The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) authorizes the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) to investigate, gather data, interview employees, enter and inspect work sites and review records as well as to gather data about hours worked and compensation paid. It can be quite intrusive; however, cooperation is certainly preferable to a perp walk. Read on to learn more about how an employer found himself arrested by the U.S. Marshal.
Read MoreWorkers don’t get to pick whether they should be classified as independent contractors or as employees. The burden is on the employer to do the classification analysis. And that burden will just get tighter when the Biden Administration proposed regulations get finalized.
Read MoreThis blog will serve as my final blog at Abrahams Wolf-Rodda. I have accepted a position with another law firm located in Washington D.C. in the Labor and Employment practice group. Thank you to all of the readers of my blogs. By Kirby M. Rousseau.
Read MoreBack in August 2022, I was puzzled by the small annual increase in the Service Contract Act (“SCA”) health and welfare rate which jumped by only 5%. At that time raging inflation was exceeding 8%-9%. Now I think I have some idea of what was going on. The CPI was overestimating the health insurance inflation.
Read MoreMany (if not most) of the myriad laws, regulations, and executive orders that apply to federal contractors each come with their own requirements to notify employees of the existence of these laws and their rights under them. For every rule, there’s a poster. News flash: they change - All. The. Time.
Read MoreFreddy’s back! DOL is tinkering with the independent contractor rules yet again. And one Philadelphia medical staffing company had to cough up $9.3M to cover the back wages, liquidated damages, and civil money penalties for going to far.
Read MoreDOL publishes a Notice on the Federal Register listing the new Federal Contractor Minimum Wage rates starting January 1, 2023.
Read MoreNo Davis-Bacon Act price adjustment claims are allowed if the contract has a clause that requires wage and fringe benefit escalations be priced into the option year quotes.
Read MoreUnder Executive Orders issued by President Biden, and before him, President Obama, federal contractors must pay a minimum wage to their nonexempt employees who work on or “in connection with” many federal contracts. The “in connection with” aspect of these Orders can trip up even seasoned federal contractors.
Read MoreOn June 23, 2022, the U.S. Department of Labor issued its annual memo that sets health and welfare (“H&W”) fringe benefit rates for Service Contract Act (“SCA”) covered contracts. Over the last few years, the rates have barely moved an inch. This year, the rates are going up by about 4%.
Read MoreSometimes the wage and hour regulations cannot be taken literally. Instead, you need to figure out the regulatory intent. For example, the SCA and DBA regulations bar the employer from claiming a credit for paying social security, worker’s comp and unemployment premiums. These tax like payments are not fringe benefits. But other federal and state mandated benefit plans like Obamacare, Romneycare in Massachusetts, holidays, and leave are fringe benefits and can be credited towards compliance.
Read MoreA recent Maryland case demonstrates how state law can supplant federal law with respect to wage and hour obligations. Federal contractors must be vigilant to avoid getting caught in this sometimes quite tangled web.
Read MoreRecently, DOL has published a record of employers who have been caught violating the Wage and Hour or Occupational Safety and Health Administration laws. There is now a searchable data base that allows the public to search for violators by company name.
Read MoreCareful drafting of CBAs, particularly on service contracts, should include some attention to language expressly making any state mandated fringe benefits into a CBA contractual requirement. At least that would be prudent for a contractor looking to get a price adjustment for state mandated benefits.
Read MoreLawyers and law firms too get picked on by DOL for FLSA violations — usually misclassification, working time and overtime problems. Just because you have a law degree doesn’t mean you understand the law.
Read MoreThe SCA rules for carry forward of leave turn logic and worker rights on their head. It is like Alice in Wonderland.
Read MoreA U.S. District Court judge holds that a contractor had not received final agency action to allow an Administrative Procedure Act suit. Thus a challenge to DOL’s determination that the Service Contract Act applies to cooperative agreements is not ripe for appeal.
Read MoreFalsifying payroll records, paying bonuses instead of premium overtime pay, and being a general scofflaw gets you double damages and civil money penalties. No Virginia, crime does not pay.
Read MoreThe Department of Labor is set to publish a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking proposing the largest overhaul to Davis-Bacon Act regulations in 40 years.
Read MoreUnder the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”), employers owe a minimum wage to their employees for all hours worked. This blog examines how that minimum wage obligation can be satisfied.
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