Groundhog’s Day for Employers: The Same Mistakes Over and Over and Over…

Mintz - Employment Viewpoints
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I still consider Groundhog’s Day not only a great comedy, but also a great movie.  Twenty-two years ago, the late Harold Ramis graced us with a tale about Phil Connors, a Pittsburgh TV weatherman, who finds himself repeating the same day over and over while on assignment covering Groundhog’s Day in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania.  (Spoiler alert) Connors, played by fan-favorite Bill Murray, escapes the time loop only after figuring out that the key to freedom lies with self-improvement and acts of kindness.

As the actual Groundhog’s Day neared this year, I thought about this movie and how sometimes I feel like I am in it when it comes to addressing certain employment law issues.

Nowhere is this truer then when it comes to the issue of overtime.  I can’t tell you how many times I have found myself in a conversation about an employment law issue unrelated to overtime, where all of a sudden the phrase “salaried non-exempts” is causally mentioned.  This always raises a red flag for me, and I will politely interject to ask whether they pay those individuals overtime, to which they typically respond (and confidently so): “we pay them a salary, so we don’t have to pay them overtime.”  It always amazes me that even some of the most sophisticated HR departments miss this issue again and again.  No, no, no – you must pay overtime to your non-exempt employees even if they are salaried.  And so it goes…

Then, coincidentally, just before Groundhog’s Day, I received a call from Law360, which was writing an article that would essentially test employers on their employment law acumen.  They wanted to know what issues I am consistently dealing with.  Of course, the salaried non-exempt issue was the first thing that came to mind.  It served as a perfect opportunity to try and highlight this issue to a larger audience.  I would encourage you therefore, to read the resulting article “10 Tricky Questions to Test Your Employment Law Savvy,” which addresses the aforementioned salaried non-exempt overtime issue along with several other issues I highlighted: (1) required payment of overtime even where unauthorized; (2) extended leave as a potential reasonable accommodation where FMLA leave has expired; and (3) following through with discipline in the face of a disability disclosure.  These four issues, along with several other issues highlighted in the article by other esteemed employment lawyers, repeatedly trip up employers believe it or not.

 

DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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