 |
|
|
|
 |
R!CH
check signal

Registered: Sep 2004
Location: potrero hill
|
|
|
Oct-17-2008 01:40
|
|
|
 |
 |
spinvinyl
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: May 2007
Location: Las Vegas, USA
|
|
|
Re: HELP! Laws for salary based employees & overtime
| quote: | Originally posted by Miss Julia
I'm not good at researching these things. Can anyone help me find out the laws for working overtime for salary based employees? I want to print it out and show it to the owner of the company I work at.
Lets say you get paid on salary (considering your work week is 40 hours per week, 5 days a week)... but you only worked about 38 hours in that one week/5 day period. Can your company legally make you come in to work a couple hours during the weekend (without extra pay) because you didn't technically work 40 hours that week (or previous weeks)?
|
Your company can't 'make' you do anything. If you are a salaried exempt employee, which most likely you are, there is no set number of hours that your pay is based on. You are expected to work however many hours it takes to complete your work.
| quote: |
Isn't the law for overtime considered anything over 40 hours in one week or anything more than 5 days in one week (even if you didn't work the full 40 hours)?
|
This if for non-salaried workers such as wage slaves or consultants that get paid on an hourly basis, or salaried workers that are non-exempt.
| quote: |
On the same note, can your company legally cut your salary if you aren't willing to come in during the weekend?
Any help/links will be appreciated! |
This issue is a little more difficult but since employment is 'at will' on both sides in California your employer can just fire you for 'no reason' at any time. They can also cut your salary, demote you, just as easily as they can promote you or increase your salary. In the tech space it's very common for ppl to work 100hr weeks when things are busy as it is common to hardly work at all in november/december when tech is slow. My advice is to be an entrepreneur and make other people work to make you rich, it's fun!
|
|
Oct-17-2008 02:10
|
|
|
 |
 |
DaveT
NEED PERSONAL COPY-EDITOR

Registered: Jul 2002
Location: San Francisco
|
|
|
If you are salary, so as long as they aren't abusing overtime, they can have you come in on any day, so as long as it's within the boundries of your job description (in detail) and the company handbook. See if either specifically says what days you are expected to work. What days. What hours.
Generally, exempt employee descriptions and handbooks of companies that have one entail that you may be required to work more than 40 hours, and may be required to work on weekends. If there is no employee description (I think employers in California _may_ be required to have a full one on hand for law purposes. The wording of your description can determine if, by law, you can be exempt or not).
If they have neither though, I would imagine it should generally be expected that you may have to work extra hours, or come on during non-normal hours, including weekends, when it's necessdary. It's the point of having exempt employees. If they would never need you for odd hours, on the weekend, or for a significant amount of overtime, they would be no reason for them to have exempt employees.
Both are the norm at my work. But, when things are slow, things are pretty laxed on you coming in a bit late or leaving early w/o using any PTO or sick hours. And on some weeks, there's just no need to work the full 40 hours. So while on average we probably still work more than 40 hours/week, it somewhat evens out when you add in the slow weeks or short days because you have errands.
Last edited by DaveT on Oct-17-2008 at 04:01
|
|
Oct-17-2008 03:54
|
|
|
 |
 |
R!CH
check signal

Registered: Sep 2004
Location: potrero hill
|
|
|
Oct-17-2008 04:30
|
|
|
 |
 |
|  |
All times are GMT. The time now is 14:46.
Forum Rules:
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not edit your posts
|
HTML code is ON
vB code is ON
[IMG] code is ON
|
|
|
|
|
|
Contact Us - return to tranceaddict
Powered by: Trance Music & vBulletin Forums
Copyright ©2000-2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Privacy Statement / DMCA
|