I've always felt that the most vital, important and set in stone labor law of them all is: Employees MUST be paid for every minute worked.
It sounds so simple, yet companies have been slowly chipping away at this golden rule in more ways than you might think.
This article goes into detail about tricks companies use to get more work out of their employees for either the same pay or sometimes even less pay, including:
- Workers being forced to work off the clock
- Overtime exempt "managers" being given virtually no managerial work and instead used to stock shelves and run registers for most of their work time, thus eliminating the need for hourly cashiers.
- Employers refusing to compensate employees for work contributions on a mobile device such a cell phone or Ipad. Imagine for example, if your company expected you to be reachable by phone practically 24/7 but only paid you for the time you were actually at a job site and "on the clock".
The article does mention that employees are starting to fight back against some of these abuses, but it's quite an uphill battle.
Companies are quite creative with how they stretch payroll. For example consider an exempt "manager" who has no actual authority and earns $24000 a year but is made to work 60 hours a week (because the company doesn't have to pay him overtime).
Even though he's making 24k, he's still basically earning minimum wage because of all the hours he has to put in.
The article also mentions a tactic used by IBM (and also by other companies I'm sure) where they reclassified certain employees from salaries to hourly but cut their base pay in order to cover expected overtime. In other words, they cut the pay of the workers so the same employees could work the same hours for the same pay only under an hourly status instead of salaried. This of course negated any gain the employees would have made by being reclassified.
I've personally seen two instances myself of companies playing fast and loose with OT requirements and labor laws:
At Gamestore, we had a strict "No OT" policy. Managers could and in fact were disciplined if they did the schedule in such a way that caused employees to run into OT. If an employee put in over 40 hours one week, the extra hours were rolled into the next weeks payroll and the schedule adjusted so that said employee would not go over 40 hours for any given week. In one instance an employee had 41.33 hrs logged on a certain week. When finalizing payroll that week, I rolled it back to 40 as directed by my manager and left a note saying 1.33 hrs of payroll needed to be added to the employee for the next week. I had no idea this was illegal until a friend told me it was.
At the sandwich shop, our genius owner implemented two rules that seemed to conflict with each other:
- All closing duties MUST be completed 100% every day, no exceptions
- All employees MUST be clocked out by 9:15 PM (the shop closed at 9)
I'm sure you can see the problem. Many days it wasn't possible to fulfill both requirements. I remember one night working with coworker K. We'd had a late rush and though I was only scheduled until 10 I stayed (on the clock) until 10:15 to help her out but after that of course I had to clock out. I watched as coworker K clocked BOTH of us out at 10:15. She ended up staying an extra THIRTY FIVE MINUTES to finish out all the closing duties. She asked me to stay and help her but I just wasn't going to do it off the clock.
I know I should have said something to the owner but he was a major league jerk who probably wouldn't have given a crap anyway.
The sad thing is my coworker K decided to stay behind because she needed the job so badly and thought the owner would fire her if she left before all the closing work was done even though we were required to clock out at 10:15.
This is completely ridiculous and it saddens to me to see companies becoming more and more creative with ways to skirt labor laws and screw employees while at the same time squeezing as much work out of them as they possibly can.
There have been multiple threads on CS about employees who have either been directly asked or strongly encouraged to work off the clock, most often in relation to a closing shift. These aren't isolated incidents. This is becoming a disturbing new trend that shows no signs of abating.
It sounds so simple, yet companies have been slowly chipping away at this golden rule in more ways than you might think.
This article goes into detail about tricks companies use to get more work out of their employees for either the same pay or sometimes even less pay, including:
- Workers being forced to work off the clock
- Overtime exempt "managers" being given virtually no managerial work and instead used to stock shelves and run registers for most of their work time, thus eliminating the need for hourly cashiers.
- Employers refusing to compensate employees for work contributions on a mobile device such a cell phone or Ipad. Imagine for example, if your company expected you to be reachable by phone practically 24/7 but only paid you for the time you were actually at a job site and "on the clock".
The article does mention that employees are starting to fight back against some of these abuses, but it's quite an uphill battle.
Companies are quite creative with how they stretch payroll. For example consider an exempt "manager" who has no actual authority and earns $24000 a year but is made to work 60 hours a week (because the company doesn't have to pay him overtime).
Even though he's making 24k, he's still basically earning minimum wage because of all the hours he has to put in.
The article also mentions a tactic used by IBM (and also by other companies I'm sure) where they reclassified certain employees from salaries to hourly but cut their base pay in order to cover expected overtime. In other words, they cut the pay of the workers so the same employees could work the same hours for the same pay only under an hourly status instead of salaried. This of course negated any gain the employees would have made by being reclassified.
I've personally seen two instances myself of companies playing fast and loose with OT requirements and labor laws:
At Gamestore, we had a strict "No OT" policy. Managers could and in fact were disciplined if they did the schedule in such a way that caused employees to run into OT. If an employee put in over 40 hours one week, the extra hours were rolled into the next weeks payroll and the schedule adjusted so that said employee would not go over 40 hours for any given week. In one instance an employee had 41.33 hrs logged on a certain week. When finalizing payroll that week, I rolled it back to 40 as directed by my manager and left a note saying 1.33 hrs of payroll needed to be added to the employee for the next week. I had no idea this was illegal until a friend told me it was.
At the sandwich shop, our genius owner implemented two rules that seemed to conflict with each other:
- All closing duties MUST be completed 100% every day, no exceptions
- All employees MUST be clocked out by 9:15 PM (the shop closed at 9)
I'm sure you can see the problem. Many days it wasn't possible to fulfill both requirements. I remember one night working with coworker K. We'd had a late rush and though I was only scheduled until 10 I stayed (on the clock) until 10:15 to help her out but after that of course I had to clock out. I watched as coworker K clocked BOTH of us out at 10:15. She ended up staying an extra THIRTY FIVE MINUTES to finish out all the closing duties. She asked me to stay and help her but I just wasn't going to do it off the clock.
I know I should have said something to the owner but he was a major league jerk who probably wouldn't have given a crap anyway.
The sad thing is my coworker K decided to stay behind because she needed the job so badly and thought the owner would fire her if she left before all the closing work was done even though we were required to clock out at 10:15.
This is completely ridiculous and it saddens to me to see companies becoming more and more creative with ways to skirt labor laws and screw employees while at the same time squeezing as much work out of them as they possibly can.
There have been multiple threads on CS about employees who have either been directly asked or strongly encouraged to work off the clock, most often in relation to a closing shift. These aren't isolated incidents. This is becoming a disturbing new trend that shows no signs of abating.
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