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Old 02-06-2011, 09:13 AM   #1
TheSpecialist
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Salary Labor Laws
By R. E. Peters, eHow Contributor
updated: December 22, 2010

Federal labor laws for salaried employees do offer some protections. The minimum wage and overtime requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) apply to all employees who come within that law's coverage, whether the employees are paid hourly or they are on a salary. The "white collar" exemption to the FLSA does exclude some salaried employees from the law's protections, but only if the employees' work duties meet the tests listed in the FLSA and accompanying regulations. The National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) does not refer to salaried employees, but does specify that professional employees come within the coverage of the federal collective bargaining law. The NLRA does not require employers to bargain collectively with supervisory employees.

Fair Labor Standards Act: Minimum Wage
The Fair Labor Act is a federal wage law that sets the federal requirements for employee wages and work hours. The FLSA requires employers to pay their employees the specified federal minimum wage, although some states require a minimum wage higher than the federal level. Although the FLSA's minimum wage requirement is expressed as an hourly rate, the law does not exclude employees who are paid in some other way. If employees are paid a salary, or at at piecework rate, or if employees' pay includes tips, they are still entitled to receive pay that is the equivalent of the FLSA's minimum hourly wage rate. Labor laws for salaried employees are often different than those that apply to hourly employees.
FLSA: Overtime Pay
The FLSA also states that employees must be paid overtime at the rate of at least

1 1/2 times the employees' regular pay rate for all hours worked in excess of 40 hours in a work week. The regular rate of pay for salaried employees is calculated by dividing the salary by the total number of work hours for which the salary provides compensation. For example, if an employee receives a weekly salary of $450 and works 45 hours per week, the employee's regular rate of pay is $10 per hour. In addition to the weekly salary, the employee must receive overtime pay (an additional $5 per hour) for the five overtime hours in the work week.
White Collar Exemption
The FLSA exempts certain "white collar" workers from the federal minimum wage and overtime labor laws. Exempt from FLSA coverage are executive, administrative, professional and outside sales employees, as well as some skilled computer employees. For the exemption to apply, the employee generally must be paid on a salary basis at a rate of at least $455 per week. The employee's actual work duties must also meet all the tests listed in the FLSA and the accompanying regulations issued by the U.S. Department of Labor. For example, an exempt executive employee must not only be paid on a salary basis, but must also have work duties that involve managing a business, directing the work of other employees and having the authority to hire or fire employees. It is often difficult for salaried employees to receive overtime pay.
Highly Compensated Employees
The U.S. Department of Labor revised the regulations for the FLSA's white collar exemption in 2004 to provide a streamlined exemption test for employees who are paid on a salary or fee basis, and earn at least $100,000 per year. Such highly compensated employees are exempt from the overtime labor law if their duties meet at least one of the work duty tests listed in the regulations for exempt executive, administrative or professional employees.
No FLSA Requirements
Although the Fair Labor Act contains specific minimum wage and overtime requirements, the law does not set federal labor standards on a number of employment issues for either hourly workers or salaried employees. For example, the FLSA's provisions do not require premium pay for working on weekends or at night, do not set a maximum number of work hours per week, and do not address issues such as severance pay, vacations, sick leave, lunch breaks or pay increases.
National Labor Relations Act
The National Labor Relations Act is the U.S. labor law that governs collective bargaining between an employer and its employees' bargaining representative. Supervisory employees are expressly excluded from the NLRA's coverage. In other words, the NLRA does not require an employer to bargain with a representative of its supervisory employees. The NLRA's definition of a supervisory employee does not refer to whether the employee is paid on an hourly or salary basis. Instead, a supervisor is defined as an individual who has the authority to hire, fire or discipline other employees.
Professional Employees
Professional employees do come within the coverage of the NLRA. The definition of professional employee in the NLRA does not turn on whether an employee is paid on a salary or hourly basis. Instead, the professional employee definition is based on the employee's work duties, as well as the type of training and education the employee has received. The NLRA states that professional employees and nonprofessional employees will not be placed in the same unit or group for bargaining collectively with their employer unless a majority of the professional employees vote to be included in such a collective bargaining unit.


Read more: Salary Labor Laws | eHow.com Salary Labor Laws | eHow.com

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Old 02-06-2011, 09:17 AM   #2
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BTW the NLRA which covers all employees both Union and Non Union was brought to you by the Labor Unions.

No need to thank us, but just don't hate.


If you want to hate, hate on the CEO's making far more money than they will ever need....

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Old 02-08-2011, 06:21 AM   #3
Jim in CT
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TheSpecialist View Post
If you want to hate, hate on the CEO's making far more money than they will ever need....
Wrong again, because you don't get economics 101.

I agree that CEO compensation is insane. But CEOs in the private sector, unlike unionized employees in the public sector, cannot force anyone to absorb those costs.

If Bill Gates pays himself too much, the marketplace will respond by buying from his competitors. So Gates, unlike public unions, is only getting from his customers that which his customers freely choose to give him. He can't force his costs on anybody. Bill Gates isn't hurting anybody, the free marketplace does not allow him to do so. (On a side note, what he's doing is creating thousands of good jobs, and creating wealth for his millions of shareholders. He is also taxed at the highest rate, which reduces the tax burden on the rest of us.)

Taxpayers don't have the luxury of buying from someone else. Last time I checked, I don't have the option of not paying the portion of my taxes that I think are ridiculously excessive.

By what right do public unionized employees forcibly confiscate from taxpayers, revenue to cover costs that no one in the private sector would ever be williung to pay?

We have buried this issue for decades, but the check has arrived at our table, and it's a big check. We have elected politicians who are much more concerned with getting re-elected than they are concerned with solving tough problems, and it's about to blow up in our faces.

Or do you union guys not agree that we are facing a debt crisis, due in large part to your benefits?

I want to be clear, I do not hate cops and teachers. If my property taxes are raised so that cops and teachers don't have to live in trailers and eat cat food, that's one thing. If my property taxes are raised so that cops and teachers and cops can cling to insane, antiquated benefits that dwarf anything available in the private sector, that's something else. And no rational person can suggest that the latter isn't exactly what's happening.

In the private sector, we live with 401(k)s, and we pay, on average, 35% - 40% of our healthcare costs (the company pays the rest). And we all survive. There's no reason why public employees cannot do the same. They obviously won't LIKE making the switch, but that doesn't mean it's not the right thing to do.

I have never heard of anyone who had to sell their house because of Bill Gates. Lots of people are forced out of their homes by property tax hikes.

Last edited by Jim in CT; 02-08-2011 at 06:42 AM..
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