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Escambia Fire Captain explains why resources might be pulled from your neighborhood | WEAR
No Days Off? Some Round-the-Clock MBTA Workers Rake in OT, Records Show – NBC Boston
As July 2019 came to a close, the top overtime earner at the MBTA began one of his busiest stretches of the month.
Electrical foreman John Devlin worked his regular daytime shift on July 31, then returned shortly before midnight to help with power problems on the Red Line, according to the transit agency's records.
Devlin worked through the night and stayed for his morning shift the next day. He picked up six more hours of overtime that day, finally heading home after 9 p.m., according to the T's records.
Chuy's to pay more than $100,000 in back wages for violating minimum wage, overtime requirements
TUCSON, Ariz. (KOLD News 13) - A news release from the U.S. Department of Labor says an investigation into Chuy's Mesquite Broiler by the Wage and Hour Division determined the restaurant must pay $114,964 in back wages and damages to 55 employees and $20,372 in civil penalties for violating minimum wage and overtime requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act.
WHD investigators found the employer failed to pay some employees for all the time that they worked. The employer violated FLSA provisions when the wages they paid failed to meet the federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour for all the hours they worked. Overtime violations resulted from the employer's practice of paying employees for only their first 40 hours each workweek by payroll check, paying for any overtime hours either in cash, or in a separate check, at straight-time rates.
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Las Vegas settles overtime pay lawsuit with firefighter | Las Vegas Review-Journal
The Las Vegas City Council agreed Wednesday to pay $560,000 to settle a lawsuit filed by a firefighter who claimed to have worked thousands of unreported or underreported overtime hours over a three-year span.
Eric Scheumann, an 18-year veteran of the Las Vegas Fire Department, said he worked more than 5,200 overtime hours, either unreported or underreported, from March 2014 through 2017.
The unpaid wages were also accrued for overtime work that were “separate and distinct” from his duties but benefited the city, according to the amended lawsuit filed in federal court May 15.
Pension of former State Police lieutenant suspended after overtime scandal conviction
The pension of one of the former state police supervisors convicted in the overtime scandal has been suspended.
He was ordered to spend two years on probation and pay $29,108.54 in restitution, Attorney General Maura Healey's office announced.
5 Investigates learned Thursday that the state retirement board voted to suspend Giulino's pension payments. A hearing officer will next determine if his retirement benefits will be forfeited.
Baltimore police racked up overtime by working long hours with little oversight in past 2 years,
As Baltimore police staffing shortages kept rising in recent years, officers kept picking up the slack, in some cases doubling their salaries. Overtime cost the department nearly $50 million in the past fiscal year alone, and the city never disclosed just how many hours each officer recorded.
A Baltimore Sun analysis of every hour of overtime paid over the past two fiscal years shows for the first time the outsize workloads logged by individual officers, often with little oversight from supervisors. One officer averaged more than 45 hours a week in overtime for an entire year on top of his regular time. Four more were paid for more than 2,000 hours of overtime, and at least 25 recorded 1,700 hours or more.
Santa Barbara City Finance Director Retires | Edhat
The City is again pulling the major wool over the eyes of all the voters in the city. How about the two jail employees that were drawing HUGE salaries for TWO YEARS while "on leave, " and now they are having the hammer dropped on them! The city runs and sets the example for the SBPD & SBSO like how they WAIT FOREVER to get it done. Boo!
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If it was a personnel issue, the City of SB can not speak of it.(period) If there was a crime committed, the City , City Attorney and possibly the D.A. must have transparency and lay it on the table...
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