US Labor Department Announces FLSA Amnesty Program

What if I told you that conducting a wage-and-hour audit and discovering aFair Labor Standards Act违反可以节省你的金钱?

Uh, Eric. Is the air up therein the cloudgetting thin?”

Hear me out.

The PAID program

On Tuesday, the U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Divison (WHD)announced“a new nationwide pilot program, the Payroll Audit Independent Determination (PAID) program, which facilitates resolution of potential overtime and minimum wage violations under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)”

Here’s how it works:

  1. You audit your pay practices;
  2. You discover that you accidentally violated the FLSA (e.g., violations based on alleged “off-the-clock” work, failures to pay overtime at one-and-one-half times the regular rate of pay, or misclassification of employees as exempt from the FLSA’s minimum wage and overtime requirements);
  3. You self-report to the WHD;
  4. You pay the back wages that you owe to the employees; and
  5. Youdon’thave to pay liquidated damages (100% of the back wages owed) or attorneys’ fees to the employees.

What’s the alternative?

  1. You don’t audit (or you sweep known problems under the rug);
  2. You may get blindsided by an FLSA collective action;
  3. You pay back wages;
  4. You pay liquidated damages and the plaintiffs’ attorney’s fees; and
  5. You pay your lawyers to defend a lawsuit in which you have no chance of success.

Oh, I’ll take what’s behind door number 1, please.

But, just to be clear, the first option is not available: (a) if the employer acts in bad faith, (b) to moot existing wage and hour litigation, or (c) if the employer is a repeat offender. Plus, the relief the PAID program affords only extends to whatever the employer self-reports, nothing more.

For more on the PAID Program, check outthis linkandthis link.

Proactive employers, read on

Hey folks, I know the idea of conducting a wage-and-hour audit is right up there withchugging sour milk.But, if you want what’s behind door number two, I know many lawyers who would love to get rich defending the inevitable wage-and-hour action.

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Like me.

The reality is that, if you’re like most businesses in America, you probably have a wage-and-hour violation lurking in your workplace and you don’t even know it.

Now isn’t the time to sit idly while the government works out the details of the PAID Program. Many of myFisherBroylespartners across the country and I have experience conducting wage-and-hour audits. (For example, I have done them on both a state and federal level.)

If you’d like to find out more about how we can help,drop me a line to discuss.

Or don’t. This isn’t communist Russia.

Unless, of course, that’s where you live. In which case, I’m not sure why you stuck with me through the first 460 words of this post.

You know that scientist in the action movie who has all the right answers if only the government would just pay attention? Eric B. Meyer, Esq. gets companies HR-compliant before the action sequence. Serving clients nationwide, Eric is a Partner atFisherBroyles, LLP, which is the largest full-service, cloud-based law firm in the world, with approximately 210 attorneys in 21 offices nationwide. Eric is also a volunteer EEOC mediator, a paid private mediator, and publisher of The Employer Handbook (www.TheEmployerHandbook.com), which is pretty much the best employment law blog ever. That, and he's been quoted in the British tabloids. #Bucketlist.

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