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The most important and most far-reaching law guaranteeing a worker's right to be paid fairly is the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), which:
One of the most complex laws of the workplace, the FLSA has been amended many times. It is full of exceptions and exemptions—some of which seem to contradict one another. Most of the revisions and interpretations have expanded the law's coverage by, for example:
The FLSA applies only to employers whose annual sales total $500,000 or more or who are engaged in interstate commerce.
You might think that this would restrict the FLSA to covering only employees in large companies, but, in reality, the law covers nearly all workplaces. This is because the courts have interpreted the term interstate commerce very broadly. For example, courts have ruled that companies that regularly use the U.S. mail to send or receive letters to and from other states are engaged in interstate commerce.
Even the fact that employees use company telephones or computers to place or accept interstate business calls or take orders has subjected an employer to the FLSA.
A few employers, including small farms—those that use relatively little outside paid labor—are explicitly exempt from the FLSA.
Some employees are exempt from FLSA requirements, such as pay for overtime and minimum wages, even though their employers are covered. For example, many airline employees are exempt from the FLSA's overtime provisions. And most companions for the elderly are exempt from both minimum wage and overtime provisions.
Exemption and partial exemption from the FLSA cuts both ways. For employees who are exempt, the often-surprising downside is that they are generally not entitled to wage extras, such as overtime and compensatory time.
The upside is that, at least theoretically, exempt employees are paid a salary that is handsome enough to compensate them for the extra duties and responsibilities they have taken on as part of their jobs. In addition, the paychecks of the exempt can be docked only for complete days of absence for vacation, personal business, illness, or partial initial or final weeks of employment.
Employers who attempt to have it both ways—for example, by denying workers overtime by claiming they're exempt but docking them for tardiness or time away for an occasional errand—risk violating wage and hour laws.
This is the most confusing and most often mistakenly applied broad category of exempt worker.
Above all, bear in mind that you are not automatically exempt from the FLSA solely because you receive a salary; the work you do must be of a certain type as well.
The Department of Labor has provided some additional guidance on what type of work these employees must perform to qualify as exempt.
Executive exemption. To qualify as an exempt executive, an employee must:
Administrative exemption. An administrative employee generally must:
Professional exemption. To qualify as an exempt professional, an employee must:
Highly compensated employees. Employees who perform office or nonmanual work and are paid total annual compensation of $100,000 or more—which must include at least $684 per week paid on a salary or fee basis—are exempt from the FLSA if they regularly perform at least one of the duties of an exempt executive, administrative, or professional employee as described earlier.
Common problems. The Department of Labor has tagged a number of problems that commonly come up relating to the exemption for executive, administrative, and professional workers. The top contenders include workplaces in which:
An outside salesperson is exempt from FLSA coverage if he or she:
Typically, an exempt salesperson will be paid primarily through commissions and will require little or no direct supervision in doing the job. And, under the law, outside sales do not include those made by mail, by telephone, or over the Internet.
This exemption applies to computer systems analysts, computer programmers, software engineers, and or other similarly skilled workers in the computer field who are compensated either on a salary or fee basis at a rate not less than $684 per week or not less than $27.63 an hour.
If you work in such circles, you may well know who you are. But the law specifically requires that an exempt computer specialist's primary work duties must involve:
Several other types of workers are exempt from the minimum wage and overtime pay provisions of the FLSA. The most common include:
An apprentice is a worker who's at least 16 years old and who has signed an agreement to learn a skilled trade. Apprentices are exempt from the requirements of the FLSA. But beware that your state may have a law limiting the number of hours you can work as an apprentice.
State law may also require that, as an apprentice, you must be paid a certain percentage of the minimum wage. Check with your state labor department for more information.
The FLSA covers only employees, not independent contractors, who typically are hired to work on specific projects.
However, whether a person is an employee for purposes of the FLSA generally turns on what degree of control and independence that worker has over their own work.
If the company directs and controls the way the worker performs—including the details of when, where, and how the work is done—then the worker is an employee. (Read more on the employee vs. independent contractor distinction.)
If your employer has violated your rights under the FLSA, you should consider contacting an employment attorney as soon as possible. In particular, you might want to contact an employment lawyer in any of the following situations:
An employment attorney can explain your rights under the FLSA and advise you on the best course of action to take. An attorney can also help you file a complaint with the Department of Labor or, if necessary, sue your employer in court.