This
fact sheet provides
general information
concerning what constitutes
compensable time under
the FLSA.
The Act requires that
employees must receive
at least the minimum
wage and may not be
employed for more than
40 hours in a week without
receiving at least one
and one-half times their
regular rates of pay
for the overtime hours.
The amount employees
should receive cannot
be determined without
knowing the number of
hours worked.
Definition of "Employ"
By
statutory definition
the term "employ"
includes "to suffer
or permit to work."
The workweek ordinarily
includes all time during
which an employee is
necessarily required
to be on the employer's
premises, on duty or
at a prescribed work
place. "Workday",
in general, means the
period between the time
on any particular day
when such employee commences
his/her "principal
activity" and the
time on that day at
which he/she ceases
such principal activity
or activities. The workday
may therefore be longer
than the employee's
scheduled shift, hours,
tour of duty, or production
line time.
Application of Principles
Employees
"Suffered or Permitted"
to work: Work not requested
but suffered or permitted
to be performed is work
time that must be paid
for by the employer.
For example, an employee
may voluntarily continue
to work at the end of
the shift to finish
an assigned task or
to correct errors. The
reason is immaterial.
The hours are work time
and are compensable.
Waiting
Time: Whether waiting
time is time worked
under the Act depends
upon the particular
circumstances. Generally,
the facts may show that
the employee was engaged
to wait (which is work
time) or the facts may
show that the employee
was waiting to be engaged
(which is not work time).
For example, a secretary
who reads a book while
waiting for dictation
or a fireman who plays
checkers while waiting
for an alarm is working
during such periods
of inactivity. These
employee have been "engaged
to wait."
On-Call
Time: An employee
who is required to remain
on call on the employer's
premises is working
while "on call."
An employee who is required
to remain on call at
home, or who is allowed
to leave a message where
he/she can be reached,
is not working (in most
cases) while on call.
Additional constraints
on the employee's freedom
could require this time
to be compensated.
Rest
and Meal Periods: Rest
periods of short duration,
usually 20 minutes or
less, are common in
industry (and promote
the efficiency of the
employee) and are customarily
paid for as working
time. These short periods
must be counted as hours
worked. Unauthorized
extensions of authorized
work breaks need not
be counted as hours
worked when the employer
has expressly and unambiguously
communicated to the
employee that the authorized
break may only last
for a specific length
of time, that any extension
of the break is contrary
to the employer's rules,
and any extension of
the break will be punished.
Bona fide meal periods
(typically 30 minutes
or more) generally need
not be compensated as
work time. The employee
must be completely relieved
from duty for the purpose
of eating regular meals.
The employee is not
relieved if he/she is
required to perform
any duties, whether
active or inactive,
while eating.
Sleeping
Time and Certain Other
Activities: An employee
who is required to be
on duty for less than
24 hours is working
even though he/she is
permitted to sleep or
engage in other personal
activities when not
busy. An employee required
to be on duty for 24
hours or more may agree
with the employer to
exclude from hours worked
bona fide regularly
scheduled sleeping periods
of not more than 8 hours,
provided adequate sleeping
facilities are furnished
by the employer and
the employee can usually
enjoy an uninterrupted
night's sleep. No reduction
is permitted unless
at least 5 hours of
sleep is taken.
Lectures,
Meetings and Training
Programs: Attendance
at lectures, meetings,
training programs and
similar activities need
not be counted as working
time only if four criteria
are met, namely: it
is outside normal hours,
it is voluntary, not
job related, and no
other work is concurrently
performed.
Travel
Time: The principles
which apply in determining
whether time spent in
travel is compensable
time depends upon the
kind of travel involved.
Home
To Work Travel: An employee
who travels from home
before the regular workday
and returns to his/her
home at the end of the
workday is engaged in
ordinary home to work
travel, which is not
work time.
Home
to Work on a Special
One Day Assignment in
Another City:
An employee who regularly
works at a fixed location
in one city is given
a special one day assignment
in another city and
returns home the same
day. The time spent
in traveling to and
returning from the other
city is work time, except
that the employer may
deduct/not count that
time the employee would
normally spend commuting
to the regular work
site.
Travel
That is All in the Day's
Work: Time spent by
an employee in travel
as part of his/her principal
activity, such as travel
from job site to job
site during the workday,
is work time and must
be counted as hours
worked.
Travel
Away from Home Community:
Travel
that keeps an employee
away from home overnight
is travel away from
home. Travel away from
home is clearly work
time when it cuts across
the employee's workday.
The time is not only
hours worked on regular
working days during
normal working hours
but also during corresponding
hours on nonworking
days. As an enforcement
policy the Division
will not consider as
work time that time
spent in travel away
from home outside of
regular working hours
as a passenger on an
airplane, train, boat,
bus, or automobile.
Typical Problems
Problems
arise when employers
fail to recognize and
count certain hours
worked as compensable
hours. For example,
an employee who remains
at his/her desk while
eating lunch and regularly
answers the telephone
and refers callers is
working. This time must
be counted and paid
as compensable hours
worked because the employee
has not been completely
relieved from duty.
Where To Obtain Additional
Information
This
publication is for general
information and is not
to be considered in
the same light as official
statements of position
contained in the regulations.
For
additional information,
visit our Wage-Hour
website: http://www.wagehour.dol.gov/
and/or call our Wage-Hour
toll-free information
and helpline, available
8am to 5pm in your time
zone, 1-866-4USWAGE
(1-866-487-9243).
Source:
http://www.dol.gov/esa/regs/compliance/whd/whdfs22.htm
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