Fair Labor Standards Act Labor Law (Minimum Wage)
Who is Covered
The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) establishes standards for minimum
wages, overtime pay, recordkeeping and child labor. These standards
affect more than 100 million workers, both full-time and part-time,
in the private and public sectors.
The Act applies to enterprises with employees who engage in interstate
commerce, produce goods for interstate commerce, or handle, sell
or work on goods or materials that have been moved in or produced
for interstate commerce. For most firms, a test of not less than
$500,000 in annual dollar volume of business applies (i.e., the
Act does not cover enterprises with less than this amount of business).
However, the Act does cover the following regardless of their dollar
volume of business: hospitals; institutions primarily engaged in
the care of the sick, aged, mentally ill or disabled who reside
on the premises; schools for children who are mentally or physically
disabled or gifted; preschools, elementary and secondary schools
and institutions of higher education; and federal, state and local
government agencies.
Employees of firms that do not meet the $500,000 annual dollar
volume test may be covered in any workweek when they are individually
engaged in interstate commerce, the production of goods for interstate
commerce, or an activity that is closely related and directly essential
to the production of such goods.
The Act covers domestic service workers, such as day workers, housekeepers,
chauffeurs, cooks, or full-time babysitters, if they receive at
least $1,300 (2001) in cash wages from one employer in a calendar
year, or if they work a total of more than eight hours a week for
one or more employers.
An enterprise that was covered by the Act on March 31, 1990, and
that ceased to be covered because of the increase in the annual
dollar volume test to $500,000, as required under the 1989 amendments
to the Act, continues to be subject to the overtime pay, child labor
and recordkeeping requirements of the Act.
The Act exempts some employees from its overtime pay and minimum
wage provisions, and it also exempts certain employees from the
overtime pay provisions alone. Because the exemptions are narrowly
defined, employers should check the exact terms and conditions for
each by contacting their local Wage and Hour Division office. These
offices are listed in most telephone directories under U.S. Government,
Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division.
The following are examples of employees exempt from both the minimum
wage and overtime pay requirements:
- Executive, administrative and professional employees (including
teachers and academic administrative personnel in elementary and
secondary schools), outside sales employees, and certain skilled
computer professionals (as defined in the Department of Labor’s
regulations);
- Employees of certain seasonal amusement or recreational establishments;
- Employees of certain small newspapers and switchboard operators
of small telephone companies;
- Seamen employed on foreign vessels;
- Employees engaged in fishing operations;
- Employees engaged in newspaper delivery;
- Farm workers employed on small farms (i.e., those that used less
than 500 “man-days” of farm labor in any calendar quarter
of the preceding calendar year);
and
- Casual babysitters and persons employed as companions to the
elderly or infirm.
The following are examples of employees exempt from the overtime
pay requirements only:
- Certain commissioned employees of retail or service establishments;
- Auto, truck, trailer, farm implement, boat or aircraft salespersons
employed by non-manufacturing establishments primarily engaged in
selling these items to ultimate purchasers;
- Auto, truck, or farm implement parts-clerks and mechanics employed
by non-manufacturing establishments primarily engaged in selling
these items to ultimate purchasers;
- Railroad and air carrier employees, taxi drivers, certain employees
of motor carriers, seamen on American vessels, and local delivery
employees paid on approved trip rate plans;
- Announcers, news editors and chief engineers of certain non-metropolitan
broadcasting stations;
- Domestic service workers who reside in their employers’
residences;
- Employees of motion picture theaters; and
- Farmworkers.
Certain employees may be partially exempt from the overtime pay
requirements. These include:
- Employees engaged in certain operations on agricultural commodities
and employees of certain bulk petroleum distributors;
- Employees of hospitals and residential care establishments which
have agreements with the employees that they will work 14-day periods
in lieu of 7-day workweeks (if the employees are paid overtime premium
pay within the requirements of the Act for all hours worked over
eight in a day or 80 in the 14-day work period, whichever is the
greater number of overtime hours); and
- Employees who lack a high school diploma, or who have not completed
the eighth grade, who spend part of their workweeks in remedial
reading or training in other basic skills that are not job-specific.
Employers may require such employees to engage in these activities
up to 10 hours in a workweek. Employers must pay normal
wages for the hours spent in such training but need not pay overtime
premium pay for training hours.
Wages and Hours of Work
The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) prescribes minimum wage and
overtime pay standards as well as recordkeeping and child labor
standards for most private and public employment, including work
conducted in the home. The Wage and Hour Division of the Employment
Standards Administration (ESA) administers this Act.
The minimum wage and overtime provisions of the FLSA require the
following from employers of covered employees who are not otherwise
exempt:
- As of September 1, 1997, employers must pay covered employees
a minimum wage of not less than $5.15 an hour. Employers may pay
employees on a piecerate basis and, under some circumstances, may
consider tips as part of wages.
- Youths under 20 years of age may be paid a minimum wage of not
less than $4.25 an hour during the first 90 consecutive calendar
days of employment with an employer. Employers may not displace
any employee to hire someone at the youth minimum wage.
- Although the Act does not place a limit on the total hours which
may be worked by an employee who is at least 16 years old, it does
require that covered employees, unless otherwise exempt, be paid
not less than one and one-half times their regular rates of pay
for all hours worked in excess of 40 in a workweek.
In addition, the FLSA sets forth special rules for working out
of the home. For example, in certain manufacturing industries, the
employer must first obtain a certification permitting homework from
the Wage and Hour Division of the Department of Labor.
As noted above, the FLSA’s child labor provisions for nonagricultural
work include restrictions on the hours of work and occupations for
youths under age 16 and restrictions on employment of 16 and 17
year olds in occupations found to be hazardous by the Department.
Other generally applicable statutes that set workplace standards
include:
- Under the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), foreign workers
may work in the U.S. ESA’s Wage and Hour Division enforces
rules pertaining to the employment of nonimmigrant workers in four
visa classifications: D-1 (Crewmembers); H-1C (Registered Nurses);
H-1B (workers employed in a “specialty occupation” or
as fashion models); and H-2A (workers employed in temporary agricultural
jobs). Under the INA, employers must verify the identity and employment
authorization of all employees, including foreign workers.
- Garnishment of wages by employers is regulated under the Consumer
Credit Protection Act. ESA’s Wage and Hour Division administers
this Act.
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