[lbo-talk] Government tells employers how to avoid paying OT

Dwayne Monroe idoru345 at yahoo.com
Tue Jan 6 10:45:58 PST 2004


It's nice to know how very helpful our government is.

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from -

http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/printstory.hts/business/2337395

Government tells employers how to avoid paying OT

By LEIGH STROPE Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Labor Department is giving employers tips on how to avoid paying overtime to some of the 1.3 million low-income workers who would become eligible under new rules expected to be finalized early this year.

The department's advice comes even as it touts the $895 million in increased wages that it says those workers would be guaranteed from the reforms.

Among the options for employers: cut workers' hourly wages and add the overtime to equal the original salary, or raise salaries to the new $22,100 annual threshold, making them ineligible.

The department says it is merely listing well-known choices available to employers, even under current law.

"We're not saying anybody should do any of this," said Labor Department spokesman Ed Frank.

New overtime regulations were proposed in March, after employers complained they were being saddled with costly lawsuits filed by workers who claimed they were being denied overtime unfairly. But the regulations themselves have stirred controversy over how many workers would be stripped of their right to overtime pay.

The issue is being seized by Democrats in their attempt to win back Congress and the White House.

A final rule, revising the 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act, is expected to be issued in March. The act defines the types of jobs that qualify workers for time-and-a-half if they work more than 40 hours a week.

Overtime pay for the 1.3 million low-income workers has been a selling tool for the Bush administration in trying to ease concerns in Congress about millions of higher-paid workers becoming ineligible.

But the Labor Department, in a summary of its plan published last March, suggests how employers can avoid paying overtime to those newly eligible low-income workers.

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full at

http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/printstory.hts/business/2337395



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