The FLSA requires that covered workers be paid time and one-half their regular rate for all hours worked over 40 in a workweek unless an exemption applies. The federal law provides several exemptions for white collar workers. If certain criteria are met, employers may not have to pay overtime to executive, administrative, professional, computer and outside sales employees, according to a fact sheet from the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL).
Employers must consider both salary and job duties in determining whether workers are exempt, sources previously told HR Dive . All of the exemptions except the outside sales exemption require employees to make more than $684 per week, according to changes in the FLSA salary threshold requirements that went into effect earlier this year. Once the salary threshold is met, the employee's job duties are considered.
Quite a lot has been going on:
Here are the City of Portland employees who were paid the most | kgw.com
PORTLAND, Ore. — Last year, 2,210 City of Portland employees received six-figure incomes, when regular pay, overtime and other earnings were all tallied.
Portland Police had by far the most six-figure earners — 726 receiving a combined $97.2 million last year.
Thus, unnamed police officers would have bumped 16 employees out of the top 50 if their names were revealed. Some of the highest-paid police employees earned a lot of overtime, a category that is likely even more substantial for 2020. Last year, it accounted for about 12 percent of six-figure earnings.
USPS Ordered to Resume Overtime Pay, Late-Day Mail Deliveries
Paterson NJ mayor, City Council spar on overtime payments
PATERSON — City Council members are raising objections to about $16,500 worth of overtime payments made to three employees in the business administrator's office during the past month.
Councilman Michael Jackson said the payments showed overtime in the administrator's office was "running amok" and said there was "a lack of oversight."
Business Administrator Kathleen Long asserted that members of her staff put in many extra hours to craft the city's current budget, meeting with department supervisors during the day and compiling numbers at night.
Quite a lot has been going on:
Atlanta police overtime pay doubles as a result of protests | Georgia | thecentersquare.com
Nyamekye Daniel has been a journalist for four years. She was the managing editor for the South Florida Media Network and a staff writer for The Miami Times. Daniel's work has also appeared in the Sun-Sentinel, Miami Herald and The New York Times.
More than 1,000 D.C.
More than 1,000 D.C. police officers, sergeants and detectives are suing the District, alleging they have been shorted pay while working overtime during the pandemic.
The suit, filed this week in federal court in Washington, is organized by the police union, but because it does not involve a grievance dealing with the contract, 1,053 officers are listed as individual plaintiffs.
The lawsuit does not say how much money police are seeking; the attorney for the officers said they are awaiting payroll records from the District to determine the number of hours of overtime each officer worked. Officers worked an abundance of overtime during periods of unrest this summer.
Proposition 22 results: California votes on Uber, Lyft driver rules
California voters were deciding Tuesday on Proposition 22, a hard-fought and expensive ballot initiative that would exempt gig companies like Uber and Lyft from a new state law requiring them to treat workers as employees.
Gig companies were a primary political target of AB 5, but they've fought state and city attorneys over whether they should have to comply. A Superior Court Judge ruled in August that Uber and Lyft must immediately switch to treating drivers as employees. That prompted the app companies to threaten "hundreds of thousands" of job cuts and the suspension of operations in California until voters decide the fate of Proposition 22. A shutdown was averted by an appellate court ruling.
Baltimore to settle a dozen Gun Trace Task Force lawsuits for nearly $2.5 million - Baltimore Sun
Baltimore attorney Latoya Francis-Williams said these settlements are long overdue considering the police department was handing out awards to the officers even as they robbed people on the streets. Francis-Williams holds city officials responsible, saying they turned a blind eye to such conduct.
* * *
Her client, Garfield Redd, is set to receive the biggest settlement: $500,000. Redd was sentenced to 20 years in federal prison in 2007 for possessing a firearm as a convicted felon. The money resolves a federal lawsuit he filed four months ago in which he says police planted the gun on him. Redd remains in prison.
Happening on Twitter
Just learned that Sleepy Joe Biden is campaigning in Pennsylvania with Lady Gaga, a proud member of "Artists Agains… https://t.co/gRDyplxURJ realDonaldTrump (from Washington, DC) Mon Nov 02 06:51:42 +0000 2020
The Supreme Court decision on voting in Pennsylvania is a VERY dangerous one. It will allow rampant and unchecked c… https://t.co/t4dJEdsgPp realDonaldTrump (from Washington, DC) Tue Nov 03 01:02:36 +0000 2020
Landing in Scranton, Pennsylvania! realDonaldTrump (from Washington, DC) Mon Nov 02 19:24:45 +0000 2020
Why is the Attorney General of Pennsylvania openly INTERFERING in the election. This is unconscionable. He MUST rec… https://t.co/ZRu7wQKtMM dbongino (from Florida, USA) Mon Nov 02 17:32:24 +0000 2020
No comments:
Post a Comment