Misclassified as Exempt? Should You Get Overtime? A Lawyer Explains Hourly vs. Salary

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  • čas přidán 7. 02. 2019
  • In this video Branigan outlines the law on who should be an “exempt” employee (salary) and who should be a “non-exempt” employee (hourly). What happens when someone is paid a salary when they should be paid hourly? Are they owed overtime? This video explains how much money you may be owed if your employer screwed up and misclassified you as a salaried employee.
    While video is intended for residents of California, its analysis is educational for everyone no matter what state you are in. However, this video is not legal advice. Mr. Robertson is an employment lawyer in Orange County, CA. If you need actual legal advice, we recommend that you contact a lawyer in your state. If you are in the Golden State, you can contact Mr. Robertson. His website is below.
    Branigan Robertson is an employment lawyer in Orange County, California. His firm exclusively represents employees in lawsuits against their employers.
    Visit Branigan's law firm website here: brobertsonlaw.com
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    CA Department of Industrial Relations Minimum Wage Page - www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/faq_minim...
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    Please subscribe to Branigan's channel!
    Branigan Robertson is an employment lawyer in Orange County, California. He represents employees in lawsuits against their employers.

Komentáře • 251

  • @mariannegriego444
    @mariannegriego444 Před 2 lety +74

    I've worked in several management positions in my life as a salary paid employee. You get use to 65 hour weeks and no lunch breaks because your making sure your team's needs are taken care of first. The burn out is real when you give 150% of yourself every day. Once your productivity levels drop to 120% (taking much needed time off) the company starts to worry that your just not as focused as you use to be. 🙄

    • @caneyebus
      @caneyebus Před rokem +17

      This is why you never give 150% unless it is your own gig. They deserve your 100%, nothing more.

    • @marychristineanderson4112
      @marychristineanderson4112 Před rokem +1

      Happens often

    • @cloneNK1124
      @cloneNK1124 Před rokem +5

      This is why good workers will not take management.

    • @sawyerramos3113
      @sawyerramos3113 Před rokem +1

      heeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeell no no, to the no no noooooooooooooooooooo. This is why I will NOT go into management, or exempt. They can suck it. My company has a program where you can sell your PTO (paid time off) twice a year..... You only get paid 50% of that. no maam!

    • @fredhamptongunclub8074
      @fredhamptongunclub8074 Před rokem

      @@cloneNK1124 That's not a good worker then, who doesn't want to get more if you're busting your tail as a so-called good worker you'd be a fool not to take the job unless you don't want to take on more responsibility.

  • @tifff9521
    @tifff9521 Před 5 lety +44

    I'm an HR manager working for a company with 5 or so employees based in CA, these videos have been helpful in making sure we're keeping up with CA as well as federal law, thanks!

    • @braniganrobertsonlaw
      @braniganrobertsonlaw  Před 5 lety +4

      You are welcome! That is why I'm making them! Thanks for the feedback.

    • @cloneNK1124
      @cloneNK1124 Před rokem

      Our HR manager quit!

    • @davidglad
      @davidglad Před rokem +1

      Wow, good for you Tiff. Although it should be emphasized that it's better to use anything on the Internet for educational purposes and to confirm relevant details with a lawyer. (Not that I am one.) I'm in Texas. So it is guaranteed a lot of specific laws will not apply to me, but the concepts sure are worth knowing.

    • @tifff9521
      @tifff9521 Před rokem

      Yup, my company had a lawyer on retainer but these videos are great starting points.

  • @EverettDiego
    @EverettDiego Před 3 lety +14

    With each successive video I've watched, I become more and more a fan of yours and what you bring to the public. Thanks for taking the time and sharing your expertise.

  • @sexygeek8996
    @sexygeek8996 Před rokem +12

    What companies really want to do is calculate your pay both ways and pay whichever is less, switching back and forth depending on how many hours you worked. They always assign exempt employees lots of overtime, but if you ever work less than 40 hours they want to dock your pay.

  • @redhulk111
    @redhulk111 Před 2 lety +15

    You missed to explain how companies dock exempt employees using their PTO hours when working half day.
    Example!: Under California law when an employee is exempt, you can work half day and still get a full days pays.
    My employer currently has this all wrong. They're using employees PTO hours to cover for the remaining full work day when in fact employees are exempt salary employees in the management department.

  • @Wifeysmitty
    @Wifeysmitty Před 4 lety +8

    Very helpful information. I am striving to become an HRBP. Currently in recruiting. Lots of information to learn, but you have a wonderful way for explaining employment law information.

  • @lilyofthenile3369
    @lilyofthenile3369 Před 4 lety +6

    WOW! your vids are informative, super easy to understand & extremely helpful. Many thanks!

  • @morganm9040
    @morganm9040 Před 2 lety +17

    I had an IT job which was salary during the week, but I was also in the "on-call" rotation (after hours, weekends and holidays). Being on-call, you were paid a flat rate of $300 - often working from Friday evening until Monday morning or Tuesday (if there was a holiday) and this also included being woken up at all horrible hours. Never got paid for actual time, but I would consider "on call" as being "available" and when you need to work you clock in, but that's not how this company worked. You just got paid $300 - less taxes. When it was brought up, it was just stated with lots of vague answers. Simple to say, I left that place awhile ago. Where does California law fit into this type of job? Great videos by the way.

    • @ryke_masters
      @ryke_masters Před rokem +4

      I don't know specifically about California, but in many jurisdictions, as an hourly waged employee, if you're present and ready for work at the demand of the employer then you must generally be paid even if the employer has no task to give you. If they don't want to pay you then they have to let you off work and can't keep you at their beck and call. This is usually defined primarily in terms of being present at the workplace, so it gets kind of iffy when working from home (or at least I don't know how the law treats it). But the same rule should still apply, so my best guess would be, if your "on call" time was spent being ready to work and left you unable to do much else, then they probably could not legally avoid paying you your hourly wage.

    • @colororb4105
      @colororb4105 Před 11 měsíci

      My Nebraska job doesn't pay anything for on-call shifts. If I have something come up outside normal hours, I can informally ask my boss if I can arrive late to work the next day

  • @somenygaard
    @somenygaard Před 4 lety +7

    I was working as a police officer and they had us coming in in 30 min before shift and staying 30 after. We would also routinely work through lunch. If we did have any overtime, which was all the time, they would make us go home a few minutes early every day until we were even. So for instance if I had 8 hours of overtime from working on my off day they would send me home 30 minutes early every day until all the OT was gone they would take that off the 30 minutes extra they were making us work for free! Long story long, we all got checks after someone complained to wage and labor folks. It went back several years too it was a good size check.

  • @ashvarma1
    @ashvarma1 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for spreading the light throughout the planet. 💐🙏

  • @LegalPadLaw
    @LegalPadLaw Před 4 lety

    Great video! Keep up the good work.

  • @Itsadrianyay
    @Itsadrianyay Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you very much for quality content sir

  • @ocampobianca
    @ocampobianca Před 3 lety +1

    ok thank u King this was so thorough and easy to follow

  • @tonystout1545
    @tonystout1545 Před 3 lety +4

    In Indiana, we have a third classification, salaried non-exempt. That is a class whereby the employer pays overtime at time and a half for hours worked past 40 in a week on top of your base salary. I worked a job for 9 years in that pay classification.

  • @IndusPacificLawOffice
    @IndusPacificLawOffice Před 4 lety +7

    Hi, I am Attorney from Pakistan but I wish to become California bar admitted Attorney. I am 33 and confused about whether I should go for it or not. CA bar is the toughest bar.
    I found this video very informative and I can see the mindset of legislators through this video.

  • @jodidyer2230
    @jodidyer2230 Před 5 lety +6

    very informative video on misclassified as exempt thanks.

  • @candie5150
    @candie5150 Před 2 lety

    I like the way you did your video. The editing was very entertaining. Whoever does your editing is doing a good job. If you learned how to do it yourself, kudos to you 👍

  • @stevendonaldson1216
    @stevendonaldson1216 Před 5 lety +1

    Love it. Very smart very Savvy content

  • @mfrx6bb2
    @mfrx6bb2 Před 4 měsíci

    Thank you, very informative.

  • @user28495
    @user28495 Před 4 lety +1

    this is so much better to watch than read about it

  • @hhectorlector
    @hhectorlector Před 4 lety +1

    well done!
    thank you

  • @dawnm.h.reeves5717
    @dawnm.h.reeves5717 Před 4 lety +3

    Oh man, that was informative.
    I need to dig into PA law. If it is close to CA I will have lawyers begging me to take my case!!!

    • @abigailguardado3912
      @abigailguardado3912 Před 2 lety

      Why is there annoying music with words in the video it’s so distracting lol

  • @moe304
    @moe304 Před 4 lety

    Very affirmative. Wish I could find a video like this but for Texas.

  • @gloryahb117
    @gloryahb117 Před 3 lety +5

    Excellent video but I do want to clarify that sales people aren’t automatically exempt. Even with inside sales, more than 80% of their income needs to come from commissions. I’ve worked as a salesperson for different companies and in all instances was paid an hourly rate then a nominal commission on top of that hourly rate. So in those instances I was still non-exempt.

  • @CriticalAuthor
    @CriticalAuthor Před 2 lety +2

    Interesting. I'm currently hourly. My employer approached me with a salary offer; 52k a year with 2 weeks paid vacation. My job is labor intensive (clean restaurants hood exhaust systems).

  • @caliinthevalley24681
    @caliinthevalley24681 Před 2 lety

    Thank you!

  • @gloriaandersen6784
    @gloriaandersen6784 Před 3 lety +2

    Love your very educational videos. Background music a little distracting!

  • @isaacdebruce2146
    @isaacdebruce2146 Před 3 lety +9

    I'm a salaried employee and I wasn't paid my biweekly salary during a pay period in which a holiday fell. I asked why I didn't get paid my full salary pay and I was told I don't get the pay from the holiday because I was in my 90 day probation period. I then asked if I was an exempt or non-exempt employee. I was then told I was exempt and that I will be receiving the remainder of my full salary I didn't originally receive. The next day I was fired for "the conflict I created with the higher ups". Do I have a case?

    • @vladildikan
      @vladildikan Před rokem +1

      The stated reason on its face sounds like a retaliatory firing. That's probably a case even before the unpaid salary.

  • @EricLopez.Official
    @EricLopez.Official Před 2 lety +6

    After watching this video, I believe I have been misclassified as a 1099 worker and have been getting treated as a W2 employee and on top of that I've not been compensated for overtime or missed breaks/meal breaks. I've only been in this position for about 1.5 months. What should I do?
    Do you have any videos specifically pertaining to 1099 vs W2 misclassification?

  • @Thatgurlnatnat
    @Thatgurlnatnat Před 3 lety

    Thank you

  • @gloryahb117
    @gloryahb117 Před 3 lety +1

    I want to commend you for making a complex issue somewhat easy to understand. However, I hope employers won’t stop watching the video after you say hourly =non-exempt and salary =exempt, because too many employers erroneously believe putting someone on salary gives them the right to make the employee work 50 to 60, even 70 hours and not pay them OT.
    My last job was in HR and on my own I studied FLSA act extensively, as well as California labor laws because I was doing my best to keep my employer from doing things that would expose him to lawsuits. Unfortunately for him, he didn’t always take my advice.

  • @FitnessartistTraining
    @FitnessartistTraining Před 4 lety

    Great video. Do you represent employers? Please let me know.

  • @christopherchristy6328

    Sir. You are the coolest at explaining these things. I may have to contact you from the midstate of CA. You have just about persuaded me against going the labor board route. I have other related complaints I may not win with this same employer. I did my own investigation on him, but realize I have little proof aside from people who know, but are too afraid to come forth. The lies have been for many years. He, the owner personally got caught forging 2 legal docs, putting my license on the line, then blamed it on his #1 secretary, who told me she only did what "Jer#*" told her to do. She fears for her job, so she won't report it. He forged at least 2 backflow test forms that, in the worst case scenario, could have caused illness or death, with my forged name on them, and lied to me and 2 top officials about this. This is only the icing on the cake!! I could go on for at least an hour. Sir, you make class A vids!!

  • @weeklyvideos1tvchannelsubl717

    If I put exempt on my application .. And work 60 hrs a week . and my hr pay is 14$ .. What will my check look like ..a week.. . plz get back to me...

  • @sandman589
    @sandman589 Před 4 lety

    Loooove this information and I have been spreading it as well. But I'm interested if their are any specific things I should know regarding freelance employees. I'm a motion graphic freelancer (in CA) and when I get hired for a job (2-6 weeks) they ask for my "day rate," and pay me as a 1099 employee. Is this wrong by the company? I'm working in their offices using their computers. I'd love your input. Or maybe you're working on a freelancer laws video? I know a lot of people that need that info.

  • @nufoxiemommy
    @nufoxiemommy Před 2 lety

    Would you still get a good reference if you bring these issues up or ask for a servence pay for concerns of doing things outside of your administrative duties. Or are they covered by their “and other duties as needed”?

  • @shaolinman
    @shaolinman Před rokem

    I used to work for a newspaper as a Sales Executive as a Salaried Employee. As the industry is getting irrelevant, management had HR had all the Sales Executive positions changed to an hourly status and allowed no Overtime.

  • @jospehjack
    @jospehjack Před rokem +1

    Some Businesses love to have it both ways. When you work 50-60 hours a week, You are Salary. Same job than says a few weeks after the holiday season when you work 25-30 hours a week you are Hourly. Isn't that Amazing how when the business Needs you for more than a 40 hour week you are Salary and when less you are Hourly.

  • @Lana-or5dz
    @Lana-or5dz Před 2 lety

    Can I negotiate to be a non-exempt employee for property management positions?

  • @thoryan3057
    @thoryan3057 Před rokem +1

    I'm interviewing for many entry-level positions that *seem* like they very well should be Non-Exempt based on their job descriptions. However, they're classified as Exempt anyway. I'm always asking for the FLSA status during my phone screens whenever it's not on the job description itself, and I'm consistently shocked at how many of these jobs are Exempt when they have no business being Exempt.
    What steps should I take *before* accepting a job offer for a job claiming to be Exempt when the job description doesn't line up?

  • @doubleg6520
    @doubleg6520 Před 2 lety +1

    As a Store Manager, does non-manual labor mean that if the employee is also required under job duties to also do manual work (i.e. cashiering, physically receiving large shipments, processing of items, merchandising, floor sales, cleaning, etc.) in addition to doing all administrative work, that they are no longer exempt from receiving overtime at 50-70 hours a week? And what if said employee is being discouraged by the company from having any full-time employees under them that they oversee (2 full time minimum requirement)? To remain exempt, shouldn't the company require the exempt employee to have at least the 2 full time employees under them at all times if they are going to have them remain exempt? (This is in Texas)

  • @na5346
    @na5346 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks but here is my confusion; So if i am an exempt employee but they demand you to work 9-6, what should i do? The company offers flex time and i have transportation issue so due to the bus schedule, offered to come by 9:15 and take lunch for 45 mins instead of an hour, and leave at 6:00, and they say “no, you either come earlier than 9 to have your regular 9-6 or at least increment by 30 mins to make it 9:30-6:30. Is this legal for them to force me to work certain hours when i am exempt?

  • @bluesun2001
    @bluesun2001 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for the chill music in the back )) Very well presented vids!

  • @mirandacuriale
    @mirandacuriale Před 4 lety

    Hahah, love the intro

  • @RyannLagattuta
    @RyannLagattuta Před 9 měsíci +1

    YES! My boss says I owe her money if I miss time on salary. I live in South Carolina. Let’s say I’m on salary for 45 hours a week, if I miss a d@y, she schedules me the next week extra hours to make up the hours I owe. I get NO lunch, non15 minute breaks… nothing.

    • @EMVelez
      @EMVelez Před 2 měsíci

      Everything he is saying only applies to workers in CA.

  • @giovannisynthesis
    @giovannisynthesis Před 2 lety +2

    My boss is salary for a big discount retail store and she’s supposed to work more than full timers. Full timers work 37.5 per week. She suppose to work 42.5 hours per week. But because she’s salary and the company keeps the payroll tight she clocks in around 50 hours weekly. There are days she working 12 hours. Of course there are yearly bonus incentives if the store performs great. $20,000 bonus which I’m assuming is taxed like a bonus. With all the overtime she’s missing out and dilution of her salary, is it even worth the effort to move to management and have no life outside work? Is it even legal for corporations to take advantage of this loophole? There’s a lack of transparency it seems.

  • @cloneNK1124
    @cloneNK1124 Před rokem

    At my last job the office staff were all Salary, got paid vacation, and were female. The warehouse staff were Hourly, no vacation, and male.

  • @shereahallberg3536
    @shereahallberg3536 Před 3 lety

    How much of this is federal law? Can you do a video for federal payroll laws?

  • @TheSebackers
    @TheSebackers Před 3 lety +1

    I'm in the Los Angeles area and I'm also 1099 but feel I should be a W2, I'm in telemarketing sales, I'm being told that I HAVE to work at our company office even though I tried working from home but I'm not allowed to, no one in our company is, we all have to work from 8 AM - 5 PM, Mon-Fri, we have a scheduled lunch time, and even have a sales manager that supervises all of us in sales ( were all 1099), were also told what to wear to work ( business casual), and we use all the companies supplies (computers, printer, desks, chairs, etc). We're strictly paid by 100% commission. What are your thoughts on this? I feel like I should be W2, it seems like my boss is enjoying all the benefits of W2 but none of the negatives that come with it. He's getting the best of both worlds by saving money on us being 1099 and following what seems to be like W2 rules.

  • @1992Co
    @1992Co Před 7 měsíci

    As a salary employee are the bonuses included to meet the minimum non exempt base salary? Asking since it was updated in 2024

  • @georgeland9862011
    @georgeland9862011 Před 2 lety

    I just became a supervisor in training and performing tasks with supervision and been working 70 hours way before and now im still working 70 hours per week in the office and Dock.what am i to do i dont feel like i need to leave because im like a super combo for them i can do it all, and a fast learner.

  • @Shadowed_Earth
    @Shadowed_Earth Před 3 lety +1

    I am so stuck in a bind I work for my family and they're doing this exact same thing. Heart is torn 💔

  • @btjohne
    @btjohne Před rokem

    MUSIC: Are you a serious attorney or trying to relive your youth at an afterhours club? Love your very informative videos.

    • @braniganrobertsonlaw
      @braniganrobertsonlaw  Před rokem

      Yeah... I know.... I had no idea what I was doing when I made this video.... Sorry. :)

  • @Sandman75238
    @Sandman75238 Před rokem

    My employer is making me use vacation time to make up for missed time during holidays. Is this legal?

  • @mythic_snake
    @mythic_snake Před 7 měsíci

    Where I work, we are considered "salary" employees, but we still have to clock in and clock out. We have to clock out for lunch as it is an unpaid meal break. We make roughly $20 per hour, so not bad but could be better for our skill level (civil designers and drafters, but not engineers). Our boss allows us to get overtime pay, but only after 45 hours per week. Anything under 45 hours is considered "expected from a salary employee." Also, our overtime is NOT counted if the week is cut short for a paid holiday. So if we work 10 hours each day for 4 days, it is only considered to be 40 hours "worked" and we don't actually get paid for the extra hours since holiday pay is counted separately from "worked" hours. Most of us are dubious about some of these policies but none of us know if we're getting a good deal or a bad deal, because it's so convoluted.

  • @akhan1884
    @akhan1884 Před rokem +2

    I am an exempt employee being treated as hourly. For example, my boss tells me I have to work 40 hours a week while he himself ( also exempt) has rarely done so in the last two years at least. He has forced me to put pto ( paid time off) in time-tracker for 1-2-3 hours when I had to pick up my kids etc. i learnt much later ( during the last year or so) that I have to put pto in half day increments ( 4 or 8 hours). Additionally, from what I have learnt from one of your videos, I really do not have any discrecsion in running my business or make decisions I think are best for my clients or even the company. Can you make a video about salaried/exempt employees and their rights? Many thanks

    • @brigittavesei4796
      @brigittavesei4796 Před rokem

      I think you start with seeing a lawyer. A labor lawyer, that is. (NOT your HR department!) An initial consult with a lawyer will usually not cost you, and will result in useful information on how to proceed. (If the lawyer wants to charge for an initial meeting, unless it's a small nominal fee, I would look for another lawyer that doesn't charge. If you live in a very small town with no labor lawyer, find one elsewhere in your state.) I did this once, and got a lot of useful information on how to proceed just from that one meeting. Afterwards I felt empowered. I knew what to do to protect myself, did those things, and felt much better about myself. I might have continued on with the lawyer, but in the meantime I found another job, and decided not to pursue justice. The next job was a much better one, I was able to recover my self esteem, and I also learned a lot about protecting myself in a corporate environment. One if the smartest things I ever did was to see that lawyer!

  • @user-yr6xc7gg8q
    @user-yr6xc7gg8q Před 2 lety +1

    I used to think the 30 min lunch break was a lot until I moved to a red state and now have a 1 hour lunch break

  • @terpgomer
    @terpgomer Před 4 lety

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but there is a baseline of this issue set by federal law, the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). You can find details on the Department of Labor website. If you are a federal employee, there is a separate set of regulations that apply FLSA to them (5CFR). I successfully filed a FLSA claim with OPM as a federal employee.

    • @braniganrobertsonlaw
      @braniganrobertsonlaw  Před 4 lety

      Correct. CA and Federal law are usually very similar. They mirror each other in many ways, but CA law is usually stronger for employees. And yes, different regulations apply to different types of employees.

  • @beautifybymariel1235
    @beautifybymariel1235 Před 2 lety +2

    Very informative video but annoying background music

  • @AA-salehbazyad
    @AA-salehbazyad Před 2 měsíci

    what about civil engineer or construction site engineer.
    do they paid hourly?
    because usually they work more than 40 hours per week

  • @sheyt.e491
    @sheyt.e491 Před 3 lety +2

    If you are a federal worker in California, what does OT should be? Over 40? or after 8 hours and 40/week?

  • @jsterling309
    @jsterling309 Před 3 lety

    John Deere in IL make their well some of their supervisors work 80 90 hours a week and 8 hours a day during their vacation is that legal????

  • @CHARITAJONES
    @CHARITAJONES Před 2 lety +1

    YOU ARE AMAZING!!!! 😍❤ GREAT VIDEO!!!! ❤😍 VERY INFORMATIVE!!!! 😍❤ NEW SUBSCRIBER!!!! ❤😍

  • @haddadsharalena6629
    @haddadsharalena6629 Před rokem

    What if someone still didn't get there w2 form for 2021? Real question..

  • @CyberBlade01
    @CyberBlade01 Před 4 lety

    What about employee that work on the river? Can I get in contact with you

  • @jesusbalestena4072
    @jesusbalestena4072 Před 3 lety

    Great video, back ground music, turn the volume down. Great job though. 👍

  • @alexvega7893
    @alexvega7893 Před 3 lety

    @branigan robertson I'm in this exact predicament myself. Can option 5 just be letting your HR person know and communicate the situation to them directly first?

    • @PagodaRolls
      @PagodaRolls Před 3 lety +3

      Going to your company's hr dept is in my opinion not a good idea..they are there to protect the company...you complain you get red flagged..you get red flagged you be the first to go..in my opinion

    • @brigittavesei4796
      @brigittavesei4796 Před rokem

      HR is NOT who you should see. See a labor lawyer first. HR only exists to protect the company, and are not required to help you no matter what they might want you to believe. The lawyer may counsel you to see HR, but only as a step in playing the corporate HR game, and with a specific purpose in mind -- such as documenting your case.

  • @allenschneider1847
    @allenschneider1847 Před 4 lety

    Can an Administrative Assistant who is salaried (for under 30k a year) and whose designated hours are 30hrs a week) work through her lunch hour and accumulate that hr as a "comp" hour and then take the accumulated hrs off at a later time, as long as they are not working more than 40 total hours a week?

  • @cozyfoxstudio
    @cozyfoxstudio Před 4 lety +1

    Can the boss of a small service business come in one day and tell you he is no longer paying you hourly, and now only paying you commission on the money you bring in every day.

  • @albertland86
    @albertland86 Před 3 lety +1

    i was really curious about my job i am a truck driver i work like 60 plus hours straight time an we dont get over time

    • @braniganrobertsonlaw
      @braniganrobertsonlaw  Před 3 lety +1

      Truck drivers are governed by some different rules. Some wage & hour laws apply differently to them.

  • @rebeleagle75
    @rebeleagle75 Před 4 lety +3

    I live in Mississippi. I started a new job 2 weeks ago. When I was hired I was told it was 40 hours a week @ $10/hr. I then found out that we get no OT. The owner said that I was on salary. I'm confused.

    • @Preacher_.
      @Preacher_. Před 4 lety

      Sadly, Salaried workers who earn over 29k a year (which is barley $13 /hr) are only eligible for overtime pay for hours worked beyond 80hrs in a week.
      Was the Hours you'd be expected to work written down in the job offering, or anywhere else? If so you have substantial leverage to use in negotiations with your employer.

    • @rebeleagle75
      @rebeleagle75 Před 4 lety

      @@Preacher_. No. Our hours were 8AM to 5PM. They wanted us to be clocked in at 745 and clocked out at 515. Thats 30 minutes a day I waa NOT being paid for. So basically 2.5 hours of overtime a week I was loosing.

    • @Preacher_.
      @Preacher_. Před 4 lety +1

      @@rebeleagle75 That's blatant wage theft... I'm not familiar with Mississippi labor laws, but federally, if you're paid less than 29k a year as a "salaried" employee- you're 100% eligible for overtime pay (time and a half) for any hours worked above 40 in a given week.
      You should give the Wage & Hour Division of the Department of Labor a call & run it by them. They're there to help you, and they'll know all the applicable laws for your circumstance.
      www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/contact/complaints

  • @samanthac4678
    @samanthac4678 Před rokem

    Is the exempt or non-exempt status written on any official paperwork or is it implied by these classifications? I guess what Im asking is if there is any documentation I might want to look for where I can see exactly how my employer is classifying me?

  • @nubiancutie5972
    @nubiancutie5972 Před 4 lety

    Can I get docked as a teacher salaried employee

  • @johnswanson1977
    @johnswanson1977 Před 9 měsíci

    I signed off on a salary paying six figures and I only have to come to the office once a week, I’ll take it.

  • @saleetaBoogie91
    @saleetaBoogie91 Před měsícem

    I live in Ohio, I’m a level 3 doing a level 6 job. Is there a law stating if a person works in a higher position, they should be compensated?

  • @808Unionist
    @808Unionist Před rokem

    My Union represents Nurses and Staff at Tripper Army Medical Center in Hawaii. Their mid-level management work leader etc. has been classified as exempt employees to avoid paying them overtime. We know it's a violation but we can't represent the workers in this area because their old contact excludes them and most of the federal workers in the unit are afraid of rocking the boat. I think this is a Nationwide Problem in both VA and DoD hospitals & clinics.

  • @juanmolina1552
    @juanmolina1552 Před rokem

    Even though we filed with the labor board one year my friend & I were not given anything extra, in other words even though the company knew they owed us paychecks and failed to pay us, they were not penalized for withholding our monies. Dept of Labor seems to be on the employers side.

  • @showbrasil1995
    @showbrasil1995 Před 4 lety +1

    If an employee is exempt and calls sick after a holiday, does the employer have the right to deduct two days of pay from that employee? (we are in CA)

    • @braniganrobertsonlaw
      @braniganrobertsonlaw  Před 4 lety

      I'm confident the answer is no. But I would have to look it up to be certain.

  • @FeliciaJune88
    @FeliciaJune88 Před 3 lety +2

    Dude, turn off the background music. It's super distracting and hard to hear you over it.

  • @luisalejandropopoca9976

    Hello! I think I have been working more than 114 hours and sometimes, I feel that my boss just want me to pay 100 hours regular pay, and 14 hours overtime pay. My question is: Why he pays me 100 hours regular pay when he supposed to pay me 80 hours regular pay and 34 hours over time or some of the 34 hours should be pay double time ?

  • @burritobandit45
    @burritobandit45 Před 2 lety

    Does signing a severance package effect the ability to pursue a case with a private attorney?

    • @braniganrobertsonlaw
      @braniganrobertsonlaw  Před 2 lety +1

      Yes. Watch my videos on severance. If you sign, you lose your right to sue.

  • @Pallidus_Rider
    @Pallidus_Rider Před rokem

    Companies get around paying computer professionals salary by leveraging contract work.
    This results in no health, etc benefits.
    This is standard practice at Bay Area tech companies.

  • @black-yn1cz
    @black-yn1cz Před 4 lety

    what if I get an job offer hourly salary and in the description of the job says Salary: exempt. is that okay? should not be a salary job?

    • @braniganrobertsonlaw
      @braniganrobertsonlaw  Před 4 lety +1

      In California exempt vs non-exempt depends on your job duties, not on what is written in the job description. If you spend 50% or more of your time doing non-exempt duties (i.e. hourly duties according to the wage order) then you should be paid by the hour.

  • @albertoquirarte2138
    @albertoquirarte2138 Před rokem

    I'm a junior estimator (my bosses name for me not lead estimator) for a construction company and not getting overtime I am part of the union we are signatory to
    My salary is set at 35 hours a week
    I get lunch and breaks but not overtime is there anything I can do?

  • @kaylab1157
    @kaylab1157 Před rokem

    Is an architectural drafter considered exempt?

  • @cynthiaeckstine8532
    @cynthiaeckstine8532 Před rokem +1

    I’ve been a RE Paralegal for fifteen years and have mostly always been non exempt hourly and rarely had to work OT. I recently accepted a new position and am required to work 10-12 hour days with no lunch break or any break at all and told I’m exempt. I mentioned due to my health I can’t do this and my boss said it’s just how it is. It’s very unreasonable. I happen to have a law degree but not licensed attorney. My offer letter specified hourly rate 40 hours week, but exempt. I have been working 60 hours/week and it is only my 2nd week. Is this legal in CA? I work in house for a profit Corp but smaller with around 300 employees.

    • @EMVelez
      @EMVelez Před 2 měsíci

      If your offer letter stated 40 but you are working 60, you need to bring this to your employer’s attention. If they do nothing, you have a possible legal case.

  • @malako777A
    @malako777A Před 2 lety

    Great Video !! I work with advertising, i guess I fit the Professional exemption... this means my employer is FREE to exploit me as much as they want? this explains why I am working Unpaid Overtime on a DAILY basis. This can't be it, right?

    • @brigittavesei4796
      @brigittavesei4796 Před rokem

      Heh. That's exactly what your company can do. You are actually doing the work of two people, and the company is happy to let you continue. You might try and see a lawyer, but you might find out that there is not a whole lot you can do, except to try and find another job with a kinder employer. Of course, this is hugely disruptive on you and your family if you might have to move for that job, or if you're an older employee who may have a lot invested already (pension, vacations, other perks) and may have trouble finding another job due to covert age discrimination. Or you can "slow roll" your job, and start politely but firmly explaining to your manager why you can't get everything done. (This is where a lawyer might be able to help you start drawing your boundaries. How to word things, for example, or how to document your work events.)

  • @rr186650
    @rr186650 Před 4 lety +1

    How much non-exempt work can an exempt employee do before being miss-classified as exempt?

  • @matthewsalmon2013
    @matthewsalmon2013 Před rokem

    If employers are using exempt status to get rid of overtime pay obligations, how is it that you computer your hourly rate by just dividing salary by 2000 h/y? Let's say they're acting in good faith and proper staffing levels, but business is not steady, so half your weeks are 30h and half are 50h. That would be 250 overtime hours per year, or 6% per year. Is the salary not adjusted up 5-15% from 2000h x hourly rate?

  • @weswallace1571
    @weswallace1571 Před 2 lety

    Are pastors exempt even if they don’t meet the minimum salary? Not sure if housing allowance has anything to do with it

  • @user-dg6pf7xi1z
    @user-dg6pf7xi1z Před 4 lety

    PLEASE help
    I do taxes in Miami and am suppose to be getting paid salary yet they want me to log my hours weekly. Am working 66 hours a week and am so damn confused. Am I not entitled to overtime if they are logging my hours weekly ???

    • @brigittavesei4796
      @brigittavesei4796 Před rokem

      They may want you to log hours so they know how many hours to charge their customers. I was an engineer (which is an exempt position) but had to log my hours so the company knew how much of my time was spent on capital projects and how much was spent on manufacturing support. This was because they paid different taxes on those two different kinds of work. (How my hours were charged internally was actually even more nuanced, but that's too complicated to explain here.)

  • @bartinacart9329
    @bartinacart9329 Před 4 lety +1

    If you are a delivery driver for a contractor of FedEx should you be getting overtime? I drive a vehicle under 10,000lbs. Also last month in December I worked everyday from December 2rd until I finally got Christmas day off so it was 22 days straight then worked from December 26th till my next day off on January 1st. I'm in Oregon is this legal? I started 4yrs ago working 5 days a week. Since December 2018 has been 6 days a week and they are now moving to 7 days a week. Oh I'm on salary also.

  • @kimberjaneblake8736
    @kimberjaneblake8736 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm a non exempt hourly employee in a healthcare facility, but I am required to be "on-call" for a week every month. This requires me to often work hours of overtime texting, emailing, and working on documents. My employer says that I do not get paid for this time because it was "part of the job description". It was my understanding that any non exempt employee who has to work overtime must be paid time and a half by the company. Is this legal??

    • @mkeptrangli
      @mkeptrangli Před 2 lety +1

      Absolutely illegal. Look for a new job.

    • @waitaminute2015
      @waitaminute2015 Před 2 lety +1

      From what I've read, a company can require overtime or on call, but you must be paid for it.

    • @mkeptrangli
      @mkeptrangli Před 2 lety

      @@waitaminute2015 Only if your non-exempt. An exempt employee can work overtime (over 40 hours per week) and won’t be paid for it. They earn a salary.

    • @waitaminute2015
      @waitaminute2015 Před 2 lety

      @@mkeptrangli The posted comment said she is non exempt hourly.

  • @be051268
    @be051268 Před rokem

    this happened to me many times

  • @ridgebacklover9901
    @ridgebacklover9901 Před rokem

    Very good presentation. However, the background music is distracting and adds nothing.

  • @Leondon73
    @Leondon73 Před 5 lety

    I need to start hiring sales people for my business. Would it be better if I hire them with Salary?

  • @oliver415
    @oliver415 Před 4 lety

    Do you handle class action in misclassification, wage and hour violations in California? Small 100-200 class

    • @braniganrobertsonlaw
      @braniganrobertsonlaw  Před 4 lety

      I have in the past, but I don't anymore. I usually refer class actions to a lawyer that I trust.

    • @oliver415
      @oliver415 Před 4 lety

      @@braniganrobertsonlaw Yes sir, I agree. I actually have just retained representation from a law firm recently but I'm in search again because they've duped me and now have major Trust issues with them. Therefore, I told them to suspend all actions immediately until further notice because I will need to fire them very soon. I was hoping that you might and still do :(

    • @oliver415
      @oliver415 Před 4 lety

      @@braniganrobertsonlaw In this video czcams.com/video/W_olkBT4oTc/video.html from @3:28 through 12:43, almost everything, every example that you had stated (wage/hour violations, misclassification, harassment, sex discrimination/gender/disparate treatment, HWE, retaliation, defamation, whistleblower, pretext/wrongful termination/constructive discharge) etc. that actually happened to me and they happened all at once, it's one of those stranger than fiction but true story, it's like my employer would be an all in one Ebeneezer Scrooge but with a team with a much more sinister twist to it and I'll be his nephew Fred. It's very complex but I believe it could also be easily and readily proven with by the right attorney, whose knowledgeable and also crafty. If I'm honest and truthful plus I have witnesses and the evidence to support and validate all these claims, (which are just all facts, documents, messages, complaints made using specific terms, circumstantial evidence/undeniable facts) Do you think you'd be able to put together or draft something like A Christmas Carol 2019. :) Thanks!

  • @alahoy3353
    @alahoy3353 Před 5 lety

    So a worker that builds machines for his bosses business is a non exempt employee?

  • @44jimcordell31
    @44jimcordell31 Před rokem

    Wow, that music is distracting. The content is great.

  • @kmckenney1311
    @kmckenney1311 Před 5 lety +2

    Do I get overtime after 8 hours in a day, even if I am considered part time emoloye?? I can't get a clear answer from any where!!!

    • @braniganrobertsonlaw
      @braniganrobertsonlaw  Před 5 lety +2

      If you are a CA employee and you're hourly, then yes, of course, you should get OT even if you're part time.

    • @kmckenney1311
      @kmckenney1311 Před 5 lety

      @@braniganrobertsonlaw thank you!!