The New Overtime Pay Rules: How to Have a Smooth Transition

Untitled design (28) (1)

Last month, May 2016, the Department of Labor (DOL) issued final rules changing who will receive overtime pay for hours worked beyond the standard 40-hour workweek. Effective December 1, 2016, these rules will affect the majority of employers. Employers need to prepare and be knowledgeable concerning these upcoming changes. Below is an overview of how companies will be affected, the potential impact the new rules could have on people, and ways to have a smoother transition.

Non-exempt vs. exempt

To make it simple, the main change in the overtime rules is the threshold that someone must be over to not have to get paid overtime. Until December 1, 2016, “non-exempt” employees are those who earn $455 a week ($23,660/year) or less, and employers must pay them at least the hourly minimum wage plus time and a half for all hours beyond forty. Employees who earn above this threshold and satisfy other requirements are “exempt” and are not required to be given overtime pay. However, this threshold will be lifted substantially in December; employees that earn $913 per week ($47,476 annually) or less will be required to be given overtime pay. For more details, check out the U.S. Department of Labor page on the Final Rule.

Changes employers will have to make

For employees whose salaries will fall below the new minimum, to comply with the new changes employers will generally either have to raise employees’ salaries to the new requirement, or reclassify the affected employees as non-exempt, convert their salary to an hourly wage, and pay them overtime for time worked beyond 40 hours/week.

It will usually make more sense to reclassify employees as non-exempt if their salaries are closer to the current minimum, especially if they rarely work overtime. However, when calculating the cost of raising employees’ salaries to the new minimum, be sure to take bonuses, incentive payments or commissions into account; 10% of these payments can count towards the minimum requirement.

Image from https://www.dol.gov/featured/overtime

Potential impact

These changes in overtime pay will inevitably have some interesting effects on employers, employees, and their interactions. Employers will have to have conversations with their employees that switch from exempt to non-exempt about how to manage their work hours; people who haven’t had to worry about hours in years will have to start keeping track again.

There will likely arise situations in which some members of a team are above the new threshold and some are below, but managers will still need to ensure the same team work output without costing the company more money. Naturally, the salaried employees’ workload will increase in order to avoid having to pay the non-exempt employees overtime. This will result in everyone being able to see who is above the threshold and who is below, increasing pay transparency. Hard feelings could arise; people above the threshold could resent not getting paid overtime like some of their coworkers. In the meantime, people below could get mad about having a lower status than those above. Unfortunately, there is a stigma around having to track hours that might make the newly non-exempt employees feel like they are in a way going backwards in their status at work.

These potential conflicts are something to be aware of in advance. These changes will require more communication and, likely, increased transparency.

Tips for a smooth transition

Take the time needed to prepare your company for these changes and make the transition as smooth as possible.

 

Exit mobile version