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| 1 | Joint Employment: Overview This Note provides an overview of joint employer relationships. It discusses the tests applied to determine whether a joint employer relationship exists under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title VII) and the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). It also discusses the risks of being a joint employer and related best practices. It addresses federal law, but will be useful to employers in all states. | Practice Note: Overview | Maintained |
| 2 | Wage and Hour Claims Toolkit Resources to help employers comply with the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), prevent and defend against wage and hour litigation, and respond to the US Department of Labor (DOL) wage and hour audits. | Practice Note: Overview | Maintained |
| 3 | Wage and Hour Law: Overview This Note provides an overview of employers' rights and obligations under federal wage and hour law, governed by the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA). This Note addresses federal law. For information on state law requirements, see the State Q&A Tool under Related Content to the right. | Practice Note: Overview | Maintained |
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| 1 | Child Labor Law A Note discussing child labor law under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and its implementing regulations. This Note addresses federal law regulating the employment of minors. For information on state law requirements, see the State Q&A Tool under Related Content to the right. | Practice Notes | Maintained |
| 2 | Compensable Time A Practice Note discussing increasingly common class actions based on an employer’s failure to recognize and count certain hours worked as compensable. It outlines how employers should minimize risk, paying particular attention to those employee activities that are most frequently the subject of litigation under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA) and Portal-to-Portal Act. The Note also suggests that employers should review their own practices, to become aware of the various jurisdiction-specific factors that help determine whether those tasks should be compensated. | Practice Notes | Maintained |
| 3 | Conducting an Internal Wage and Hour Audit A Note addressing wage and hour audits under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). This Note addresses preliminary issues private employers should consider, common wage and hour issues to evaluate, options for responding to problems discovered during the audit and best practices going forward after the audit. For information on requirements under state wage and hour laws, see the State Q&A Tool under Related Content to the right. | Practice Notes | Maintained |
| 4 | Defending Wage and Hour Collective Actions A Practice Note discussing the key issues employers face in defending wage and hour collective actions brought under Section 16(b) of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) (29 U.S.C. § 216(b)). This Note also covers state-law class actions brought under Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP). For more information on state law wage and hour requirements, see the State Q&A Tool under Related Content to the right. | Practice Notes | Maintained |
| 5 | Independent Contractor Classification A Note explaining the independent contractor classification, including the benefits of the classification and the penalties for misclassification. This note addresses federal law. For information on state law requirements, see the State Q&A Tools under Related Content to the right. | Practice Notes | Maintained |
| 6 | Interns, Trainees and Volunteers A Note addressing interns, trainees and volunteers under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). This Note discusses the proper classification of interns, trainees and volunteers under the FLSA, including when they must be paid and best practices for private, for-profit employers. This Note addresses federal law. For information on requirements under state law, see the State Q&A Tool under related content to the right. | Practice Notes | Maintained |
| 7 | The Fluctuating Workweek Method of Paying Overtime under ... A Note addressing the fluctuating workweek method of calculating overtime under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). This Note addresses requirements for using the fluctuating workweek method, how to calculate overtime using the fluctuating workweek method, and using the fluctuating workweek method to calculate damages in wage and hour misclassification cases. This Note addresses federal law. For information on requirements under state wage and hour law, see the State Q&A Tool under related content to the right. | Practice Notes | Maintained |
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| 1 | Employee Relocation Expenses Agreement A model relocation expenses agreement for a private employer to use when providing relocation assistance to an employee. This relocation expenses agreement is based on federal law. It has integrated notes with important explanations and drafting tips. | Standard Documents | Maintained |
| 2 | Employee Retention Bonus Agreement A model retention agreement, sometimes referred to as a stay bonus agreement, for a private employer to use when offering an employee a retention bonus for remaining with the employer until a specified date. This retention bonus agreement is based on federal law. This Standard Document has integrated notes with important explanations and drafting tips. | Standard Documents | Maintained |
| 3 | Expatriate Secondment Letter of Assignment A sample cross-border secondment letter to be used in the expatriate context when a US employee is temporarily assigned to work abroad while remaining employed by the original (actual) employer. This Standard Document has integrated notes with important explanations and drafting tips. | Standard Documents | Maintained |
| 4 | Independent Contractor/Consultant Agreement (Pro-client) An independent contractor agreement between an independent contractor (a self-employed individual) and a client company for consulting or other services. This Standard Document is drafted in favor of the client company. This Standard Document has integrated notes with important explanations and drafting tips. | Standard Documents | Maintained |
| 5 | Offer Letter for a Commission Salesperson An offer letter to be used with an employee paid on commission, such as a salesperson or sales representative. This offer letter also can be used as a short-form employment agreement. This Standard Document is intended to be used by private employers with their nonunionized workforce. This Standard Document has integrated notes with important explanations and drafting tips. It is based on federal law. For information on state law requirements, see the State Q&A Tools under Related Content to the right. | Standard Documents | Maintained |
| 6 | Offer Letter for a Fluctuating Workweek Employee An offer letter to be used with an employee paid on a fluctuating workweek basis. This offer letter also can be used as a short-form employment agreement. This Standard Document is intended to be used by private employers with their nonunionized workforce. This Standard Document has integrated notes with important explanations and drafting tips. It is based on federal law. For information on state law requirements, see the State Q&A Tool under Related Content to the right. | Standard Documents | Maintained |
| 7 | Offer Letter/Employment Agreement for a Non-Executive ... A short-form offer letter/employment agreement containing terms and conditions of employment for a non-executive employee to be executed by both the employer and employee. This Standard Document is intended to be used by private employers with their non-unionized workforce. This Standard Document has integrated notes with important explanatory and drafting tips. It is based on federal law. For information on state law requirements, see the State Q&A Tool under Related Content to the right. | Standard Documents | Maintained |
| 8 | Payroll Practices and Compensation Policy An employee policy on pay procedures under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). It includes policies on payroll practices, payroll deductions, overtime, meal and rest breaks, timekeeping and complaints. It can be incorporated into an employee handbook or used as a stand-alone policy document. This Standard Document applies only to private workplaces. It is based on federal law. State or local law may impose additional or different requirements but this document will be useful and relevant to employers in every state. This Standard Document has integrated notes with important explanations and drafting tips. | Standard Documents | Maintained |
| 9 | Questionnaire to Determine Exempt Status under the FLSA A questionnaire to help determine an employee's status as exempt or nonexempt under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). This Standard Document addresses the administrative, executive, professional, computer professional, outside sales, commission sales and highly compensated employee exemptions under the FLSA. This Standard Document has integrated notes with important explanations and tips. For informantion on state law requirements, see the Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool under Related Content to the right. | Standard Documents | Maintained |
| 10 | Secondment Letter to Employee for Domestic Transfer A sample secondment letter to be used with an employee being temporarily assigned to work for another entity in the United States, either to another business unit within the employer's organization or externally to another company. This Standard Document is intended to be used by private employers with their nonunionized workforce. This Standard Document has integrated notes with important explanations and drafting tips. | Standard Documents | Maintained |
| 11 | Unpaid Internship Agreement (Learning Contract) An unpaid internship offer letter and agreement (also known as a learning contract). This letter agreement outlines the terms and conditions of a student's unpaid internship. It helps an employer minimize risk by setting expectations and acknowledging that all of the criteria considered by the Department of Labor (DOL) have been met. This Standard Document has integrated notes with important explanations and drafting tips. This Standard Document is drafted in favor of the employer based on requirements under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). For information on requirements under state wage and hour law, see the State Law Q&A Tool under Related Content to the right. | Standard Documents | Maintained |
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| 1 | Employee Handbook Disclaimer about Employee Benefit ... A Standard Clause for an employee handbook stating that any summary of benefits in an employee handbook or a summary plan description (SPD) for an employee benefit plan under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) simply summarizes and does not replace or amend the underlying plan document. This Standard Clause is based on federal law. This Standard Clause has an integrated note with important explanations and drafting tips. | Standard Clauses | Maintained |
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| 1 | FLSA White Collar Exemptions Checklist A Checklist of factors for properly classifying a job as an exempt administrative, executive or professional position under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA). This Checklist discusses minimum salary requirements, types of exempt duties and other factors under these three FLSA white collar exemptions tests. For information on state law requirements regarding exempt job classifications, see the Wage and Hour Laws State Q&A Tool under Related Content to the right. | Checklists | Maintained |
| 2 | Holiday Party Liability Prevention Checklist A Checklist to help employers minimize the legal risks presented by employer-sponsored holiday parties. This checklist addresses sexual harassment prevention, avoiding harms created by alcohol consumption, workers' compensation liability, and wage and hour claims. This resource is jurisdiction-neutral. For information on state law requirements, see the State Q&A Tools under Related Content to the right. | Checklists | Maintained |
| 3 | Using Independent Contractors and Outside Firms: Avoiding ... A Checklist of independent contractor classification considerations and practical steps a company can take to minimize the risk of misclassification of employees as independent contractors. This Checklist considers individual workers and using outside firms as independent contractors. It is jurisdiction-neutral. | Checklists | Maintained |
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| 1 | Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool This tool enables subscribers to search and compare PLC's Independent Contractors State Q&A resources. Questions and answers address state-specific definitions of independent contractor, benefits of using independent contractors, tests used to assess proper classification, administration/enforcement, penalties and more. Simply select the questions and the jurisdictions that you are interested in and click the "Submit" button. To see all of PLC's State Q&As on Independent Contractors, see State Q&A Guide to Independent Contractors. To see all of PLC's State Q&As, including relevant Legal Updates since the publication date (under Related Content), see individual Q&As on the Labor & Employment State Q&As landing page. | State Q&A Tool | -- |
| 2 | Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool This tool enables subscribers to search and compare PLC's Wage and Hour State Q&A resources. Questions and answers cover state-specific exemptions from overtime/minimum wage, compensable time, timing of wage payments, deductions, recordkeeping and more. Simply select the questions and the jurisdictions that you are interested in and click the "Submit" button. To see all of PLC's State Q&As on Wage and Hour Laws, see State Q&A Guide to Wage and Hour Laws. To see all of PLC's State Q&As, including relevant Legal Updates since the publication date (under Related Content), see individual Q&As on the Labor & Employment State Q&As landing page. | State Q&A Tool | -- |
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| 1 | Independent Contractors: Alabama A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Alabama. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 01-Apr-2013 |
| 2 | Independent Contractors: Arizona A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Arizona. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 27-Dec-2012 |
| 3 | Independent Contractors: Arkansas A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Arkansas. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 25-Sep-2012 |
| 4 | Independent Contractors: California A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in California. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). For a recent update on California's agreement with the DOL to reduce misclassification of employees as independent contractors, see the Related Content section on the right-hand side. | State Q&A | 19-Oct-2012 |
| 5 | Independent Contractors: Colorado A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Colorado. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 10-Jan-2013 |
| 6 | Independent Contractors: Connecticut A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Connecticut. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 12-Aug-2012 |
| 7 | Independent Contractors: District of Columbia A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in the District of Columbia. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 01-Mar-2013 |
| 8 | Independent Contractors: Florida A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Florida. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 04-Mar-2013 |
| 9 | Independent Contractors: Georgia A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Georgia. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 24-Sep-2012 |
| 10 | Independent Contractors: Idaho A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Idaho. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 05-Jun-2012 |
| 11 | Independent Contractors: Illinois A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Illinois. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 24-Jan-2013 |
| 12 | Independent Contractors: Indiana A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Indiana. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassifcation. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 21-Mar-2012 |
| 13 | Independent Contractors: Iowa A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Iowa. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 01-Apr-2013 |
| 14 | Independent Contractors: Kansas A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Kansas. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 29-Mar-2013 |
| 15 | Independent Contractors: Kentucky A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Kentucky. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 22-Feb-2012 |
| 16 | Independent Contractors: Louisiana A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Louisiana. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 09-Apr-2013 |
| 17 | Independent Contractors: Maine A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Maine. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 15-Mar-2013 |
| 18 | Independent Contractors: Maryland A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Maryland. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 20-Dec-2012 |
| 19 | Independent Contractors: Massachusetts A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Massachusetts. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 25-Apr-2013 |
| 20 | Independent Contractors: Michigan A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Michigan. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 11-Jul-2012 |
| 21 | Independent Contractors: Minnesota A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Minnesota. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 04-Oct-2012 |
| 22 | Independent Contractors: Mississippi A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Mississippi. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 06-Feb-2013 |
| 23 | Independent Contractors: Missouri A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Missouri. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 19-Jun-2012 |
| 24 | Independent Contractors: Nebraska A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Nebraska. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 28-Sep-2012 |
| 25 | Independent Contractors: Nevada A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Nevada. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 30-Nov-2012 |
| 26 | Independent Contractors: New Hampshire A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in New Hampshire. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 19-Sep-2012 |
| 27 | Independent Contractors: New Jersey A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in New Jersey. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 20-Feb-2013 |
| 28 | Independent Contractors: New York A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in New York. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 11-Oct-2012 |
| 29 | Independent Contractors: North Carolina A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in North Carolina. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 01-Apr-2013 |
| 30 | Independent Contractors: Ohio A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Ohio. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 22-Feb-2013 |
| 31 | Independent Contractors: Oklahoma A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Oklahoma. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 21-Feb-2013 |
| 32 | Independent Contractors: Oregon A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Oregon. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 10-Jul-2012 |
| 33 | Independent Contractors: Pennsylvania A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Pennsylvania. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 28-Jan-2013 |
| 34 | Independent Contractors: South Carolina A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in South Carolina. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 05-Sep-2012 |
| 35 | Independent Contractors: Tennessee A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Tennessee. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 15-Nov-2012 |
| 36 | Independent Contractors: Texas A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Texas. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 06-Jun-2012 |
| 37 | Independent Contractors: Utah A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Utah. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 27-Mar-2013 |
| 38 | Independent Contractors: Virginia A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Virginia. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or muncipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 04-May-2012 |
| 39 | Independent Contractors: Washington A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Washington. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 21-Feb-2013 |
| 40 | Independent Contractors: West Virginia A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in West Virginia. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 16-Nov-2012 |
| 41 | Independent Contractors: Wisconsin A Q&A guide to state law on independent contractor status for private employers in Wisconsin. This Q&A addresses how independent contractors are classified under state law, including the various tests to evaluate worker status, penalties for misclassification and practices to avoid misclassification. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Independent Contractors: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 02-Jan-2013 |
| 42 | Wage and Hour Laws: Alabama A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Alabama. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 28-Feb-2013 |
| 43 | Wage and Hour Laws: Arizona A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Arizona. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 24-May-2012 |
| 44 | Wage and Hour Laws: California A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in California. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). For recent updates on the Ninth Circuit decision that California wage claims do not usurp the Public Utility Commission's Jurisdiction, the administrative employee exemption test, and the Brinker decision on meal and break periods, see Related Content to the right. | State Q&A | 26-Jul-2012 |
| 45 | Wage and Hour Laws: Colorado A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Colorado. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). For an update on Colorado's minimum wage increase, see Related Content on the right. | State Q&A | 02-Aug-2012 |
| 46 | Wage and Hour Laws: Connecticut A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Connecticut. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 22-Jun-2012 |
| 47 | Wage and Hour Laws: District of Columbia A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in the District of Columbia. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 28-Mar-2013 |
| 48 | Wage and Hour Laws: Florida A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Florida. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 28-Feb-2013 |
| 49 | Wage and Hour Laws: Georgia A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Georgia. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 15-Jan-2013 |
| 50 | Wage and Hour Laws: Idaho A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Idaho. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). For an update on Colorado's minimum wage increase, see Related Content on the right. | State Q&A | 30-Aug-2012 |
| 51 | Wage and Hour Laws: Illinois A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Illinois. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 05-Feb-2013 |
| 52 | Wage and Hour Laws: Indiana A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Indiana. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 07-Mar-2012 |
| 53 | Wage and Hour Laws: Iowa A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Iowa. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 16-May-2013 |
| 54 | Wage and Hour Laws: Kentucky A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Kentucky. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 17-Apr-2013 |
| 55 | Wage and Hour Laws: Louisiana A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Louisiana. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 07-May-2012 |
| 56 | Wage and Hour Laws: Maine A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Maine. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 29-Nov-2012 |
| 57 | Wage and Hour Laws: Maryland A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Maryland. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 19-Feb-2013 |
| 58 | Wage and Hour Laws: Massachusetts A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Massachusetts. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 01-Mar-2013 |
| 59 | Wage and Hour Laws: Michigan A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Michigan. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 02-Apr-2013 |
| 60 | Wage and Hour Laws: Minnesota A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Minnesota. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 04-Oct-2012 |
| 61 | Wage and Hour Laws: Mississippi A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Mississippi. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 01-Nov-2012 |
| 62 | Wage and Hour Laws: Missouri A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Missouri. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 20-Mar-2013 |
| 63 | Wage and Hour Laws: Nevada A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Nevada. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 07-Jan-2013 |
| 64 | Wage and Hour Laws: New Hampshire A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in New Hampshire. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 29-Nov-2012 |
| 65 | Wage and Hour Laws: New Jersey A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in New Jersey. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). For recent updates on the New Jersey inside sales exemption and equal pay notice, see Related Content on the right. | State Q&A | 14-Feb-2013 |
| 66 | Wage and Hour Laws: New York A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in New York. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 05-Dec-2012 |
| 67 | Wage and Hour Laws: North Carolina A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in North Carolina. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 11-Apr-2013 |
| 68 | Wage and Hour Laws: Ohio A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Ohio. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 16-Jan-2013 |
| 69 | Wage and Hour Laws: Oklahoma A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Oklahoma. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 16-May-2013 |
| 70 | Wage and Hour Laws: Oregon A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Oregon. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 07-May-2012 |
| 71 | Wage and Hour Laws: Pennsylvania A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Pennsylvania. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). For a recent update on changes to the state law governing overtime pay in the healthcare industry, see Related Content at the right. | State Q&A | 05-Nov-2012 |
| 72 | Wage and Hour Laws: South Carolina A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in South Carolina. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 09-Aug-2012 |
| 73 | Wage and Hour Laws: Tennessee A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Tennessee. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 12-Nov-2012 |
| 74 | Wage and Hour Laws: Texas A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Texas. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 25-Feb-2013 |
| 75 | Wage and Hour Laws: Utah A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Utah. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 12-Mar-2013 |
| 76 | Wage and Hour Laws: Virginia A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Virginia. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 29-Mar-2013 |
| 77 | Wage and Hour Laws: Washington A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Washington. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). For a recent case on Washington wage and hour law, see Related Content to the right. | State Q&A | 02-Jan-2013 |
| 78 | Wage and Hour Laws: West Virginia A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in West Virginia. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 21-Feb-2013 |
| 79 | Wage and Hour Laws: Wisconsin A Q&A guide to state-specific wage and hour laws for private employers in Wisconsin. This Q&A addresses nuances of state law, including minimum wage, overtime, exemption and litigation questions. Federal, local or municipal law may impose additional or different requirements. Answers to questions can be compared across a number of jurisdictions (see Wage and Hour Laws: State Q&A Tool). | State Q&A | 07-Feb-2013 |
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| 1 | Genesis Healthcare Corp. v. Symczyk: Expert Q&A An expert Q&A with Douglas Darch of Backer & McKenzie LLP on the implications for employers of the US Supreme Court's decision in Genesis Healthcare Corp. v. Symczyk, holding that an FLSA collective action was properly dismissed after the sole plaintiff's individual claims were rendered moot by the defense's offer of judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure (FRCP) 68. | Articles | 07-May-2013 |
| 2 | Enforcing Arbitration Agreements in California and Beyond Since the US Supreme Court's 2011 decision in AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion, courts have taken a variety of approaches to enforcing employment arbitration agreements. This article analyzes the state of post-Concepcion case law in California and in other parts of the country. | Articles | 01-Dec-2012 |
| 3 | Meal and Rest Break Litigation in California: Expert Q&A An expert Q&A with Richard J. Simmons of Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP regarding the impact of the California Supreme Court's decision in Brinker Restaurant Corp. v. Superior Court on meal periods, rest breaks, off-the-clock work and class action litigation. | Articles | 31-May-2012 |
| 4 | Ensure Proper Exempt Classification Of Employees This article explores the process that employers should undertake to ensure that employees are properly classified as exempt from federal and state overtime compensation requirements, as well as best practices for addressing any misclassification. | Articles | 01-Dec-2011 |
| 5 | Wage and Hour Investigations This Article explains the recent increase in wage and hour investigation activity and provides practical advice on how to respond to an investigation effectively. | Articles | 05-Jan-2010 |
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| 1 | DOL Issues Model Exchange Notices, Updated COBRA ... The Department of Labor (DOL) issued Technical Release 2013-02, which provides temporary guidance and model notices addressing health care reform's notice of exchange requirement under Section 18B of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), which requires most employers to inform employees of coverage options available through the health insurance exchanges. The guidance also provides an updated model election notice under the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985 (COBRA). The election notice is revised to include, among other changes, additional information regarding coverage alternatives offered through the exchanges. | Legal Update: archive | 10-May-2013 |
| 2 | Jackson Lewis: Nebraska Supreme Court Rules Paid Time Off ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses the Nebraska Supreme Court's May 3, 2013 holding in Fisher v. PayFlex Systems, USA, Inc. and Norton v. PayFlex Systems, USA, Inc. that employers must pay terminating employees their unused paid time off (PTO) hours when leaving employment. Under the Nebraska Wage Payment and Collection Act, an employer must pay terminating employees their earned but unused vacation leave. Since PTO hours are indistinguishable from earned vacation time under the Act, the court held employers must also pay PTO hours to terminating employees. | Legal Update: archive | 06-May-2013 |
| 3 | The Best Defense Is a Good Wage and Hour Audit Resources to help employers and their counsel conduct wage and hour audits. | Legal Update: archive | 30-Apr-2013 |
| 4 | Jackson Lewis: Tennessee DOL Granted Exclusive ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses a recent amendment to Tennessee's Wage Regulations Act that grants exclusive authority to enforce the Act to the Tennessee Department of Labor (DOL). The amendment eliminates private suits for state wage and hour violations and requires all aggrieved employees to bring their complaints under the Act to the Tennessee DOL. The amendment also awards, in certain circumstances, reasonable expenses for claims brought under the Act. | Legal Update: archive | 25-Apr-2013 |
| 5 | Employees Paid on a Piece-rate Basis Entitled to Separate ... In Gonzalez v. Downtown LA Motors, LP, the California Court of Appeal for the Second District held that automotive service technicians paid for repair work on a "piece-rate" basis must also be paid a separate hourly minimum wage for time spent during their work shifts waiting for vehicles to repair. | Legal Update: archive | 09-Apr-2013 |
| 6 | Jackson Lewis: Text of New York Minimum Wage Bill ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses the minimum wage increases recently passed by the New York legislature. New York's minimum wage will be $8.00 per hour on and after December 31, 2013, $8.75 per hour on and after December 31, 2014 and $9.00 per hour on and after December 31, 2015. The minimum wage requirements for tipped employees remains unchanged, pending any changes to the New York State Department of Labor's Wage Orders. | Legal Update: archive | 05-Apr-2013 |
| 7 | Successor Liability Applies in FLSA Actions, Even if Asset ... In Brian Teed v. Thomas & Betts Power Solutions, the US Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit held that an asset purchaser may be liable as a successor for an acquired company's Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) violations, even when the purchaser specifically disclaimed that it was assuming the liabilities of the company in receivership when it acquired its assets. | Legal Update: archive | 01-Apr-2013 |
| 8 | Spring Cleaning: Self-audits and Preparing to Respond to ... Resources to assist employers conducting self-audits and responding to government agency audits. | Legal Update: archive | 19-Mar-2013 |
| 9 | Ogletree Deakins: California Employers Can Require ... This Law Firm Publication by Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. discusses Avidor v. Sutter’s Place, Inc., in which the California Court of Appeal held that a casino could require card dealers to participate in a tip-pooling arrangement under Section 351 of the California Labor Code. Under Section 351, an employer cannot take any part of the employees' tips, but can require employees to pool their tips if the tips are shared among employees who are not in managerial positions where they may be considered the employer's agents. | Legal Update: archive | 08-Mar-2013 |
| 10 | Fisher & Phillips: Piece-rate-paid Employees in California Are ... This Law Firm Publication by Fisher & Phillips LLP discusses Gonzalez v. Downtown LA Motors, LP, an unpublished decision in which the California Court of Appeal for the Second District held that technicians at a car dealership were entitled to separate hourly compensation for waiting time. The technicians were paid on a piece-rate basis and their employer averaged their piece-rate wages across the time spent waiting for repair work or performing non-repair tasks. The court held that technicians had to be paid the minimum wage for each and every hour of waiting time under subdivision 4(B) of California Wage Order 4-2001. | Legal Update: archive | 07-Mar-2013 |
| 11 | Undocumented Foreign Workers May Recover Unpaid Wages ... In Lamonica v. Safe Hurricane Shutters, Inc., the US Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit held that undocumented foreign workers are employees who may recover unpaid wages under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). The court found that the US Supreme Court's prior decision in Hoffman Plastic Compounds, Inc. v. NLRB that the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) could not award backpay to undocumented aliens terminated for union activity in violation of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) did not overrule Eleventh Circuit precedent permitting recovery of unpaid wages under the FLSA. | Legal Update: archive | 07-Mar-2013 |
| 12 | Second Circuit Clarifies Pleading Requirements for FLSA ... The US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled in Lundy v. Catholic Health System of Long Island Inc. that a plaintiff must sufficiently allege 40 hours of work in a particular workweek as well as some unpaid time in excess of 40 hours to sustain a Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) overtime claim. | Legal Update: archive | 05-Mar-2013 |
| 13 | IRS Expands Voluntary Worker Classification Settlement ... The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has announced that it has expanded its Voluntary Classification Settlement Program (VCSP), making it possible for many more interested employers to apply. To achieve this expansion, the IRS is modifying the eligibility requirements to allow employers under an IRS audit to qualify for the VCSP, to reduce the special six-year statute of limitations, and to temporarily waive the requirement that employers must have filed required Forms 1099 for workers they wish to reclassify. | Legal Update: archive | 28-Feb-2013 |
| 14 | OFCCP Rescinds Guidance on Enforcement of Executive ... The Department of Labor (DOL) Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) issued a notice of final rescission rescinding two guidance documents on enforcement of the Executive Order 11246 prohibition on compensation discrimination. The guidance documents, which are commonly known as the Standards and the Voluntary Guidelines, were originally issued in 2006. Their rescission will permit the OFCCP to conduct investigations of contractor pay practices consistent with Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title VII), allowing it to better identify and remedy the varied forms of compensation discrimination that occur. The notice of final rescission is effective February 28, 2013. | Legal Update: archive | 28-Feb-2013 |
| 15 | District Court Okays Private Settlements of FLSA Claims ... In Picerni v. Bilingual SEIT & Preschool Inc., the US District Court for the Eastern District of New York held that parties could settle a Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) claim without court approval or DOL supervision. | Legal Update: archive | 26-Feb-2013 |
| 16 | Eleventh Circuit Advances Circuit Split, Holds that Liquidated ... In Moore v. Appliance Direct, Inc., the US Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit joined the Sixth and Eighth Circuits in holding that the retaliation provision (Section 216(b)) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA) creates a separate discretionary standard of damages for retaliation claims, and therefore gives the district court discretion whether to award liquidated damages. | Legal Update: archive | 19-Feb-2013 |
| 17 | Rule 23 Class Action Provisions Apply to FLSA Collective ... In Espenscheid v. DirectSat USA, LLC, the US Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit upheld a district court opinion decertifying a proposed class of plaintiffs claiming they were not paid for work performed and were denied overtime pay in violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). In its decision, the court ruled that the same certification analysis applies to collective actions under the FLSA as it does to class actions under Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. | Legal Update: archive | 11-Feb-2013 |
| 18 | Jackson Lewis: Deducting Service Fees From Employee ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses Allende v. PS Brother Gourmet, Inc., in which the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York held, in a case of first impression, that an employer likely violated the FLSA and New York law when it deducted the full amount of service fees (charged by internet food delivery sites) from employees' gratuities. Although an earlier decision of the US Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit allowed an employer to deduct credit card processing fees from employee gratuities, some of the fees in this case were not needed to generate employees' gratuities. | Legal Update: archive | 06-Feb-2013 |
| 19 | DOL Issues Final Rule Implementing Amendments to FMLA The Department of Labor (DOL) issued its final rule implementing statutory amendments to the FMLA regarding leave for military caregivers and airline flight crews made by the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2010 and the Airline Flight Crew Technical Corrections Act. | Legal Update: archive | 05-Feb-2013 |
| 20 | Eighth Circuit holds that class action waiver provisions are ... The United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit has granted a motion to compel arbitration of a Fair Labor Standards Act claim by upholding a class action waiver in the arbitration agreement. | Legal Update: archive | 25-Jan-2013 |
| 21 | Mandatory Travel Time Not Automatically Compensable under ... In Griffin v. S&B Engineers & Constructors, Ltd., the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit held that the fact that an employer's commuting scheme for employees was mandatory, rather than voluntary, did not automatically render employees' travel time compensable under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). | Legal Update: archive | 15-Jan-2013 |
| 22 | Secondary Agriculture Exemption under the FLSA Interpreted ... In Rodriguez v. Pure Beauty Farms, Inc., the US Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit helped interpret the secondary agriculture exemption under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). The court found that employees who cared for plants at Home Depot on behalf of a commercial farm were engaged in secondary agriculture and therefore were exempt from the FLSA's overtime requirements. | Legal Update: archive | 11-Jan-2013 |
| 23 | Epstein Becker: Employer Wins California's First "Suitable ... This Law Firm Publication by Epstein, Becker & Green, P.C. discusses Garvey v. Kmart Corp., in which the US District Court for the Northern District of California held after a bench trial that Kmart was not required to redesign its cashier and bagging areas to provide seats to comply with California's "suitable seating" requirements. The court recognized that Kmart has a genuine rationale for requiring cashiers to stand relating to safety, image and efficiency. However, the court left open the possibility that another form of seating, "lean-stools," could be consistent with Kmart's job requirements. | Legal Update: archive | 26-Dec-2012 |
| 24 | Constangy: Massachusetts High Court Provides Helpful ... This Law Firm Publication by Constangy, Brooks & Smith, LLP discusses Crocker v. Townsend Oil Co., Inc., a recent Massachusetts Supreme Court opinion that clarifies the limitations on damages that employees can seek under the state Wage Act when an employee claims to have been misclassified as an independent contractor. The opinion also establishes two conditions that must be met in order for Wage Act claims to be waived through the use of general releases. | Legal Update: archive | 19-Dec-2012 |
| 25 | Jackson Lewis: State Minimum Wage Increases Effective ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses state minimum wage increases, effective January 1, 2013, in Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Missouri, Montana, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington. It also describes minimum wage increases in several cities, including San Francisco, California. | Legal Update: archive | 17-Dec-2012 |
| 26 | Call to Employer About Docked Pay Did Not Constitute FLSA ... In Montgomery v. Havner, the US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit affirmed the district court's grant of summary judgment. The Eighth Circuit concluded that an employee failed to establish a prima facie case of retaliation under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA) because no reasonable jury could find that her call to the employer to ask why her pay was docked by ten minutes constituted filing a complaint under the FLSA. | Legal Update: archive | 27-Nov-2012 |
| 27 | Holiday Cheer Without Legal Fear This Legal Update offers best practices tips for avoiding liability connected to an employer-sponsored holiday party. | Legal Update: archive | 27-Nov-2012 |
| 28 | Wage and Hour Issues During Disasters This Legal Update highlights pertinent resources about employers' legal obligations regarding proper pay practices during disasters leading to office closures or mass employee absences. | Legal Update: archive | 13-Nov-2012 |
| 29 | No FLSA Violation When Employee Failed to Log Work During ... The US Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit affirmed summary judgment for the employer in White v. Baptist Memorial Health Care Corp., holding that the employer was not liable for unpaid wages under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) when the employee failed to properly log time worked during unpaid meal breaks. The court further explained that automatic meal deduction systems can be lawful under the FLSA. | Legal Update: archive | 08-Nov-2012 |
| 30 | Jackson Lewis: California Court Rules Drivers' Independent ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses Elijahjuan v. Superior Court, in which the California Court of Appeal held that owner-operator truck drivers were not required to arbitrate their state law misclassification claims. Although the parties' agreements contained a clause requiring arbitration in all disputes arising from the "application or interpretation" of the agreements, the court held that the drivers' California Labor Code claims fell outside the scope of that provision, as they concerned statutory rights rather than an interpretation of contractual rights. One justice dissented, arguing that arbitration clauses have been consistently interpreted as applying to extra-contractual disputes. | Legal Update: archive | 23-Oct-2012 |
| 31 | Schnader: Compliance With New Jersey Equal Pay Notice ... This Law Firm Publication by Schnader Harrison Segal & Lewis LLP explains that employers in New Jersey do not have to comply with the new equal pay notice requirement by the November 19, 2012 effective date or 30 days thereafter, because the New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development has not yet formally published the notice. The regulatory process that must precede final publication of the notice will take months, and therefore the notice will not be ready by the effective date. The notice will state that gender-based discrimination is prohibited in pay and the other terms and conditions of employment. | Legal Update: archive | 22-Oct-2012 |
| 32 | Ogletree Deakins: Industrial Commission of Arizona Raises ... This Law Firm Publication by Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. discusses the increase to Arizona's minimum wage in 2013. Effective January 1, 2013, Arizona's minimum wage will be $7.80 per hour, and the minimum wage for tipped employees will be $4.80 per hour plus tips. This change makes Arizona's minimum wage 55 cents higher than the current federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour. | Legal Update: archive | 19-Oct-2012 |
| 33 | Jackson Lewis: Florida Federal Judge Rules Business E-mails ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses the US District Court for the Southern District of Florida's recent decision in Lewis v. Keiser School, Inc., holding time an employee spent sending work e-mails during her lunch hour was not compensable under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). The court found that the time the employee spent on the work e-mails was de minimis, and despite receiving e-mails from her during lunch, there was no evidence that her employer suffered or permitted her to work off the clock, particularly since the employee indicated she was not working by clocking out for lunch. | Legal Update: archive | 17-Oct-2012 |
| 34 | Ogletree Deakins: Florida's Minimum Wage to Increase on ... This Law Firm Publication by Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. discusses the increase to Florida's minimum wage in 2013. Effective January 1, 2013, Florida's minimum wage will be $7.79 per hour, and the minimum wage for tipped employees will be $4.77 per hour plus tips. | Legal Update: archive | 15-Oct-2012 |
| 35 | Workweek Change to Reduce Employees' Overtime Does Not ... The US Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit ruled in Abshire v. Redland Energy Services, LLC that an employer did not violate the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) when it changed the workweek designation for certain employees in a manner that reduced their overtime hours. | Legal Update: archive | 11-Oct-2012 |
| 36 | California Governor Signs Multiple Employment-related Bills ... California Governor Jerry Brown signed multiple employment-related bills into law in September 2012, covering such areas as wage payment laws and notification requirements, anti-discrimination laws and social media laws. | Legal Update: archive | 08-Oct-2012 |
| 37 | Epstein Becker: Waiver of California's Day of Rest This Law Firm Publication by Epstein Becker & Green, P.C. discusses the US District Court for the Central District of California's recent holding in Mendoza v. Nordstrom, Inc., that an employer did not violate California's day of rest statute where the plaintiff employees voluntarily worked for more than six days in a row. Similar to the California Supreme Court's decision in Brinker Restaurant Corp. v. Superior Court, the district court noted that while employers must provide employees with a day of rest, they do not have to ensure employees take that day off. | Legal Update: archive | 03-Oct-2012 |
| 38 | Ogletree Deakins: Employers in New Jersey Must Provide ... This Law Firm Publication by Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. discusses a recently enacted New Jersey law, A2647, requiring employers with 50 or more employees to post a notice stating that discrimination based on gender is prohibited in compensation or the other terms and conditions of employment. Employers must provide a copy of this poster or notice to each employee and receive the employee's written acknowledgment that he has read and understands the form. The law takes effect on November 21, 2012. | Legal Update: archive | 24-Sep-2012 |
| 39 | Ogletree Deakins: New York Expands the Scope of ... This Law Firm Publication by Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. discusses an amendment to Section 193 of the New York Labor Law that gives employers greater freedom to make deductions from employees' pay. Specifically, the amendment allows employers to make deductions from an employee's wages for the employee's preauthorized personal activities, and to recapture overpayments, loans or advancements made to an employee. Currently, the law prohibits employers from making wage deductions unless a governmental entity authorizes the action or the employee provides written authorization for a deduction that benefits the employee. The new law takes effect on November 7, 2012, but will expire in three years. | Legal Update: archive | 10-Sep-2012 |
| 40 | Jackson Lewis: California Court Vacates Order Compelling ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses Truly Nolen of Am. v. Superior Court, in which a California Court of Appeal vacated a trial court's order directing an employer and employee to resolve wage and hour claims by class arbitration. In doing so, the court found that the California Supreme Court's decision in Gentry v. Superior Court, which held that class action waivers are void in certain circumstances, remains valid in spite of language in recent US Supreme Court opinions that appeared to call Gentry's reasoning into question. | Legal Update: archive | 31-Aug-2012 |
| 41 | Jackson Lewis: California Eliminates FEHC and Provides ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses California's Senate Bill 1038, which was recently signed by Governor Brown. Effective January 1, 2013, the new law will, among other things, eliminate the California Fair Employment and Housing Commission (FEHC). The FEHC's duties of rulemaking and administrative adjudication of discrimination claims will be mainly assumed by the Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH), which will include a Fair Employment and Housing Council. | Legal Update: archive | 29-Aug-2012 |
| 42 | Foley Hoag: New Law Imposes Obligations on Staffing ... This Law Firm Publication by Foley Hoag LLP discusses the Temporary Workers' Right to Know Act, which was recently enacted by the Massachusetts legislature. Effective January 31, 2013, the new law requires staffing agencies to provide temporary employees with specific information about each of their work assignments, including a description of the position, designated pay days and the hourly rate of pay, as well as the name, address and telephone number of the staffing agency and the work site employer. The law also prohibits staffing agencies and work site employers from deducting any costs or fees from an employee's wages without express written authorization. | Legal Update: archive | 21-Aug-2012 |
| 43 | Ogletree Deakins: Rhode Island Bans Discrimination on the ... This Law Firm Publication by Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C discusses a new Rhode Island law that prohibits employment discrimination on the basis of homelessness. Specifically, employers will be prohibited from discriminating against job applicants or employees who lack a permanent mailing address or use a shelter or agency as a mailing address. The law provides injunctive relief, actual damages and reasonable attorneys' fees to homeless job applicants or employees who experience this form of discrimination. | Legal Update: archive | 17-Aug-2012 |
| 44 | Epstein Becker: Massachusetts Bans Mandatory Overtime for ... This Law Firm Publication by Epstein Becker & Green, P.C. discusses a new law in Massachusetts that will prohibit hospitals from requiring nurses to work mandatory overtime except in emergencies. Under the law, regularly scheduled work cannot exceed 12 hours in any 24-hour period, and nurses will be not be allowed to work more than 16 consecutive hours in a 24-hour period. If an emergency situation creates the need for overtime, a hospital must make a good faith effort to have overtime covered on a voluntary basis before resorting to mandatory overtime. Other provisions include employer reporting requirements and anti-discrimination measures. The law was signed into law on August 6, 2012 and will go into effect 90 days later (November 4, 2012). | Legal Update: archive | 14-Aug-2012 |
| 45 | Jackson Lewis: Employee Must Arbitrate Individual Wage ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses the California Court of Appeal's decision in Nelsen v. Legacy Partners Residential, Inc., ruling that an employee must arbitrate her individual wage and hour claims against her employer where an arbitration agreement between the parties was not unconscionable or in violation of public policy. Notably, the court rejected the employee’s argument that the agreement was unenforceable because it violated federal public policy under the National Labor Relations Board's (NLRB) decision in D.R. Horton. The court found that the issues in D.R. Horton were outside the expertise of the NLRB, that the holding had been rejected by at least two other federal courts, and that there was no evidence that the plaintiff in Nelsen was covered by the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). | Legal Update: archive | 31-Jul-2012 |
| 46 | Employer and Union May Negotiate Binding Settlement that ... In Martin v. Spring Break '83 Productions, L.L.C., the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit held that an employer and a labor union could enter a private unsupervised settlement agreement releasing union-represented employees' substantive claims under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). The settlement was permissible because there was a bona fide dispute over hours worked, and the union addressed, rather than waived, the employees' substantive FLSA claims in the settlement. | Legal Update: archive | 26-Jul-2012 |
| 47 | FLSA's Executive Exemption Applies to Warehouse ... On July 12, 2012, the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled in Ramos v. Baldor Specialty Foods, Inc. that a group of workers charged with supervising employees at a warehouse are subject to the executive exemption from the overtime pay protections of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). | Legal Update: archive | 17-Jul-2012 |
| 48 | Jackson Lewis: Minnesota Court of Appeals Clarifies ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses In re Labor Law Violation of Daley Farm of Lewiston, in which the Minnesota Court of Appeals held that the exemption for agricultural workers under the Minnesota Fair Labor Standards Act (MFLSA) only applies to workers who receive a salary. The court held that a salary is not the same as an hourly wage. Therefore the defendant's employees, who received an hourly wage, did not qualify for the exemption, even though their weekly pay exceeded the minimum salary level that qualifies for the MFLSA exemption. Furthermore, the court held that the MFLSA was not preempted by the federal Fair Labor Standards Act, and therefore employers must comply with the law that sets the higher standard. | Legal Update: archive | 16-Jul-2012 |
| 49 | Jackson Lewis: Pennsylvania Amends Minimum Wage Act to ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP explains a recent change to the Pennsylvania Minimum Wage Act that allows employers in the healthcare industry to use the "8/80" overtime rule established by the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). This amendment allows healthcare employers to pay employees overtime for hours worked in excess of 8 hours per day or 80 hours in a 14-day period. As with the FLSA, the amendment requires that the employer and employee reach an agreement or understanding as to this method of compensation before performance of the work. | Legal Update: archive | 16-Jul-2012 |
| 50 | DOL Announces Wage and Hour Compliance Initiative for ... On July 9, 2012, the US Department of Labor (DOL) announced that it will begin an initiative to improve wage and hour law compliance in Virginia's construction industry. | Legal Update: archive | 13-Jul-2012 |
| 51 | Preponderance of the Evidence Standard Applies to Proving ... The US Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit held in Lederman v. Frontier Fire Protection, Inc. that the preponderance of the evidence standard applies to determine whether an employee is exempt under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). The court's decision clarifies the appropriate evidentiary standard in light of previous Tenth Circuit decisions that discussed a "plainly and unmistakably" legal standard. | Legal Update: archive | 12-Jul-2012 |
| 52 | Jackson Lewis: Rhode Island Minimum Wage to Increase in ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses the increase to Rhode Island's minimum wage in 2013. Effective January 1, 2013, Rhode Island's minimum wage will rise to $7.75 an hour, up from the current rate of $7.40. The legislation containing the change was signed by Governor Lincoln Chafee on June 20, 2012. This will be the first minimum wage increase in the state since 2007. | Legal Update: archive | 02-Jul-2012 |
| 53 | Third Circuit Establishes Test for Joint Employer Status under ... In In re Enterprise Rent-A-Car Wage & Hour Employment Practices Litigation, the US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit established a new test to determine whether a joint employment relationship exists under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA). The "Enterprise test" focuses on the control the potential joint employer exercises over the relevant employees, including the alleged employer's ability to hire employees, issue work rules and maintain control over employee records. | Legal Update: archive | 29-Jun-2012 |
| 54 | US Supreme Court Finds Pharmaceutical Sales Reps Exempt ... The US Supreme Court held in Christopher v. SmithKline Beecham Corp. that pharmaceutical sales representatives qualify as outside salespersons exempt from the overtime requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). The decision resolves a split between the US Courts of Appeals for the Second and Ninth Circuits and clarifies the FLSA's outside sales exemption. | Legal Update: archive | 18-Jun-2012 |
| 55 | DOL Lawfully Reversed Guidance on Application of FLSA ... In Mortgage Bankers Ass'n v. Solis, the US District Court for the District of Columbia held that the Department of Labor (DOL) did not violate the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) by changing its interpretation of the applicability of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) administrative exemption to mortgage loan officers without using the APA's notice and comment process or by issuing an interpretation that conflicts with DOL regulations under the FLSA. In Administrator's Interpretation 2010-1, which stated that that mortgage loan officers are nonexempt employees, the DOL reversed its 2006 position on this issue. | Legal Update: archive | 12-Jun-2012 |
| 56 | Jackson Lewis: California Court of Appeal Enforces Class ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses a California Court of Appeal's decision in Iskanian v. CLS Transportation upholding a class action waiver in an arbitration agreement and distinguishing the National Labor Relations Board's (NLRB) decision in D.R. Horton. The court followed AT&T Mobility LLC v. Concepcion, noting Concepcion made no exception for employment-related disputes in reiterating the general rule that arbitration agreements must be enforced according to their terms. The court also held the arbitration agreement barred the plaintiff from bringing claims under the California Private Attorney General Act (PAGA). | Legal Update: archive | 04-Jun-2012 |
| 57 | Jackson Lewis: Use of Fluctuating Workweek Method Upheld ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses Roach v. Moran Foods, in which a Connecticut Superior Court ruled that Connecticut's wage and hour law permits employers to use the fluctuating workweek method when calculating employee overtime. In concluding that the method complies with state wage and hour law, the court noted that the Connecticut wage statute identifies a specific category of employees, delivery drivers, to whom the fluctuating workweek method does not apply, indicating that the legislature intended it to apply to other employees. | Legal Update: archive | 16-May-2012 |
| 58 | Jackson Lewis: Personal Attendant Who Performs Routine ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses Cash v. Winn, in which the California Fourth District Court of Appeal clarified the personal attendant overtime exemption under Wage Order 15. The court held that a personal attendant who is exempt from overtime is not disqualified from the exemption if less than 20% of his job duties include routine health-related services, such as taking a person's temperature, checking his pulse or assisting with an over-the-counter blood sugar test. | Legal Update: archive | 15-May-2012 |
| 59 | Constangy: Forum Selection Clause May Violate ... This Law Firm Publication by Constangy Brooks & Smith, LLP, discusses Melia v. Zenhire, Inc., in which the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court identified the circumstances when an out-of-state forum selection clause in an employment contract violates the Massachusetts Wage Act. In Melia, the court held that a forum selection clause is a special contract disallowed by the Wage Act when the employee's claim is covered by the Wage Act, the court of the forum state would not apply Massachusetts law, and the employee would be deprived of a substantive right under the Wage Act. | Legal Update: archive | 11-May-2012 |
| 60 | Jackson Lewis: Prevailing Parties Not Entitled to Attorneys' ... This Law Firm Publication by Jackson Lewis LLP discusses Kirby v. Immoos Fire Protection, Inc., in which the California Supreme Court recently held that prevailing parties in meal and rest break litigation under Section 226.7 of the California Labor Code are not entitled to attorneys' fees. The court held that meal and rest breaks are not covered by the two fee-shifting statutes in the Labor Code. The first statute, Section 1194, allows employees to recover attorneys' fees when they prevail on minimum wage or overtime claims. The second statute, Section 218.5, provides attorneys' fees to employees or employers who prevail on employees' claims of "nonpayment of wages." | Legal Update: archive | 01-May-2012 |
| 61 | DOL Withdraws Proposed Regulations on Child Labor in ... The US Department of Labor (DOL) has withdrawn a proposed rule that would revise the child labor agricultural hazardous occupations orders. | Legal Update: archive | 27-Apr-2012 |
| 62 | Epstein Becker: California Labor Commissioner Revises ... This Law Firm Publication by Epstein, Becker & Green, P.C. discusses the California Labor Commissioner's revisions to the official Frequently Asked Questions Guidance and notice template, which are intended to aid employers in complying with California's Wage Theft Prevention Act of 2011. The revisions to these documents address employer concerns about the effect of the template on at-will employment and the listing and description of rates of pay. New guidance on joint-employment situations is also included. | Legal Update: archive | 18-Apr-2012 |
| 63 | California Supreme Court Clarifies Meal and Rest Break ... In Brinker Restaurant Corp. v. Superior Court, the California Supreme Court clarified that employers must provide a 30-minute meal period by making it available to employees, but need not ensure that no work is done during that period. The court also held that hourly employees in California are entitled to paid ten-minute rest breaks at certain intervals, depending on the length of the work shift. | Legal Update: archive | 13-Apr-2012 |
| 64 | Jackson Lewis: New York Court of Appeals Holds That Bonus ... This Jackson Lewis LLP Law Firm Publication discusses Ryan v. Kellogg Partners Institutional Servs., in which the New York Court of Appeals recently held that an employer violated the New York Labor Law when it failed to pay a bonus that it orally promised to an employee. The bonus was protected by the New York Labor Law because it had been "earned" by the employee. The New York Labor Law affords greater remedies than the common law to employees who seek to recover wages from their employer, including liquidated damages, attorneys' fees and interest. | Legal Update: archive | 12-Apr-2012 |
| 65 | Epstein Becker: Tennessee Appellate Court Holds Tips Are ... This Law Firm Publication by Epstein Becker & Green, P.C. discusses wage garnishment in the context of the Tennessee Court of Appeals' decision in Erlanger Medical Center v. Strong. The court relied on guidance found in the US Department of Labor's Field Operations Manual and a Wage and Hour Opinion Letter to hold that tips are not earnings that may be garnished. The publication notes that the decision and the US Department of Labor guidance documents on which it relied may serve as strong persuasive authority in other jurisdictions. | Legal Update: archive | 30-Mar-2012 |
| 66 | Rule 23 Class Actions Not Incompatible with FLSA Opt-in ... The US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit ruled that state law class action wage and hour claims brought under Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP) are not inherently incompatible with Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) collective action claims. With the decision, the Third Circuit joins four other federal appeals courts in concluding that a federal court is not barred from hearing both opt-out claims under state wage and hour laws and opt-in claims under the FLSA. | Legal Update: archive | 29-Mar-2012 |
| 67 | DOL Again Extends Comment Period for Proposed Rule ... The Department of Labor (DOL) Wage and Hour Division (Wage and Hour Division) has again extended the comment period for its proposed rule expanding minimum wage and overtime protections for domestic caregivers under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). The Wage and Hour Division extended the comment period until March 21, 2012. | Legal Update: archive | 09-Mar-2012 |
| 68 | Ogletree Deakins: New Jersey Inside Sales Exemption ... This Law Firm Publication by Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. discusses the New Jersey inside sales exemption, which was formally restored as of February 21, 2012. The exemption covers any employee: Whose primary duty consists of sales activity. Who receives at least 50% of his total pay from commissions. Who receives total compensation of not less than $400 per week. | Legal Update: archive | 07-Mar-2012 |
| 69 | DOL Extends Comment Period for Proposed Rule Revising ... The Department of Labor (DOL) Wage and Hour Division (Wage and Hour Division) has extended the comment period for its proposed rule expanding minimum wage and overtime protections for domestic caregivers under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). The Wage and Hour Division extended the comment period to March 12, 2012. | Legal Update: archive | 22-Feb-2012 |
| 70 | Jackson Lewis: Due Process Concerns Sinks Overtime Class ... This Jackson Lewis LLP memorandum discusses the California Court of Appeal's February 6, 2012 decision in Duran v. U.S. Bank National Association. In this class action for alleged unpaid overtime, the trial court certified a class of 260 employees and selected a random witness group of 20 plaintiffs to testify at trial. The appellate court held that the trial court's use of representative sampling in place of trial testimony unfairly prevented the employer from defending itself. The employer was therefore denied due process. The court reversed the judgment and ordered the class to be decertified. This is the first California decision to analyze in detail an employer's due process rights in a class action. | Legal Update: archive | 15-Feb-2012 |
| 71 | California Partners with DOL to Reduce Employee ... California became the 12th state to sign a memorandum of understanding with the Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division to reduce the improper classification of employees as independent contractors. | Legal Update: archive | 10-Feb-2012 |
| 72 | Ogletree Deakins: Georgia Enacts Law Allowing Non-lawyers ... This Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. memorandum discusses a new Georgia law that effectively overturns a recent Georgia Supreme Court decision requiring employers to use a Georgia-licensed attorney to file answers to garnishments. Among other changes, the new law allows employers to use a Georgia-licensed attorney, in-house staff or other third-party vendors to file answers to garnishments. The new law takes effect on February 8, 2012. For more information on the Georgia Supreme Court decision effectively overturned by this law, see Legal Update, Constangy: Attorneys Must Sign Garnishment Answers, Georgia State Bar Says. | Legal Update: archive | 08-Feb-2012 |
| 73 | Requiring Government Contractor to Pay Wage Rates Equal ... In Beary Landscaping, Inc. v. Costigan, the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit held that the Illinois Department of Labor (IDOL) did not violate the plaintiff contractors' due process rights by using a local collective bargaining agreement's (CBA) wage rates as a proxy for the prevailing wage rates when setting the minimum wage the plaintiffs must pay to employees working on publicly financed construction and demolition projects. | Legal Update: archive | 01-Feb-2012 |
| 74 | Epstein Becker: New York Caps Executive Compensation & ... This Epstein Becker & Green, P.C. memorandum discusses an Executive Order requiring state agencies to issue regulations imposing caps on executive compensation and administrative costs on for-profit and not-for-profit service providers that receive State-authorized financial assistance or payments. New York's Governor, Andrew M. Cuomo, executed the Order on January 18, 2012, to prevent public funds from being diverted to excessive compensation and unnecessary administrative costs. The new limitations imposed by the Executive Order may adversely affect hospitals and other service providers especially Medicaid-managed healthcare plans. | Legal Update: archive | 30-Jan-2012 |
| 75 | Fourth Circuit Joins Majority of Circuits in Holding that ... On January 27, 2012, in Minor v. Bostwick Laboratories, Inc., the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit held that intracompany complaints may constitute protected activity under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). An employee's complaint falls under the FLSA anti-retaliation provision where it is sufficiently clear and detailed for a reasonable employer to understand it as an assertion of FLSA rights and a call for their protection. | Legal Update: archive | 30-Jan-2012 |
| 76 | Arbitration Provision with Class and Collective Action Waiver ... In LaVoice v. UBS Financial Services, Inc., the US District Court for the Southern District of New York granted a motion to compel arbitration of the plaintiff's Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and state wage and hour claims despite a class and collective action waiver. The court found AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion, precluded LaVoice's argument that the FLSA creates an unwaivable right to collective actions. Notably, the court rejected the argument that D.R. Horton, Inc. supported a contrary reading of AT&T Mobility. | Legal Update: archive | 23-Jan-2012 |
| 77 | Mandatory Arbitration Agreement Prohibiting Class and ... The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) recently held that requiring employees, as a condition of employment, to sign an arbitration agreement prohibiting them from filing collective or class actions for employment-related claims violates the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). In its January 3, 2012 decision in D.R. Horton, Inc., the NLRB also held that its decision does not conflict with the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) and distinguished AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion. | Legal Update: archive | 10-Jan-2012 |
| 78 | Epstein Becker: California Wage Theft Prevention Act FAQs ... This Epstein Becker & Green, P.C. memorandum discusses a Notice to Employee template and FAQs released by the California Division of Labor Standards Enforcement (DLSE) to assist employers in complying with California's Wage Theft Prevention Act (CAWTPA), which went into effect on January 1, 2012. The template and FAQs address and clarify questions such as: What information must be included in the notice to each newly hired nonexempt exmployee. When a "hiring" has taken place such that the notice must be provided. Whether notices may be included in offer letters or distributed electronically. | Legal Update: archive | 06-Jan-2012 |
| 79 | Jackson Lewis: Notice Compliant with New California Wage ... This Jackson Lewis LLP memorandum discusses the form notice for California employers under the California Wage Theft Prevention Act. The state Division of Labor Standards Enforcement (DLSE) issued a notice that employers may use to comply with the new requirements to provide employees with certain wage information at hire. The notice is available in six languages: English, Vietnamese, Chinese, Korean, Spanish and Tagalog. | Legal Update: archive | 30-Dec-2011 |
| 80 | Jackson Lewis: Washington Court Affirms $2.1 Million ... This Jackson Lewis LLP memorandum discusses the Washington Court of Appeals' decision in Pellino v. Brink's Inc., affirming a $2.1 million judgment against an employer for failing to comply with state meal and rest period law. The Court of Appeals found no error in the trial court ruling that armored car employees were always engaged in active work duties while in the vehicles. The Court of Appeals also agreed that the company engaged in a class-wide pattern or practice of failing to provide enough meal and rest time. | Legal Update: archive | 30-Dec-2011 |
| 81 | Ogletree Deakins: California High Court Clarifies ... This Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. memorandum discusses the California Supreme Court's December 29, 2011 decision in Harris v. The Superior Court of Los Angeles County, clarifying the administrative employee exemption. The state Supreme Court rejected the "administrative/production worker" dichotomy, holding that the proper test is a two-part test to determine if an employee's work is "directly related" to management policies or general business operations. California courts must consider whether the work is both qualitatively administrative and quantitatively "of substantial importance to the management or operations of business." | Legal Update: archive | 30-Dec-2011 |
| 82 | Final Rule on Commercial Truck Drivers Hours of Service ... The Department of Transportation's (DOT) Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) has issued a final rule setting new hours of service for commercial truck drivers. | Legal Update: archive | 29-Dec-2011 |
| 83 | New California Employment Laws Effective on January 1 ... A list of new California employment-related laws effective on January 1, 2012 and covering areas such as pay notices, credit checks, pregnancy disability leave and independent contractors, among others. | Legal Update: archive | 29-Dec-2011 |
| 84 | Pre-shift Work Not Compensable Without Employer ... The US Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit held that an employee's pre-shift work was not preliminary or de minimis, but that it was not compensable under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) because the employer had no actual or constructive knowledge that the pre-shift work was taking place. | Legal Update: archive | 28-Dec-2011 |
| 85 | Fisher & Phillips: California Court Limits Reporting-time Pay ... This Fisher & Phillips memorandum discusses Michael Aleman v. AirTouch Cellular, a putative class action. In this decision, the Court of Appeals of California, Second District held that employees were not entitled to reporting-time pay for attending scheduled store meetings because they were furnished work for at least half the meeting time and paid accordingly. Employees also were not owed one hour of premium pay for working a split-shift because the amount they actually earned in excess of the minimum wage could be accumulated to satisfy the one-hour split-shift premium requirement. | Legal Update: archive | 27-Dec-2011 |
| 86 | DOL Proposed Rule Would Revise Companionship and Live ... The DOL's Wage and Hour Division has announced proposed rules aimed at expanding minimum wage and overtime protections for domestic caregivers under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). The new rules propose to limit the types of work exempt from FLSA wage requirements, increase recordkeeping requirements for certain domestic workers and clarify that companionship exemptions are limited to individuals employed by the family or household using the services. | Legal Update: archive | 16-Dec-2011 |
| 87 | Jackson Lewis: California Increases the Minimum Salary ... This Jackson Lewis LLP memorandum discusses the increases in the minimum salary requirements for computer professionals in California. As of January 1, 2012, to be exempt from California's overtime law, computer professionals must be paid at least $38.89 per hour, $6,752.19 per month or $81,026.25 per year. Employees must also meet a duties test to qualify for the exemption. | Legal Update: archive | 08-Dec-2011 |
| 88 | Jackson Lewis: State Minimum Wage Increases Effective ... This Jackson Lewis LLP memorandum discusses increases to the minimum wage in Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Montana, Ohio, Oregon, Vermont and Washington. These increases are effective January 1, 2012. | Legal Update: archive | 07-Dec-2011 |
| 89 | Ogletree Deakins: New Oregon Employment Laws Take Effect ... This Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. memorandum discusses several new Oregon employment laws effective January 1, 2012. HB 3450 requires employers to include specific disclaimers in arbitration agreements with employees. Under HB 3034, employers must permit employees to take unpaid leave for jury duty rather than requiring the employees to use vacation, sick or annual leave. HB 2828 requires employers with ten or more employees to provide certain insurance coverage to an employee serving as a juror if the employee elects to have coverage continue during this time. HB 2040 clarifies the information a former employee must include in a written notice of non-payment of wages at termination. Under HB 2039, employees can recover statutory damages and attorneys' fees from employers that issue dishonored checks. | Legal Update: archive | 07-Dec-2011 |
| 90 | Ogletree Deakins: Ohio Minimum Wage Rate to Increase on ... This Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. memorandum discusses the increase to Ohio's minimum wage in 2012. Effective January 1, 2012, Ohio's minimum wage will be $7.70 per hour, and the minimum wage for tipped employees will be $3.85 per hour plus tips. | Legal Update: archive | 05-Dec-2011 |
| 91 | IRS Updates Voluntary Classification Settlement Program FAQ The IRS updated its Frequently Asked Questions page on the Voluntary Classification Settlement Program (VCSP). The VCSP allows employers to voluntarily reclassify current non-employees as employees and is meant to increase tax compliance and improve certainty among employers, employees and the government. | Legal Update: archive | 02-Dec-2011 |
| 92 | Jackson Lewis: Ninth Circuit Holds California Wage Claims ... This Jackson Lewis LLP memorandum discusses the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit's recent decision in Kairy v. SuperShuttle International, finding the district court had subject matter jurisdiction over the plaintiffs' claims that they were misclassified as independent contractors. The district court had ruled that the case could implicate the Public Utilities Commission's (PUC) jurisdiction, but the Ninth Circuit found that applying California's wage and hour laws would not interfere with the PUC's regulations. | Legal Update: archive | 14-Nov-2011 |
| 93 | Jackson Lewis: Arkansas Supreme Court Limits Statute of ... This Jackson Lewis LLP memorandum discusses the November 3, 2011 Arkansas Supreme Court ruling in Douglas v. First Student, Inc. The court unanimously held that the limitations period for overtime claims under the Arkansas Minimum Wage Act is three years. The court rejected the plaintiff's argument, based on earlier Arkansas precedent, that a five-year statute of limitations should apply. This ruling harmonizes the Arkansas statute of limitations with the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). | Legal Update: archive | 07-Nov-2011 |
| 94 | Ogletree Deakins: New Mandatory Poster and Notice Issued ... This Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. memorandum discusses the new six-page notice, MW-400 (11/11), that was issued on November 4, 2011, by the New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development (NJDOL). The notice is in accordance with the requirements of a 2009 statute, P.L. 2009, c. 194, relating to the maintenance and reporting of employment records. Employers must immediately provide the notice to all new employees and have until December 7, 2011 to distribute it to current employees. | Legal Update: archive | 07-Nov-2011 |
| 95 | Ford & Harrison: Court Finds that the California Trucking ... This Ford & Harrison LLP memorandum discusses the October 19, 2011 Southern District of California ruling in Dilts v. Penske Logistics LLC. The court held that the California trucking industry does not have to comply with California rest and meal break laws. Penske had moved for summary judgment, arguing that it is not required to comply with California meal and rest break laws because those laws are preempted by the Federal Aviation Authorization Act (FAAA). The FAAA regulates transportation including motor carriers, and expressly provides for preemption of state law. The court agreed, reasoning that California law, which does not directly target the motor carrier industry, would interfere with the price, route and service of a motor carrier, and with competitive market forces in the industry. | Legal Update: archive | 02-Nov-2011 |
| 96 | DOL Extends Comment Period for Proposed Agricultural Child ... On October 31, 2011, the Wage and Hour Division of the Department of Labor extended the public comment period on proposed changes to the child labor regulations that govern agricultural work. The proposed regulations were published on September 2, 2011 and the original comment deadline was November 1, 2011. The new deadline is December 1, 2011. | Legal Update: archive | 01-Nov-2011 |
| 97 | Employers Not Entitled to FLSA Wage Credits for Mandatory ... In Ramos-Barrientos v. Bland, the US Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit held that employers of migrant farm workers under the H-2A visa program are entitled to wage credits under the Fair Labor and Standards Act (FLSA) for worker meals, but not for employer-provided housing since that is a benefit primarily to the employer. | Legal Update: archive | 31-Oct-2011 |
| 98 | Ogletree Deakins: Massachusetts Wage Act Protects Out-of ... This Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. memorandum discusses the recent Massachusetts Superior Court decision in Dow v. Casale. The court held that the Massachusetts Wage Act applies to the out-of-state employees of Massachusetts employers. In Dow, an employee of a Massachusetts technology company worked out of his home in Florida. The court held that the employee had sufficient contacts with the state to sue his employer under the Massachusetts Wage Act for unpaid commissions and vacation pay. | Legal Update: archive | 27-Oct-2011 |
| 99 | Ford & Harrison: Tennessee Employers Must Compensate ... This Ford & Harrison LLP memorandum discusses the October 10, 2011 Tennessee Attorney General's Opinion Letter No. 11-72. The letter states that travel time to and from jury duty is compensable, even if the employer does not usually compensate employees for travel time. | Legal Update: archive | 20-Oct-2011 |
| 100 | Ogletree Deakins: Industrial Commission of Arizona Raises ... This Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. memorandum discusses the increase to Arizona's minimum wage in 2012. Effective January 1, 2012, Arizona's minimum wage will be $7.65 per hour, and the minimum wage for tipped employees will be $4.65 per hour plus tips. | Legal Update: archive | 18-Oct-2011 |
| 101 | Ogletree Deakins: New California Laws on Maternity ... This Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. memorandum discusses new California employment laws signed by Governor Brown. Under SB 222/AB 210, health insurers must provide maternity coverage for all insureds under individual policies starting no later than July 1, 2012. Under AB 243, farm labor contractors must include the name and address of all growers or other farm labor contractors that used the employer's services on employees' itemized payroll statements. Under SB 126, the Agricultural Labor Relations Board can certify a union as the employees' bargaining agent if it finds employer misconduct would make the chances of a fair new election unlikely. The latter two laws become effective January 1, 2012. | Legal Update: archive | 14-Oct-2011 |
| 102 | Ford & Harrison: Watch Out Employers of Commissioned ... This Ford & Harrison LLP memorandum discusses the New Jersey Department of Labor's (NJDOL) recent amendments to New Jersey's wage and hour regulations. The amended regulations incorporate the federal Fair Labor Standards Act's (FLSA) white collar exemptions, including the administrative, executive, professional and outside sales exemptions. However, in making the change, the NJDOL apparently inadvertently eliminated the commissioned sales exemption previously recognized under state law. | Legal Update: archive | 13-Oct-2011 |
| 103 | New California Laws Covering Credit Reports, Pay Notices ... New employment laws cover areas such as consumer credit reports, penalties for willful independent contractor misclassification, written commission agreements and pay information notices for newly hired employees, among other areas. | Legal Update: archive | 11-Oct-2011 |
| 104 | Ogletree Deakins: Florida Minimum Wage to Increase January ... This Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. memorandum discusses the increase to Florida's minimum wage in 2012. Effective January 1, 2012, Florida's minimum wage will be $7.61 per hour, and the minimum wage for tipped employees will be $4.65 per hour plus tips. | Legal Update: archive | 06-Oct-2011 |
| 105 | District Court May Exercise Supplemental Jurisdiction Over ... In Shahriar v. Smith & Wollensky Restaurant Group, Inc., the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit upheld the district court's grant of class certification, finding that a district court hearing federal claims under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) may properly exercise supplemental jurisdiction over state law wage and hour claims. | Legal Update: archive | 04-Oct-2011 |
| 106 | Constangy: Attorneys Must Sign Garnishment Answers ... This Constangy, Brooks and Smith, LLP memorandum discusses the Supreme Court of Georgia's adoption of a state bar advisory opinion on wage garnishments. According to the September 12, 2011 Supreme Court of Georgia opinion, a garnishment is a legal proceeding. Therefore, employers responding to a garnishment order must have a Georgia-barred attorney file a response on its behalf. Non-attorneys who file a response to a garnishment are engaged in the unlicensed practice of law. In addition, employers' answers filed by a non-attorney may be stricken, resulting in a default judgment against them and liability for the total debt. | Legal Update: archive | 26-Sep-2011 |
| 107 | IRS Begins Voluntary Classification Settlement Program for ... On September 21, 2011, the IRS announced that it has initiated the Voluntary Classification Settlement Program (VCSP). The VCSP will allow employers to voluntarily reclassify current nonemployees as employees. The Program is designed to increase tax compliance and improve certainty among employers, employees and the government. | Legal Update: archive | 23-Sep-2011 |
| 108 | Foley Hoag: Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Issues ... This Foley Hoag LLC memorandum discusses two Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decisions on the state's Payment of Wages Act (Act). The court held in Awuah v. Coverall North America, Inc. that a company may not avoid timely wage payments by classifying employees as franchisees and withholding payment until customers have paid for services. Furthermore, a company may not reclaim advances to alleged franchiees and may not require them to pay for their own workers' compensation insurance and other benefits. In Rosnov v. Molloy, the court held there is no requirement for an award of treble damages for claims arising before July 12, 2008, when the Act was amended to make treble damages mandatory. | Legal Update: archive | 01-Sep-2011 |
| 109 | HR Consultant Not Liable as Joint Employer Despite Contract ... In Field v. American Mortgage Express Corp., the US District Court for the Northern District of California refused to impose joint employer liability on an outside human resources consultant because it lacked sufficient control over wages and working conditions, despite language in the consulting contract. | Legal Update: archive | 23-Aug-2011 |
| 110 | NLRB Holds Employers Who Mistakenly Overpay Employees ... In Daycon Products Co., the NLRB found an employer violated Section 8(a)(5) and (1) and Section 8(d) of the NLRA by unilaterally reducing the contractual wages of eight employees after discovering it had mistakenly paid them inflated wages. | Legal Update: archive | 19-Aug-2011 |
| 111 | FLSA Protected Activity Includes Disclosing Confidential ... In Randolph v. ADT Security Services, Inc., the US District Court for the District of Maryland held that an employer violated the anti-retaliation provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) when it terminated employees for breaching their confidentiality obligations by disclosing confidential information to a state agency in connection with a wage claim. | Legal Update: archive | 15-Aug-2011 |
| 112 | Sabbatical and Regular Vacation Differentiated by California ... Legitimate sabbatical leave must meet a four-part test to not be considered regular vacation and subject to vacation pay requirements, ruled the California appellate court in Paton v. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., reversing summary adjudication in favor of the employer. | Legal Update: archive | 10-Aug-2011 |