Eight million workers to lose overtime
By Ross Eisenbrey
August 15, 2003
Opinion pieces and speeches by EPI staff and
associates.
[ THIS PIECE ORIGINALLY APPEARED IN WORCESTER (MASS.) BUSINESS JOURNAL ON JULY 14, 2003 ]
Eight million workers to lose overtime
The Bush administration is trying to quietly and unilaterally change that establishes workers' right to overtime pay whenever they put in more than 40 hours a week. The administration maintains that moreworkers will receive overtime pay. But they know full well that theirrules will accomplish just the opposite: Millions of workers will end upworking longer hours for less pay.
In March, the Department of Labor proposed to amend the
regulations thatfor 65 years have governed the right of workers to
be paid time-and-half for work beyond the normal 40-hour workweek.
But a thorough examinationof the effects of the rule change on 78
occupations shows that it islikely to result in the loss of
overtime pay for more than eight million workers.
The Department of Labor appears to be expanding various exemptions
untilthey bear no resemblance to the original intent of Congress.
The threemain exemptions from the right to overtime pay are for
professional (doctors, lawyers, etc.), executives (bosses and top
managers), andadministrators (financial analysts, human resource
managers, etc.)Congress excluded them from protection in 1938
because they are the decision-makers in business and don't need
protection.
Under the new rules, millions of additional workers making as
little as$22,100 (less than a poverty level salary in Alaska, and
less thanmiddle class everywhere else) will be ineligible for
overtime pay. Lowlevel supervisors, who do not even have the power
to hire or fire andwho spend most of their time doing the same work
as the two people they"supervise" will be declared "executives."
Technical assistants with nodiscretion in their work and no
decision-making authority will be deemed"administrators." And
millions of workers who do not have college degrees, let alone
advanced degrees, will be treated as “professionals."All of them
will be denied the right to overtime pay.
Employers are more than twice as likely to assign overtime work
toexempt workers, as to protected workers, and may forego hiring in
favorof working their exempt staff longer hours.
The new rules have one good feature: they raise the salary floor
below which employees must be paid overtime from $155 a week (less
than the minimum wage) to $425 a week. This will protect 1.3
million workers. But because the salary level is not indexed for
inflation, it will protect fewer and fewer workers in the years
ahead.
The new rules will not provide clarity. Substituting vague concepts
like "position of responsibility" and "substantial importance" for
the current rule's "independent judgment and discretion" will
merely replace known and thoroughly litigated concepts with unknown
concepts. The Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Administrator
predicts a deluge of lawsuits as employees and employers press for
clarifications.
These rules might be cheaper for some employers, but for working
Americans and the American economy, they can be summed up thus:
lower pay, lost family time, and, as more workers are stretched to
the breaking point, a less productive and less prosperous
economy.
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