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DOL Seeks to Raise Salary Threshold for White Collar Exemption to Overtime

On August 30, 2023, the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) released a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) that would significantly raise the minimum weekly Salary to qualify for one of the Fair Labor Standards Act’s (FLSA) three white-collar exemptions. If the changes go into effect, they would have a significant impact on how employers pay their employees and who is or is not entitled to overtime pay.

Specifically, the DOL proposes raising the weekly salary by over 50 percent from $684 per week to $1,059 per week (which is the equivalent to an annual salary of $55,068). The DOL also seeks to increase the annualized salary threshold for the exemption for “highly compensated employees” (HCE) from $107,432 per year to $143,988 per year. Finally, the DOL proposes automatically updating these earnings thresholds every three years.

The Proposed Rule

According to the DOL’s press release, the proposed rule seeks to accomplish four (4) primary goals:

  • Restore and extend overtime protections to low-paid salaried workers. Many low-paid salaried employees work side-by-side with hourly employees, doing the same tasks and often working over 40 hours a week. Because of outdated and out-of-sync rules, however, the DOL believes these low-paid salaried workers are not getting paid time-and-one-half for hours worked over 40 in a week. The DOL’s proposed salary increase would help ensure that more of these low-paid salaried workers receive overtime protections traditionally provided by the DOL’s rules.
     
  • Give valuable time back to workers who are not exempt under the executive, administrative or professional exempt classifications. By better identifying which employees are executive, administrative or professional employees who should be overtime exempt, the proposed rule will better ensure that those who are not exempt will gain more time with their families or receive additional compensation when working more than 40 hours a week.
     
  • Prevent a future erosion of overtime protections and ensure greater predictability. The rule proposes automatically updating the salary threshold every three years to reflect current earnings data.
     
  • Restore overtime protections for US territories. From 2004 until 2019, the DOL’s regulations ensured that for US territories where the federal minimum wage was applicable, so too was the overtime salary threshold. The DOL’s proposed rule would return to that practice and ensure that workers in the US territories subject to the federal minimum wage have the same overtime protections as other US workers.

The DOL further stated in the FAQs that “[a]utomatically updating the salary level and HCE total annual compensation requirement using the most recent data will ensure that these tests continue to accurately reflect current economic conditions.” The FAQs further noted that the proposed rule includes a provision that would allow “the Department to temporarily delay a scheduled automatic update where unforeseen economic or other conditions warrant.”

As with the most recent 2019 rule, which increased the salary and total annual compensation requirements for the EAP and HCE exemptions, the DOL has not proposed any changes to the duties tests, which outline the types of primary duties an employee must perform in order to be classified as exempt (in addition to receipt of a salary at or above the threshold).

Read more about the NPRM in the DOL’s official press release.



This post first appeared on Overtime Law Blog | FLSA Decisions, please read the originial post: here

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DOL Seeks to Raise Salary Threshold for White Collar Exemption to Overtime

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