Wage and Hour Posting Requirements in the Remote Workplace

For many who are working remotely, it feels like decades since they’ve strolled down to the break room where they can view many notices required by various employment laws such as the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”), the Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”), the Service Contract Act (“SCA”), and the Employee Polygraph Protection Act (“EPPA”). A recent bulletin issued by the Department of Labor provides much needed guidance about how employers may use electronic posting to fulfill their posting obligations in the remote working world.

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Do You Hear Me Now – GAO Studies Communications Problems Arising From Service Contract Act Enforcement

In October of this year, the Government Accountability Office (“GAO”) published a study titled Federal Contracting – Actions Needed to Improve Department of Labor’s Enforcement of Service Worker Wage Protections (Oct. 2020). The GAO report has offered up some interesting factual nuggets on SCA investigations along with six rather bland recommendations to improve enforcement.

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Avoiding a Bermuda Triangle: Preservation of Subcontractor Pass-Through Claims

The triangular relationship between the Government, prime contractors, and their subcontractors provides fertile ground for disputes to arise. How parties allocate the risk of losses caused by Government acts can cause a claim to disappear. The recent ASBCA decision in Appeal of JAAAT Technical Services, LLC, ASBCA No. 62373 (Oct. 26, 2020) reminds us how to prevent claims from disappearing in a contractual Bermuda Triangle.

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The Wage and Hour Grinch -- Holiday Gift Cards and the FLSA

If you want to give an employee a holiday gift card, and exclude the value from the regular rate of pay, it would be prudent not to announce the gift in advance and perhaps even make the award of the gift card conditioned upon “unique or extraordinary efforts” or for “challenging or stressful situations”, or for a “worker-of-the-month” bonus.

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Ch-ch-ch Changes? What the Transition Could Mean for Government Contracts and Wage and Hour Policy

Regardless of the ultimate outcome of the electoral process, government contractors wonder whether there will be wholesale changes for them, particularly with respect to their employment policies. Well, as with most things, the unsatisfactory answer is yes and no. Here are some examples of what might be on the horizon.

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Transcript of President Abraham Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address (1865)

“…. insurgent agents were in the city seeking to destroy it without war -- seeking to dissolve the Union, and divide effects, by negotiation. Both parties deprecated war; but one of them would make war rather than let the nation survive; and the other would accept war rather than let it perish. And the war came.”

— Lincoln, Second Inaugural

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A Modest Wage-Hour Proposal: A Paid Day Off for Democracy

Declaring Election Day a national holiday isn’t exactly a novel idea. While the 2020 Presidential election may be the most participated U.S. election in recent memory, more can always be done to remove the obstacles faced by each voter. Accordingly, we make a modest proposal that Election Day be made a mandatory paid holiday with guaranteed time off to vote. Let’s tip a glass of cider to a new Democracy Day holiday!

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Are Part-Time Executive Trainers Exempt Learned Professionals? DOL says - Yes, but No

The Department of Labor recently issued an FLSA opinion letter that addressed whether highly educated part-time executive trainers are exempt learned professionals. The opinion provides a useful reminder that, while there are many nuances that complicate the assessment of FLSA exemptions, the analysis always requires the consideration of duties, method of payment, and the amount of pay. Hence, the answer to whether a particular employee might be exempt often may be yes—but no.

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Wasting Away -- DOL Opines That Oil Waste Services Company Has a Retail or Service Concept

On August 31, 2020 the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) published an official Opinion Letter regarding the new “retail concept” regulations expanding the reach of the overtime exemption of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) based on new rules it had promulgated on May 19, 2020. DOL found that a previously ineligible industry — oil field services/waste management — was now eligible for the Section 7(i) overtime exemption to the FLSA. Thus, DOL has lit the way for more enterprises to use his overtime exemption.

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Keeping Track of Time: DOL Issues "Reasonable Diligence" Guidance for Monitoring Teleworking Hours

The Department of Labor (“DOL”) recently issued guidance regarding an employer’s obligation under the FLSA to track the number of hours of compensable work performed by employees who are teleworking. Essentially, employers are required to exercise reasonable diligence in monitoring work hours without discouraging employees from reporting their legimate hours worked. Read on to learn our take on this new guidance.

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The Silly Season in Government Contracting Arrives Early—The Rush Is on to Issue Executive Orders, New Rules, and to Bring Judicial Challenges

The Trump Administration isn’t necessarily a lame duck, but it sure is acting like it by rushing employment law regulations and Executive Orders into place like this is their last chance. We have seen this show before, and it usually doesn’t end that well.

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Choosing NAICS Codes: In the Size of the Beholder

A Contracting Officer’s choice of what industry classification (aka NAICS code) applies to a contract can determine whether a business is or is not eligible to compete for a small business set aside contract. It all comes down to the size standards applicable to the chosen category. Read on to learn more about the implications of such classifications and whether you can do something about a bad choice.

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