Labor Laws For Salaried Employees In New York In Queens

State:
Multi-State
County:
Queens
Control #:
US-002HB
Format:
Word; 
PDF; 
Rich Text
Instant download

Description

This Handbook provides an overview of federal laws addressing employer-employee rights and obligations. Information discussed includes wages & hours, discrimination, termination of employment, pension plans and retirement benefits, workplace safety, workers' compensation, unions, the Family and Medical Leave Act, and much more in 25 pages of materials.

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  • Preview USLF Multistate Employment Law Handbook - Guide
  • Preview USLF Multistate Employment Law Handbook - Guide
  • Preview USLF Multistate Employment Law Handbook - Guide
  • Preview USLF Multistate Employment Law Handbook - Guide
  • Preview USLF Multistate Employment Law Handbook - Guide
  • Preview USLF Multistate Employment Law Handbook - Guide
  • Preview USLF Multistate Employment Law Handbook - Guide
  • Preview USLF Multistate Employment Law Handbook - Guide
  • Preview USLF Multistate Employment Law Handbook - Guide
  • Preview USLF Multistate Employment Law Handbook - Guide
  • Preview USLF Multistate Employment Law Handbook - Guide

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FAQ

What Are the Key Changes? Changes are meant to reflect inflation and increased living costs. As a result, thresholds tend to move upward rather than downward: Minimum Salary Threshold: The new rule raises the standard salary level from $35,568 per year ($684 per week) to $58,656 annually ($1,128 per week).

Most salaried employees don't often exceed 45-50 hours of work in a given week. If a job regularly requires more than 50 hours of weekly work, then the role is probably poorly designed. The roles, duties and responsibilities may be completed more effectively if distributed across multiple jobs.

Agency: New York State Department of Labor. Division: Division of Labor Standards Local Office. Phone Number: (888) 469-7365. Business Hours: Monday - Friday: AM - PM. Staff is available through the automated phone system during business hours. Call volume is often high. If you don't get through, call back later.

WARNING SIGNS OF TOO MUCH OVERTIME One of the first indicators of excessive overtime is your wage bill. If all or most of your employee's actual wages are consistently 30–45% higher than their salary, alarm bells should be going off – especially if it's every month.

Under the FLSA, exempt salaried employees have virtually no rights at allwhen it comes to overtime, aside from their base salary as determined in their employment agreement. Employers can require any number of hours or any type of schedule from employees, including mandatory overtime or makeup time for absences.

The law does not provide a maximum number of hours that an exempt worker can be required to work during a week. This means that an employer could require an exempt employee to work well beyond 40 hours a week without overtime compensation.

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Labor Laws For Salaried Employees In New York In Queens