Business

Congress Fights Overtime Rule

Members of Congress join associations, including ASAE, in pushback against proposed overtime rule.

This week, 108 members of Congress sent a letter [PDF] to Labor Secretary Tom Perez expressing serious concern with the administration’s efforts to finalize a new rule this year that would more than double the salary threshold to determine who is eligible for overtime pay.

The Department of Labor (DOL) released a proposed rule last summer that would require businesses to pay overtime wages to employees making $50,440 or less per year, which would be a 113 percent increase over the current threshold. In addition, the minimum salary would automatically increase each year to match the 40th percentile of the average salary earned by full-time employees in the United States.

In the February 9 letter, the members of Congress led by Reps. Cresent Hardy (R-NV) and Steve Knight (R-CA) urged DOL to reconsider moving forward with the overtime rule as drafted, arguing that it would have a disproportionate impact on small businesses and nonprofits, particularly in certain geographic areas.

“The belief that this rule change will increase millions of workers’ paychecks is simply shortsighted,” the letter states. “Unfortunately, a change of this magnitude is likely to have unintended consequences regarding how an employer compensates its employees, which would negatively affect workers.”

The letter also raises concern about DOL’s plan to possibly change the duties test, which is a main component used in determining whether an employee is exempt from the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). In its proposed rule last year, DOL asks whether a percentage-of-time rule should be applied to the primary duties test. DOL did not provide a concrete regulatory proposal regarding the duties test, but merely asked for comment on possible changes.

More than 250,000 organizations, including ASAE, submitted comments [PDF] on the proposed rule to DOL last year. ASAE believes the new rule would adversely affect many nonprofit organizations and other employers with limited revenues and could harm many affected employees as well. To contain payroll costs from increased overtime obligations, employers would have to either lay off employees or exclude reclassified employees from telework and career-growth opportunities outside of core business hours, ASAE said.

ASAE also noted in its comments that the $50,440 salary threshold amounts to a “one-size-fits-all” measuring stick and that the minimum salary level for exempt employees should instead be keyed to government data on regional cost-of-living differences.

DOL has yet to suggest what changes, if any, might be made to the final rule, but has indicated it may issue a final rule as soon as July 2016.

(iStock/Thinkstock)

Chris Vest, CAE

By Chris Vest, CAE

Chris Vest, CAE is vice president, corporate communications and public relations at ASAE. MORE

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