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To ensure full employer compliance with the
Department of Labor’s new overtime
security rules, Department of Labor officials will be meeting with members of
the human resource community this week in Michigan, Texas, North Carolina, and
Pennsylvania. To date, Department of Labor officials have held over 60
presentations, forums, and briefings in over 20 states as part of an extensive
compliance assistance outreach.
“The Department wants to ensure that workers understand their rights and
employers understand their responsibilities. The misinformation campaign against
the new overtime security rules hurts works’ rights by creating confusion. These
compliance efforts are designed to get the truth out,” said Al Robinson, Wage
and Hour Administrator.
The new rules, unveiled in April, guarantee and strengthen overtime rights for
more American workers than ever before. They modernize and clarify overtime
regulations that were first created in 1938. The old regulations were so
outdated that they created a legal nightmare. Many white-collar workers were
forced to go to court to find out if they were eligible for overtime. Overtime
complaints now generate more federal class action lawsuits than employment
discrimination complaints.
Under the 50-year-old regulations, only workers earning less than $8,060
annually were guaranteed overtime. Under the new rules, workers earning $23,660
or less are guaranteed overtime. This strengthens overtime protection for 6.7
million low-wage salaried workers, including 1.3 million salaried white collar
workers who were not entitled to overtime pay under the existing regulations.
Also, for the first time ever the overtime regulations expressly protect the
overtime rights of first responders, construction workers, blue-collar workers,
licensed practical nurses and workers paid on an hourly basis.
The Department’s new FairPay rules were published in the Federal Register and
take effect August 23, 2004. A text version is available online at
www.dol.gov/fairpay.
For further information about the Fair Labor Standards Act, visit the
Department’s Wage and Hour Division web page at
www.dol.gov here On-Line
Training Seminars are available. These seminars show DOL experts describing the
new FairPay overtime rules. The video is enhanced with a synchronized transcript
and slide presentation and is searchable by topic.
Also available on the website are Fact Sheets by exemption and by occupation.
There is also a toll-free help line opening Monday—Friday 8:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
for further information. That number is at 1-866-4USWAGE (1-866-487-9243) or TTY
1-877-889-5627.
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