Posts in Wage & Hour
What Happened Here? DOL finds “Widespread Violations” of Government Contract Labor and Contract Violations

The Wage and Hour Division (“WHD”) of the US Department of Labor (“DOL”) announced last week that it recovered “$1.5 million dollars of back wages and damages for more than 400 workers” working for employers that had “federally funded” contracts. The announcement doesn’t convey the underlying cause of this multi-contractor compliance breakdown—the scale of which actually is extremely rare. I sure would like to know what happened here.

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A Thumb on the Scale? Department of Labor Establishes “Partnership” with Union

The Wage and Hour Division (“WHD”) of the US Department of Labor (“DOL”) announced last week a three-year “collaborative agreement” with a union to educate workers and identify labor law violations. Is this an unfair thumb on the scale? Hopefully not, but this agreement arguably erodes the degree of independence that should accompany the Government’s enforcement of employment laws.

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Back Up the Truck – Mandatory Project Labor Agreements For Federal Construction Projects Are Here!

New rules are now issued and Project Labor Agreements (“PLAs”), which are pre-hire collective bargaining agreements with one or more labor organizations that establishes the terms and conditions of employment will be mostly mandatory for federal government construction projects of $35M or more.

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DOL Finalizes New Independent Contractor Rule: But, Really, it’s Just the Same Old Smell Test

The Department of Labor (“DOL”) has finalized its long-awaited “new” rule that really just restores the decades-old approach to assessing whether a worker is an employee covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act or if they’re a mere independent contractor. Truly this is little more than the same old smell test that employers have lived with for ages.

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Application of the Davis-Bacon Act By “Operation of Law” Is Here

New Davis-Bacon Act (“DBA”) regulations went into effect at the end of October 2023. Among other things, they purport to make the DBA clauses and wage determinations apply by operation of law. But they also provide for price adjustments for contractors. Exactly how it plays out is yet to be determined, but it might be prudent for the contractor to take any omitted clauses or wage determination problem slowly, and not just jump ahead into supposed compliance only to find out they have a fight to get a price adjustment.

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Deep in the Heart of Texas: Injunction Bars Federal Contractor Minimum Wage

Last week a Texas judge rejected President Biden’s Executive Order that requires federal contractors to pay a minimum wage when they are working on or in connection with a covered federal contract. This is the latest installment in the ongoing battle over the President’s use of Executive Orders to direct federal contractors to adopt workplace rules under the federal Procurement Act.

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Who Will Be the Bag Holder -- the TPAs or the Employers -- for the Admin Fees DOL Recently Disallowed For Davis-Bacon Act and Maybe SCA H&W plans?

DOL’s new DBRA regulations has some clarifications and guidance as to its future treatment of benefit plan administrative expenses charged by third party administrators to various DBRA and SCA H&W plans. Get ready for more enforcement actions by DOL to disallow plan expenses and for more disputes between employers and TPAs over the cost of such fees.

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