work for one full day or more because of personal reasons other than sickness or disability;

  2. For absences caused by sickness or disability if the deduction is made in accordance with a bona fide plan that provides compensation for the lost time;

  3. As penalties for violating safety rules of major significance;

  4. For unpaid, disciplinary suspension; and,

  5. To offset amounts an employee receives as a jury or witness fee, or for military pay.

  6. Employers are also permitted to make deductions from an employee’s paid time off as long as the employee receives his or her standard weekly salary.  If the employee performs no work in a given workweek, then the FLSA does not require that the exempt employee be paid for that week.  Similarly, an employer is not required to pay the full salary in the first and last weeks of employment or when the employee takes unpaid leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act.

The FLSA also contains a provision that allows employers to correct an impermissible deduction and thereby preserve the exempt status of the employee.  To take advantage of this “window of correction,” the employer must have a policy that is clearly communicated to employees that prohibits improper deductions.  The policy should be in writing and must provide a mechanism by which employees can file complaints.  Once a violation is found, the employer must reimburse the employee and make a good faith commitment to comply in the future.

The WPCA

The WPCA limits an employer’s ability to make deductions from an employee’s wages after the wages have been earned, unless the employer and employee have completed a statutorily-required authorization.  This includes situations where the employee owes the employer a debt, such as when the employee has charged a purchase to an employee account.  Unlike the FLSA, the WPCA restrictions apply to both salary and hourly employees.

An authorization is not required if the deduction is for union or club dues, pension plans, payroll savings plans, credit unions, charities, hospitalization and medical insurance.  In addition, deductions without an authorization are permitted when the deduction is for “an amount required by law to be withheld.”  This exception is very narrow.  Wages that must be garnished pursuant to a court order, such as child support obligations, would meet the exception.

If the deduction is for any reason other than those listed above, then the employer must use a wage assignment form.  The West Virginia Division of Labor has posted a sample form on its website, and employers should use this form.  The assignment cannot exceed one year.  It must be signed by the employer, acknowledged by the employee, and notarized.  It must also specify the total amount due and collectible by virtue of the assignment and state that three fourths of the employee’s periodical wages are exempt from the assignment.

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