Obama’s Overtime Rule Tried
at IBM, and It Didn’t Work, by James
Sherk / @JamesBSherk / May 19, 2016 / 276
comments
Juggling work and family life is
hard. On Wednesday the Labor Department made it even harder for millions of
salaried workers. The administration’s new overtime regulations will
effectively turn them into hourly employees.
The regulation won’t increase their
earnings, but it will greatly reduce their control over their schedules. The
Fair Labor Standards Act requires employers to pay hourly workers overtime for
working over 40 hours a week.
But the Fair Labor Standards Act
regulations exempt many salaried employees. This makes sense: Salaried
employees get paid to do a particular job, not work particular hours. They also
generally have more control over when and where they work.
Many salaried employees have the
flexibility to do things like take off early in the afternoon to attend a
child’s soccer game, and then finish their work from home in the evening when
their child has gone to sleep. Similarly, millions of salaried employees
telecommute at least once a month.
The Labor Department just restricted this flexibility. On Wednesday it raised the overtime
“threshold” test for salaried employees to $47,500 a year. All salaried employees
making less than that—no matter how advanced their job duties—now qualify for
overtime. Their employers must pay time and a half when they work more than 40
hours a week.
On the surface this seems appealing.
Why shouldn’t workers get extra pay for working longer hours? However, economic
research shows that is unlikely to happen. Most employers respond to overtime
laws by reducing
base pay an offsetting amount. Combining new
overtime pay and lower salaries, most workers will earn almost exactly what
they made before.
This is what happened when IBM
reclassified 7,000 salaried and technical-support workers as overtime-eligible
in a lawsuit settlement. It also cut their base pay by 15 percent, leaving total
earnings unaffected. Even liberal
supporters of the rule concede that the “wage
offer reflects expected overtime hours” and so there will be “no change at the
margin” in pay.
The rule will change how employees
work. Overtime-eligible salaried employees must carefully log their hours. Each
time they respond to a work e-mail, take a work phone call, or do any other
work from home, their employer must track and pay them for it. If they do not,
they risk getting sued. Trial lawyers filed 8,800
Fair Labor Standards Act lawsuits in
2015, many of them for employers who did not compensate overtime-eligible
employees for work done remotely.
In order to avoid lawsuits, many
employers deny flexible work arrangements to overtime-eligible employees.
Virtually all employers who permit remote work and flexible work arrangements
allow overtime-exempt employees to use them.
Only
about half allow workers covered by overtime
regulations to do so. As the head of human resources for Pitney Bowes explained
to reporters, the company turned down requests
from overtime-eligible staff to work from home because: “You just don’t take
the [legal] risk.”
The Labor Department says this regulation
will help workers. It is much more likely to make balancing work and family
even more difficult.
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