Alert: Update on Publication of the New FLSA Overtime Regulations
The final overtime rule is edging closer to release: the U.S. Department of Labor (USDOL) has sent its final changes for determining which workers are eligible for overtime pay to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for an administrative review. Procedurally, this is the final step before a new regulation is published as a final rule. OMB’s final review could take several months or just a few weeks. Once complete, the final rule will be published in the Federal Register and take effect within 60 days of publication.
Commentators believe that the final rule
will work its way quickly through OMB and most likely be published by July 7,
meaning it would take effect on Labor Day, Sept. 5. That has obvious symbolic
meaning. Alternatively, considering other significant events taking place this
fall, if the rule is published on September 2 -- the Friday before Labor Day --
it will take effect on November 1, the day prior to Election Day.
Although the proposed regulations were issued in July 2015, the differences between those proposed regulations and the final rule won't be made public until the final rule is actually issued.
According to the Unified Agenda and Regulatory
Plan, published in November 2015 by OMB, the earliest the final rule could be
released would be in July. Timing is important. Under the Congressional Review
Act, a joint resolution from both houses of Congress and the President can undo
laws and rules passed during the final 60 legislative days of the previous
Congress. In other words, the Obama Administration must work quickly so that
the regulations take effect before President Obama leaves office and to protect
the new regulations from being overridden, if a Republican wins the White
House.
Employers ought to be planning now for implementation of the new
regulations. Among the changes likely to be reflected in the new regulations
when they are published include:
- The salary threshold under which employees would
be required to receive overtime pay (regular hourly rate x 1.5 for all hours
worked beyond 40 hours in a given workweek) would be the 40th percentile of
average weekly earnings in the U.S. The USDOL has projected that the 40th
percentile weekly wage in the final rule will be $970, or $50,440 per year for a
full-time employee. This represents a significant jump from where it currently
stands -- $23,660.
- This new salary-level threshold will be annually
updated, based either on the percentile or indexed to inflation.
- For highly compensated employees (considered exempt without regard to any duties test), the new annual salary threshold will be $122,148, which is up from the current level of $100,000.
It remains to be seen whether changes in the
applicable duties test will be incorporated into the new regulations. No
proposed changes to the duties test were reflected in the proposed rule
published in 2015.
To avoid paying overtime to employees who would need
to be reclassified as nonexempt, employers might consider increasing the
employees’ salaries to a level above $50,440. Alternatively, employers might
considering reducing the hours of employees who would be newly non-exempt and
eligible to receive overtime. A third option is to adjust the hourly rates of
newly non-exempt employees downward so that, when their additional overtime pay
is considered, their overall weekly compensation remains unchanged. Most
employers will implement some combination of these tactical options in order to
control the financial implications of the new regulations.