The EmployStats consulting team, lead by Matt Rigling, MA, recently worked on a case involving employee misclassification. EmployStats assisted attorneys by calculating potential damages for employees who were classified as exempt but potentially should have been classified as non-exempt and therefore owed FLSA overtime wages for hours worked over 40 in a workweek.
Matt Rigling and the EmployStats team also worked to use the case data and information provided to confirm whether the employees in question passed both the salary and duties tests for exemption purposes. According to the FLSA, an employee can be classified as exempt under the Administrative, Executive, or Professional exemption if they meet all of the requirements for salary and job duties.
In this case, EmployStats compared the employee information to the salary and job duty requirements of the Administrative and Executive exemptions. Under both exemptions, the employee must be paid a salary of at least $455, as well as meet the job duties specific to an Administrative or Executive employee. According to U.S. Department of Labor, Administrative employee’s primary job duty must be office work that is “directly related to the management or general business operations of the employer or employer’s customers” and must include “the exercise of discretion and independent judgement” for matters of importance. Similarly, Executive employee’s primary job duty has to be managing the company, or a department of the company. Additionally, they must also regularly direct at least two other full-time employees and have the authority to at least recommend the company fire, hire, or promote other employees.