By: Rachel Dickey & Darryl Durham
As most Louisville businesses are aware by now, the Department of Labor added a new rule to the Fair Labor Standards Act, doubling the salary threshold for overtime pay from $23,660 to $47,476. Under the proposed rule, employees who are paid $47,476 or less must be paid time and a half for any overtime, unless they come within a special exception to the rule. That gives employers a couple of options: 1) pay time and half for overtime hours; 2) raise the employee’s pay to an amount over the threshold to avoid paying overtime; 3) limit the employee’s hours to 40 hours per week; or 5) some combination of the above.
This proposed change, which was to go into effect December 1, 2016, impacts over 4.2 million employees across the United States.
However, the rule was recently challenged in State of Nevada et al v. U.S. Department of Labor, and an emergency preliminary injunction was granted in the case on November 22, 2016, by Judge Amos Mazzant of the Eastern District of Texas.
This injunction hits the pause button on the rule's roll out in all fifty states, even those who were not among the 21 states who joined as plaintiffs. The Department of Labor’s website indicates that they “strongly disagree with the decision by the court” and insist that the “Overtime Final Rule is the result of a comprehensive, inclusive rule making process.”
On December 1st, the Department of Justice, on behalf of the Department of Labor, filed a notice to appeal the preliminary injunction and made a motion to expedite the appeal, which was granted.
For now, employers and employees across Kentucky can well… hurry up and wait. However, your Louisville business should still be putting a plan in place, should the injunction be lifted.