Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Tip Tuesday! DOL quietly drops big news on new overtime rules

by Christian Schappel



The DOL’s been pretty quiet about what it’s doing behind the scenes about changing the overtime exemption rules and salary threshold. But it has finally spoken. 

This week, at the American Bar Association’s Labor and Employment Law conference in Philadelphia, the Solicitor of Labor M. Patricia Smith shared some insider info that elicited “gasps” from the audience, according to a report by The Wall Street Journal.

Smith said during a panel discussion that the finalized changes to the FLSA’s overtime eligibility rules likely won’t be issued until late 2016. From that juicy piece of info, one could surmise that they won’t take effect until 2017.

This is huge news for the business community, which hasn’t been shy about expressing outrage over the proposed overtime rule changes the DOL issued this summer. The delay means employers have more time to prepare, even though they don’t know what the finalized rules will look like yet.

The period during which the public can comment on the proposed rules ended Sept. 4, and the DOL received roughly 270,000 comments during that period. That’s about three times the amount of comments the agency received when it last updated the overtime rules back in 2004. About 50,000 comments came in during the last week alone.

But despite that last-minute outpouring of commentary, the DOL announced it wouldn’t extend the comment period. It said the standard 60-day comment period — combined with its outreach efforts prior to the proposal being published — was enough to “produce a quality regulation.”

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